Luke 10:25-37 · The Parable of the Good Samaritan
The Two Ultimate Questions of Life
Luke 10:25-37
Sermon
by King Duncan
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Someone has made a list of what she calls “The World’s Worse Questions.” Are you ready for these?

  • Will you promise not to get mad it I ask you something?
  • Do you have any statistics to back up that statement?
  • You don’t honestly expect me to believe that, do you?
  • Haven’t you any sense of humor?
  • You don’t remember me, do you?
  • Have I kept you waiting?
  • NOW what’s the matter?
  • You asleep?
  • So what?
  • WHEN are you going TO GROW UP? (1) The World’s worst questions.

A friend once asked Isaac Isidor Rabi, a Nobel prize winner in science, how he became a scientist.

Rabi replied that every day after school his mother would talk to him about his school day. She wasn’t so much interested in what he had learned that day, but she always inquired, “Did you ask a good question today?”

“Asking good questions,” Rabi said, “made me become a scientist.” (2)

Another Nobel winner said this: “You can tell whether a person is clever by his answers. You can tell whether a person is wise by his questions.”

And the philosopher Voltaire said: “Judge a person by his questions rather than by his answers.”

On one occasion an expert in the law stood up to test Jesus. “Teacher,” he asked, “what must I do to inherit eternal life?” If we were to judge this expert in the law by his question, we would be deceived. He was not seeking to discover some profound secret about life. He was not even trying to discover the way to God. His purpose was to test Jesus, to trip him up, to lead Jesus to discredit himself by giving some unorthodox answer that would arouse the people against him. Still, Jesus used this experience to open the door of life for all who would enter.

Actually the expert in the law asked Jesus two questions. Let’s deal with the first question: “Teacher,” he asked, “what must I do to inherit eternal life?”

Note, first of all, that the lawyer’s question stressed doing something. “What shall I DO to inherit eternal life?” What good action could he take to insure that God would accept him? It is evident that he had no concept of the part that God’s love and grace played in the process of salvation. He simply wanted to know if there was some act he could perform that would guarantee that he would be accepted behind the pearly gates.

He’s no different from many of us. We, too, want to make sure we meet the minimum standards. Believe in Jesus? Check. Been baptized? Check. Show up in worship at least on Christmas and Easter? Check. Nothing profound here the man just wants to make certain all the bases are covered. But note how cleverly Jesus leads the conversation to open the man’s eyes to new realities.

First, he shows this lawyer that he already knows everything he needs to know to find life. He’s an expert in the law. Everything he needs is contained in the Law of Moses.

“What is written in the Law?” Jesus replied to him. “How do you read it?”

Everywhere he went this expert in the law carried with him a little leather box called a phylactery. Several passages of Scripture were in this phylactery, two of which were Deuteronomy 6:3 and Deuteronomy 6:11. These are the two verses which he quotes in response to Jesus’ question. The expert in the law answers, “‘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, ‘Love your neighbor as yourself.’”

 “You have answered correctly,” Jesus replies. “Do this and you will live.”

What did Jesus mean when he said, “Do this and you will live?” The lawyer was already alive physically. Was there more to life than what he was experiencing? Was he missing something? Is there an aliveness that goes beyond simply existing?

The great missionary and writer E. Stanley Jones once said he was alive in the ALIVE. The second alive was spelled in capital letters. Alive in the ALIVE! Jones meant that he was not only existing but that he was truly alive through Jesus Christ.

Jesus promised, “I have come that they might have life, and have it more abundantly” (John 10:10, RSV). To find Christ is to become ALIVE, with capital letters both in this world and the world to come.

So many people live such dreary lives. Country singing star Tim McGraw has an interesting twist on this idea. He has a song titled, “Live Like You Were Dying.”

