Luke 10:25-37 · The Parable of the Good Samaritan
What Do You See?
Luke 10:25-37
Sermon
by James Merritt
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A businessman was returning to the U.S. from Asia and had a connecting flight in Iran. After deboarding the plane he stopped by the bathroom. After washing his hands he looked down to realize his bag had been stolen. That is a problem for anyone, but for him it was a disaster, because his wallet and passport were in it. He rushed out into the terminal to see if he could spot someone running away, but he found no one.

He was relieved that at least he was traveling with a co-worker, but his supposed friend said he couldn’t stay around and help that his wife had planned a very important party and he had to get on the next flight and get back home. With a “Hang in there buddy” he ran away.

Frantic, he approached the airline desk and asked for help. The line was backed up, the flight attendant was busy and simply said, “Sir, I am sorry. There is nothing I can do to help you and besides I’ve got to help these other people.” He said, “You don’t understand. I was on your flight. I’ve lost my passport. I have no money. I have no way to contact my wife and children. Can you just at least call a security guard or phone the embassy?” She just shrugged her shoulders and went back to work. He finally found another American businessman, explained his plight to him, only to be told that he was just another scam artist trying to rip off someone’s passport and money and the man turned and walked away.

The afternoon turned to evening so the businessman made a bed on an airport seat bench where he curled up and tried not to think about how hungry he was. Dozing in and out for an hour, all of a sudden he realized someone was watching over him. He looked up to see a man in traditional Muslim dress standing next to his wife in a full burka.

There was a kindness in the man’s eyes when he said, “Sir, Are you all right?” The American, looking at this man and how he was dressed hesitated to answer him, but this time words came out of the man’s mouth that was literally music to his ears, “Sir, How can I help?”

“Well… I lost my passport and I have no money. My family is probably worried sick waiting for me to get off the plane and I am desperate to get in contact with someone.” The couple looked at the man and smiled. The woman motioned for the man to follow them as they turned to walk away. At first, the businessman hesitated. He had only seen people who looked like this on television news reports about terrorism and quite honestly he was afraid. The fear of going with someone he didn’t really know was outweighed by the fear of being with no one at all.

Walking out of the airport the couple led the man to their car and drove him straight to a restaurant where they translated his meal order for him. After he had eaten a full meal, the couple took him to the American Embassy. Inside, the man explained what had happened and they issued him a new passport. On the ride back to the airport, the couple gave the businessman their phone so he could call his wife and explain his situation. Pulling up to the airport, he began to get out of the car when the woman in the burka said, “Sir, we think you will need this.” She handed him a roll of cash in the exact amount he needed to pay the taxes and fees at the airport.

Standing on the curb, the man began to cry and thank them for what they had done. The couple humbly nodded and drove away. His friend had abandoned him. A fellow countryman gave no assistance. The airline he had patronized turned a cold shoulder, but the people he looked upon as his enemies stopped to help. The question arises, “Which of these would you want to be your neighbor?”

Or, to turn it around, what if you had been in that story? You are in a foreign country and have a flight to catch. You don’t know who this man is. You don’t know if it is a sham or if he is a con artist. He approaches you with this same story. Question - “Are you a good neighbor?”

Jesus told a story that may be the most famous story he ever told. It is the story of the Good Samaritan. It begins with a lawyer asking a seemingly good question, but with a bad motive.

“And behold, a lawyer stood up to put him to the test, saying, “Teacher, what shall I do to inherit eternal life?” (Luke 10:25, ESV)

Now it seems like a good question, but it really is a flawed question, because what can anyone do to inherit anything? By its very nature, inheritance is a gift from one family member or a friend to another. If you are born into a family you don’t have to do anything to inherit anything. Inheritance is not payment for services rendered and this lawyer really knows that. So why is he even asking the question?

We are told he is doing this to test Jesus. This question is a test and a trap. Contrary to what it seemed as if Jesus had been teaching, this man wanted to know if, just by trying to keep the law as best as you could, you could earn a relationship with God. We’ve all encountered people who ask questions that they really don’t want an answer to, but they just want to get into a debate.

