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Seeing The World – Part 2 of 2

May 22, 2026
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God calls His people to be salt and light in a world facing spiritual decay. We are instructed to preserve the world and grant perspective on its darkness. In this message, Pastor Lutzer shows how we can avoid losing our influence. We must point people to Jesus—not to ourselves.

Dr. Erwin W. Lutzer: Let us run with endurance the race that is set before us, looking to Jesus, the founder and perfecter of our faith.

Dave McAllister: When Jesus told his followers to take the gospel to the ends of the world, he did not leave them helpless. "You shall receive power," he told them, promising the Holy Spirit as that source of divine power. Two millennia later, the work of reaching the now eight billion people of earth goes on.

What is your part in this Great Commission? What is mine? Today, let's make our commitments real. Stay with us. From the Moody Church in Chicago, this is Running to Win with Dr. Erwin Lutzer, whose clear teaching helps us make it across the finish line. Pastor Lutzer, supporting the work of missionaries takes funds. If Christians contribute to the work of missionary families, are they not just as much a part of reaching the world as those whom they support?

Dr. Erwin W. Lutzer: The answer to your question, Dave, is absolutely. As a matter of fact, there is a principle that comes to us from the Old Testament, that those who go to war and those who support those who go to war should enjoy the victory together.

So as people contribute, as people pray, they are a part of the Great Commission no matter where they are in the world. And all of us should be involved somewhere, somehow, in different ways, but nonetheless having the burden of the whole world on our hearts.

And we here at Running to Win are deeply committed to do what we can to be able to share that burden and that vision that more people might hear the gospel. Now at the end of this message, I'm going to be telling you about a book that I think is going to be a tremendous blessing.

I'm sure that all of us know those who have been conceived out of wedlock. They have a sense of helplessness. Perhaps they don't believe that it's possible for them to live a fulfilled life or to experience God's blessing. This book is going to help us to understand God's grace and God's mercy for the most helpless.

But now I want you to listen carefully, but I also encourage you to listen after this message because I'm going to be giving you some contact info that I think will be of great help even as you seek to help others in this hurting world.

And the world is dead. And unless Christ speaks a word of life, the world remains dead and dark. You know why I emphasize this? Sometimes I think we expect too much from the world. We are surprised at the amount of evil, and certainly that is something that we never really get over. But what else can you expect with people who think that they can see and yet they are blind, who think that they are alive and yet they are dead?

So first of all, these metaphors help us to get a window on our world. Secondly, these metaphors help us to also get a window on our ministry. What is it that we are supposed to be doing as believers? First of all, salt preserves. As I mentioned, it slows down the putrefaction process. If not entirely reversing it, at least it keeps it from going all the way.

Now do you know that we as believers are the salt of the earth and the light of the world, and we preserve this world from the judgment of God and from decay? It is better to even have carnal believers than none at all. You remember in the Old Testament the story of Lot? Lot was not walking closely with God at all.

And yet even though he was not walking with the Lord, the fact is that before God sent judgment to Sodom and Gomorrah, God took Lot and his family and got them out of Sodom and Gomorrah because God says, "I will not judge the righteous with the wicked when it comes to the outpouring of my wrath."

Now when you have earthquakes today, the judgment comes to both the righteous and the wicked indiscriminately. All natural disasters are like that. But when it comes to the outpouring of God's wrath, as is going to take place during the days of the Great Tribulation, that is why some of us believe that the church is going to be removed first because God does not pour out his wrath upon his own people.

And the Lord says that we are here to restrain evil. The Holy Spirit restrains evil, and were it not for those restraints, the wrath of God would be poured out from heaven, and the whole world would be engulfed in his anger and in his judgment. We preserve the world in its rush to decay.

But also we should be seasoning the world, which is what salt does. Salt gives food flavor. You've heard me say before that one of our responsibilities is to make sure that Jesus Christ is attractive to the world. Now you and I know that Jesus Christ is attractive, but they don't believe that he is because they have so many misconceptions about him.

They have so many misconceptions about Christians. They are skeptical about the believability of anyone, much less the believability of Jesus Christ, and we need to convince them otherwise by the way in which we live. There's a man by the name of Dr. Weigle, who was a hymn writer, who was speaking in Pasadena, California, to a Bible conference.

And one afternoon he decided to visit all of the rose gardens in Pasadena, and he came back and someone asked him, "Did you enjoy going to the rose gardens?" And he was surprised that the person knew where he had spent the afternoon. And the man said, "You have brought the fragrance of the flowers with you."

And that's what we should be doing as Christians. Yes, we preserve the world in its rush to judgment, but also we should be in a position where people are attracted to Christ because of the way in which we live. Salt preserves and salt seasons.

