Friday, March 14, 2014
The Lawyer’s Question
Luke 10:20-37
INTRODUCTION
You have heard many sermons
on Jesus’s Parable of the Good Samaritan. That’s because it is such an
important story.
But in this message I want
to especially focus on the lawyer who asked the question to Jesus: “Who is my
neighbor?”
Behold, a lawyer stood up to put Jesus to the test, saying, “Teacher,
what shall I do to inherit eternal life?”
Jesus said to him, “What is written in the law? What do your read
there?”
And the lawyer answered, “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 neighbor as yourself.”
And Jesus said to him, “You have answered right; do this and you will
live.”
But the lawyer, desiring to justify himself, said to Jesus, “And who is
my neighbor?”
This lawyer was sharp. His
answer to Jesus was the same answer that Jesus gave some Pharisees when they
asked him which of the commandments was the greatest.
The lawyer wasn’t asking
because he wanted to know the answer, but because he wanted “to put Jesus to the test.”
He wanted to see how good
Jesus was at theology.
So he asked the big, number
one question: “What must I do to inherit eternal life?”
But Jesus’s answer to the
lawyer’s question has always made me wonder.
Jesus pointed him to the
Law.
Isn’t that odd? When the
jailer at Philippi asked, Paul, “What must I do to be saved?” Paul answered, “Believe in the Lord Jesus and you will be
saved” (Acts 16:31).
When some people asked
Jesus: “What must we do to perform the works of God?’ Jesus answered them, “This is the work of God, that you believe
in him whom he has sent” (John 6:29).
So why didn’t Jesus tell him
just to believe? He could have said, “God
so loved the world that he gave his only Son that whosoever believes in him
shall not perish but have everlasting life.”
Why did Jesus point the
lawyer to the Law, which we know from the rest of the New Testament can never
save anyone?
I. When Jesus says, “What is
written in the law?” he is answering the lawyer’s question with another
question. This is a common technique of Jesus and all good teachers. People get
understanding by building on what they already know.
A. The first part of the
answer—“You shall love the Lord your God with all your
heart…soul….strength…and…mind”—was a scripture from Deuteronomy 6 that the
lawyer, like all good Jews, would have recited twice each day. It is called the
“Shema.”
The second part of the
lawyer’s answer comes from Leviticus (19:18)—from the middle of a chapter that
contains 39 rules for living—some insignificant, some very important.
B. Jesus’s response to the
lawyer’s answer was to challenge him to live out the truth that he had recited
from the Old Testament Bible.
God is never concerned to
give us information just to satisfy our curiosity. That is why we have so many
unanswered questions about the Bible and faith. It isn’t important that we know
all the answers; it is important that we live up to what we know.
The scribe was enjoying
himself now, so he asked the next question: “And who is my neighbor?”
This could get to be a big
discussion—a discussion the lawyer was looking forward to.
Maybe the lawyer expected
Jesus to say, “Your neighbor is your neighbor Jew.” Or maybe his neighbor was
his fellow church member.
Could we extend “neighbor”
to good Gentiles? Or maybe—just possibly—to everyone who crosses my path or
whose path I cross?
Jesus answered with a
story—a story that will make the lawyer think.
And this story will make us
think too, and even change our thinking—and we hope it will change our
behavior.
II. This is the story:
A man was going down from Jerusalem to Jericho, and he fell among
robbers, who stripped him and beat him, and departed, leaving him half dead.
Now by chance a priest was going down that road; and when he saw him,
he passed by on the other side.
So likewise a Levite, when he came to the place and saw him, passed by
on the other side.
But a Samaritan, as he journeyed, came to where the injured man was:
and when he saw him, he had compassion, pouring on oil and wine: then he set
him on his own beast and brought him to an inn, and took care of him.
And the next day he took out two denarii and gave them to the
innkeeper, saying, “Take care of him; and whatever more you spend I will repay
you when I come back.”
Which of these three, do you think, proved neighbor to the man who fell
among the robbers?”
The Lawyer said, “The one who showed mercy on him.” And Jesus said to
him, ”Go and do likewise.”
A. The road from Jerusalem
to Jericho was only 17 miles. It could be walked in a day. It was a
commonly-traveled road. Jesus walked this road many times.
But going from Jerusalem to
Jericho one descended 3,300 feet. It would have been much easier going to
Jericho—downhill all the way—than going from Jericho to Jerusalem—uphill all
the way.
It is a winding, meandering
road. It was dangerous. There were lots of places for robbers to hide.
This poor man had been
attacked, robbed, and left half-dead.
The priest and the Levite,
saw him but passed by on the other side.
They certainly knew the law
about loving their neighbor, but they didn’t want to get involved.
To have stopped would have
been to take a big risk. Suppose the robbers were lurking nearby?
I read once of an account of
a young man and woman who were driving on a country road and came upon a car
pulled off the road.
They stopped to see whether
they could help.
