Luke 10:25-37 · The Parable of the Good Samaritan
Like a Good Neighbor, Jesus Is There
Luke 10:25-37
Sermon
by James Merritt
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Which stranded motorist would be helped the soonest: a pregnant woman, a little old lady, a messy hippie, a smartly dressed career woman, or a scantily dressed sex symbol?

A Florida Space Coast newspaper decided to find out, and ran a test on U. S. Route One with a twenty-two year old actress, Sally Mullins, who played the distressed driver in five different roles:

Career woman: standing by the side of her broken down Pontiac, dressed in a double-breasted suit, holding up a "stop and please help sign" - sixty-two cars passed and a minute and a half before a man pulled over and offered assistance.

Pregnant woman: disguised with about eight months of padding under her blouse, this time more than one hundred cars and two and a half minutes passed by before two paramedics made a U-turn in their ambulance to offer a helping hand.

Little old lady: dressed as a senior citizen, two hundred cars and five minutes passed by before two college students pulled over to help her.

Dirty hippie: dressed in dirty, faded jeans, a loud floral blouse, and a wild blonde wig, three hundred and fifty cars and fifteen minutes passed by, and still nobody stopped, in fact, no one even slowed down.

Mini-skirted sex symbol: dressed in a tight fitting mini-skirt, she no sooner had gotten out of her car until in nine seconds flat, a young man pulled behind her to help her.

Which one of those people would you have helped the quickest? The Lord Jesus told a story about a Good Samaritan that not only relates to this newspaper story, but also had great implications for a person's relationship with God.

Now not everybody understands the real meaning of this story. A little boy returned home from Sunday School, and his mother asked him what lesson the teacher taught that day. He said,
"It was about two preachers who saw a man in a ditch, but they didn't stop because he had already been robbed."

When you read the entire context of this story, there is a great truth about how we should relate both to our fellowman and to the God who made us.

I. A Lawyer Seeking Life

"And behold, a certain lawyer stood up and tested Him, saying, ‘Teacher, what shall I do to inherit eternal life?'" (v.25) Now this lawyer was not a legal expert as we think of lawyers today. Rather his expertise was in the law of the Old Testament. He was, in essence, a religious scholar. There is a debate as to whether or not this lawyer was really sincere, since it says in v.25 he was "testing" the Lord Jesus. But nevertheless, he did ask the right question. What he was saying in effect, "How can I know for sure that when I die I am going to heaven?" I call that life's greatest question.

Interestingly, Jesus answers his question with a question. "He said to him, ‘What is written in the law? What is your reading of it?'" Jesus tells this man then what I am telling you now. The only place to find not only the answers of earthly life, but the solution for eternal life, is in the Word of God.

This lawyer replies to Jesus' question with a perfect answer. "So he answered and said, ‘You shall love the Lord your God with all your heart, with all your soul, with all your strength, and with all your mind,' and ‘your neighbor as yourself.' And He said to him, ‘You have answered rightly; do this and you will live.'" (vv. 27-28) Had you seen that lawyer you would not have been surprised that he gave this answer.

Attached to the center of his forehead would have been a small black calfskin box called a phylactery. In that phylactery would have been copies of Deuteronomy 6:4-5, and Leviticus 19:18, which are the very verses this lawyer had quoted. For a moment, I am sure there was smug satisfaction on this man's face when he realized he had given Jesus the right answer.

But this lawyer soon realized that he had dug his own pit and fallen into it. There were two problems with his response. First of all, he had the law in his head, but he did not have the Lord in his heart. His question was the right question, but it was also a confusing question. Because he asked how he could inherit eternal life. An inheritance is not based on what you do, it is based on who you are.

Furthermore, Jesus correctly said that in order to have eternal life, you must love God totally and perfectly. That means you must love God emotionally ("with all your heart"), psychologically ("with all your soul"), willfully ("with all your strength"), and intellectually ("with all your mind").

Now don't think that Jesus was being shipwrecked on the rocks of legalism. He was not saying that you are saved by what you do. Nobody loves everybody, especially God, all of the time, with all of their heart. If you go one second without loving God perfectly, you've broken the first commandment, and if you put yourself ahead of someone else one time, you have broken the second commandment.

