1 Jan 2000

Hypothetical Situations and the Good Samaritan

Submitted by theshovel
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This article about the Good Samaritan and came about as a post I made to a discussion group

You know, this approach of posing a hypothetical situation sounds EXACTLY like many of the confrontations between the religious and Jesus!! :) The fleshly mind NEVER changes ... or never CAN change. This hypothetical situation probably hides many, many internal conflicts hiding within the conscience of the guy who posed it. To truly communicate with this friend of yours, forget the potential of his suggestion and speak to his heart. What in the world might he be actually dealing with regarding his deacons and elders ... or even himself? How many things does he know about that he has let slide and now beats himself up over? How fragile does he regard his whole leadership structure? How many times has he thought about cleaning house only to back off because he knew it would either all fall apart or maybe come back on himself? Never lose sight of the real meaning of hypothetical questions and scenarios.

We have often read hypothetical into the parables and stories that Jesus told ... but I don't think they were. I think stories like the Good Samaritan were actual happenings fresh in the memories of the hearers. I wouldn't be a bit surprised if the priest and the Levite who passed by on the opposite side of the road might have been in the crowd, or may have been one of the ones who confronted Jesus in the first place. Until Jesus told that story, the religious assumption would have demanded that the actions of the aforementioned religious leaders were not only appropriate, but also RIGHTEOUS. After all, these men of God had to keep themselves clean and pure in order to serve God. And who might the wounded man have been? How did the religious community regard his fate? Was he obviously being judged by God in the near-death experience at the hands of those thieves? Remember, the reason Jesus told the story in the first place was in the context of being challenged by a Biblical lawyer.

And behold, a certain lawyer stood up and put Him to the test, saying, 'Teacher, what shall I do to inherit eternal life?' And He said to him, 'What is written in THE LAW? How does it read TO YOU?' And he answered and said, '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 He said to him, 'You have ANSWERED correctly; DO THIS, and you will live.' BUT WISHING TO JUSTIFY HIMSELF, he said to Jesus, 'And WHO is my "neighbor"?' Jesus replied and said, 'A CERTAIN MAN ...' Luke 10:25-30

Here is the bottom line: But wishing to justify himself, he basically asked, HYPOTHETICALLY speaking, who are we talking about here?. But Jesus got so real his answer cut through the crap and exposed the fakery behind the question itself. With all its pomp and circumstance, the flesh is still pretty obvious. When we pose such questions we are merely trying to justify our own sorry legally-entrenched fleshly perceptions.

You know what hurt the absolute MOST in this story? The fact that the hero was a despised non-person in the sight of the man challenging the morals of Jesus (as well as that of the rest of the crowd). By the way, a Samaritan was a cross-breed between a Jew and (I think) a Canaanite. A current equivalent would be something akin to descendants of Osama bin Laden and an American who turned her back on her own people. Many in our country would rather kill such offspring, and would consider them despised by God as well as by all so-called good Americans. But in this probably-true story, they would have already known that one of their own people had been rescued by a piece of trash while their own leaders left him to die because they were too damned busy doing God's work!

Jesus didn't let the lawyer off easy, for he made him answer his own question. "Which of these three do you think proved to be a 'neighbor' to the man who fell into the robbers' hands?" It's not recorded, but I'll bet this was one of the most difficult obvious answers this man ever had to give. He couldn't even bring himself to say, "The Samaritan". No, he tried to keep it impersonal: "The one who showed mercy toward him.". Then Jesus hits him with the OBVIOUS punch-line: "Go and do likewise." Oh, yeah, we think this moral of the story was some kind of grace imperative. How BOGUS! The fact is that this man had his whole religious structure ripped to shreads in front of the crowd he had hoped to impress with his technical righteousness about the getting of eternal life. He, along with all the religious-minded in the crowd, were slam-dunked into the pit of despair regarding their own scriptural performance standards.

Here's the point: By their OWN interpretation of the Law, through the very admission of one of their Biblical technicians, they were shown to be less able to do God's will than the worst human they could imagine. The fact that we have learned this story by the title Good Samaritan only underscores our total ignorance as to its scathing conclusion!!

It is the LEGAL mind that establishes this form of godliness that ALLOWS for a multitude of sin, and then that same legal mind turns around and demands to know if the mind of Christ is suggesting that it's morally okay to sin in such-and-such a fashion!! This is the whole underlying motivation behind all the attacks made on Jesus by the religious community. And instead of backing off the obviousness of their built-in sin acceptability standards Jesus either seemed to answer them in a totally unrelated manner or else he pounded them over the head with those standards. What Jesus did was something like pulling the lever on the huge trap-door they themselves had constructed, and they fell down through the floor and into the chute beneath them.

New Testament: 

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