(Leviticus 19:17-18, Deuteronomy 6:1-9; Luke 10:25-37)
The curtain rises on one of Jesus’ opponents trying to test him. The teacher of the Law asks, “What must I do to inherit eternal life?” He wants to know how he can earn his inheritance. Over the centuries, contrary to what the Old Testament actually taught, the Jews had come to believe that was possible—that by keeping the Law, they earned their reward from God. In pointing them back to the truth that they hadn’t earned God’s favor (and couldn’t), Jesus was challenging the conventional wisdom. That’s never a popular thing to do, so the scholar was trying to use this to get him in trouble.
It failed, because Jesus is a master of verbal judo; one of the things I love about him as a teacher is that he never does the expected. Here, he turns the question back on his questioner: “What is written in the Law? How do you recite?”—which is to say, when you stand to recite the Law in your worship in the synagogue, what do you say?
The scribe answers with the same summary of the Law Jesus gives in Matthew 22, and Jesus responds, “You’ve given the right answer. Do this, and you will live.” Note three things here. First, Jesus praises the teacher of the Law for his knowledge, then questions his behavior: is he willing to act on what he knows? Second, where he asked about eternal life, Jesus answers about all of life: “do this now and now you will live.” This isn’t just about life after death, it’s about real life before death. Third, this man asked, “What specific things do I have to do in order to inherit eternal life,” and is handed a commandment—in his own words!—to live a life of unlimited and unqualified love for God and for other people. “You want to do something to inherit eternal life?” Jesus says. “OK, just continually love God and your neighbor with every part of your being.”
This is an impossible standard. There’s no line drawn, no list, no limits—no point at which it becomes possible to say, “I’ve done enough, I’ve kept the Law.” There’s no requirement anyone could actually meet. Looking for some sort of limit, the scribe asks, who actually qualifies as his neighbor? If the list is short enough—maybe just his relatives and friends—he might be able to claim that he has fully loved them, and thus fulfilled the Law’s demands. But Jesus responds with this story:
A man was going down from Jerusalem to Jericho, seventeen miles of dangerous road; like far too many travelers down that road, he was robbed, beaten, and left lying naked by the side of the road. He couldn’t identify himself to anyone who might come along, because he was unconscious; his clothes would have identified him as a Jew, but they were gone, leaving him not only unprotected, but anonymous.
A little while later, a priest came riding back down the road to Jericho after his two weeks of service in the Temple in Jerusalem. He saw the man lying there naked, and suddenly he had a problem. The rabbis taught, “If a man sees his fellow drowning, mauled by beasts, or attacked by robbers, he is bound to save him! From the verse, you shall not stand by the blood of your neighbor.” But, the priest hadn’t seen it happening, and he couldn’t tell if the man was a Jew. What’s more, he might already be dead.
He ought to help, but he was a priest—he had to stay ritually pure in order to do his job. If he touched the man, it might make him unclean, and then he’d be out of work until he could complete the week-long purification ritual. And if he found the man dead, he would have to tear his clothes, which would be such a waste. There was no way he could try to help the man without losing status—and while he was absolutely commanded to maintain ritual purity, the command to help others was conditional. Clearly, he should just ride on. So, he did—as far to the other side of the road as possible, since even coming within six feet of a dead body would defile him.
Riding some distance behind him came a Levite, also returning from his two weeks in the Temple. Unlike the priest, he only had to stay ritually clean, not pure, so he was a lot freer to help. Where the priest stayed as far from the wounded traveler as possible, the Levite went up to him and looked him over; he could tell the man was still alive, but not if he was a fellow Jew. Still, he might have helped; but obviously there were robbers about. If he stopped, he might end up the next victim. What’s more, he knew the priest was ahead of him—like any smart traveler, he knew who else was on the road—and the priest hadn’t done anything. Who was he, a mere lay leader, to question the judgment of a religious professional? If he helped this man when a priest had left him there to die, it would only make the priest look bad, and he didn’t want to do that. Next to that, how important was one wounded man, really, anyway?
After the Levite’s departure, Jesus’ audience would have expected an ordinary Jew to come along, making the same trip home from the Temple. Instead, to their shock and horror, the next traveler is one of the hated Samaritans. To get the full effect, imagine the first traveler is Billy Graham, the second is Dr. Kavanaugh, and the third is an al’Qaeda terrorist. Or tell this in a Palestinian community and make an Israeli officer the hero—how do you think they would take it? And yet, that’s what Jesus does: he tells a group of Jews that after two of their religious leaders have left a man to die by the side of the road, along comes one of their most hated enemies to redeem their sin.
