Luke 10:25-37 · The Parable of the Good Samaritan
The Parable Of The Kindly Innkeeper
Luke 10:25-37
Sermon
by King Duncan
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Peter Godwin was a bit of an oddity in the African village where he grew up. Though a British citizen, Peter and his family had moved to Rhodesia when he was just a child. His mother, a missionary doctor, was assigned to start a vaccination program. Under her supervision thousands of people were inoculated against tuberculosis, smallpox, and other diseases. For some diseases, a shot was needed, but for others the vaccination was much more pleasant. It only involved putting a small dose of medicine on a sugar cube and feeding the cube to the patient. Little Peter was often enlisted to carry the tray of sugar cubes and to inspect children's mouths to make sure they had fully swallowed the cube.

In the 1970s, civil war in Rhodesia forced the Godwin family to return to England, where a nowgrown Peter found work as a journalist. The London Sunday Times sent Peter back to South Africa in 1986 to cover the clash between the Marxist government and armed rebels. While there, Peter had a great urge to slip into Mozambique, an area officially closed to foreign journalists. He managed to make it to Mozambique, but he was captured by a band of heavily armed rebels. The rebels forced Peter to return with them to their base camp. It was a twoday hike, during which Peter was often kicked or hit by his captors. When they arrived at the camp, Peter was hauled before the base commander. By chance, he heard the commander address his manservant in a dialect he recognized from his childhood in Rhodesia. Peter began speaking this language to the astonished commander, who demanded to know where Peter had learned the language. Peter explained a little about his childhood in Africa. When Peter mentioned his family name was Godwin, the commander's whole manner changed. The big man rolled up his shirt sleeve to expose a scar, the same kind of scar that vaccination shots usually leave. Peter's mother had vaccinated this man when he was just a child. And the commander had received a medicinecoated sugar cube from Peter's own hand. Only moments before, Peter Godwin had been treated like an enemy by the rebels; now he was a welcome guest among them. They returned him safely to the area where he had been captured, and even posed for a picture with Peter before they left. (1) It's nice, isn't it? when good works are rewarded.

Once there was a 14yearold girl in Cleveland, Ohio who got so angry with her parents that she ran away to New York City. Cold, hungry and friendless, she was shivering on a street corner when a cab pulled up. As some partygoers got out, a man in the group noticed the girl and, asking if she needed help, insisted that she join them for dinner in a nearby restaurant.

After hearing her story, the man took the teenager to the train station and bought her a ticket back to Cleveland. "Whatever your desire," he told her, "if you want it enough, you can make it happen." Then he gave her $20 and his address and telephone number. If she ever needed anything, she was to call him. The teenager returned to her family. Although she often thought of the man, she could not find the paper with his name and telephone number.

After high school this teenager attended college and medical school, and became a surgeon. She married another doctor. Together they had two children.

Soon her own daughter was 14 and asking for some vintage clothes and props for a school program. As mother and daughter searched trunks of old school things, the lost paper fell out of a diary. It took months of inquiries but the mother finally located her benefactor.

Twentyfive years after the two first met a kindly man named Ralph Burke received a letter and a check for $300. The woman asked that he accept it with the love and spirit in which it was sent. The idea, she said, wasn't to repay a "kindness that has no price"; rather, she hoped he would come meet her family. Accepting the invitation, Burke was welcomed like a longlost uncle. Today he insists that one should perform those "simple acts of kindness" whenever one can. "Sometime, some way," Burke says, "they always come back to you." (2)

YES, IT'S NICE WHEN GOOD WORKS ARE REWARDED. IT'S EVEN NICER WHEN NO REWARD IS ANTICIPATED. A certain man was going down from Jerusalem to Jericho when he fell among robbers, who stripped him and beat him, and left him for dead.

You know the story as well as I. It was a seventeenmile journey between Jerusalem and Jericho and muggings were not unknown. And thus, an unfortunate man lay beside the road in desperate straits. A priest passed by and a Levite. The fact that they were Jewish religious leaders is incidental. Jesus could just have easily said a Protestant pastor and a Roman Catholic priest passed by. Insensitivity knows no race or creed. Regardless of the religious affiliation, they should have known better. That they were leaders in their faith makes the story even more disturbing.

That the hero of the story was a Samaritan was even more shocking to Jesus' listeners. Relations between the Jews and the Samaritans were so strained that not only was it surprising that the Samaritan would offer assistance, it was equally as surprising that the Jewish man in the ditch WOULD ACCEPT the help. There was a saying in those days, "The Jew who accepts help from a Samaritan delays the coming of the kingdom." (3)

Even more surprising is the role of the innkeeper. Innkeepers obviously played a different role in Jesus' day than they do in ours. Can you imagine someone bringing a beatenup man to the local Holiday Inn and saying to the manager, "This poor fellow is going to need some looking after. You take care of it and I'll reimburse you when I return"? In fact, maybe we should call this parable "the parable of the kindly innkeeper" rather than the parable of the Good Samaritan.

