Luke 10:25-37 · The Parable of the Good Samaritan
Do This And Live!
Luke 10:25-37
Sermon
by King Duncan
Loading...

Many of us are afraid of dogs. It is a common fear. The immortal scientist Louis Pasteur was far more frightened of dogs than most people. Even a distant bark would terrify him. In his mind he could still see a mad wolf which raged through his boyhood village bringing agony and death to many of his neighbors. "I have always been haunted by the cries of those victims," he said time and again. Yet in 1882, past the age of 60, Pasteur gave up all his other studies in an intense search for a cure for rabies.

For three long years, in spite of his deepseated fears, he risked his life living with mad dogs. At last he came through with a vaccine to cure the victims of rabies. On a July night in 1885 he tried the first injection on a little boy whose life seemed doomed. The boy lived. The remembered agony of his neighbors spurred Louis Pasteur to find a cure for this dread disease. (1)

Let ™s move now from the sublime to the ridiculous. Some of you are fans of America ™s best known fat cat, GARFIELD. In a recent Garfield cartoon, Garfield, seated in a comfortable chair, sees his friend Odie at the window peering in eagerly. Garfield says to himself, "Poor Odie. Locked outside in the cold. I just can ™t bear to see him like this. I gotta do something." At this point Garfield gets up from his chair and closes the curtains!

Two responses to need. Louis Pasteur sought a cure. Garfield closed his curtains.

A lawyer put Jesus to the test with this question: "What shall I do to inherit eternal life?" Jesus turned the question back to the lawyer. "What is written in the law? How do you read it?" The lawyer answered, "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, and your neighbor as yourself." Jesus said to him, "You have answered right; DO THIS AND LIVE."

There it is. The simplest formula for the good life ever given and from the lips of the Master himself. LOVE GOD AND LOVE YOUR NEIGHBOR AND YOU WILL LIVE!

Doctors know it is true. Love for God and one ™s neighbor is the healthiest thing you can do for yourself. Time after time it has been proven. Men and women who keep to themselves, even those in good physical health, are more likely to die prematurely than are those whose lives are linked to others. Even more impressive are studies that show we benefit physically and emotionally from helping those less fortunate than ourselves. Dr. Hans Selye, an authority on stress, calls this kind of service to others "selfserving altruism" because the pleasure one receives from such an activity often adds more to the inner quality of the helper than it does the person who is helped.

It reminds me of a story Charles L. Allen once told of a man who went in search of a flower called hearts ease. Upon every road he took, however, he found an obstacle blocking his progress. That obstacle was his brother ™s burden. At last in desperation he decided to lift that unwelcome obstacle, because he could continue his search in no other way. Then to his utter amazement, he found the lovely flower of hearts ease blooming under the burden he lifted. There is the great secret to life. Help others and ultimately we help ourselves. Do this and live!

Surely everyone in this room is aware of how rewarding it is to help someone who cannot help themselves. We know how much joy we have received when we have gone out of our way to help someone in need. Why then don ™t we live out our love for God and for our neighbor on a daily basis? That is the question. Why don ™t we do it?

IS IT NOT TRUE THAT THERE IS SOMETHING WITHIN US THAT REBELS AGAINST DOING THE VERY THING THAT WOULD BRING US THE MOST JOY? That is a story as old as the Garden of Eden. Even when we know the key to life we resist it.

Anthony Campolo tells about a young woman who made a commitment of her life to Christ but still found depressing and boring. She went to a psychotherapist for help, but after several sessions with him, felt that the effort was futile. Then one day she came into her therapist ™s office with her face radiant with excitement. "I ™ve had the most wonderful day," she said. "This morning I could not get my car started, so I called the pastor and asked him if he could drive me to my appointment with you. He said he would, but on the way he had to stop by the hospital and make a few calls. I went with him and while I was in the hospital I visited some elderly people in one of the wards. I read from the Bible and prayed with them. By the time the morning was over, I was higher than a kite. I haven ™t felt this good in years."

The psychotherapist quickly responded, "Now we know how to make you happy! Our problem is solved! Now we know how to keep you out of the doldrums!" Much to his surprise, the young woman answered, "You don ™t expect me to do this sort of thing every day, do you?" (2)

She knew the solution to her problems. She knew how much satisfaction she received from ministering to others, but still she resisted. Her story is our story, is it not?

There is a respectable lawyer in Albert Camus ™ novel, THE FALL. He is walking in the streets of Amsterdam one night and hears a cry. A woman has fallen into the canal and is crying for help. Then the thoughts come rushing through his mind. Of course he must help, but...a respected lawyer getting involved in this way? What would the implications be? ....what about the personal danger? After all, who knows what has been going on? By the time he has thought it through, it is too late. She has drowned. He moves on, making all kinds of excuses to justify his failure to act. Camus writes, "He did not answer the cry for help. That is the man he was." (3)

We would have done better, we tell ourselves, and yet all around us are people in need. Not just physical needs. Emotional needs can be more devastating than physical needs. The most serious disease in America today according to many experts is loneliness. Many of us could hear cries for help right in our own neighborhood, if we would listen. Or our own families. Why do we not listen? "Do this and live," said Jesus.