And redeem it he does, step by step. When he sees the man, he doesn’t start calculating what it would cost him to help; instead, he is seized with compassion. The Greek word here is derived from the word for “guts”—the Samaritan sees the plight of this man by the side of the road, a man he knows has already been ignored by two other travelers, and he reacts at a gut level: I have to help this man. Where the priest just passed by, where the Levite only got close enough to look, the Samaritan actually goes to him and cares for him. This involves considerable risk for him: he too risks being made unclean, which would also make his animals and goods unclean, and he makes himself a prime target for the robbers, if they’re still around. And yet, he steps forward.
He begins by cleaning the man’s wounds with oil, disinfecting them with wine, and binding them with soft cloths. This was standard practice, but it was also fraught with symbolism. Oil and wine were among the sacrifices which the priest and the Levite would have offered at the Temple, and yet they refused to offer them here; it was left to a Samaritan to do that. What’s more, in the prophets, God promises to bind up his people’s wounds; yet here that promise is kept by a rejected outsider. Despite that, the Samaritan might receive no thanks, but only rejection, because the Jews said, “Oil and wine are forbidden items if they come from a Samaritan.”
Nevertheless, the Samaritan continues to show mercy. The priest could have put the wounded man on his animal, but didn’t, so the Samaritan makes up for his neglect. What’s more, though he has several animals (probably carrying goods), he puts the man on his own animal and walks the rest of the way, leading the animal like any servant. Where the priest’s chief concern was for his dignity and social standing, the Samaritan throws both to the winds in order to care for a complete stranger.
Nor does he stop there: he takes the man to an inn, gets him a room, and stays overnight to take care of him. This is the bravest thing he’s done yet; as a Samaritan riding into town with a badly wounded man, he risks the man’s family taking vengeance on him for the attack on their relative. Never mind if he’s guilty or not, he’s available, and he’s a Samaritan, so he’s the sort of person who would do such a thing. It’s not rational, but when those we love are hurt, it tends to make us irrational. The fact that the Samaritan had gone to considerable effort to save this man’s life would make no difference. The smart thing to do would be to leave his burden at the door of the inn and disappear—but he doesn’t do that. In fact, when he heads out in the morning, he leaves the innkeeper with a blank check. He’s just asking to be swindled.
This is Jesus’ response to the question, “Who is my neighbor?” He isn’t answering it, but reshaping it, before turning it back: “Which of these three do you think became a neighbor to the man attacked by robbers?” There is only one possible answer, and the teacher offers it: “The one who showed him mercy.” Jesus responds, “Go and do likewise.” In other words, “You wanted a standard? That’s it. If you want eternal life, that’s what loving your neighbor means.” To that, there was nothing to say.
The proper question isn’t “Who is my neighbor?” (in other words, “Who do I have to love?”), but “To whom must I become a neighbor?” The answer is, everyone in need—even an enemy! The teachers of the Law put limits on the command to love your neighbor as yourself—family, friends, other Jews, the righteous, but not the unrighteous, definitely not non-Jews, and certainly not one’s enemies. We tend to do the same. Jesus won’t allow that. Who is your neighbor? The abortionist, or the pro-life activist; the homosexual, or the gay-basher; the boss who fired you, the man who abandoned your daughter with a baby, the swindler who took your parents for their life savings, these are your neighbors, just as much as your nearest and dearest.
This is impossible; which means our salvation is impossible, at least for us. We can’t justify ourselves, because the standard is too high; there’s no way we can meet it, and yet we’re held to it nevertheless. We can’t earn eternal life, no matter how hard we try; our best doesn’t even begin to come close to an approximation of being good enough.
That’s where Jesus comes in. The wounded man is left to die by his own people, and then along comes the Samaritan, the rejected outsider, to bind up his enemy’s wounds and bring him healing, to save his life. To do this, the Samaritan risks his own life and all that he has. This is Jesus, the despised and rejected outsider, the unique agent of God’s love and salvation; the amazing compassion of the Samaritan is the amazing love of the Son of God. This is the love that led him to the cross to heal our wounds and lead us to safety; it is the love that is our only hope; and it is the love he gives us to share with all our neighbors, everywhere, wherever we might find them. Let’s pray.