Luke 10:25-37
Col. 1:1-14
We have all
heard this story many, many times. We’ve
heard it so many times that I fear we don’t even hear it anymore. Or we don’t hear it for anything new. We think we understand it. But as a wise man once said to me, “if we
think we understand the parables, we’ve missed their meaning entirely” for
there are always new layers to uncover, new meanings to explore, new messages
for each of us each day. The whole point
in saying things with a story is exactly that – that stories have much greater
depth, they share at deeper and deeper levels if we let them into our
hearts. They stick with us, and this
story sticks particularly well, and gives our hearts something to chew on, to
meditate on, to engage with in our prayers and our time with God. However, while we know that stories do this,
sometimes even they can become so familiar that we no longer really hear them,
or we no longer can accept new information from them.
Today we
used a “reader’s theater” version of the story in an attempt to hear it a
little differently. Did that help? What did you hear differently? Did anything strike you that hadn’t struck
you before?
Are there certain
kinds of people who when they approach you it bothers you? Are there strangers who, when they approach
you, you find yourself thinking “oh, no: not today.” Or “please don’t talk to me!” Or “You can’t see me, you can’t see me!” Who are they?
The beggars near the grocery stores?
How about political solicitors - those are the ones who really bother me
- they stand outside the grocery stores trying to get you to donate money for
whatever cause they have and to sign their petitions. I find that really annoying - I just want to
go to the store in peace, but there they are trying to get my attention, my
time, and sometimes my money as I try to go about my business, and there are
times when it is just too much to even try to be polite, when even a simple,
“no thank you!” feels like too much work.
Who else?
A half dozen years
ago I had a doctor’s appointment that I was a little nervous about and as I was
waiting in the waiting room a woman came in who plopped herself down next to
another patient and began to talk, asking very personal questions about his
medical problems and his wife (whom all of us in the waiting room soon
discovered had recently died - apparently, this did nothing though to stop this
woman from further inquiries into the nature and specifics of her death!). At first, I found it a little amusing
listening to her harass this poor guy and also share some very personal stuff
(like about her sex life) that the rest of us really didn’t particularly want
to hear. But as I sat there, one by one
the other patients in the waiting room were called, I began to get
nervous. When her conversational victim
of choice was called to his appointment, this woman got up and sat next to
someone else and began all over again. I
found myself quickly reaching for a book and pretending to be completely
engrossed in it. When everyone else was
finally called in and I was left, just her and I in the waiting room, I found
myself bending over and praying HARD that I would be invisible to her or called
in as quickly as possible. This kind of
thing is hard for me to take. Are there
people like that for you?
We currently have
laws called “Good Samaritan law” which in most cases in the United States are
laws that say if you try to help someone medically who really needs the help,
even if you fail or end up injuring them further in the attempt, you can not be
sued. But there are also more and more
places, beginning with Vermont, that now have a law that says if you are in a
position to help someone without risk to yourself, who is experiencing a crime
or medical problem and you fail to do so, you can be fined or even imprisoned. This law has been enacted in places to
prevent what happened in one Seinfeld episode from happening on a regular
basis: in this episode everyone stood around and watched while a woman was
robbed and no one did anything to help.
The law in Massachusetts General Law Chapter 268, Section 40, requires
that anyone who "knows that another person is a victim of aggravated rape,
murder, manslaughter or armed robbery and is at the scene of said crime shall,
to the extent that said person can do so without danger or peril to himself or
others, report said crime to an appropriate law enforcement official as soon as
reasonably practicable."
We hear terrible stories in the papers all the time in which a crime is happening to someone in a public place and everyone just stands around and watches, but no one steps in and offers the simple assistance that would actually stop the problem, no one calls for help, no one does anything but stop and stare. It is in response to these that such laws are made. But really, isn’t it unfortunate that the idea of helping someone in dire crisis has to be made into a law in order to make it happen in many cases? But I find the fact that these laws are being made in some places pushes me to think even farther. Maybe these laws should be expanded. For example, maybe we should be fined, or arrested for standing idle and not sending money to help starving children in Africa when we can afford it. Maybe we should be fined for not adopting a desperate child who’s being abused. How about for failing to call the cops when we hear a neighbor hurting or being hurt by another family member? What about shopping at a store (like Walmart) that we know uses child labor?
We hear terrible stories in the papers all the time in which a crime is happening to someone in a public place and everyone just stands around and watches, but no one steps in and offers the simple assistance that would actually stop the problem, no one calls for help, no one does anything but stop and stare. It is in response to these that such laws are made. But really, isn’t it unfortunate that the idea of helping someone in dire crisis has to be made into a law in order to make it happen in many cases? But I find the fact that these laws are being made in some places pushes me to think even farther. Maybe these laws should be expanded. For example, maybe we should be fined, or arrested for standing idle and not sending money to help starving children in Africa when we can afford it. Maybe we should be fined for not adopting a desperate child who’s being abused. How about for failing to call the cops when we hear a neighbor hurting or being hurt by another family member? What about shopping at a store (like Walmart) that we know uses child labor?
There are so many
ways of turning away, of failing to be the neighbors we are called to be. There is a song by Pink Floyd that I want to share with you because I think the words are really appropriate for today’s scripture lesson:
The Good Samaritan
story in the Bible is really about something very simple. We are called to help those around us, no
matter who they are. As an Arab proverb
tells us - “To have a good neighbor you must be one.”
So, as I said at
the beginning, we’ve all heard this story and mostly this story convicts
us. Where is the good news in this? Well, someone does come along to help the
poor man on the side of the road - someone considered imperfect by the
standards of the day - a Samaritan, an outcast, a person who didn’t have it
right. Sinner saving sinner. The lost helping the lost. Grace, mercy, coming out when we least expect
it. And the Good Samaritan is sometimes
us. Sometimes it is you and sometimes it
is me. Other times we are the one hurt on the side of the road. But again, someone does come and help. Together we work together, helping each
other, uplifting each other, wrapped in the action of love - God’s love and
God’s grace. This is what the kingdom of
heaven looks like. Here on earth, all
around. As the words to one of my
favorite hymns, “Gather us in” say, “Not in the dark of buildings confining;
and not in some heaven light years away, but here in this place a new light is
shining. Now is the kingdom. Now is the day.” Let there be no more turning away. Amen.
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