Sunday, July 10, 2022

July 10 2022 5th Sunday After Pentecost

Luke 10:25-37   (The Message)

25 Just then a religion scholar stood up with a question to test Jesus. “Teacher, what do I need to do to get eternal life?”

26 He answered, “What’s written in God’s Law? How do you interpret it?”

27 He said, “That you love the Lord your God with all your passion and prayer and muscle and intelligence—and that you love your neighbor as well as you do yourself.”

28 “Good answer!” said Jesus. “Do it and you’ll live.”

29 Looking for a loophole, he asked, “And just how would you define ‘neighbor’?”

30-32 Jesus answered by telling a story. “There was once a man traveling from Jerusalem to Jericho. On the way he was attacked by robbers. They took his clothes, beat him up, and went off leaving him half-dead. Luckily, a priest was on his way down the same road, but when he saw him he angled across to the other side. Then a Levite religious man showed up; he also avoided the injured man.

33-35 “A Samaritan traveling the road came on him. When he saw the man’s condition, his heart went out to him. He gave him first aid, disinfecting and bandaging his wounds. Then he lifted him onto his donkey, led him to an inn, and made him comfortable. In the morning he took out two silver coins and gave them to the innkeeper, saying, ‘Take good care of him. If it costs any more, put it on my bill—I’ll pay you on my way back.’

36 “What do you think? Which of the three became a neighbor to the man attacked by robbers?”

37 “The one who treated him kindly,” the religion scholar responded.

Jesus said, “Go and do the same.”


The command to love our neighbor as ourselves is not a “fifty-fifty” proposition, as if we are to divide up our love like a pie.  It is much more radical than that.  The Greek reveals this deeper meaning:  “Love our neighbor in place of, instead of yourself.” In other words, change plans with your neighbor.  Let him/her enter the space where your love is and discover

God’s love in the process.


It is as Frederick Buechner has said:


When Jesus tells us to love our neighbors, he is not telling us to

love them in the sense of responding to them with a cozy

emotional feeling.  You can as well produce a cozy emotional

feeling on demand as you can a yawn or a sneeze.  On the 

contrary, he is telling us to love our neighbors in the sense

of being willing to work for their well-being even if it

means sacrificing our own well-being to that end.”                                                (Listening To Your Life, p.242)


Indeed, it is not enough to “pass by on the other side.”  Nor is it enough to offer our “thoughts and prayers”.  It is only enough when we sacrifice something of our own cherishing to benefit the needs of our neighbor.  


Could this include sacrificing what we claim we have a right to, to safeguard the rights of our neighbor?  Like the right to bare arms verses facing the fact that we have lots of neighbors being shot up because we refuse to face the gun issue in a realistic way.


The evidence is clear, if we will only see it and not walk by on the other side. We have the largest number of “innocent neighbors” being killed by

guns of mass destruction of any nation in the world.  No matter how poor a shot you are, you do not need an AK- 47 to kill a prairie dog.  (Senator Thune, SD)  The AK-47 is not a sporting weapon.  It is a weapon designed to kill as many as possible as quick as possible.  It is time we stop “walking by on the other side” and face this issue.  Our neighbors cry out for our sacrificing our rights for the better good!  It is being a Good Samaritan!




“When Jesus tells us to love our neighbors,        

he is telling us to love our neighbors in 

the sense of being willing to work 

for their well-being even if it means sacrificing 

our own well-being to that end.”  

Frederick Buechner







Prayer thought for the week:  “Lord, keep me from the indifference which keeps me from loving my neighbor as you loved me - sacrificially.”









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