Now the lawyer must have realized the trap he had set for himself because Luke tells us in v.29: "But he, wanting to justify himself, said to Jesus, ‘And who is my neighbor?'" He was wanting to justify himself. This is a day and age of pluralism in which people are now saying that one religion is just as good as another; that there is not just one way to God, that every way to God is all right if you are sincere about it. So people try to justify themselves before God in their own way. Well, I have news for you. You will never get yourself justified until you quit trying to justify yourself.

Nevertheless, this lawyer has now asked a second question, and Jesus proceeds to answer that question in a way that was both disturbing and shocking.

II. A Lord Giving Light

In response to the question "Who is my neighbor?" Jesus answers with one of his favorite methods by telling a story. "Then Jesus answered and said: ‘A certain man went down from Jerusalem to Jericho, and fell among thieves, who stripped him of his clothing, wounded him, and departed, leaving him half dead.'" (v.30) Jerusalem is seventeen miles southwest of Jericho. It is set on a hill twenty-seven hundred feet above sea level. The Jericho road is a seventeen mile narrow dangerous winding strip that is bordered by steep cliffs on one side, and barren hills on the other side.

From Jerusalem to Jericho is a drop of 3,500 feet. That is why Jesus talks about the man who "went down from Jerusalem to Jericho." This road was so dangerous in those days, it was called "the way of blood."

Some Bible scholars estimate there were at least 12,000 "thieves" in that Judean wilderness surrounding Jerusalem. These thugs roamed the countryside like packs of wild dogs attacking innocent victims.

So here was a man who had been victimized by some thieves, not only robbed, but beaten and left for dead. With that background, Jesus introduces in this story three characters: (1) the thieves, (2) the priest and the Levite, (3) the Good Samaritan. These three characters represent the three types of people in the world today.

a. The Taker

The thieves represent those people who have this attitude: What is yours is mine I'll take it. The world is full of all kinds of thieves today. The robber, who takes money, is a thief. The rapist, who takes sex, is a thief. The adulterer, who steals another man's wife, is a thief. Another thief that we don't talk about much is the crooked businessman, who sees customers as dollar signs rather than human beings.

Let me give you this definition of a thief. God has given us things to use and people to love. But when you start loving things and using people, you become a thief.

Robert Raines, once prayed this prayer that sums up the philosophy of a thief:

Lord, I size up other people
in terms of what they can do for me;
how they can further my program,
feed my ego,
satisfy my needs,
give me strategic advantage.
I exploit people
ostensibly for your sake, but really for
my own sake.
Lord, I turn to you
to get the inside track
And obtain special favors,
Your direction for my schemes,
Your power for my projects,
Your sanction for my ambitions,
Your blank checks for whatever I want.

When you try to manipulate people, and God, and use them for your own selfish schemes, you are a thief.

b. The Keeper

"Now by change a certain priest came down that road. And when he saw him, he passed by on the other side. Likewise a Levite, when he arrived at the place, came and looked, and passed by on the other side." (vv. 31-32) Now the priest and the Levite represent the keeper. His attitude is this: What is mine is mine I'll keep it.

Interestingly enough, the two people that you would have thought would have stopped to help this man would have been the priest and the Levite. They were the religious establishment. The priest represented the man in the pulpit; the Levite represented the man in the pew. Levites were assistants to the priests. All priests were Levites, but not all Levites were priests.

Jesus illustrates by their action, their refusal to get involved, that they were no better off than the thieves. As a matter of fact, in a real sense they, too, were thieves because you can be a thief in two ways: A thief can take something that does not belong to him, or keep something that belongs to someone else. Prov. 3:27 says, "Do not withhold good from those to whom it is due, when it is in the power of your hand to do so." James also said in James 4:17, "Therefore, to him who knows to do good and does not do it, to him it is sin."

I am reminded of the story I heard about a preacher who went into a big city for the first time in his life. He had never seen the degradation, the drunkenness, the down-and-out, just littering the sidewalks.

He and some friends were going to a restaurant, and he passed by the front of a department store that was closed, and up in the doorway of that store was an old drunk. He had passed out, the sand had blown up around him, he was covered with newspapers and just lying there in his own filth. This preacher said, "I couldn't believe it. People just walked past this man without even looking at him. Nobody would go over to him, nobody helped him. They were just so cruel, so callous. I just couldn't believe it."

Then the preacher said, "My friends and I went to lunch, came back, and can you believe it? That drunk was still there and still no one had helped him."

That man's religion had some-thing in common with the priest and the Levites; straight as a gun barrel and just as empty.

