“Good Samaritan” has become part of our language, whether we are Christian or not. About ten years ago I was trying to help my mother out of a car into her wheel chair. We were at a parking lot and the car was on an incline. The wheelchair was rolling a bit. A woman came over and held the wheelchair. I thanked her and said, “You certainly are a good Samaritan.” I thought about the incident later. I felt sure she would know what I meant, whether she were a Christian or not — so familiar is the story of the Good Samaritan. There are even “Good Samaritan” laws in our civil code to protect the passerby, who helps a victim, from being sued later. We have known Good Samaritans in our parish who gather clothing for the poor, turkeys for families at Thanksgiving and who make sandwiches to bring to the homeless. But these Good Samaritans are one of us, out of our community. The Samaritan in the gospel story was from “the other side.” It’s difficult to hear this parable afresh because we have tamed it so.
Parables aren’t supposed to pat us on the back or provide us with tidy formulas. They are meant to provoke the thoughts and imaginations of the hearers. We are so removed from the original hearers and have so tamed this story, we miss its cutting edge and its provocation to our tidy inner world and to our views of religious practice. Before we come down too hard on the priests and Levites, we must remember that according to their traditional religion, they were not allowed to touch a dead body. Since the man was “half dead,” they might have thought he was dead and felt no qualms about leaving a dead body in the ditch, thus observing their customs and piety.
The Samaritans were traitors to the Jewish faith and nation. They had allied themselves with the enemies of the Jews and the Jews, in turn, had destroyed their temple. Jesus’ deliberate choice of a Samaritan has the sharp edge that might enable the parable to pierce the shield of traditional thinking and presumptions about people. Remember that Jesus is directing the story to the Jewish scholar of the law. Whose side would God be on in this parable? The scholar of the law has previously summed up the law as loving God and loving neighbor as self. So, one would presume that God would be on the side of the one who shows mercy. Who therefore, was neighbor to the victimized traveler? The answer given to Jesus’ query is, “The one who treated him with mercy.”
But mercy is the very experience the Jews have had at the hands of God. Who has God been for the Jews, but the One who has shown them mercy? God’s merciful treatment of them is the very story of the bible, the story of God’s covenant with Israel. God is the One who has been neighbor to them by showing mercy when they were beaten up and lying by the side of the road half dead. The scholar may have the Law memorized; may teach it to the uneducated and be able to debate it with other scholars. But it is the despised infidel, the Samaritan, who has encapsulated the Law by putting it into practice. And in showing mercy, the Samaritan has mirrored God’s merciful acts towards the Jews. The parable reflects who Jesus was for them and for us. He is the merciful face of God turned toward us. Jesus is on his way to Jerusalem and when he gets there he will enflesh the mercy revealed in this parable. By his death and resurrection, he will bring life to neighbor and stranger alike. And in doing that, he will tear down the walls that separate us and cause so much animosity between us. This parable certainly shows God working outside the religious and observant world of Jesus’ listeners. This parable also threatens our sureties about friend and foe, God and religion, custom and religious practice.
With whom do we identify? Maybe with the Samaritan. He must have known from his own experience what it felt like to be “beaten up” and left behind. His own experience, as a member of a despised group, an outsider to the religious and national thinking of the Jews, may have made him respond to the victim by the side of the road. He knew what it was like to be victimized. The preacher might invite the hearers to find places in their lives where they have been excluded, victimized, judged. Feeling and remembering what that pain felt like might help us be sensitive to the victims of abuse, harassment, negligence, favoritism, racism, etc., whom we come upon in our daily lives. We don’t have to travel far, the road to Jericho might pass through our own homes, workplaces, and neighborhoods.
Of course there is the massive victimization of third world countries due to their debts to first world nations and banks. They will never get out of the ditch unless we who have the power to do so, find a way to help them. There is a strong sentiment among religious people to urge the world’s rich countries to do something about the international debt. Reminding us of the Jewish ideal of canceling debts for the jubilee years, St. Pope John Paul II said (“Tertio Millennio Advente”), “Christians will have to raise their voices on behalf of all the poor of the world, proposing the jubilee as an appropriate time to give thought, among other things, to reducing substantially, if not canceling outright, the international debt which seriously threatens the future of many nations”.
But maybe we choose to identify with the “half dead” person in the ditch. Where in our lives are we in need of the stranger or outsider to come to our aid? Have we ever been helped by one considered “outside” our circle? Did that experience do anything to soften our attitudes towards that person’s group? Did it help us put asides our stereotypes? The lawyer in this story is surprised by what he finds himself having to admit: the Samaritan was the neighbor. The Samaritan had compassion. Once we can speak such truths we can be assured the parable has cracked through our customs and even our religious attitudes to help us see God. Perhaps our own family or religion have planted ideas about other people. These judgements of others have damaged us as well. Because of what we were taught, we too have “fallen in with robbers.” We have been victims, damaged and left by the side of the road. Jesus, the Outsider, comes by, sees our wounds and comes to heal us. This parable is the instrument of our healing, it is the oil he pours on our wounded spirits.