To read the texts click on the texts: Dt 30:10-14; Col1:15-20; Lk 10:25-37
The
Parable of the Good Samaritan has often been interpreted as one which tells the
listener that one’s neighbor is anyone in need of help. While that is true, it
is only a small part of the meaning and message of the story. The main point of
the Parable is that the Samaritan, the outcast, the one marginalized, is Good.
The Parable seeks to break the stereotypes that we carry in our minds and
hearts about those whom we do not understand.
This
point is indicated in a variety of ways. First, one listening to the Parable
might have expected the third person in the story to be an Israelite or a Jew
after hearing that the Priest and Levite walked by on the other side. However,
the listeners’ expectations are shattered when the third person is not a Jew
but a Samaritan, a person whom the Jews had strong prejudices against. If the
third person were a lay Jew, then the Parable could be interpreted as a dig
against the Priestly class represented by the Priest and Levite. However, this
is not the case. The one who reached out to help was one who would not normally
have been expected to do so because of the animosity that existed between Jews
and Samaritans. He, too, ought to have walked by on the other side. Yet, he
does not do so. He reaches out to help. A stereotype is broken. A pre-conceived
notion is shattered. A label has to be changed.
While
the actions, or more correctly non-actions, of the Priest and Levite are
narrated in few words, Jesus uses seemingly more words than necessary to
describe the loving action of the Samaritan. These include his bandaging the
wounds of the injured man, pouring oil and wine to cleanse the wound and keep
it soft, putting the man on his own animal and even going beyond the call of
compassion by leaving money with the innkeeper for the further care of the man.
The reason for these many words and this detailed description is probably
because, if Jesus had simply stated that the Samaritan helped the man, the
listeners would have scoffed and poured scorn on him. They would not have
believed that such a thing was possible. The story might have fallen flat on
its face. Thus, Jesus had to describe in great detail the actions of the
Samaritan to make the story believable.
Jesus
turns the lawyer’s question on its head when he asks his own question at the
end of the Parable. While the lawyer’s question was “Who is my neighbor?” and
the answer to this question would have been, “Anyone in need,” Jesus’ question,
“Who was neighbor to the man who fell among robbers?” demands that the Lawyer
answers “The Samaritan.” However, so deep rooted is the prejudice of the Jewish
Lawyer that he cannot even utter the word “Samaritan” and answers instead, “The
one who showed mercy” which is, in other words, the Samaritan. It is clear that
Jesus wanted the lawyer, who was a Jew, to go beyond the narrow definition of
neighbour, to go beyond his prejudice, his bias, and his stereotyping.
When
Israel was split into two kingdoms after the death of Solomon in around 922
BCE, the North (named Israel which had its capital at Samaria) and he South
(named Judah which had its capital at Jerusalem), became the target for its neighbors,
because its strength was divided. In 722 BCE, the Assyrians captured Israel and
Samaria and took as their wives and concubines Israeli women. The children by
that union were known as Samaritans and, till the time of Jesus, were regarded
as inferior and as outcasts by their former Jewish brothers and sisters. Thus,
Jesus is asking the Jewish Lawyer if he can get rid of his negative way of looking
at the Samaritans, and regard him also as neighbor. The Samaritan is indeed,
neighbor, because he behaved as a neighbour.
The
parable is thus a challenge to each one of us to review the stereotypes that we
have of others. Often, a stereotype is created because of insufficient or
incomplete information about a situation or about the other. It is also created
because many of us feel comfortable when we are able to categorize people and
place them in neat pigeon holes that we have created in our minds and hearts.
Albert Einstein said “It is easier to disintegrate an atom than a prejudice”.
In
order to correct this way of looking, Moses’ address to the people in the first
reading of today invites them to a following of the Lord and his commands and
decrees. This following is not difficult. All it requires is openness and
sincerity. It requires one to see, not only with the eyes but also, with the
heart. If we see with the eyes of the heart, then we will be able to see
rightly.
This
is also what Paul means when he speaks in the second reading of today of Jesus
who is the image of the invisible God. We, as Christians, need only to look at
him and know how we are to speak and how we are to act. We have only to look at
him to know that there is a neighbor in every human being.
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