I read of a woman named Marjorie who resents jokes about the priest and the Levite who passed by on the other side. They remind her of the times, because of understaffing at the hospital where she worked, when she ignored one patient in order to tend to another. Marjorie feels that honoring the compassion of the Samaritan does not require attacking the priest and the Levite.

Marjorie says she wants to focus on the Innkeeper. The victim of the mugging would need several weeks to recover, for the text describes him as half dead. "It is one thing to deliver emergency care," says Marjorie, "but it's another to provide longterm care the tedium of lifting a spoon to someone else's lips, the drudgery of emptying the bed pan, the burden of turning the body and changing the dressings, the exhaustion of waking in the night to the moaning of the victim who relives the violence in a nightmare." All this is what the innkeeper did. And he did it in trust that the Samaritan would return and pay him. (4) In fact, there is a level of trust and humanity throughout this story that is rarer today than it was back then. The Good Samaritan. The kindly innkeeper.

THIS STORY CALLS US TO RENEW OUR SENSITIVITY TO THE NEEDS OF THE PEOPLE WE ENCOUNTER. This story is a call to welldoing. This is the kind of story we use to wash out our brain. It reminds us that kindness and decency are possible in the world.

When Edgar Guest, the American poet and writer, was a young man, his first child died. Writes Guest: "There came a tragic night when our first baby was taken from us. I was lonely and defeated. There didn't seem to be anything in life ahead of me that mattered very much. I had to go to my neighbor's drugstore the next morning for something, and he motioned for me to step behind the counter with him. I followed him into his little office at the back of the store. He put both hands on my shoulders and said, ˜Eddie, I can't really express what I want to say, the sympathy I have in my heart for you. All I can say is that I'm sorry, and I want you to know that if you need anything at all, come to me. What is mine is yours.'"

Years later Edgar Guest reminisced upon that incident. He said, "Just a neighbor across the way a passing acquaintance. Jim Potter [the druggist] may long since have forgotten that moment when he gave me his hand and his sympathy, but I shall never forget it never in all my life. To me it stands out like the silhouette of a lonely tree against a crimson sunset." (5)

KINDNESS AND DECENCY ARE POSSIBLE IN OUR WORLD. That is a truth of which we need to be reminded. IN FACT, THEY ARE ESSENTIAL INGREDIENTS IN WHAT IT MEANS TO BE A FOLLOWER OF JESUS. Why is this so? Consider.

There was a classic experiment performed years ago. An unsuspecting person was walking by an alley when from the darkness someone yelled for help a woman who said she was being raped. Nearby were two other people who were part of the experiment. As instructed, they ignored the woman's cries for help and kept walking.

The unsuspecting passerby didn't know whether to respond to the pleas or not, but when he saw the other two people act as if nothing was wrong, he decided that the cries for help were insignificant, and he ignored them also.

This study was repeated many times with generally the same result. These studies led psychologists to conclude that our response to another person's plight is often determined by how other people respond. This is our cue about whether the situation merits our involvement. In other words, THE MOST IMPORTANT PERSON IN ANY SITUATION IN WHICH COMPASSION AND COURAGE IS INVOLVED IS THE FIRST PERSON TO ACT. After one person acts, then others are prone to respond as well but someone needs to step out from the crowd and go first. (6) This is what Jesus meant when he referred to us as a light set on a candlestick. God has planted us in the world to set an example of both kindness and decency. After people see our willingness to get involved, then they will get involved too. Not only do we respond to human need out of our neighborly concern, but also as our way of witnessing to God in the world. There is a man on a cross who says to us, "What I did for you, you are to do for others." This is what following Jesus is all about.

Our text for the day comes in response to the question of a lawyer, "Teacher, what must I do to inherit eternal life?" "What does the law say?" Jesus asks. The lawyer replied, "You must 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 you must love your neighbor just as much as you love yourself."

The priest and Levite loved God. We don't doubt that. They were probably returning from doing their religious duties at the temple in Jerusalem. Doing your religious duties is not enough. Our faith is about loving God, but it is also about loving our neighbor. It is about doing good with no expectation of a reward. It is about following the example of a Good Samaritan and a kindly innkeeper. It is about acting with kindness and decency. You know that, of course. And I know that, but we need to be reminded. We need to renew our sensitivity to the needs of the people we encounter. We need to be reminded that kindness and decency are possible in our world. In fact, they are an essential ingredient in what it means to be a follower of Jesus.


1. Peter Godwin, "A Good Deed Comes Round," from Mukiwa: A White Boy in Africa. Cited in Reader's Digest, January 1998, p. 135-138.

2. Dorothy Willman, "A Kindness Beyond Price," Claremore, Oklahoma, Daily Program. Cited in "Heroes for Today," Reader's Digest, April 1996, pp. 183-184.

3. Eugene L. Lowry, How to Preach a Parable (Nashville: Abingdon Press, 1990).

4. Elaine M. Ward, Once Upon a Parable... (Educational Ministries, Inc., 1994), p.

5. Jack R. Van Ens. Arvada, Colorado. Leadership, Vol. 8, #4.

6. Dr. Robert Cialdini, Influence (New York: William Morrow and Company, Inc., 1984).

Dynamic Preaching, Collected Sermons, by King Duncan