5th Sunday after Pentecost, July 14th,
2019
Luke 10:25-37
"Who Is My Neighbor?"
There’s a lot of law in today’s readings. You look at Leviticus and it’s like the
second table of the 10 commandments written in an expanded form – with law
about sexuality, stealing, courtroom justice, and more. It sums it all up, “Love your neighbor as
yourself”. And amidst the pleasantries
of Paul’s greeting in Colossians 1, there’s some fine law, too, including the
encouragement to “walk in a manner worthy of the Lord”.
And then you come to today’s Gospel reading, in which
we have the famous parable of the Good Samaritan. We will get to that in a
minute. But first notice that Jesus
tells this parable in the context of a conversation with a young lawyer about –
the law. The man asks that universal
question of the human soul, “What must I do to be saved?” and Jesus refers him
to the law – something he is, as a lawyer, well familiar with. He sums up the law perfectly, too – in much
the same way Jesus once summed it up – Love God, and love your neighbor. Jesus even commends him for answering
correctly.
But then the hitch:
“Do this and you will live!” And
here’s where the man should have stumbled.
Here’s where he, and all of us, could fall down under the crushing
weight of the law’s demands. Where we
can and should admit, “I haven’t done this.
I can’t do this. And for the most
part, I don’t even WANT to love God and my neighbor as myself. I mostly want to love myself. Me first.
You second, and only if I have time and if it makes me feel good. But I know that’s not right, and I know I
should do better. If I have to do this
law to live? Where does that leave me? Where can I go for help, consolation,
mercy? Or am I simply doomed to die?”
But not this guy.
Instead he does what sinners so often do: he seeks another way out. A loophole.
An addendum or exception by which he doesn’t really have to do what the
law demands. He seeks to define away,
“who is my neighbor”. He presses Jesus
on the question. And so Jesus answers
with the parable of the Good Samaritan.
Now, many preachers and theologians have treated this
parable from a rather law-oriented perspective.
They see this Good Samaritan character as an example for us to follow, a
standard of treating our neighbor in kindly ways when even the supposedly
“good” people of the world do not.
Loving the unlovable, those people who we don’t really identify with –
as Jews and Samaritans were like oil and water.
And so the sermons and bible studies that run this way end up heaping on
more law, digging you further into the grave, because which of us can say we’ve
been a good Samaritan? Which of us can
say we’ve loved our neighbor even close to this?
But there is another perspective from which to see
this parable. And that is to consider
Christ. Where is Christ, you say? Well look a little closer at this figure of
the Good Samaritan.
Here’s someone who comes from the outside. Here’s someone who brings healing, binds up
wounds, shows compassion. He takes the
poor man to the inn and provides for his ongoing care. And he promises to come back. Do you see Jesus?
And then think again about the man left half-dead in
the ditch. Maybe you can identify with
him. For we are beset by enemies far
worse than robbers. We are under the
assaults of the devil, the sinful world, and even our own sinful flesh. We are far worse off than half-dead. The ditch in which we lie is far deeper.
And yet our Good Samaritan comes and pulls us up out
of the muck and mire, heals our every wound with the balm of his grace and
mercy, and brings us to the church, where his appointed servants care for
us. And Jesus doesn’t pour oil on us,
but he does wash us in Holy Baptism. And
he gives us wine and bread that are his true body and blood.
In fact our Good Samaritan goes even further, for he
takes our place. He becomes subject to
beating and theft and indignation in our place.
He goes to the cross, obediently, in our place. He becomes the one who is beaten and bloodied
and left for dead, in a borrowed tomb.
All this to show his mercy to sinners. All this to win for us healing and
wholeness. Thanks be to God!
And seeing Christ and his work for us first – and
coming to the parable in a Gospel framework – now the example of the Good
Samaritan can stand for us – not as a terrifying indictment of our failures,
but as an encouragement to do likewise for so Christ has loved us.
So who, then, is your neighbor, Christian? We now ask the question again, but not from
the stance of, “How can I wiggle out of this?” but in faith, “how can I serve,
who can I best serve, who would God have me love and serve?” And the answer might surprise you.
Some Christians might answer the question, “Who is my
neighbor?” by simply saying, “everyone!”
And while there’s a good intention there – and I think it’s
well-meaning, it isn’t quite right. In
fact it makes the word “neighbor” mean nothing.
Rather, your neighbor is simply whoever is near you. That’s the only qualification.
While in a very tenuous sense the starving beggar
thousands of miles away who you don’t know or know of is your neighbor – for
he’s a fellow human on the same planet – he’s not nearly your neighbor like the
needy friend down the street, or coworker in the next cubicle, or your fellow
church member, or even family member.
We might want to qualify who “deserves” to be our
neighbor, but that’s not how it goes.
Don’t love people because they deserve it anymore than we deserve
Christ’s love. But we do it simply
because we are given to do it. The
Samaritan in the parable didn’t plan on helping the man who was robbed – but
God placed him there and so he did what he could. What neighbor has God placed before you?
And then think also of the question, “who is my
neighbor?” through the lens of vocation.
This can help us discern not only who is my neighbor, but how I might
serve him. Am I a father, husband,
brother or friend? A mother, daughter,
co-worker, or citizen? A pastor or
hearer, an office or magistrate, a solider or nanny? Each vocation has its appointed neighbors to
serve, and its way of serving.
I saw a bit of humorous wisdom this week: a sign said, “Forget world peace; visualize
using your turn signal!”
And maybe the point is made well: Christian love and mercy for the neighbor
begins with the simple, the everyday, the lowly forms of love and service. It means caring first of all for your family,
raising children in the fear and nurture of the Lord. It means supporting the grieving, encouraging
the fearful, even just listening with a friendly ear. It might mean a denarius out of your own
pocket here and there, or a little of your own oil or wine. But whatever the means of service, and
whoever the neighbor, you’ll never do it better than the author of the parable who
is the ultimate Good Samaritan from above.
Which really brings us back to Paul’s prayer for the
Colossians, and a good prayer for you and me, that we would “walk in a manner
worthy of the Lord, fully pleasing to him: bearing fruit in every good work and
increasing in the knowledge of God; being strengthened with all power, according
to his glorious might, for all endurance and patience with joy; giving thanks
to the Father, who has qualified you to share in the inheritance of the saints
in light.”
In Jesus Christ our Lord, Amen.
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