Showing posts with label Luke 10:25-37. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Luke 10:25-37. Show all posts

Saturday, 9 July 2022

Neighbours of Mercy

Luke 10:25-37

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There’s a saying that goes, “You can’t choose your family, but you can choose your friends.”  Similarly, this applies to neighbours.  To a large extent we can’t choose our neighbours either, but like family we can have a unique relationship with our neighbours that’s like no other.  Sadly, in the world in which we live people typically don’t know their neighbours all that well if at all so we could say what does it matter whether we can choose them or not.  Well, it does matter.  I’m sure that there has been a wealth of studies done that demonstrate that having good relationships with your neighbours improves one’s own quality of life.  So also, the adverse of that.  If we don’t have a good relationship with even just one of our neighbours it diminishes our sense of quality of life.  Life is not good if you have an enemy next door.  Good neighbours make for a greater sense of community in the neighbourhood.  Knowing who your neighbours are makes the neighbourhood a safer place.  Whereas not knowing your neighbours opens the door to crime in a neighbourhood.  Good neighbours look after your place when you’re not there, help you out, lend you stuff, and there’s always a laugh over the fence.  It’s just plain good to know your neighbours and to know them well.  They actually can become like family in many ways.  

Looking at our passage here in Luke, it’s not uncanny that Jesus would use the example of being a very good “neighbour” as an example of how to have a life full of the presence of God if I can make that stretch.  Let’s have a look. 

A lawyer stands up to test Jesus wanting to know what he had to do to inherit eternal life and it is interesting that Jesus ties it to one’s conduct as a neighbour.  Let’s first look at the question the lawyer asked.  Off the bat, to our Modern ears it seems an odd question to ask because to us an inheritance is not earned.  You don’t typically do something to get an inheritance.  For us an inheritance is bestowed, given usually on the simple basis of a family tie. 

But, that’s not the framework this lawyer was operating with as he was a Jew who lived in the First Century.  In his mind the idea of inheritance had a specific referent in the promise God made to Abraham to give his descendants the land of Israel and make them a great and numerous nation.  The fulfillment of that promise was the inheritance every Jew would receive from God, but they all realized that receiving this inheritance wasn’t necessarily a given.  Receiving that inheritance first of all hinged-on Abraham’s faithfulness to God, which he was.  But for his descendants to receive it, they must also remain exclusively faithful to the God of Abraham (no idols) and also observe the Law of Moses or they could lose the land and cease to be a nation.  They could get themselves written out of the will, so to speak, as they did when God sent them into exile in Babylon for their idolatry and not keeping the Law; particularly the parts of the Law that required them to take care of the poor, widows and orphans, and foreigners in their midst.  

So, in this lawyer’s thinking there was something the Jewish people must do to inherit the fulfillment of the promise God made to Abraham – worship God alone and keep the Law.  This is the framework in which the lawyer places his test question.  It is a test question.  The lawyer is looking to catch Jesus on something in order to bring him up on charges.  The lawyer is likely asking that since for the Jewish people the inheritance of the land and being a great and numerous nation hinged-on exclusive faithfulness to God and keeping the Law of Moses, does this apply to eternal life as well for the Jewish people?  The test is whether Jesus will deviate from the established framework.  Does inheriting eternal life require something other than exclusive faithfulness to God and keeping the Law of Moses?  If it does, then to the mind of the this expert in the Law there’s false teaching involved.

Well, Jesus had been calling people to follow him.  Would he answer that receiving the inheritance of eternal life was contingent on having faith in and following him?  That would likely get him into trouble with the lawyer for it would place Jesus in the place of God and his way of life in place of the Law of Moses.  But, we would say, “Umm.  Isn’t that what Jesus says in John 3:16? ‘Whosoever believes in me shall not perish, but shall have eternal life.’”

