A Homily on Neighbor Love
Luke 10.25-37
Psalm
82
Deut
6.1-9
James
2.8-26
Prayer of Invocation
Lord of all power and might,
the author and giver of all good things: Graft in our hearts the love of your
Name; increase in us faithfulness; nourish us with all goodness; and bring
forth in us the fruit of good works; through Jesus Christ our Lord,
who lives and reigns with you
and the Holy Spirit, one God, for ever and ever. Amen.
Prayer of Illumination
Lord, bless the hearing of your word by
equipping us to do what you say, for the life of the world, and for the sake of
your reputation.
Proclamation
Introduction
(before the reading of Luke 10.25-37)
The story of the "Good Samaritan" only occurs in the
Gospel of Luke. And it's actually (more accurately) a story about an encounter
between Jesus and a religious scholar (Luke 10.25-37). The good Samaritan
makes an appearance in this encounter as the means by which Jesus responds to
the religious scholar’s question about the technicality of neighbor love.
In order to hear this story afresh, this encounter between Jesus
and the legal scholar, it is helpful to know that it falls within a larger
literary context (Luke 9.52-19.48) sometimes referred to as the "journey
section". In this larger portion of the Gospel, Luke highlights Jesus'
approach to Jerusalem, where his confrontation with religious and political
leaders will come to a climax, where he will be considered an outsider by the
religious establishment, and where he will be stripped, beaten, and left for
dead. Two themes emerge throughout this "journey section", themes
that are helpful for deepening our understanding of what Jesus asks of us when
we say we have faith in him: (1) through Jesus, God is fulfilling and embodying
His promise to redeem Israel, and through Israel the entire world; redeeming
them from rebellion and slavery, from oppression and assaults by the evil one;
and (2) this redemption comes, in part, through the (re)formation of a people
of God, a people who not only know and hear God's word, but who will also do
it, who will put it into practice.
So, in this section of the Gospel, Luke has included and arranged
these particular happenings with Jesus so as to underscore who God is, and that
we have been invited to join in God's mission of redeeming this world by doing
what He calls us to in His word. With this as the backdrop, the stage is set
for a challenging reflection on what it means to respond to God in faith.
Exposition
What must we do to inherit eternal life? It is not
necessarily a question we would ask Jesus today. We might ask him something
like, what must we know and believe, or what must we affirm or give
ascent to? Or, what prayer must we pray? Or perhaps, what worldview must we
hold to?
Luke tells us about a religious scholar, a teacher of the Law, one
who has dedicated his life to correctly understanding what God has revealed to
Israel and how to work that revelation out where the rubber meets the road in
daily life. This religious scholar, shaped by the thought world of the Torah
asks Jesus, "What must I do to inherit eternal life." From his
reading, thinking, and religious formation, he knows that faith without works
is dead; that affirmation without action is an aberration. He knows that to
hear the word of the Lord does not merely mean to know it but to also do it. It
is after all particular practices, those prescribed by the one true God in the
Holy Scriptures, that mark out those who belong to the life of the world to
come. And so this legal expert is not so sure that Jesus has the correct
interpretation of those practices.
We gather this from the way that Luke describes the origin of
their encounter: the religious scholar, this 'lawyer' or 'scribe' as some
English translations render it, "stood up to entrap Jesus" (Luke
10.25). We don't know exactly why the religious scholar is suspicious, but this
question that he asks Jesus has bite to it. "Teacher," (does he say
this scoffingly?) he says, "what must I do to inherit eternal life?"
Throughout the narrative of Luke's Gospel, religious scholars are found
monitoring Jesus' teachings to discern whether they concord with the Bible (or
at least their interpretation of it). The narrative world of Luke also colors
our expectations of religious scholars because they are included in the list of
people who rejected Jesus and worked to have him crucified.
Jesus responds with two of his own questions: What is written
in the Law? And, How do you read it?
The religious scholar is in his sweet spot, he gets to talk about
his knowledge of the Bible! He responds with a concise and perceptive summary
of all that the Law teaches: "You shall love the Lord your God with all
your heart and with all your soul and with all your strength and with all your
mind (Deut 6.5) and your neighbor as yourself (Lev 19.18)."
Mark (12.30) tells us that this is precisely what Jesus answered
when a scribe asked him which commandment was the most important of all. Loving
God with all our being and loving our neighbor, this is our duty to God, our
vocation or calling. (This is God's vision for us; it’s how life is made to
work. It is for this reason that this double command to love God in a total,
all-encompassing way, and out of that to love the neighbor as oneself, has been
regarded by Christians throughout the ages as the one single and basic rule for
the Christian life.)
