Pentecost 5C
July 13, 2025
Luke 10:25-37
INTRODUCTION
Last week we heard a lot about the kingdom of God – what it is like, what it is not like, and how to proclaim it. This week, right on the tails of Jesus sending out 70 of his followers to proclaim the kingdom, and their return, we hear a very familiar story, the Good Samaritan, which gives us a concrete example of what it would look like if we did, indeed, love our neighbor – that is, live like this is God’s kingdom. The familiarity of this tale has perhaps diminished how very scandalous it is – we’ll get into that in a moment! Today, as you listen to the first readings, hear that God’s law and hope for us has not changed since the Israelites entered the Promised Land, give thanks in the Psalm that God is present with us as we strive to live God’s word, and hear in our reading from Colossians a prayer for you as you strive to live a life of faith. Then, as you listen to the story of the Good Samaritan, place yourself in the story – not as the hero, the Samaritan, but as one of the other characters. Maybe the guy in the ditch, or one of those who crosses the road, or the innkeeper. For that matter, maybe you’re the lawyer at the beginning, seeking to understand what love of neighbor looks like. As you listen, imagine your character’s thoughts and feelings as this all plays out. Let’s listen.
[READ]
Grace to you and peace from God our Father and our Lord Jesus Christ. Amen.
When I preached on this text in 2019, I referred to a border crisis that was hot in the news – thousands of asylum seekers from South and Central America, being held in questionable conditions on the border. What does it look like, I asked, to be a neighbor in the midst of such a crisis? Who is our neighbor?
Well, new year, new immigration crisis. In 2025, we are watching immigrants, even some with legal residency documents and no criminal record, being rounded up and sent to detention centers. The brand new detention center in the Florida Everglades currently houses 900 people, and reports from detainees and visitors have said conditions are awful – numerous hygiene concerns, lack of running water, one meal a day (one person reported maggots in his meal), lights on constantly, extreme temperatures, and people packed in, “wall-to-wall humans.” One reported that his Bible had been confiscated with the explanation that his right to freedom of religion did not apply here. 93% of the people who have been rounded up have no criminal record. Meanwhile, even US citizens with brown skin are living in fear – I recently met a Hispanic United Methodist Bishop in our state who has been stopped twice by ICE. He has started carrying his US passport with him everywhere he goes. It is a scary time to be an immigrant in this country.
In other news, this week, the IRS opened the door for pastors to talk about politics and even to endorse a candidate from the pulpit. I have deep concerns about this as well, for many reasons, and so rest assured, I am not going to do that. You didn’t call me to be a political leader from the pulpit. But you did call me to be your spiritual leader and to preach the gospel. Our views on current events are shaped by a lot of factors, but one of them, I hope, is our faith convictions, and so I will comment on a question that guides me through current events and guides my life as a civilian, and that is: what would Jesus have me do, in this event or situation? How do we as Christians understand and respond to current events in a way that is guided by God’s word and law?
Today’s parable offers a profound lens through which to view public life, especially any situation in which care for those in need is at play – whether they are hungry, sick, a refugee, etc. The Parable of the Good Samaritan is quite familiar, of course – if you know just one of Jesus’ parables, it is probably this one! And that familiarity can sometimes make it hard to glean something new from it. But let’s take a deeper look at it together, and see what we can learn.
“A certain man was walking,” Jesus begins. Already, here is something significant. We know nothing about this guy, and by design. He is nobody in particular, and he is everyone. I might have expected this lawyer, whom Luke tells us is “wanting to justify himself,” to stop Jesus right there for some clarification. “Hold on,” he’d say. “What kind of guy are we talking about here? Where is he from? What is his religion? What color is his skin? Is he gay or straight, Democrat or Republican? Is he a citizen of this country? Did he come here legally? Has he committed a crime, and if so, what kind? Does he pay taxes? Is he educated or skilled? What’s his deal?” In other words, “Let me make a judgment before I hear anything else in this story, about whether this guy is even worth my time and energy.” Honestly, I’m kind of interested to know myself!
But no, Jesus intentionally leaves out any of those details, because the only detail that matters, as we’ll soon see… is that this man is in need. “Some guy” is each of us, and he is the person we love the most, and he is the person we love the least, or the one whom we fear the most. This “certain man” is every man, every person, regardless of tribe, background, status, or skill level. In other words: it doesn’t matter who he is, because everyone who is in need is your neighbor.
