Who is My Neighbor?
based on Luke 10:25-37
by Dr. David Rogne
A young, rather innocent girl from a small country town went to seek
work in a large city. She was given one of those massive forms to fill
out: Name, address, family history, etc. When she came to the question,
"In case of emergency, whom should we notify?" she called the personnel
manager over and said, "I don't understand." The manager said, "Well,
you know, if some accident befell you on the job, or some emergency
arose, whom should we call?" She responded, "Why, the nearest human
being, of course." If only that were so! When she has spent a little
time in the city, she will discover that many human beings are not that
neighborly.
Our scripture reading for this morning picks up on the idea of
neighborliness and helps us see some of its characteristics. You will
remember that a lawyer, seeking to test Jesus, asks him, "Teacher, what
must I do to inherit eternal life?" Jesus asks him what he already knows
from the Jewish law, and he responds that people are to love God, and
their neighbor as themselves. When Jesus responds that that will satisfy
the requirements, the lawyer persists and asks, "Who is my neighbor?" It
is then that Jesus tells the story of a man making a journey from
Jerusalem to Jericho along the road that was called in those days the
"bloody road," because it was filled with caves and sharp turns where
robbers could hide and fall upon lonely travelers. Usually people would
travel in groups for greater protection, but this man who was alone,
became the victim of muggers, and was left to die. A priest and a
religious professional who passed by offered no help, but a despised
Samaritan, a half-breed, coming on the scene, had compassion and took
care of the man.
Then Jesus concluded the story by asking who was neighbor to the hurt
man in the story, and the lawyer had to confess that it was the one who
showed mercy. Jesus said simply, "Go and do likewise." Does that mean
that everyone who wants to do "likewise" has to go out and find a
mugging victim to help? I don't think so. "Likewise" means that we have
to be as sensitive to our opportunities as the Samaritan was to his.
There are, however, some characteristics in this good Samaritan that
will help us to identify how good neighbors act.
For one thing, the Samaritan took action. Sometimes, when we are faced
with a problem, we prefer to study it to death. Xerox is a case in
point. It devoted millions of dollars and years of effort to the
development of a personal computer. It hired many of the most brilliant
minds, people who would eventually make microcomputer technology
possible. But Xerox couldn't make the decision. The former director of
research says that they had a sure-fire micro product ready long before
the founders of Apple Computer came on the scene, but, he says, they got
bogged down planning the Invasion of Normandy, and didn't get into the
market. Similarly, when we embark on some program of good work, somebody
can always think of one more report that we should have before we begin,
and as a result, nothing is done.
Sometimes the problem is that we don't agree with one another about how
to proceed, so nothing gets done. Max Lucado, in his book, And the
Angels Were Silent, tells of Peter Loetz who took a bad fall that left
him with a punctured lung and broken ribs and internal bruising. Lying
in an emergency room, barely conscious, he probably thought things
couldn't get any worse. They did. As he looked up, the two doctors
responsible for his care began arguing over who would get to put a tube
into his crushed chest. The argument became a shoving match, and one
doctor threatened to have the other removed by the security police.
"Please, somebody save my life," Loetz pleaded as the doctors fought
over him. The two doctors were arguing over procedure. While they were
debating, two other physicians assumed responsibility for the patient
and saved his life.
Fortunately, the Samaritan didn't have anyone to argue with. Indeed,
those who were listening to Jesus' story would have assumed that the
Samaritan would not have had any insights worth listening to anyway--he
would not know the laws of God--he would be held in contempt. Yet he
knew what was called for--action. Henry Ward Beecher pointed out a long
time ago that "Religion means work. Religion means work in a dirty
world. The world has got to be cleaned by somebody; and you are not
called by God if you are ashamed to scour and scrub." If we really want
to be helpful, we have to get beyond talking about the problem and do
something.
Another thing the Samaritan did was to give of his time. He no doubt had
some place to be--an appointment to be kept--a customer to see. But he
interrupted his journey, took the time to administer first aid, put the
victim on his own donkey, got him to an inn, stayed the night, and cared
for him.
Time is the hardest thing for us to give one another. Michael Quoist has
written: “When I was young, my mother was going to read me a story, but
she had to wax the bathroom floor and there wasn't time. When I was
young, my grandparents were going to come for Christmas, but they
couldn't get someone to feed the dogs, and my grandfather did not like
the cold weather, and besides, they didn't have time. When I was young,
my father was going to listen to me read my essay on ‘What I Want to Be
When I Grow Up’ but there was Monday night football and there wasn't
time. When I grew up and left home to be married, I was going to sit
down with Mom and Dad and tell them I loved them and would miss them,
but my best man was honking the horn in front of my house, so there
wasn't time.”
When we do give our time, it is an expression of love. A young woman,
who was an attorney, lived 500 miles away from her elderly father. They
had not seen each other for a number of months. The father called her
and asked, "When are you going to visit?" His daughter proceeded to tell
him about all the demands on her time, her court schedule, and various
other meetings which would prevent her from visiting. The father then
said, "Tell me, when I die, do you intend to come to my funeral?" The
woman responded, "Dad, I can't believe you'd even ask such a question!
