To read the texts click on the texts: Gal 1:6-12; Lk 10:25-37
Our text for today contains the Parable of The Good Samaritan.
This is a parable that is found only in the Gospel of Luke, and the context in
Luke is the question that is asked by a lawyer regarding eternal life.
In
Matthew and Luke, the lawyer is hostile (not so in Mark), because the question
is asked to “test” Jesus. While in Matthew (22:34-40) and Mark (12:28-31) the
question is about the greatest commandment, and Jesus answers the question
quoting from Deuteronomy and Leviticus, in Luke, Jesus asks the lawyer a
counter question and gets him (the lawyer) to answer. Deuteronomy 6:4-9 (Love
of God) was part of the “Shema” (the prayer to “Hear”), repeated twice each
day, but it had not been linked to Leviticus 19:18 (Love of neighbour) as it is
here. Since it is the lawyer who answers, Jesus responds with a
commendation (“You have answered right; do this, and you will live.”)
Since the lawyer was forced to answer and cede the upper hand, he does not give
up, but asks a question over which there was some controversy – “Who is my
neighbour?”
In his response to this question, Jesus tells the parable of the
Good Samaritan. This parable has often been interpreted as one in which Jesus
is telling us that those in need are our neighbours, or that it has an anticlerical
edge, in which Jesus is showing up the priestly class by mentioning priest and
Levite as not reaching out to the one in need. If these were the meanings, then
there would be no need to make the third person that passed by that way, a
Samaritan. The third person could have been a lay Jew. The reason why the third
person is a Samaritan is because 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 kingdoms after the death
of Solomon in around 922 BCE, the North (named Israel which had its capital at
Samaria) and the South (Judah which had its capital as Jerusalem), it became
the target for its neighbours, because its strength was divide. In 722 BCE, the
Assyrians captured Israel and its capital 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 outcasts by their
former Jewish brothers (and sisters).
Jesus is thus asking the Jew (the lawyer)
if he can get rid of his negative way of looking at the Samaritan, and regard
him also as neighbour. It is interesting that at the end of the parable, Jesus
overturns the lawyer’s question. Jesus asks, “Who was neighbour to the one who
fell among robbers?” whereas the lawyers question was “Who is my neighbour?”
The Samaritan is indeed, neighbour.
We often look at people with tainted glasses or a prejudiced
vision. We tend to categorise them and place them in neat compartments based on
their backgrounds. This attitude leads to stereotyping people and not being
able to see them as they are. Albert Einstein said this about a prejudice, “It
is easier to disintegrate an atom than a prejudice”.
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