Once that is established, Jesus goes on to tell this now-famous story: some non-descript guy is walking along and gets mugged, beaten, robbed, and left for dead on the side of the road. He’s walking along a notoriously dangerous road, where such incidents were common. Sometimes, such beaten people were left there as bait, so that when someone stopped to help, bandits would jump out and get the helper, too. Frankly, the priest and the Levite who soon passed by were making a smart decision, crossing to the other side, for a lot of reasons. One was that helping the man would put them in great personal danger. Everyone has the right to safety and self-defense, right?
But another important reason they were smart not to help was that touching this man, assuming he was dead (Jesus says he was “left for dead”) would be breaking God’s law. These were religious leaders, who could not perform their religious duties if they had touched a dead body. Such an interaction required extensive cleansing rituals over several days. And so each of them opted to follow the letter of the law, rather than risk stopping to help the man, and then go on to serve and honor God in their respective positions. Good call, if you ask me, and probably one that served a greater good. I don’t blame them at all. In fact, it’s a call I have myself made many times.
And then along comes the Samaritan. Now, to add a little more color to this story, you should know that Jews and Samaritans did not get along. Jews believed that Samaritans had bad theology and dirty blood. The hatred was long-standing and deeply entrenched. We don’t know the affiliation of the guy in the ditch, but we know those listening to the story were likely Jews, who heard, “A Samaritan came along…” and immediately went tense. Nobody there would like to hear that the Samaritan was the good guy – even the lawyer, when asked who was a neighbor, can’t even say the word, Samaritan. Instead, he answers (I imagine, reluctantly, through clenched teeth), “The one who showed him mercy.” For Jesus then to add, “Go and do likewise,” was offensive, and throwing salt in the wound: go and be more like this person you despise.
The original question, you remember, was, “Who is my neighbor?” and Jesus’ implicit answer to that is, “Everyone.” The story he goes on to tell shows us not who is our neighbor, but rather, how to be a neighbor to “everyone” – regardless of race, creed, political affiliation, age, health status, country of origin, marketable skills, immigration status, sexual orientation or gender identity. Everyone.
If I’m honest, I find this story pretty troubling. As a rule-follower myself, I have to wonder, are the priest and the Levite not good neighbors? They follow the letter of the law – they don’t stop to help so that they wouldn’t put themselves in danger, or get themselves ritually unclean, such that they wouldn’t be able to perform their religious duties. The law is in place for a reason, after all. If we don’t follow it, there will be chaos. Following the law seems like pretty good neighbor conduct, right? And you know, I’d be willing to bet, they probably even prayed for that guy in the ditch. They were faithful men, after all. So, couldn’t that be what being a neighbor looks like?
Ah, but this story isn’t called “the prayerful priest” or “the law-abiding Levite.” We call it the Good Samaritan, because it was the Samaritan who saw that, while the law is a good thing that keeps order, it is not more important than mercy. Grace is a higher good than law. Love is a higher good than safety. The law is in place to guide us on how to gracious, merciful and loving toward our neighbor in need, and sometimes it does this well, and sometimes it falls short – sometimes it directs us away from mercy. And so, as the lawyer rightly points out, if the highest law of all is, “You shall love the Lord your God with all your heart, and soul, and strength, and mind; and your neighbor as yourself,” then every other law must lead us toward fulfilling this mandate. Do this, says Jesus, and you will live.
Immigration is a complicated issue, one we’ve been trying to solve for years. I don’t know the right policy. I’ll focus on my lane, which is to do my best to teach God’s word, and follow Jesus. Per God’s instruction, not just in this parable but throughout scripture, our job as Christians is to be a neighbor, to err on the side of love and mercy. How we each live out that call will differ, of course – direct aid, running for office, calling your representative, praying, listening, speaking out in love… there is no shortage of ways to love and show mercy to our neighbor in need.
Whatever action we take: when we are good neighbors, when we show mercy – we will live. We will experience God’s life-giving kingdom here and now. When we are bold in our compassion, courageous in our love, and faithful in our witness, we will live. That is the promise of Jesus Christ: that because we have already received such mercy and grace by Christ’s own death and resurrection, we are emboldened to share that love with a hurting world, trusting in the power of God and life everlasting.
A neighbor shows mercy to this broken world. Go, and do likewise.
Let us pray… Most merciful God, there are so many who suffer in this world, who need to encounter your mercy. Help us to be agents of your love. Show us how to do it, as individuals and as a country. Reveal to us your plan, then embolden us to become a part of it. In the name of the Father and the Son and the Holy Spirit. Amen.