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Luke 12:31  (Darby English Version)
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Luke 12:31

A vital step to overcoming covetousness is to study, pray, fast, meditate, and obey. Consciously practice God's way of life. This takes sacrifice and discipline, but it fills the mind with God's thoughts. This will eventually make sin foreign to us because we simply will not think to do it!

John W. Ritenbaugh
The Tenth Commandment (1998)

Related Topics:



Luke 12:13-31

In Luke 12:13-21, a listener in the crowd surrounding Jesus asks Him to instruct his brother to divide the inheritance due to him equitably. Jesus declines, saying that life should not be based on having many possessions. He uses this occasion to teach His disciples that a godly life is more important than material things. To explain this, He tells a parable about a rich man who builds larger and larger barns to store all his crops and goods.

Since he had everything he could possibly want or need, the rich man's focus was on living an easy life. God's response is that the man was foolish because, when he died later that night, his goods would do nothing for him. Someone else would inherit and enjoy them. A person whose life is caught up in what he owns is not rich toward God. The Parable of the Rich Fool illustrates Jesus' teaching to guard against every kind of covetousness.

Martin G. Collins
Parable of the Rich Fool




Other commentary entries containing this verse:

Matthew 13:31
Matthew 13:31
Mark 4:31
Luke 13:19


Library resources that contain this verse:

Articles

Where Is the Promise of His Coming?  

Bible Studies

Biblical Symbolism  

Parables of Matthew 13 (Part Four): The Parable of the Mustard Seed  

Sermon Transcripts

A Thoughtful Offering  

Parables of Matthew 13 (Part 1): The Mustard Seed  

Purpose-Driven Churches (Part 1)  

Where Is Your Heart?  


 
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