Uh, brief excursion.  Please don’t think of eternal life as going to heaven when we die.  The lawyer was not asking what he had to do to go to heaven when he died.  That was a question made popular by the medieval Church.  Nowhere in the writings of First Century Jews or earlier do we find them asking that question.  For most Jews and Christians back then, eternal life would have meant either our present life filled with the presence of God or the new age soon to come when the Messiah arrived and established the Kingdom of God here on earth or a mixture of both: experiencing the presence and reigning of God in one’s life now as a foretaste of what it will be in the coming age.  And with reference to John 3:16, Jesus defines eternal life at John 17:3 as knowing the Father and the Son whom he has sent.  Even in the Gospel of John eternal life does not mean going to heaven when we die.  So…chew on that.

Getting back on track, Jesus realizes that he’s talking to an expert in the Law of Moses who is trying to trap him so he employs this expert device of rhetoric known as “Make the dude answer his own question”. “What’s the Law say?” Jesus asks.  That’s a big question.  How does one sum up the first five books of the Bible?  Surprisingly, the Lawyer does very well.  He gives the perfect summary of the Law; one Jesus himself used: “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 neighbour as yourself.”  Jesus tells him that he has answered correctly and if he does that he will “live”.  The omission of the word eternal there likely means having the type of life now that will be in the age to come – life full of the presence and reigning of God.

Well, I suspect the lawyer just realized he’d been outwitted.  I suspect he has realized that he was not able to love God the way the Law required nor love his neighbour.  I mean, how does one show love for God?  According to this lawyer’s summary, we love God in concordance to how we love our neighbour which is related to how we love ourselves.  Well, apparently this lawyer has some limits as to what love of neighbour looks like.  So, he seeks to justify himself by wanting to define who is and who is not his neighbour.  “And who is my neighbour?” He asks.

We know the story from there.  A man is robbed and left for dead by the side of the road.  Who’s going to help him?  Not the priest.  The man looks dead.  If he goes to find out and accidentally touches a corpse, well, according to the Law, he can’t enter the temple where he lives and works for seven days because he has made himself unclean.  So also, the Levite who also would have worked at the temple.  Then along comes the Samaritan.  

There’s some history you need to know.  Samaritans and Judeans, though both groups were Jews, children of Abraham, and their lands neighboured each other, they were long-time enemies.  The Samaritans saw themselves as true-Jews for they observed only the first five books of the Bible which contained the Law.  But they were also of mixed lineage dating back nearly 700 years from when the Assyrians invaded the northern part of Israel and intermarried with them.  Still, they considered themselves Jews and, moreover, their ancestors never went into the Babylonian Exile as did the ancestors of the Judeans.  God never kicked the Samaritans off of the land.  Similarly, the Judeans also saw themselves as true Jews because their lineage was pure and included the priesthood and their region housed the Temple, the place where God himself chose to dwell.  So, this common disdain was both religious and racial.  They weren’t good neighbours to each other. It is interesting that Jesus chose to use a Samaritan as an example of a neighbour in his parable to this Judean expert in the Law.

Back to the parable.  Unlike the priest and the Levite, this Samaritan didn’t think about the consequences to himself if the man happened to be dead.  Instead, he was moved with compassion and was concerned with what might happen to the man if the man were still alive and he didn’t stop to help.  Like a neighbour ought, he checked to see if the man was still alive regardless of the Law saying that he too would be unclean for seven days if he touched the man or even just came in contact with his blood.  

Compassion must override religious legalism.  That’s the spirit of the Law.  The Samaritan fulfilled the Law even though he didn’t keep the letter of the Law.  He was very generous with the man.  Put him on his mule.  Took him to an inn and cared for him and then had the man’s care looked after when he couldn’t do it himself.  Unconditional love, sacrificial generosity, above and beyond hospitality all in the name of compassion.  That’s what it is to be a neighbour.  Do that and live.

When Jesus asked the legal expert who was a neighbour to this man who had been robbed and left for dead out in the middle of nowhere where there were no neighbours, the man answered, “The one who showed him mercy.”  Mercy.  That’s an interesting word.  We typically misunderstand it to mean the leniency of a judge.  But in the Greek, the word means to show kindness to someone in dire need.  If you get yourself a nice bottle of Greek olive oil, you’ll find the Greek word for mercy on it because the words for olive oil and mercy come from the same word family.  Olive oil is like mercy.  Not only was it an important source of nourishment, but it was also a healing balm.  The Samaritan man likely would have put olive oil on the man’s wounds to heal him.