The song tells the story of a man in his forties who is told by his doctor that he has a very short time to live. And so this man changes his style of living. In the chorus, the man says to his friend: “I went sky diving, I went Rocky Mountain climbing, I went 2.7 seconds on a bull named Fumanchu And I loved deeper and I spoke sweeter. And I gave forgiveness I’d been denying. Someday,” the refrain concludes, “I hope you get the chance to live like you were dying.”

Good advice. So many people live dreary pointless lives. Someone has noted that the average American spends three years in business meetings, 13 years watching TV, makes 1811 trips to McDonalds, is involved in 6 motor vehicle accidents, is hospitalized 8 times (men) or 12 times (women), spends 24 years sleeping, about five years dreaming, and six months waiting at red traffic lights. So much of our lives is spent accomplishing humdrum tasks; yet so little time is spent being truly alive.

You’ve probably heard the story about when life really begins. It’s a question theologians have bantered about seemingly forever.

A Catholic priest was asked when life began and he answered, “Life begins at conception.”

A Jewish rabbi was asked when life began and he responded, “Life begins at birth.”

A Protestant minister was asked, and she said, “Life begins when the last child goes off to college and the dog dies.” (3)

When does life begin? What does it mean to be alive—really alive? The lawyer already had the answer in the Hebrew Law. Jesus answers the lawyer’s question with a question of his own, “What is written in the Law? How do you read it?”

The lawyer replies, “‘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, ‘Love your neighbor as yourself.’”

“You have answered correctly,” Jesus replies. “Do this and you will live.”

From Jesus’ answer to the lawyer it is clear that new life is possible only through the power of love: love for God and love for neighbor.

As Sam Shoemaker once put it: “In the triangle of love between ourselves, God, and other people is found the secret of existence and the best foretaste, I suspect, that we can have on earth of what heaven will probably be like.”

No one is more alive than when he or she is in love. Do you remember your first experience of being in love? Poets and songwriters have employed millions of words and melodies to celebrate the transforming power of love. “It’s love, it’s love, it’s love that makes the world go ’round.” Or as a popular song put it a generation or so ago, “If you ain’t loving, then you ain’t living. . . .” Poor grammar, but great theology!

Love is at the center of our lives. The power of love has driven persons to climb mountains, cross oceans, start wars, give up thrones. Love brings a glow to the face, a twinkle to the eye, a lightness to the step. No other force in this world can do that. Withhold love from a small baby and it will be sickly and perhaps die no matter how many vitamins and minerals he or she may be fed.

Without love we cannot survive, not emotionally, not spiritually. We were made for community, for sharing, for belonging. There is no force in the world that moves us and motivates us as does love. Love tells us who we are. Love tells us we belong.

Many years ago the psychologist Kinch described an amusing experiment conducted by a group of five male graduate students. They chose as their subject, or shall we say “victim,” a very plain‑looking girl who was a fellow graduate student.

The boys’ plan was to begin in concert to respond to the girl as if she were the best‑looking girl on campus. They agreed to work into it naturally so that she would not be aware of what they were up to. They drew lots to see who would be the first to date her. The loser, under the pressure of the others, asked her to go out. Although he was not drawn to the girl, he was a good actor and by continually saying to himself “She’s beautiful, she’s beautiful . . .” he got through the evening.

According to the agreement it was now the second guy’s turn and so it went. The dates were reinforced by similar responses in all contacts the young men had with the girl. In a matter of a few short weeks the results began to show.

At first it was simply a matter of more care in her appearance: her hair was combed more often and her dresses were more neatly pressed; but before long she had been to the beauty parlor to have her hair styled, and was spending her hard‑earned money on the latest fashions in women’s campus wear.

By the time the fourth young man was taking his turn dating the young lady, the job that had once been undesirable was now quite a pleasant task. And when the last guy in the conspiracy asked her out, he was informed that she was pretty well booked up for some time in the future. It seems there were more desirable males around than those “plain” graduate students who were conducting this mischievous experiment. (4)

The power of love. It is love that brings us alive, for it is love alone that affects us in heart, soul, strength and mind. Love demands our all our emotions as well as our reason. To love is to live. To love God is the beginning of life. But what does it mean to love God?