I love the story of Martin Luther who was approached by one skeptic and who said, “Mr. Luther, What was God doing before He made the world?” Martin Luther said, “Creating hell for people like you who ask stupid questions like that.”

The Pharisees never understood that Jesus never takes a test. He always gives the test. Instead of answering the lawyer’s question He lets him answer it. “You're a lawyer, you are an expert on the law, so you tell Me what the law says.”

“He said to him, ‘What is written in the Law? How do you read it?’And he 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.’ And he said to him, ‘You have answered correctly; do this, and you will live.’” (Luke 10:26-28, ESV)

There was smile on the lawyer’s face when Jesus gave him a “bay” for his answer, but the smile didn’t last long.

The lawyer now realizes he had fallen into a trap he had set himself.

“And he said to him, ‘You have answered correctly; do this, and you will live.’ But he, desiring to justify himself, said to Jesus, ‘And who is my neighbor?’” (Luke 10:28-29, ESV)

Jesus had said in effect, you love God with all you heart, soul, mind and strength and you love your neighbor and you do both of those things every waking moment of every day the rest of your life and you are good to go. Loving God was one thing, but loving your neighbor is something else.

The lawyer puts on the brakes and says, “Whoa, wait a minute! Who is my neighbor?” Like any good lawyer, he is looking for a loophole. His question assumes there are two categories of people: neighbors and non-neighbors. As a good 1st century Jew, he expects Jesus to give him a Christmas list of neighbors. It would be a list that includes Pharisees, baby Sadducees, and certainly synagogue and temple attending Jews, but not Gentiles, and certainly not Samaritans! He assumed the answer would be, “Your neighbors are people who are just like you.” What does Jesus do? He did something that I think probably drove His listeners nuts at times. He tells another story. Jesus had this maddening habit of answering questions, by telling stories. What you are about to hear is probably the most shocking story He ever told.

I got to travel this road only one time. It has since been closed, because it is just too dangerous to travel, both because of how steep it is and how dangerous it is.

The Jericho Road is 17 miles long and it drops from Jerusalem, which is 2700 feet above sea level to Jericho, which is 800 feet below sea level. In other words, that road drops almost a football field every mile. It is desert land and there are still bandits and robbers who roam this area. Back in the day, it was such a dangerous road it was called, “The way of blood.”

It was one of the most crime-ridden areas in all of Israel. Bible scholars estimate there were at least 12,000 thieves that roamed that Judean wilderness between Jerusalem and Jericho. It is kind of like our modern day gangs today roaming around like packs of wild dogs attacking innocent victims, beating them, and robbing them.

Jesus tells about another victim – robbed, beaten and literally left half dead. There is a lot we don’t know about this man, but there is one thing we do know about him. He is a man in need. You know the old saying, “A friend in need is a friend in deed.” As Jesus tells this story, He shows us how there are only two ways we will always respond to people who are in need.

I. Rationalize The Situation In Your Mind

The story naturally breaks up into two parts. Here is part one.

“Now by chance a priest was going down that road, and when he saw him he passed by on the other side. So likewise a Levite, when he came to the place and saw him, passed by on the other side.” (Luke 10:31-32, ESV)

The temple was served by three classes of people - priests, Levites and lay people. The priest evidently had been to the temple to serve and was on his way back down the mountain to Jericho where many of the priests lived. They would go to Jerusalem for a two-week assignment and then return to their homes in Jericho, because it was more of a coastal climate where the fruit and vegetables were abundant.

Immediately optimism rises, because this man is a priest. He is a holy man, a righteous man and a religious man. Surely, he will be the first one to help. But, the moment he saw him he passed by on the other side. Why?

The priest had a special problem. This man was unconscious and he was naked. Now, if he were a fellow Jew and especially a law-abiding Jew, the priest would have been obligated to help him, but the man was naked and unconscious and there was no way to tell whether he was a Jew or a Gentile.