Unsurprisingly then, Jesus retorts that the religious scholar has
answered correctly. "Do this," Jesus exhorts, "and you will live
(Luke 10.28)."
But Luke tells us that the religious scholar is not done yet. He
has one more qualifying question for Jesus. In fact, Luke tells us that this
man who has dedicated his life to the knowing and teaching God's revelation to
Israel wanted to "justify himself", asking Jesus "And who is my
neighbor?"
It is perhaps illuminating that the scholar did not feel that he
needed clarification on what it means to love God with his whole being. Maybe
he felt as though he had that part down. What he did want to know is who
qualified as a neighbor. Luke doesn't tell us why this question was important
to the religious scholar, but instead only gives us the motive for
asking--"he wanted to justify himself." Perhaps he wanted to know the
boundaries or limits of neighbor love; perhaps he was asking so that he would
know who he did not have to show love to.
Jesus gave him clarification by telling him a story about an
anonymous, label-less man who was going down from Jerusalem to Jericho. On his
journey, this man fell among thugs who stripped him, beat him, and left him for
dead. Luckily (and it seems that this is said with a tinge of sarcasm) for this
man who has been left for dead, a priest was also going down that road. This
priest who knew God's word, served him in the temple, and taught Israel about
what it meant to love God saw the man left naked and half dead...and
passed by on the other side.
Likewise, a Levite, a man who came from the tribe of Israel that
was in charge of helping mediate God's life to God's people for the sake of the
world, came to the place where the naked, beaten, anonymous man languished. He
also saw this man...and passed by on the other side. Apparently for
these two men, an anonymous man, a man whom they did not know, a man with whom
they held no bonds of kinship or friendship, a man who was not in their network
of associations, a man who had nothing to mark him as a neighbor (at least not
in the narrative), whom they happened to stumble upon in the course of their
daily affairs, was not a neighbor that they were obligated to love. For them, he
did not possess the status of neighbor.
The story climaxes with the entrance of a Samaritan. Someone whom
the Jews regarded as an outcast, a non-neighbor, a heretic, and a worshipper of
a false god. The narrative of Luke's Gospel thus far has prepared us to be
suspicious of any encounters with Samaritans (Luke 9.53). This Samaritan came
upon the naked, beaten, half-dead man, and when he saw the destitute
man, he had compassion on him. Rather than pass by on the other side, he went
to him (Luke 10.35), and bound up his wounds with oil and wine. What is
more, he put the battered man on his animal, brought him to an inn and took
care of him to make sure he was healing properly. The next day he gave the
innkeeper what amounted to something like two one hundred-dollar bills,
probably enough to cover three weeks of lodging, and asked him to take care of
the man until he returned.
The Samaritan showed extravagant generosity, risking much more
than was required of him in an effort to care for the man who fell among thugs,
putting his own life in harm's way by taking him to an inn (not a reputable
place in the first century), and by sacrificing his agenda, time, and resources
to assure that the man would recover.
Jesus then asked the religious scholar a question: "Which of
these three, do you suppose, became a neighbor to the man who was beat
up by the thugs (Luke 10.36). The religious scholar, caught in his own trap,
responded, "the one who did mercy to him" (Luke 10.37).
It is important to underscore that with this response, the
religious scholar was evoking a phrase that encapsulated God's call for the
people of Israel--to do, to practice, to demonstrate mercy. For in the Torah,
mercy is not just a feeling of pity; it is rather an action that we engage
in.
"You go, and do likewise," Jesus concluded. (Not
feel or think likewise)
The story ends as a kind of microphone drop. The religious scholar
who sought to entrap Jesus has, with his own words, answered his own question:
to love our neighbors we must become neighbors to others. He has heard this
word afresh; but will he do it? Will he become a disciple of Jesus by doing His
word? We don't know, but in ending the story in this way, Luke confronts us
with the same question especially as we read this story in its larger literary
context. We have heard the word; we know what we are called to do. Will we
do it?
The religious scholar wanted to define what a neighbor was, wanted
to know what the limits of neighborly love was. Jesus responded by explaining
that the ethos of the command to love your neighbor as yourself was not to
focus on who may or may not be one's neighbor, but rather it was to become a
neighbor, to see yourself as a neighbor to others. To say it another way,
Jesus is pointing out that one does not have a neighbor, instead one becomes
a neighbor to those in need.