Of course I'd come to your funeral." "Okay," said the father, "let's
make a deal. Forget the funeral. I need you now more than I will then."
Showing love to someone requires that we take time.
Another thing we learn from the Samaritan is that he did what he could
do. He bound the man's wounds, he poured on the oil and wine, he lifted
the man, he got the victim to an inn. The lawyer who asked Jesus the
questions would have been content to discuss generalities. He wanted to
engage Jesus in a conversation about neighborliness and let it go at
that. I have attended conferences that were willing to spend several
days arriving at definitions and then adjourn as though they had
accomplished something. Discussion became a substitute for action. Jesus
didn't give in to a philosophical discussion of neighborliness. Instead,
he gave a specific illustration.
Of course, big undertakings do require planning and organization, but
for most of us, our expressions of love need to match our circumstances
and opportunities. The New York Times carried a story a while back about
a 33-year-old cab driver who says that he "prayed to God for guidance on
how to help the forgotten people of the streets who exist in life's
shadows." As he recalls it, God replied: "Make eight pounds of
spaghetti, throw it in a pot, give it out on 103rd Street and Broadway
with no conditions, and people will come." He did, they came, and now he
goes from door to door giving people food to eat.
A pastor tells of a woman who lived in Woodville, Texas. She was a
member of the United Methodist Church, who practiced a "stewardship of
love." She had a debilitating illness and was sentenced to the life of
an invalid. She had a telephone placed next to her bed, and whenever she
became aware of someone in the community with a problem or a sorrow, she
could not go visit, but she could phone and say, "I want you to know I'm
thinking of you, and during these days of trouble I'm praying for you."
The first President Bush was trying to turn the citizens of our country
on to doing the doable when he spoke of a "thousand points of
light"--individuals rendering those personal services of which they are
capable.
The Samaritan also stayed with the helping process for as long as
necessary. He did more than take the man to the inn. He disrupted his
journey, he stayed a day later, he gave extra money, and even obligated
himself into the future. He didn't stop with first aid; he was
interested in seeing the victim restored.
Torey Hayden, in her book, One Child, tells of a little girl who was
forced out of the family car and left stranded against the guardrail of
a freeway. She was picked up by someone and turned over to social
services. The girl was almost mute, acting more like an animal than a
human being. Eventually, she was placed in a special education class
taught by Ms. Hayden, who saw something special in the girl and coaxed
that something into life. The girl became very dependent upon Torey and
didn't want to let Torey out of her sight. When Torey had to break some
of the patterns they had established so that Torey could continue with
her own life, the girl became angry and rebellious. The teacher
explained that their relationship had to change for the good of both of
them, but that Torey still cared for the girl. "How can you expect so
much of me?" she asked. The girl responded, "Because, when you save
somebody, you 'sponsible."
I wouldn't want to suggest that the girl was right in expecting the
teacher to devote her life to the girl, because the teacher had helped
the girl, but she was right to the degree that it isn't enough just to
save a person from a calamity and then abandon them. If we pull a person
from an icy stream, we still must see that there is follow-up care. If
we take a person to the emergency room, we don't just dump them off at
the door. When we feed somebody who is hungry, we have done something
that is specific, concrete, and useful, but we must not content
ourselves that we have done all that it is necessary to do. A
Thanksgiving basket helps, but it isn't the solution to hunger. Since
the time he told this story, Jesus has stamped it on Christian hearts,
"When you save somebody, you 'sponsible."
It is with the condition of the human heart that this whole parable has
been dealing. It is the heart, not the mind, that will save society. The
lawyer who asked Jesus the question already knew what the Mosaic law
said. The priest and the Levite were professionals who knew how to
interpret the law--they just didn't apply it to themselves. The
difference in the Samaritan is made clear by Jesus when Jesus says of
the Samaritan that "he had compassion."
In a Christian missionary magazine Larry Dinkins writes about what he
observed in Thailand. "Feet are the least honored part of a Thai's
anatomy," he writes. "The thought of touching even a well person's foot
is offensive to the Thai. At the clinics I saw nurses not only touch,
but gently cradle, ulcerous limbs as they washed and bandaged them.
Edith Barrett worked in northeast Thailand with the Christian and
Missionary Alliance. Although not trained as a nurse, her job was to
wash the feet of leprosy patients at their clinics. She lined her
patients up in a row, starting with the less severe and ending with the
more drastic cases. She told me, 'You know, we Christian and Missionary
Alliance people believe in the soon return of our Lord. Sometimes I
pray, Come quickly, Lord Jesus, come quickly before I have to wash this
last patient.'"
It isn't the mind that keeps a person doing what the person finds
distasteful, because the mind rebels and says, "There is no profit for
me in doing this." It is the heart, in tune with God, that enables us to
act with compassion.
The lawyer provides the occasion for this story by asking the question,
"Who is my neighbor?" But the question Jesus answers is, "What kind of
neighbor should I be?" for at the end of the story he asks the lawyer,
"Which of these three, do you think, was a neighbor to the man who fell
into the hands of the robbers?" When the lawyer responded, "The one who
showed him mercy," Jesus challenged him as he challenges us, "Go and do
likewise."