Furthermore, the wounded man could have been dead and if he was, the priest, if he had touched him would have become ceremonially defiled and he would have had to gone back to Jerusalem and undergone a weeklong process of ceremonial cleansing. He would be away from his family without any explanation and would be quarantined from everybody else. In addition, what if there were other robbers in the area? The priest, too, might be robbed. Since discretion is the better part of valor, it might be better just to go your way. Hope sinks.

Then a Levite comes by. Now a Levite was a royal blue blood. He belonged to the tribe of Levi and he was an assistant to the priest. In fact, there is a probability he was an assistant to this particular priest. Maybe knowing that the priest had passed by and had done nothing, he felt in his mind, since the priest didn’t do anything maybe he knows something I don’t know and neither should I do anything. Since he didn’t get involved, “Why should I get involved?”

In reality we are not told why these men passed by on the other side, but somehow they were able to rationalize in their mind to crossover to the other side. Amazingly, the two people that you would have bet everything you had on would have stopped to help this man didn’t. The religious people, the people who had just left church, passed by on the other side, because they didn’t want to get involved.

Jesus, very subtly, illustrates something about this priest and this Levite. He shows they were really no better than the thieves who beat and robbed this man and left him for dead. You can be a thief in one of two ways - you can take something that doesn’t belong to you or you can keep something that belongs to somebody else. Proverbs 3:27 says, “Do not withhold good from those to whom it is due, when it is in your power to do it.” (Proverbs 3:27, ESV)

“So whoever knows the right thing to do and fails to do it, for him it is sin.” (James 4:17, ESV)

The problem with both the priest and the Levite is not what they did. They didn’t beat the man up and they didn’t rob him. The problem was not what they did, but what they didn’t do. The priest and the Levite were bad neighbors, because they refused to be good neighbors.

Let’s bring this up to date. A 13-year-old Pinellas County, Florida, boy was brutally beaten by three older boys on a school bus while the bus driver looks on. In the video, you can hear this bus driver saying, “Leave that boy alone! Leave that boy alone!” Other than shouting and telling the dispatcher a fight had broken out, this bus driver didn’t do one thing. On the video, he says, “They are about to beat this boy to death… they are still doing it…there is nothing I can do.”

That 13-year-old boy was left with a broken arm and two black eyes. Now, under his county’s regulations, this man was not required to jump in and stop this fight. But here is the question. This man did what a legally correct. He even did what was physically smart, but did he do what was morally right? When you begin to rationalize with your mind why you shouldn’t get involved and why you shouldn’t help and why you should not be a friend indeed to a friend in need, do you know what you will do? You will pass by on the other side. There is one other way that you can react to a person in need.

II. Respond with Your Heart

For those in the crowd listening to this story there is still hope. The priest has failed. The Levite has failed, but there are still a lot of great Jewish people out there. Surely, there is a good Jew in this story that will come along to help. Surely, Jesus is going to tell a story about how a good Jew rescued a wounded Samaritan, but when they heard the next words out of Jesus’ mouth, you could have heard a giant sucking sound all the way down to Egypt. People gasped when they heard this, “But a Samaritan, as he journeyed, came to where he was, and when he saw him, he had compassion.” (Luke 10:33, ESV)

Today, we talk about the “Good Samaritan.” Two thousand years ago, to a Jew the only good Samaritan was a dead Samaritan. No class or race of people was hated more by the Jewish people than Samaritans. Samaritans were publicly cursed in the synagogue. They were excluded from temple worship. Prayers would be offered every day begging God to keep them out of heaven. It is a long story as to why they were hated so much, but just suffice to say it was all pure racism.

If you really wanted to insult a person or insult a Jew 2000 years ago, all you had to do was just call him a “Samaritan.” That is why some Jews said to Jesus in John 8:48, “Are we not right in saying that you are a Samaritan and have a demon?” (John 8:48, ESV)

Just imagine how this lawyer and his Pharisaical buddies are feeling as they continue to listen to this galling story.

“He went to him and bound up his wounds, pouring on oil and wine. Then he set him on his own animal and brought him to an inn and took care of him. And the next day he took out two denarii and gave them to the innkeeper, saying, ‘Take care of him, and whatever more you spend, I will repay you when I come back.’” (Luke 10:34-35, ESV)

What this Samaritan does is nothing short of amazing. He uses all of his available resources - oil, wine, his own personal clothing, his animal, time, energy, and his money to give this man the best care possible.