What does light do? Well, light gives perspective. In the darkness, you can see shapes, but you have no idea as to what it is that is really there. As children, we used to do a lot of running in the darkness out in the fields, and we always liked to have a flashlight because we imagined all kinds of things that weren't there.

And in the very same way, when you are in darkness, you may see the shapes, but you don't know what the shapes are. You can't distinguish a stone from a piece of gold. It all seems to be alike in the night. And isn't that exactly where the world is today? It is a world without values, a world without understanding, a world where everything has gone amuck.

And we as Christians have the responsibility of proclaiming to the world that this is reality. There are values out there, and we are to be light. And another thing that light does is not only give that perspective but give direction because people are confused.

And of course, no matter what we do, always back of every single social program that we as a church might have, back of every attempt that we might have to restrain wickedness, we must always be pointing men and women to Christ, which is the ultimate answer to the dilemma that this country finds itself in.

We must point people to Jesus, not to ourselves. You remember the story of the man who said to someone, "I have pointed to the moon, and all that you saw was my finger." In other words, there are people who may look at us, and they may not be able to get beyond us, and we must constantly be encouraging men and women to look to Christ who is the answer, the way, the truth, and the life, and the light of the world, because that's the message that men and women so desperately need.

So this metaphor that Jesus Christ uses gives us some perspective, first of all, on our world, a perspective on our responsibility within our world, but also some interesting perspectives on the pitfalls that we face. Now I want you to hear this very clearly. If you're here today as a born-again Christian, you are salt and you are light. Period.

You may not be a very good witness for Jesus Christ, but you are salt and you are light because that is what Christ made you. Now the problem is that sometimes the salt loses its ability and sometimes the light is hidden, and what a tragedy that becomes. For that, we look at the text now.

Jesus said in verse 13, "You are the salt of the earth, but if the salt has become tasteless, how will it be made salty again? It is good for nothing anymore except to be thrown out and trampled under the foot of men." Here's what Jesus is saying: I have made you salt, but beware lest you lose your ability to be salty. Beware lest you use it.

And how might salt lose it? Sodium chloride, we're told, does not easily break down, does not easily lose its properties. And if it is still sodium chloride, perhaps it doesn't lose any properties at all. I think that Jesus is talking about the custom that people would have of sometimes taking salt, which was very important in those days, and simply putting it on the ground.

And in the process of putting it on the ground, it was mixed with impurities. And the more impure the salt became, the less it had the power to sustain and to retain and to preserve and to season. And Jesus is saying, "Beware lest you become mixed with impurities."

Do you know why it is that we find it so difficult at times to witness? I've had people say to me, and I'm sure we have all felt this way at times, how can I tell others about the glories of Jesus Christ when he isn't working for me? When there are things in my life that are wrong, it is very difficult for me to tell men and women how they should live and where they should go for eternal life.

And do you know what God is asking the church to do at this very critical time of history in America? God is now saying, in light of the fact that I've kicked some props out from under you, it is now your responsibility to seek me as you have never sought me.

It is your responsibility to be before you do, and I am calling you to holiness and to wholeness and to find me satisfying. And when that happens, you will find it easy to witness to the world. As long as that doesn't happen, you can have all the books and all the courses on evangelism and you will not say a word.

Jesus said, "Beware of a life that is mixed." I think it was James who said, "Keep your life unspotted from the world." And it is that mixture that causes us to lose our ability. And then Jesus said, "Nobody lights a lamp and puts it under a peck measure," verse 15, "but on a lampstand, and it gives light to all that are in the house."

You see, Jesus is saying, "I've created you as light, and now it's your responsibility to live within that calling, and would you please remember, do not hide your light." Once again, we can hide our light because of our lifestyle and because of our lips.

We can hide our light because of the way in which we live, which undercuts any credibility that we have in the world. And we can also hide it because we remain silent even when we know the truth. Christ is urging us today to recognize the crucial role that we play in the world.

And what I'd like to do as I conclude is to just summarize all this for us and help us to understand what we should be doing in this time when America seems to be falling apart. Number one, would you remember that the world owes Christians a great debt? The world owes Christians a great debt.

Now I have to say this only to you folks. I would not stand on a street corner and say this. I would not go on television and say this, but I have to say it to you. Do you know that the text actually says this because of the emphasis that Jesus puts on it? You and you alone are the light of the world. You and you alone are the salt of the earth.

Do you realize what the text is saying, don't you? Jesus is saying that the only reason why God is restraining his wrath and the only reason why this world hasn't totally disintegrated is because your presence in the world sheds light and preserves what is still left of the decaying process. That's what Jesus is saying.

Now can you imagine the world's response to something like that? They regard us with scorn—not all of them, but some of them. You know that when it comes to social agendas here in the United States, that we are regarded as those that we need to get these folks out of the way because we are hindering the advancement of a good, reasonable social agenda. We are considered to be those who are standing in the way of progress.

