Sermon Luke 10: 25-37 September 1, 2019
A Good Neighbor
The story of the Good Samaritan is a story you have heard since the cradle or just about that long.
When you hear the words “Good Samaritan”, you might think of the parable or
perhaps the many hospitals with that name or centers for assistance. Or perhaps
the “Good Samaritan” laws for those who assist people along the side of the
road after an accident. All these references are to “good deeds”.
We naturally equate this parable with doing good deeds,
eve n Jesus tells the lawyer at the
end of the story “Go and do the same”.
But this is not a story about good deeds;
it is a question about eternal life.
The lawyer’s first question is what brings us eve ntually to this parable: thus many would be led to
believe that to receive eternal life we must go around doing acts of
kindness. If we spend our live s
picking people up out of ditches, then God will surely recognize us and then
grant us our reward.
Unfortunately, this is how the words of Jesus have been reinterpreted through time. We seem to need
a way to make excuses for the choices others make. When we provide rational
excuses for someone else’s inappropriate behavior, then it gives us a way out
for our inappropriate behavior-our excuses. “I would have stopped, but I was on
my way to a doctor’s appointment I had been waiting for for months.” “therefore
God, my eternal life is intact, right?”
First the lawyer:
Jesus has been healing the sick on the Sabbath, he has been
associating himself with unclean people, he has welcomed known sinners and so
this lawyer seeks to find out if Jesus really knows the Law; to clarify to Jesus
That HE does not obey the Law.
Hosea 6:6 “For I desire steadfast
love and not sacrifice, knowledge of
God rather than burnt offerings”. From this verse we know God requires more
than obedience.
Jesus turns the question on the lawyer and he responds with
the correct formula answer.
He knows that God requires this double love ; love
of God and love of neighbor.
We have a God who
is all about relationship. It would seem that eternal life has to do with
this double love ; the ability to love God and our neighbor. As believers we
then conclude that eternal life is about doing, about loving and trying to do
what is right.
So, the lawyer who understands justice and judgment wants Jesus
to clarify and asks, “who is my neighbor?”.
Second, we enter now into the parable.
The focus of this parable is on two people, the person in
the ditch and the one who rescues him.
The man in the ditch is without description. He is
anthropos, eve ryman. Perhaps like
the “eve ryman” in the 15th
century play who was looking for eternal life. Eve ryman,
any man, humanity, was lying in the ditch in need of rescuing, in need of
someone to come and save him.
Two religious people pass by and do not eve n bother to stop, as a matter of fact; they make a
wide berth around the victim in order to avoid him.
We have justified
these two people ove r the years by
saying the priest was unable to come near anything unclean and that is why he
could not stop and that the Levite was on his way to the temple and if he
stopped then he would have too much
ritual to go through to carry out his functions in the temple.
Yet, Jesus doesn’t give
any explanation as to why they didn’t stop!
We want to rationalize their behavior because it helps us
rationalize our own.
It is the Samaritan,
the one despised by the Jews
who shows pity.
In the apocryphal scripture Sirach they refer to the
Samaritans as “stupid” people. Who are the people we refer to with that name?
It is exactly this detested person that Jesus give s the hero role to.
It would have
been a whole lot better if the Samaritan was the one who was in the ditch.
It’s always easier to do kind things for those who are considered less than
ourselve s. “We’re good people we serve soup to the poor eve ry
Saturday night”, We’ve turned our
house into a shelter for the homeless, we went to Africa and built a school for
orphans; all these acts of doing things for the “less fortunate” make us feel
good, make us feel justified.
Remember friends, we don’t have
the identity of the person in the ditch except “anthropos” humanity. He
could have been wealthy, or poor, he could have been royalty or a common man.
What we have is
the identity of the one who came to save ,
a person despised by many,
a person oppressed, rejected,
acquainted with grief and
not held in esteem.
Do we recognize someone else who fits this description?
This person, this Samaritan, is move d
with pity.
The Greek word actually means move d from your gut, a ve ry
deep emotion, one that musters up all of your body’s senses. Seve ral places in Scripture Jesus is move d with the same pity, the same emotion.
Eve ryman
(humanity) is lying in the ditch and receive s
grace and mercy from someone despised by others, eve ryman
accepts this grace without a word.
Notice that the person in the ditch does not have a dialogue yet he is the object lesson
for us. Eve ryman or humanity has the
opportunity of receiving grace, has the opportunity to receive eternal life.
God’s justice and God’s grace is not limited to a select few,
but is open to all.
A few years ago, I took a youth
group to spend three days working at a homeless shelter in Louisville. The
shelter was a hotel and those who lived there were learning all the skills of
hotel work. Cooking, cleaning, management and so on. It was an eye-opening
experience and a lesson about ‘all God’s creatures’.
I asked myself, ‘would I be willing
to be vulnerable and get help from one of
these people? I came to serve them, this was my mission to feel good about what I did not what they did for me.’
And yet, my life was altered and my tunnel vision changed.
I think the experience at the homeless shelter was recognizing
the dignity restored to the men and women in the hotel.
People, once homeless, were given new life.
The men working in the kitchen were able to teach us how to do their job.
They taught us
with pride and
helped me to realize
that I wasn’t there just doing something to lift them out of the ditch
but
they were doing
something to lift me
out of my short
sightedness.
Thirdly, we then want to identify who is the neighbor.
Jesus, at the end of this parable turns the tables on the
question who is my neighbor to who was the neighbor.
The answer was the one who showed mercy,
the one who approached others with grace.
Bonhoeffer says, “Neighborliness is not a quality in other
people, it is simply their claim on ourselve s”.
I am the neighbor; you are the neighbor in this story.
Friday and Saturday our local CCYF
(Community Christian Youth Fellowship) had a weekend experience at Camp OOTB.
We had 11 youth gather to sleep in tents right on the water of Occohannock
creek. We cooked our dinner over a fire, roasted marshmallows, made ourselves
vulnerable to each other through challenge games, climbed a rock wall, went
canoeing and swimming.
We learned a lot about each other.
We bonded.
We worshiped.
We grew in our understanding of our
neighbor.
I think too often we choose not to participate
in events or charity opportunities, or programs because the people involved are
just not cool enough for us,
or the venue is only where ‘those’
people hang out.
Sometimes being a good
neighbor is more about
how we make ourselves vulnerable among the
least of these
and allow them to be the
teacher,
to be the ones who open the gates
of heaven for us.
Perhaps, that’s the point Jesus was
trying to make with this story more than anything else…perhaps.
We as followers of Jesus Christ have
the opportunity to share his grace with all those who we meet. We have the opportunity to share the good news of eternal
life with humanity.
You see this parable of Jesus is meant to throw us into
new awareness.
It is meant to help us understand the fullness of the Law.
The fullness of the Law is that it is about justice and
grace.
The two go hand in hand, you can’t have
justice without grace nor grace without justice.
If there was no grace in the Law then we’d all still be in
the ditch.
But, grace is what lifts us out of the ditch and give s us new life, eternal life.
We are called to live
our live s with the same grace that
we have receive d.
The Good Samaritan is not just a good deed story
nor a rescue eve nt,
but an example of how God
reached out to humanity through his son Jesus Christ
who gave his life
for us so that we might reach out to others and so it goes…
Amen.
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