There has been an erroneous notion in the Christian community that the Jews feared God but that Christians love him. Such a statement is far too simplistic. That lawyer who confronted Jesus and quoted the great commandment was quoting from the Hebrew Bible, which we call the Old Testament. We dare not forget that. The ancient Jew may have known more about the love of God than many of us ever will.

Samuel Taylor Coleridge once reminded us that the good Jew would not tread upon the smallest piece of paper in his way for possibly that piece of paper might have written on it the name of God. Can you imagine such a regard for God? Can you imagine such a regard for holiness? Maybe the Jew did fear God, but such an attitude is closer to love than the casual, irreverent way we use God’s name today.

The name of God is not to be trampled upon. When we love God, we treat with reverence and respect everything that is God’s including other people. That brings us to the second critical question that the lawyer asked: WHO IS MY NEIGHBOR?

Jesus answered the lawyer with one of his most famous stories: “A man was going down from Jerusalem to Jericho, when he was attacked by robbers. They stripped him of his clothes, beat him and went away, leaving him half dead. A priest happened to be going down the same road, and when he saw the man, he passed by on the other side. So too, a Levite, when he came to the place and saw him, passed by on the other side. But a Samaritan, as he traveled, came where the man was; and when he saw him, he took pity on him. He went to him and bandaged his wounds, pouring on oil and wine. Then he put the man on his own donkey, brought him to an inn and took care of him. The next day he took out two denarii and gave them to the innkeeper. ‘Look after him,’ he said, ‘and when I return, I will reimburse you for any extra expense you may have.’

“Which of these three,” asked Jesus, “do you think was a neighbor to the man who fell into the hands of robbers?”

Authentic love for God always leads to love for people. All people. Samuel Taylor Coleridge goes on to say: “Trample not on any; there may be some work of grace there, that thou knowest not of. The name of God may be written upon that soul thou treadest on; it may be a soul that Christ thought so much of as to give his precious blood for it; therefore, despise it not.” In short, Samuel Taylor Coleridge was saying, “Love your neighbor as you love yourself.”

For many of us such an answer is idealistic it will not work. That was the view of Sigmund Freud, the father of psychoanalysis. In his book Civilization And Its Discontents, Freud wrote that love is a valuable thing and must not be thrown away. Love imposes obligations and sacrifices. The loved person must be worthy of love.

Freud wrote that it is understandable for one to love a person who is like himself because he loves himself in that person. It is understandable, too, to love a person who is better than oneself or a person who happens to be the son of a friend. But, Freud adds, if there are no specific reasons for loving, to love will be difficult and will be an injustice to those who truly deserve to be loved.

As for loving a stranger, Freud states, “Not merely is this stranger on the whole not worthy of love, but, to be honest, I must confess he has more claim to my hostility, even to my hatred.” (5) Sigmund Freud and Jesus were in two different camps.

Is it possible for me to love my neighbor if he is somehow different from me? Freud said no. But Jesus says, “Yes.” The boundaries of our love can be extended.

“Do this and you will live.” Do what? Love God and love every person you meet. This is how you have life abundant in this world as well as the world to come.

Jesus gave the lawyer the answer to both his questions. Want life abundant in this world and the world to come? Love God and love your neighbor? Who is my neighbor? Everyone on this earth.


1. Jane Goodsell, Reader’s Digest.

2. Arno Penzias, Ideas and Information: Managing in a High-Tech World (Simon & Schuster, Inc., 1989).

3. Thomas Cathcart and Daniel Klein, Heidegger and a Hippo Walk Through Those Pearly Gates (New York: Penguin Books, 2009), p. 58.

4. Contributed. Source unknown.

5. Silvano Arieti and James A. Arieti, Love Can Be Found (New York: Harcourt Brace Jovanovich, 1977).

ChristianGlobe Networks, Inc., Dynamic Preaching Third Quarter 2013, by King Duncan