These past few weeks at our college ministry, WAVE, I have been checking in with students on how their semester is ending. Here is the phrase I heard most from all of them: “I don’t have a final; I have a group project, and it’s not going well because everyone else in my group just started.”
Now, being in college ministry for a while, I have learned that the statement may not be fully true, and the student I am talking to is probably also just starting their part of the group project. It all starts the day the project is assigned. Either everyone knows what they’re doing and roles are clear, or nobody really understands the assignment, and somebody is tasked with taking the lead. Typically, the second option is 99% of group projects, and before long, the project isn’t just messy; it’s heading nowhere fast. The frustrating part is that everyone is doing something, but no one is actually equipped to do their part well.
That image helps make sense of what Jesus is getting at in Luke 6:39–40. At first, it sounds almost too obvious. Of course, a blind person cannot successfully guide another blind person. The outcome is predictable. But Jesus isn’t trying to give a clever observation about physical ability; He’s exposing something deeper about spiritual influence and formation.
It’s possible to be active, confident, and even well-intentioned while still lacking the clarity needed to actually lead others well. That’s what makes this teaching so important because Jesus is not just talking about leadership in a formal sense. He’s talking about influence, discipleship, and the reality that every person is shaping someone else’s life in some way.
That means the question is not whether you are influencing others; you are! The question is whether your influence is actually grounded in truth, clarity, and maturity in Christ.
It helps to think about this in everyday life. A new believer trying to disciple someone else without ever having been discipled themselves. A person giving advice about prayer while rarely praying themselves. Someone encouraging others toward generosity while living with a closed-handed posture toward their own resources. None of these situations require malicious intent to become dangerous. They simply require a lack of clarity. And over time, unclear leadership tends to lead people into confusion rather than growth.
That’s why Jesus asks, “Will they not both fall into a pit?” The danger is not just personal; it’s multiplied! When someone who cannot see clearly leads another who also cannot see clearly, the result is shared misdirection. Influence always moves in a direction, and when that direction is off, the consequences don’t stay isolated.
But Jesus doesn’t stop with warning. He also reframes what growth actually looks like. “A disciple is not above his teacher, but everyone, when he is fully trained, will be like his teacher.” In other words, formation always leads to resemblance. You become like what you consistently learn from, listen to, and follow. That’s true in everyday life. Athletes begin to mirror their coaches. Students begin to think like the professors they learn from most. Even friendships slowly shape tone, habits, and perspective. Over time, imitation happens almost without noticing it. Jesus is saying the same is true spiritually: what you are close to is what you will begin to look like. Discipleship is not just about knowing more; it’s about becoming like the One you are following. And because that is true, who you follow matters deeply.
At the same time, Jesus is not telling people to step back from influence until they feel “fully ready.” That would leave everyone disqualified forever. Instead, He is calling for humility in how we see ourselves. We are always both learners and influencers at the same time. We are being shaped, and we are shaping others. The key is not perfection; it’s direction.
We can’t excuse ourselves from obedience just because we feel immature in certain areas. If you feel like you are not exactly where you want to be in your prayer life, that doesn’t mean you stop praying or stop praying with others. If you haven’t memorized Scripture before, that doesn’t mean you avoid sitting down with a friend and memorizing a passage together. Growth doesn’t require arrival; it requires willingness. Waiting until you feel “ready enough” often becomes a way of delaying obedience rather than pursuing maturity.
That means we should take seriously who we are allowing to shape us. Not every voice deserves equal weight. Not every example is worth imitating. If what you are following is unclear, unstable, or disconnected from Christ, it will eventually show up in the way you live and lead others.
But it also means we don’t have to withdraw in fear. Even as we are still growing, God can use us. We can encourage someone, point them toward truth, and walk with others in faith while still learning ourselves. The difference is humility. It takes knowing we are not the source, but we are being formed by the true Teacher.
So this passage leaves us with both a warning and an invitation. Be careful who you are following closely. Be honest about what is actually shaping you. And be aware that your life is already influencing someone else, whether you realize it or not.