SOME PEOPLE DO LISTEN. Recently I read about a young man named Dan Quisenberry, ace relief pitcher of the world champion Kansas City Royals. Known for his "saves"that it, the victories he has preserved for his teamQuisenberry gives thanks to his Savior, Jesus Christ.

Quisenberry did not grow up in a Christian home but was baptized the same day he made his first professional baseball appearance for a minor league club at Waterloo, Iowa, in 1975.

He took a course in Jeremiah, an experience that directed his attention as a Christian toward issues of poverty, world hunger, and human need. "Following Christ is more than words like `God loves me ™" He says, "We have a responsibility to feed the poor, to help set the oppressed free, to seek justice for all people."

He has set up a `Quisenberry Relief Fund. ™ Through this he donates $200 for each win or save he chalks up on the playing field, to Harvesters, a community food bank in Kansas City. (4)

Who benefits the most from Quisenberry ™s Christian conscience? Probably Dan Quisenberry himself. "Do this and you shall live!" To love is to live. Some people have discovered this lifegiving principle of doing for others.

BUT ONE THING MORE NEEDS TO BE SAID. WE LOVE OUR NEIGHBOR BECAUSE CHRIST FIRST LOVED US. The lawyer who asked Jesus about the great commandment wanted clarification. "And who is my neighbor?" he asked. At this point Jesus told him a parablea parable all of us know by heartthe parable of the Good Samaritan. Each of us at some time or another has identified with the priest or the Levite who passed by on the other side or perhaps in our better moments with the Samaritan himself who minstered to the man who had been beaten and robbed. But we will never have the power to be the loving man or woman God means for us to be until we identify with the man who is lying bruised and beaten beside the road and have discovered that it is Christ himself who has been the Samaritan binding up our broken hearts and lives.

V.P. MENON was a significant political figure in India during its struggle for independence from Britain after World War II.

Menon had a splendid reputation for personal charity. His daughter explained the background of this trait after he died. When Menon arrived in Delhi to seek a job in governent, all his possessions, including his money and I.D., were stolen at the railroad station. He would have to return home on foot, defeated. In desperation he turned to an elderly Sikh, explained his troubles, and asked for a temporary loan of fifteen rupees to tide him over until he could get a job. The Sikh gave him the money. When Menon asked for his address so that he could repay the man, the Sikh said that Menon owed the debt not to him but to any stranger who came to him in need, as long as he lived. The help came from a stranger and was to be repaid to a stranger.

Menon never forgot that debt. His daughter said that the day before Menon died, a beggar came to the family home in Bangalore asking for help to buy new sandals, for his feet were covered with sores. Menon asked his daughter to take fifteen rupees out of his wallet to give to the man. It was Menon ™s last conscious act. Menon ministered to strangers because a stranger had ministered to him. (5)

You see, we get it all backwards. We say, I will love my neighbor if I feel there is a chance he will love me back. I will love my neighbor if he is worthy of that love. I will love my neighbor after he shows some concern for me. What we fail to see is that while WE were unworthy Christ died for us. While WE were unloving and unloveable he gave himself in our behalf. We already owe a tremendous debta debt that can only be repaid by finding others who are also unworthy and unloving and perhaps unloveable and passing on to them what we have received.

The great preacher Rev. Dr. W.E. Sangster was once asked what impressed him the most on his extensive world travels. Dr. Sangster replied that the greatest impression was that he had not seen one single Atheist ™s Home for Orphan children, or any example of an Agnostic Hospital for the Poor and Indigent. On the other hand, in countless countries and unexpected places, he encountered Christians reaching out with comfort and encouragement through health and feeding programs.

Why have Christians been historically so charitable, so caring? It is because once we were lying beside the road broken and bleeding and nailscarred hands reached down to us and ministered to us in our need. Now we seek to do the same for others. Besides, we have found that such a concern for others is the source of unlimited joy. Our Master himself put it like this: "Do this and live!"


1. Alex Osborn, L.H.D., YOUR CREATIVE POWER, (New York: N.Y.: DellPublishing Co., Inc., 1948).

2. Anthony Campolo, SEVEN DEADLY SINS, (Wheaton, Illinois: Victor Books,1987).

3. Sunday Sermons

4. David Shelly, "A Master of Saves," PRESBYTERIAN SURVEY, July/August, 1986.

5. Robert A. Fulgham, ALL I REALLY NEED TO KNOW I LEARNED INKINDERGARTEN, (New York: Villard Books, 1988).

Dynamic Preaching, Collected Sermons, by King Duncan