With this story of the Good Samaritan, Jesus redefined
"neighbor" from being an object to being a subject. The religious
scholar wanted an abstract discussion about what a neighbor is and isn’t; Jesus
turned it into an exhortation to personally engage in acts of mercy to anyone
who is in need. For Jesus, the point of loving one's neighbor is not to figure
out who can be excluded from that love, but rather loving God with all your
being by becoming neighborly to all, even those outside of your kinship
and friendship bonds.
What is more, we exercise this neighbor love "on the
way", in the course of our daily affairs. To love God and neighbor is to
practice faithful presence: to be present enough to see those
who are in need of mercy and to move towards them with our resources in order
to bring healing.
How can we become more faithfully present to those in our daily
affairs? Let me suggest one way:
prayer walks. Intentionally walking about our neighborhood, asking God
to help us see; giving thanks for signs of His work; and praying when you see
signs of people being cut off from God’s life. We will be organizing a prayer
walk for our church neighborhood in the weeks to come: just a half hour of
walking, praying, and seeking God’s will for this place. But I encourage you to
do this in your own neighborhood. Become a neighbor by actively praying for those
who live around you.
But this text leaves us with another questions: How
is the message from Jesus, good news to us, and to the world? And how is it
connected to the gospel that centers our lives?
First, the gospel is the announcement that Jesus
is Lord. The proper response to Jesus is faithful allegiance (faith). Faith in
Jesus, means that we are committed to loyally aligning with King Jesus and His
way of life. This (neighbor love) is what we are made for; and it is one of the
ways in which we join God in what He is doing in this world. Thus, it is good
news in the sense that it is the way in which God has chosen to love the world,
through our participation with Him in doing mercy to those beyond our cliques
and circles of association, our comfort zones.
Second, embedded
in this story is in fact Jesus’ own mission of deliverance and healing. Since
at least the third century, Christian teachers have seen two layers of meaning
in this story. While it is indeed a picture of our duty to God, our proper
response to his love and mercy, it is also a picture of God’s love for the
world, for you and for me. The anonymous man in the story represents all of us
who in Adam (man) have descended from Jerusalem, the place of intimate
fellowship with God, and have fallen into the hands of the powers and
principalities who animate and agitate our present age and seek to strip us and
leave us half dead. God is the outsider, who through Jesus sees our dire
condition; he sees and moves towards us (while others pass by on the other
side); he moves towards us in our shame, and our dying, in our state in which
we are left for dead in order to heal our wounds with his own provisions. (In
fact, he is stripped, beatend, and left for dead so, He participates in our
pain and suffering, in order that we can be healed.) He has extravagantly given
us his resources that we may heal; he has bore us on His cross, and brought us
to the inn, the church, where the First Adam can be healed by the Second Adam.
At this level, the story of the good Samaritan is not only an explicit guide to
loving our neighbor as ourselves but also tacitly and more deeply an insight
into the history of human salvation, as a picture of the gospel itself.
When by the gospel, we receive this kind of care and healing, we become the
kind of people Jesus is calling us to be. As we learn from other teachings and
stories from Jesus (e.g. Luke 19.1-10; Matt 18.21-35; John 15.1-17), when we do
mercy we demonstrate that we have in fact inherited eternal life, because
we exhibit that we share in God's life of mercy.
So, as we seek to understand our Christian
vocation, when we seek to understand what faith looks like on the ground, let's
hold this story of Jesus close to us. Our mission is to share in God's life of
love for the world. This mission is worked out in everyday encounters with
others, where we are called to see and move toward darkness,
death, corruption, violence, and to extravagantly use our resources to bring
healing.
Eucharist
This is what the Eucharist speaks to us each
week. It is not only provision for our own healing, healing that came at the
cost of Jesus’ own suffering and death, but it also casts for us a vision
of the kind of people we are called to be; we have been rescued and healed so
that we can become healers to one another in the inn, and to those who are
lying half dead on the road down from Jerusalem. But part of that healing for
us means that we must wrestle with the ongoing ways in which we fail to love
God with our whole being and love our neighbor as ourselves. We must
acknowledge the ways in which we fail to become a neighbor to those around us;
and as we do, we turn to the Healer to ask his cure.
Benediction
By His wounds you have been healed; you were
straying sheep, but have been returned to the Shepherd and Overseer of your
souls.
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