And yet Jesus said, "You and you alone are the light of the world." You know the New Agers say that there is going to come a time before the New Age dawns when there will be cleansing, and by that they mean that those who believe to biblical values and absolutes are going to be gotten out of the way. They're going to have to be purged from this earth.

I have a quote in something that I wrote that says that all the plagues of the Book of Revelation are reserved for those who believe in absolutes and who will not let the battle for America progress along the humanistic New Age lines. That's who the judgment is going to come for. And so, of course, Jesus is saying something so opposite it is unbelievable. He's saying that if it were not for my followers, all the judgment of God would begin to spill out of heaven. The world owes us an unrecognized debt.

There's a second observation I'd like to make, and that is that we have a high responsibility, a very high calling from God, an incredible calling from God. When you stop to think of it, where is the world supposed to get light, where is the world supposed to get salt, except through believers?

Now here's something encouraging. We may think that our numbers are small, but our influence can be much greater than our numbers. You could have a hundred pounds of meat and perhaps it needs only a few pounds of salt to preserve the meat. You don't have to have as much salt as you have meat for preservation.

You can be in a very dark cave and you can have only one or two candles, and it would be a surprise to us if we knew how bright those candles were in light of the thick, pitch darkness within that cave. So we don't have to wring our hands and say, "Well, we are few in number and there isn't much we can do, and look what is happening to our country."

My dear friend, God has a job for us to do and he says, "I have commanded you to be salt and light and give people direction in this world that is so desperately without hope." Do you remember that story that comes to us from China about the doctor who was able to take a man who had not seen in years because he had cataracts in his eyes?

And the doctor was able to take those away and the man was able to see. And he was so excited that he came back days later with a rope, and he was leading a number of other blind men, all of them hanging onto the rope as he led them to the mission station so that they could all meet that miracle doctor.

Yes, people are blind. Yes, it is dark. Yes, there is death spiritually speaking, but you and I have the privilege of pointing men and women to the only one who can say, "I create light within you. You are light and you are salt." Christ, King, Lord, God. And we have that awesome privilege.

And do you realize that Christ has put that responsibility upon us? We all know that there would be angels who would glad to spread the message, and if they were to spread the message, they would do it very, very quickly. But Jesus said that since I have gone into heaven, you are now my representatives.

Some of us who were in Berlin this past fall remember that statue of Christ in Kaiser Wilhelm's Church in Berlin, with his arm broken off. And there was a sculptor who said, "I will fix the arm of Christ." But they said in this damaged church that had been so severely bombed during the Second World War, "We will keep his arm off as a reminder of the fact that we are his arms. We are his arms." You and you alone are the light of the world. You and you alone are the salt of the earth.

There's a final observation I'd like to make, and that is that every single person is either clay or salt, either darkness or light. Obviously, Jesus here is making a very clear distinction between his people and the people of the world. Now let's be very clear about this. As you look at us this morning, there is not a whole lot of difference between us.

We may have different faces and we may look differently, but you can't simply tell by looking at us what is in our hearts, can you? And you and I have sometimes misjudged people. We have thought some people were very, very fine Christians and it turned out that they were not Christians at all.

Or the opposite may be true. We've met some people and we never believed in the world that they were believers, and after we got to know them, we discovered that despite their faults and failures, they're believers after all. Because we with our eyes can see only the outer representation and we really can't see the heart.

So you have today mixed multitudes all over the place, mixed multitudes in the church, mixed multitudes listening by radio. But I want you to know today that from God's standpoint, from the way in which he views the world, there is a great, great unbridgeable gulf between those who are his and those who are not his.

And that gulf cannot be bridged except by faith in him. The difference is immediately apparent to angels, to demons, to God. All the differences become clear and remarkable. I need to ask you a question today. You may be here physically alive but spiritually as dead and in the darkness that we spoke about, thinking of course that you are alive and filled with light.

But you have never believed on Christ, you've never trusted him, you are going your own way. I wouldn't want to conclude this message without pointing out that unless you come to saving faith in Christ, unless God works in your life and you sense that prompting of the Spirit to say, "Lord Jesus, I receive you as my savior."

When God works in your heart and you say that, you become one of his. And you become salt and light, and the darkness becomes light and the clay becomes salt. And if you desire to believe on Christ, you may do that today. Christ has given us a great responsibility to this world.

It is our responsibility to be salt and light wherever he has planted us. If America is to be won back, if the battle of ideas and the battle for its heart and soul is to be won for the cause of Christ, it will not be won politically.

It will not be won because of some great crusade put on by one man or ten men. It will be won block by block, office by office, community by community, God's people being what Christ says they are to the fullest extent possible. Let's pray.