So, to be a neighbour is to show healing compassion to others indiscriminate of who they are which includes unconditional love, sacrificial generosity, and extending above and beyond hospitality especially to those with dire need.  It is to let your life be a healing balm to the lives of others whatever the cost.  Being this kind of a neighbour is what it is to have eternal life.  Do this and you will live.  The presence of God will permeate your life with a sense of your own belovedness to God and a sense of everyone’s belovedness.  Mercy is applying God’s beauty, which looks like indiscriminate compassion, to the situations in life that are terrible to behold so that healing might occur and sacred beauty abound.  Do this and you will live.  Amen. 

  

Saturday, 13 July 2013

A Lawyer Joke, If I May

Text: Luke 10:25-37
There's something about the parable of the Good Samaritan that I bet you didn’t know and that’s because I’m making it up. It is actually one of the earliest recorded lawyer jokes in existence, if not the earliest. It’s a lawyer joke and in the Bible. Go figure. Amazing book, the Bible is. There's actually some humour in it. Everybody likes a good lawyer joke and I won’t go into the reasons why because that would entail telling a few and I wouldn’t want to offend (i.e. slander) any lawyers from the pulpit for fear of getting sued for appearing to be guilty enough of being responsible for what my own actions appeared to do though untenable in a criminal court under section so and so of the banality code. Did that make sense? I think I might be moving from the area of law into claims adjusting. But anyway, I think that here in the Parable of the Good Samaritan we’re looking at a lawyer joke. It may not seem funny to us because the sense of humour comes from a culture different from our own and nearly 2,000 years old. Nevertheless, it definitely has a punch line that we should get.
Now this lawyer joke seems to revolve around a trick question that the lawyer asks. He says, “What must I do to inherit eternal life?” Well there you go, this is your typical lawyer up to the typical task of asking a typically tricky question to try to throw us off. Those tricky lawyers. The trick is that there is nothing a person can do to gain an inheritance—nothing. Inheritances are granted and usually along bloodlines. You can’t earn them. Actually, it’s the other way around. There are things you can do to loose your inheritance. You can’t earn it, but you can loose it. Actually, that is the punch line of the little joke about the Priest, the Levite, and the Samaritan that's also in this text.
           Let's have a look at that joke first. The two people who were doing their best to earn their inheritance from God—the Priest and the Levite—are actually the ones who stand to loose their inheritance because of what they neglect to do. They didn't show compassion because they were afraid of breaking the “dead clause” in the Temple Law. The “Dead Clause”was that if you touched a dead person, you could not go into the Temple for several days because it made you impure, unclean, or unholy. One did not bring death before the LORD God. Helping this man would complicate things for the Priest and the Levite because they worked and lived in the Jerusalem Temple. They weren’t willing to risk being put out of their home and work for a few days to save a man’s life. So, here’s the first punch line: Though the inheritance is free, it comes at a cost. Trying to earn your inheritance by being obedient to laws rather than acting merciful, compassionate, and just can actually lead to loosing it. Now this little joke would have made our lawyer friend a little uncomfortable because like most of the things Jesus said it hit too close to home. As an expert on the Law, the lawyer would have been associated with the Priest and the Levite and would have done exactly what they did in walking on by.
           Well, the punch line is going to grow here a bit as the lawyer begins to justify himself. In Jesus day a lawyer or scribe was an expert in both the general themes and the details of the rules of the Temple Law. These folks knew what you could and could not do and they also knew the loopholes. This leads us to another thing we are supposed to find funny in this joke: how Jesus turns the expertise of the lawyer back on the lawyer. As I said a moment ago the lawyer asks Jesus a loaded question of “How can I earn my inheritance?” Well, Jesus being smarter than the lawyer (Ha. Ha. Joke. Get it. Jesus is smarter than a lawyer.) refuses to answer the question and instead makes the expert answer it himself. “What does the law say?” Jesus asks. Well, of course the lawyer has the right answer. Love the Lord your God with all your heart, soul, strength, and mind and your neighbour as yourself. “Right answer,” Jesus says. “Do this and you will live.” Well…our lawyer just has to go and be a lawyer. He has to determine the extent of the Law by asking, “Who is my neighbour?” He’s working with the loophole of “Who deserves compassion and who does not?” If he can qualify a group of people who do not deserve compassion, then he’s off the hook.