I'm sure that these religious hypocrites had all kinds of excuses why they didn't help this man. They thought to themselves, "These robbers might still be lurking, and I might get robbed;" "I might be accused of robbing him myself;" "If he dies, I might get sued." But the Lord Jesus is going to illustrate there is never a good excuse to excuse yourself from doing good.

The most selfish people in the world are keepers. You know who the keepers are today? People who are always demanding their rights, but never talking about their responsibilities. Someone once asked the great Russian Christian, Alexander Solzhenitsyn, "Do we have a single main underlying moral ill that you can identify?" He answered:

Besides cowardice, selfishness. We hear a constant clamor for rights, rights, always rights, but so very little about responsibility, and we have forgotten God.[1]

These two men exercised their legal right to pass this man by, and forgot God in the process.

c. The Giver

But then Jesus told about one other figure. When he did, He not only poured it on, He rubbed it in. Because everybody expected the third person to be a Pharisee, or perhaps a Sadducee, but definitely an Israelite. But no, Jesus froze everybody in their tracks, and you could have heard a giant sucking sound all the way down to Egypt, as people gasped as they heard him say: "But a certain Samaritan, as he journeyed, came where he was. And when he saw him, he had compassion on him.
(v.33)

Now you need to understand that where today we talk about "the Good Samaritan," two thousand years ago the Jew felt that the only good Samaritan was a dead Samaritan. Jews hated the Samaritans. Why?

Because when the Northern Kingdom of Israel was defeated, many Jews were dragged off into exile to Babylon. But those Jews who remained, intermarried with the Assyrians, which was an abomination in the sight of the Jews.

They even built their own temple on Mount Gerizim and refused to worship in Jerusalem. One of the greatest insults you could give to a person that day would be to call him a Samaritan. That's why the Pharisees said to Jesus in John 8:48, "Do we not say rightly that You are a Samaritan and have a demon?"

Every morning, in his daily prayer, a Pharisee would go to the temple and thank God he had not been born a woman, a Gentile, or a Samaritan. Many Pharisees prayed that the Samaritans would be excluded from the resurrection. Even a Gentile could become a Jewish proselyte, but not a Samaritan.

The hatred was so great that in order to avoid contact with Samaritans, when traveling from Judah to Galilee, or vice versa, instead of simply going north or south and traveling through Samaria, a Jew would proceed eastward across the Jordan river, and then go north or south until they had passed Samaria, and then re-cross the Jordan river to go to their destination. So it was that Jesus, in an ironic twist, makes the hero of this story a Samaritan. Now why did He do that?

III. A Lesson Teaching Love

Jesus was illustrating to this lawyer that he had asked the wrong question. The question is not "Who is my neighbor?" The question is, "Am I a good neighbor?" Put yourself in this story and ask yourself this question: Which would you have been: the thief, the priest and the Levite, or the Good Samaritan?

I heard about a Sunday School teacher who was telling her class the story of The Good Samaritan. He said, "Now if you saw a person lying in a ditch, beaten up, lying in his own blood, his teeth knocked out, his scalp hanging from his head, what would you do?"

A thoughtful little girl broke the silence and said, "I think I would throw up."

Well, the Lord Jesus uses the Samaritan to teach three lessons about love that this lawyer would never forget.

a. Love Is Not Limited by Legalism

There was no law that said this Samaritan had to stop and help, what was certainly in the story, a Jew. There are those who say you cannot legislate morality. I don't agree with that, but you certainly cannot legislate mercy. This Samaritan did what he did not because he had to, but because he wanted to.

The last three words of v.33 tell us what set this Samaritan apart "he had compassion." What made this Samaritan so special was not the color of his skin, but the compassion in his heart. A law could not make the Samaritan stop, but love could.

I am amused by these people I talk to occasionally who will let me know in a heart beat that they don't have to read their Bible, pray, witness, or go to church, to have a relationship with God. That is true, but if you are saved, and you really love God, you will want to do every one of those things and a whole lot more. Because love is not limited by legalism.

b. Love Is Not Restricted By Religion

It didn't matter to this Samaritan whether or not this was a Jew or a Gentile or another Samaritan. He just knew this was a man who needed help.

I just got a letter from a man this past week who is leaving our church. One of the reasons he gave that he was leaving was because of our "mixing choirs." In other words, he was upset because we had a choir from a church of another denomination come and sing with our choir. I want to tell you, that is nothing less than spiritual bigotry.