He then risks his own life by taking this wounded man to an inn in Jewish territory. You could have not blamed the Samaritan for just dumping him at the edge of town and riding away, because after all, “What would you think if you saw a Samaritan bringing a beaten up, naked, wounded Jewish man on his donkey?” Even if he was innocent he could legally still have been held responsible.

To top it off, the Samaritan gives the man enough money to cover all of his food and lodging for three weeks. Then promises to come back and pay anything else that the man owes. This is important, because any person who could not pay their bill could be sold, as a slave, by the innkeepers in order to get full payment for a debt.

The crowd is about to fall out already when Jesus drives the knife in all the way to the hilt. He looks at the lawyer and says, “Which of these three, do you think, proved to be a neighbor to the man who fell among the robbers?” (Luke 10:36, ESV)

The answer almost gagged this lawyer. He can’t even bring himself to call him a “Samaritan.” He says, “The one who showed him mercy.” (Luke 10:37, ESV)

To which Jesus calmly, but with a smile on his face replied, “You go, and do likewise.” (Luke 10:37, ESV)

The tables had been totally turned. The lawyer had asked the wrong question. The question is not, “Who is my neighbor?” That assumes there are certain people who are never your neighbors. The question is “Am I a good neighbor?” Or, if you want to go back to the Jericho Road, “Which side are you on?”

There is a reason why the victim in this story was not just beaten unconscious and robbed, but we are told specifically he was stripped naked. There was no way to identify the race or the ethnicity of this person. There was no way to tell whether he was Jewish or Gentile, because it didn’t matter who he was. You are a neighbor to all who are needy.

Being a neighbor has nothing to do with proximity, nationality, popularity, or ethnicity. It is all about not being greedy with people who are needy.

What was it that set the Samaritan apart from the priest and the Levite? If you will notice, we are told in verse 31 the priest “saw him and passed by.” In verse 32 we are told the Levite “saw him and passed by.” In verse 33 we are told a Samaritan “saw him and had COMPASSION.” What made this Samaritan so special was not the color of his skin, but the compassion in his heart. No law will ever make you a good neighbor, but real love can’t keep you from being a good neighbor. Three men walked by a man that day. Two men saw a nuisance. One man saw a need. Our takeaway today is in a form of a poem that I have written. I don’t write many, but I wrote this one:

Key Takeaway: “A neighbor is not defined by color or creed;
A neighbor is defined by nearest need.”

Are you a good neighbor? I can tell you whether you are not if you are always constantly asking this one question, not “Why should I get involved?” That is what you asked when you rationalize with your mind. The question a good neighbor asks is, “How can I help?” That is when you respond with your heart.

I hope you know who the real Good Samaritan is in this story. It is Jesus. You see there was a man who traveled that Jericho Road. He wasn’t going away from Jerusalem, but He was going towards Jerusalem. He did it with a cross on His back. Just like that Samaritan, He came to all of us sinners, who the world, the flesh, and the devil has beaten and robbed and left for dead and totally naked and gave us everything He had when we could give Him nothing in return. Like a good neighbor, Jesus is there which makes this final story so pointed.

It was during the wintertime in Europe and snow was a foot deep. A man was working in a shoe store. He noticed a barefoot little boy outside the baker shop next door to that shoe store. He was trying to keep warm by standing on a grate blowing hot air. Here was this shoe store owner surrounded by all these shoes and here was a baker with all those pastries. Both are watching this hungry, barefoot, boy standing outside in the snow.

Out of the blue, a little lady walks by. She bends down, speaks some kind words to the child, brings him into the shoe store, and buys him some brand new shoes and socks. She then takes him across the street and buys him some pastries and hot chocolate. As she begins to leave, he looks at the lady and said, “Are you God’s wife?” She said, “No Son, I am just one of His children.” He smiled and said, “Well, I knew you must be kin to Him somehow.” Which side are you on? If you are like Jesus, you will always be on the side of the needy.

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