Well, Jesus has a field day with that bit of banistering. Jesus turns the question around on the lawyer too. He makes it go from being “Who is my neighbour?” to “What kind of a neighbour are you?” That’s a real knee slapper. I think I might roll around on the floor here and bust a gut. Jesus doesn't stop there he keeps going. He compares the lawyer to a Samaritan—a Samaritan. You know what a Samaritan is? They lived down the hill from Jerusalem. They were mixed along the bloodlines, if you know what I mean. Now, this joke of Jesus' has become an outright insult to our lawyer friend because Jesus is suggesting to the Lawyer that a Samaritan was a better neighbour than a Priest or a Levite and therefore this lawyer.
That’s an insult if I've ever heard one and since it's Jesus “meek and mild” who didn't cry when he was a baby who's doing the insulting we might ask why. Well, Jesus wants to make clear what his kingdom is all about. It is about the inheritance of eternal life. It is a free gift. God the Father grants us this inheritance freely in and through Jesus Christ the Son by means of him becoming human as we are, living and dying as we do on account of sin. “He became what we are by nature to give us what is his by nature” and he had to go through death and out the other side to do it. Thus, God the Father in the power of the Holy Spirit raised him from the dead and in so doing defeated sin and death once and for all. Jesus is now ascensed into heaven where he ever-intercedes for us until his return. And it doesn't stop there. The Father and the Son send us the Holy Spirit to live in us in humanity that we may share in the risen humanity of Jesus the Son as adopted children of God, the living signposts of the new creation coming. As children of God by adoption we freely share in Jesus' relationship with the Father—a life of faithfulness, hope, and compassion rather than a life of uncertainty, anxiety, despair, and self-absorption.
It is impossible to earn what the Trinity has freely done for us. Our only possible response to this grace is to love God the Father back with the love of Jesus Christ the Son that he has also implanted in us by the Holy Spirit coming to live in us. It is Christ Jesus' love in us that makes it possible for us to love the Trinity with all our heart, soul, mind, and strength and our neighbours as ourselves. We can’t do this of our own capacity. Without the power of the Holy Spirit living in us we can’t love God the Father rightly in, through and with God the Son. Instead, we try to manipulate "God" for our purposes. We try to make "God" work for us. “God, I’ll do this for you, if you’ll give me my inheritance.” God the Father, Son, and Holy Spirit is not like that. The Trinity just simply loves us and wants to be a part of us and want us to be a part of Him. And that is the healing to our brokenness that the Trinity freely gives. It’s just there. We need only get on with living in it.
This little thought of God’s healing presence being given to us freely necessitates a question—“If we can’t earn it, then how do we know we got it?” Well, there’s a real and wondrous sense awakened in each one of us that God the Trinity really does love us. The declaration that the Gospel makes is that we of no act or effort of our own have been made God's children by adoption through the faithfulness of Jesus Christ in the power of the Holy Spirit. We need only begin to pray that the Trinity will cause us to know this personally, to know who are in Him. Paul says, “your life is hidden with Christ in God” (Col. 3:3). Just start praying and following and the Trinity will let you know who are are in Him.
The personal knowledge of the Father's love for us gives us a sense of trust, of peace, a calmness that really only comes from beyond us. It also makes it much easier to be kind, patient, and compassionate and to forgive. And, this is where we find the real punch line of the Parable of the Good Samaritan. Showing mercy to others is the only appropriate response to the Trinity's grace. Showing mercy is how we love each other and how we show our love for The Father, Son, and Holy Spirit. If we have this inheritance of eternal life which is Christ living in us, then mercy is the fruit which comes from it which we must nurture and bear forth. When Jesus says, “Go and do likewise” he means for us to discipline our lives to let the Trinity's grace and mercy shine through us, to let his Spirit destroy all hate and heal all hurt that is in us. Showing mercy is not how we earn our inheritance. Rather it is how we keep it. Go and do likewise. Amen.