I want to make something plain. I am a Baptist, and proud of it, but I can have more fellowship with a conservative Pentecostal who has some fire in his religion, and a burning love for Jesus, than with a liberal Baptist who is as cold as ice and as dead as a corpse. I am not going to let my love be restricted by religion.

I believe the Muslim is lost and going to hell. I believe the Buddhist is lost and going to hell. I believe the Hindu is lost and going to hell. But I am going to love them no matter what.

c. Love Is Not Constrained By Cost

Notice what the Samaritan did for this man. "And went to him and bandaged his wounds, pouring on oil and wine; and he set him on his own animal, brought him to an inn, and took care of him. On the next day, when he departed, he took out two denarii, gave them to the innkeeper, and said to him, ‘Take care of him; and whatever more you spend, when I come again, I will repay you.'" (vv. 34-35)

He probably tore his own robe to make the bandages. He took oil and wine from his own supplies to use as medicine. Then, took him to an inn and paid for his upkeep. Now two denarii may not sound like a lot to you. In fact, in today's money it would only be about forty cents. But in those days it would have been two days wages for the common laborer.

The point is, to help this man cost him time and cost him money. But love is not constrained by cost.

You know what I have learned about the average Christian? The average Christian loves Jesus, but his love stops at his calendar and at his checkbook. The average Christian will tell you how much he loves Jesus, and he will tell you he is saved, but don't impose on his time and don't ever ask him to give any money.

Why have I titled this message "Like a Good Neighbor Jesus is There?"

Because, really and truly, Jesus is the Good Samaritan. You see, there was a time we were all beaten and left for dead by the devil and sin. But Jesus came to us and poured the oil of the Holy Spirit into our hearts and gave us the wine of the joy of eternal life. I want to tell you that when you do for other people, whether physically or spiritually, what the Good Samaritan did for this man, you are never more like the Lord Jesus Christ.

Jesus asked one last question: "So which of these three do you think was neighbor to him who fell among the thieves?" (v.36) I'm sure the answer almost gagged the lawyer. "And he said, ‘He who showed mercy on him.' Then Jesus said to him, ‘Go and do likewise.'" (v.37) Are you a good neighbor?

I read a modern parable of the Good Samaritan that went like this:

A certain woman went down from Washington to Richmond and ran over a spike, which punctured her tire and left her stranded by the side of the road. After raising the hood of her car and tying a scarf to her radio antenna, she locked the door handles and sat in the car praying for the Lord to send help!

By chance, there came a limousine that way with a bumper sticker that read: "Smile, God loves you!" When the occupant saw the stranded woman, they passed by in the far lane without smiling.

Likewise, there came a sports car with a CB Radio and a bumper sticker saying, "Honk, if you love Jesus!" The man who was driving passed by in the far lane without honking, and without using his CB to tell the Highway Patrol about the woman's dilemma.

But a certain working man, as he traveled to his job, came to the spot where the woman was, and when he saw her raised hood, white scarf, and flat tire, he had compassion on her.

He stopped his old beat-up pickup which had no bumper sticker and crossed a four-lane highway and offered to change the tire. The woman opened the door and gave him the key to the trunk, the man took out the spare tire, jacked up the car, removed the flat tire and replaced it with a spare.

When he had finished, the woman tried to pay him. He refused the money saying, "If my wife were stranded on the highway with a flat tire, I would want some Good Samaritan to stop and help her out.

He returned to his bumper-stickerless truck, smiled, honked at her, and rode his way.

Which of these three was neighbor unto her that had a flat tire?

Like a good neighbor, Jesus is there, and you will be too if you are like Jesus. I read a story one time about a man who was working in a shoe store in Nova Scotia. He noticed a barefoot little boy outside the baker shop next-door to the shoe store. He was trying to keep warm by standing on a grate blowing hot air outside the bakery. The man watching was uncertain about what to do about the little boy, when a middle-aged lady came by.

She spoke to the child and then brought him into the shoe store and bought shoes and socks for him. The child said to the lady, "Are you God's wife?" "No son, I am just one of His children."

He nodded his head and said, "Well, I knew you must be kin to Him somehow." Friend, when you get the Lord in your heart, you'll get love in your heart. Just like Jesus, you'll be a good neighbor.


[1] Cited by Charles R. Swindoll, Living on the Ragged Edge, (Waco: Word Books, 1985), 75.

ChristianGlobe Networks, Inc., Collected Sermons, by James Merritt