Our Father, we do thank you today for the awesome privilege of representing you in the world. We thank you, Father, that you have called us to be salt and light. We wish that we were better. We wish that we were more bold. We wish that we were sweeter. We wish that we had more faith to believe in your ability to save people.

But nevertheless, Father, we're here because we do love you and we want to be all that we can be. And we want to use this opportunity to dedicate ourselves to you and say, "Father, we commit ourselves to a lost, to a lost world." And now before I close this prayer, what is it that you have to say to God?

What commitment is he asking you to make today? And also, if you do not know Christ as Savior and you desire to believe, why don't you just tell him, "Lord Jesus, thank you for dying on the cross. I receive you as my very own." Would you do that even where you are seated because he knows your heart and is waiting for response.

Father, take our commitment. Take all that we are and use us. In our weakness, make us strong. In our faithlessness, grant us hope and strength. And may we see changes in our homes, in our neighborhoods, in our communities, and in our offices because we see ourselves called of you as your representatives. In Jesus' name we pray. Amen.

My friend, I want you to take a moment and visualize a young child rejected by her mother, often home alone even as a five or six-year-old, taken to an orphanage, dropped off, lives in the orphanage for seven years. Abandoned, hated even by the children in the orphanage, going from foster home to foster home, experiencing more abuse.

And yet some students came to that orphanage and they said these words, "God loves you." And she as a little girl sitting at the back, very angry at life, said, "God, if that's true, you've got all of me." This young woman grew up, one hurt after another, rejected by her father after she found him.

Looked him up, lived with him for a while, but then discovered that her father disowned her because she wanted to become a missionary as she was older now and married. Told her to get out of the house and said these words, "You are no longer my daughter." But it's a story of hope and a story of redemption.

For a gift of any amount, we're making this book available for you. It's entitled Dory: The Girl Nobody Loved. I hope that you have a pen or pencil handy because I'd like to give you some contact info. Here's what you do: you go to rtwoffer.com. I'm going to say that again because I believe this is very important.

Or you can call us at 1-888-218-9337. Right now you can go to your computer, go to rtwoffer.com. For a gift of any amount, this book can be yours. Or pick up the phone and call us at 1-888-218-9337. The title of the book, Dory: The Girl Nobody Loved. It's a book of hope.

Dave McAllister: You can write to us at Running to Win, 1635 North LaSalle Boulevard, Chicago, Illinois, 60614. Running to Win is all about helping you find God's roadmap for your race of life. A long time ago, there was a man God called to preach to a pagan city and call them to repent.

The man's name was Jonah, and he dug in his heels, telling God, "No way." In four short chapters of the Bible, we trace the story of how God got his man to say yes. Next time, the saga begins. Plan to join us. For Pastor Erwin Lutzer, this is Dave McAllister. Running to Win is sponsored by the Moody Church.

This transcript is provided as a written companion to the original message and may contain inaccuracies or transcription errors. For complete context and clarity, please refer to the original audio recording. Time-sensitive references or promotional details may be outdated. This material is intended for personal use and informational purposes only.

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Video from Dr. Erwin W. Lutzer

About Running To Win

Running the race of life is hard. But with the Bible front and center and a heart to encourage, Pastor Erwin Lutzer presents clear Bible teaching, helping you make it across the finish line. Since 2011, this 25-minute program has provided a Godward focus and features listeners’ questions.

About Dr. Erwin W. Lutzer

Dr. Erwin W. Lutzer is Pastor Emeritus of The Moody Church where he served as the Senior Pastor for 36 years (1980-2016). He earned a B.Th. from Winnipeg Bible College, a Th.M. from Dallas Theological Seminary, a M.A. in Philosophy from Loyola University, and an honorary LL.D. from the Simon Greenleaf School of Law (Now Trinity Law School).

A clear expositor of the Bible, he is the featured speaker on two radio programs: Running to Win—a daily Bible-teaching broadcast and Songs in the Night—an evening program that’s been airing since 1943. Running To Win broadcasts on a thousand outlets in the U.S. and across more than fifty countries in seven languages. His speaking engagements include Bible conferences and seminars, both domestically and internationally, including Russia, the Republic of Belarus, Germany, Scotland, Guatemala, and Japan. He has led tours to Israel and to the cities of the Protestant Reformation in Europe.

Pastor Lutzer is also a prolific author of over seventy books, including the bestselling We Will Not Be Silenced, One Minute After You Die, and the Gold Medallion Award winner, Hitler’s Cross. Pastor Lutzer and Rebecca live in the Chicago area and have three grown children and eight grandchildren. Connect with Pastor Lutzer on X (@ErwinLutzer) or moodymedia.org.

Contact Running To Win with Dr. Erwin W. Lutzer

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