It was a ruse. Thugs
attacked the young man and the girl, robbed them, and killed them.
Those young people followed
the example of the Good Samaritan and it cost them their lives.
It may have been a hard
decision for the priest or Levite, or anyone, to get involved in this
situation. How could they tell what it might involve?
This is the same thing that
keeps us sometimes from doing what is right. We don’t want to get involved. We
might not want to see it through.
B. The striking thing about
the story is that its hero is a Samaritan.
Samaritans were despised by
the Jews. They called Samaritans “dogs.” They believed that even to touch them
was to become polluted.
The reason goes back a long
time before Jesus.
When the Assyrians conquered
the northern Kingdom of Israel more than 700 years before Christ, they deported
many of the Israelites and settled them in other lands. Then the Assyrians
brought in pagans and settled them among the remaining Israelites.
These pagans adopted the
religion of Israel and the two groups intermarried.
The Jews from Judea
considered the Samaritans heretics, half-breeds, and had nothing to do with
them. Sometimes there was even bloodshed.
If Jesus were to tell the
parable to us today, he would perhaps make the hero of his story a Muslim. Can
you imagine how that would go over in your church?
“The Parable of the Good
Muslim.” Of “The Parable of the Good Hindu.”
For all I know the story is
a true one. Things like this happen.
The Samaritan is a hero
because he took a big risk.
He got involved. He doctored
the man, put him on his donkey, and took him to an inn along the road.
But he went even farther. He
took care of him in the inn.
And when the time came to
depart, he left two denarii with the innkeeper for the man’s keep. Two denarii
was two day’s wages for a working man—think, $150-$200 dollars.
And, as he left the inn, he
promised the innkeeper that he would be back to pay whatever else it cost to
get the man on his feet again.
C. When Jesus asked, “Which of these, do you think, proved
neighbor to the man who fell among the robbers?” there was only one answer
possible for the lawyer: “The one who
showed mercy.”
APPLICATION
When we read, “Love your
neighbor,” we think of having a feeling of fondness toward our neighbor.
Jesus is thinking of costly
love, the kind of love that steps in and helps, in whatever way is in our
power.
So sometimes we take credit
for loving our friends—as if that is a virtue.
Jesus said (Luke 6:32-33): “If you love those who love you, what credit
is that to you? For even sinners love those who love them.”
Sometimes we limit the
people we are willing to love.
I was on a church missions
committee. During one of our meetings one of our members said, “I don’t think
we should be sending money overseas. There are plenty of people in our country
we can be helping.”
Some people are willing to
help the poor—but they limit their willingness to the “deserving poor.”
Some people are willing to
help but they expect an expression of thanks.
People should be grateful
and express their appreciation, but that won’t always happen, and we don’t need
to expect it.
We don’t know whether the
man the Samaritan saved ever thanked his benefactor. Perhaps he hated being
indebted to a despised Samaritan.
Jesus said, “Love your enemies, do good and lend,
expecting nothing in return. Your reward will be great, and you will be
children of the Most High; for he is kind to the ungrateful and the wicked. Be
merciful, just as your Father is merciful” (Luke 6:35-36).
If we don’t get thanked here
in this life, God has promised to thank us someday—isn’t that enough?
Proverbs 19:17: “Whoever is kind to the poor lends to the
Lord, and will be repaid in full.”
CONCLUSION
When I was a child, I used
to collect stamps. I would save up my nickels from my weekly allowance of 5
cents a week and go to the dime store and buy stamps for my collection.
I loved to mount the stamps
in my book and study their designs.
I noticed that many of the
stamps from Belgium had a picture of a Roman soldier sitting on a horse with a
beggar facing him.
The soldier was cutting his
cloak in two with his sword.
I learned that this was St.
Martin, the patron saint of Belgium.
The story is that Martin was
a Christian soldier in the Roman army.
One cold winter day Martin
was riding his horse when a beggar stopped him. Martin had no money, but the
beggar was shivering.
Martin was moved with
compassion, so he took off his cloak, cut it in two, and gave half of it to the
beggar. The beggar blessed him and they parted.
That night Martin had a
dream. He saw all the angels of heaven and Jesus sitting among them wearing the
torn half of Martin’s cloak.
One of the angels asked the
Lord, “Master, who clothed you thus?”
And Jesus answered softly
“It was my servant Martin.”
Jesus said that when we
serve his poor, we are serving him.
I heard of a person who
works in a mission feeding the homeless who prays, when the homeless people
line up to receive their meals: “Lord,
help me to be kind to you when you come through this line today.”
Jesus comes to us in our
neighbor, the one who is poor, the one who is lonely, the one who is
discouraged, the one who needs a listening ear, a friend, a compliment, a loan,
a smile.
Maybe a fellow resident of
this facility…
Sometimes it costs little to
love our neighbor; sometimes it costs a lot.
Are we willing to pay the
price of love?
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