July 13, 2025 at Saint Agnes Church in Naples, FL
Deuteronomy 30: 10-14 + Psalm 69 + Colossians 1: 15-20 + Luke 10: 25-37
The day that Jesus spoke those words to that man who came to him asking a question is a date to be remembered in all the history of humanity. What Jesus said that day was something that no other religion in history ever said: that everyone in the world, without exception, is our neighbor. In those days, and even for some today, there is always a “them and us” attitude that is incompatible with a faith rooted and springing out of the words and actions of Jesus Christ.
There is here even a new definition of neighbor. In the book of Leviticus quoted by this scholar of the law a neighbor is one who is to be loved. What emerges from this exchange with Jesus is that a neighbor is one who loves. Jesus is answering a question that should have been asked and is being asked today as he speaks to us: “Who is capable of becoming a neighbor?” This is the deeper question being asked of us today. We don’t need to ask “Who is my neighbor?” That question is already settled. Now we have to ask, “Am I a neighbor?”
There is a terrible risk confronting all of us today in the world and in this nation. It comes from seeing, day in and day out, the suffering of others either in real life or on TV, the homeless, the victims of violence, famine, and injustice. The risk is a hardened heart or a surrender to helplessness. A religion that is totally vertical that is focused only on my going up to God and God coming down to me is not a religion inspired by Jesus Christ. It must also be a horizontal religion that embraces broken humanity through whom we might find God. How is it possible to see the Divine in a suffering and crucified Jesus unjustly condemned and not see the Divine in the sufferings of anyone else? This is the critical issue raised by this story and the words of this Gospel.
Feeling sorry will not do. Those who passed by that victim certainly saw him and, no doubt, felt sorry for him. They had their excuses, and because of them, nothing changed. When reflecting on this story, it is easy to focus on the Samaritan, thinking that we should all be “good Samaritans” and that’s all very nice thinking, but where is the action?
It might help if instead of focusing on the good Samaritan we focused on the man in the ditch and with some empathy and compassion beginning to realize what it’s like to lie there watching people look away and walk on by. In truth, that man in the ditch and the Samaritan had a lot in common, and that might be why the Samaritan rose to the occasion. They were both looked upon as outsiders by the world in which they lived. Samaritans were despised by Jews at the time who would have nothing to do with them. It would make them unclean just as having something to do with that victim would make them unclean. Suddenly on that road, the Samaritan and that man discovered that they had something in common, and they both ended up being the better for it.
When we realize that we have something in common with the suffering people in this world, we will all be better for it. We have humanity in common. We are neighbors. We both share the image of our creator and a place in God’s creation. We all have a right to dignity. All of us were saved by that man on a cross. When someone is vilified, deaminized, imprisoned, and treated like an animal put in a cage, all humanity is degraded, and we all suffer this indignity.
As long as we perpetuate the false belief in individual independence, we will never relate to those who are suffering. We will continue to see them as a burden. That Samaritan did not see that man as a burden. The more deeply we become related to one another, the more we shall truly live in the image of the Holy Trinity, ultimate Divine community.