Sermons

Summary: We all have ideas of what love is, but Jesus uses an unlikely person by Jewish standards to illustrate what love looks like.

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Karl Marx the philosopher, social scientist, historian and revolutionary is without a doubt the most influential socialist thinker to emerge in the 19th century.

He gained a reputation as a socialist and seemed to be concerned about the poor and the working class while he himself sought a middle class status

It was recently discovered that he really never knew a working class person but rather sought to associate himself with intellectuals like himself

When he and Friedrich Engels created the Communist League, and again when they formed the International, he made sure that working-class socialists were eliminated from any positions of influence.

It is also clear that for all his endeavors to be the social benefactor of humankind, he disliked people and continuously fought with members of his family.

Marx lived his life in an atmosphere of verbal violence, quarreling with everyone with whom he associated for any length of time. He worked hard at becoming middle-class

What is the point here?

All humans find it difficult to live up to what we espouse intellectually.

R. Kent Hughes says´” Love for people, or the lack of it, reveals the quality and effectiveness of the philosophy we hold.

And from a Biblical perspective our love for people is even more revealing, because it actually indicates the authenticity and health of our relationship with God.”

Before us today is a familiar story

It is a story about kindness, generosity, sacrifice

It is a response to a question raised by a lawyer

I. Real does not discriminate vs. 31-33

31 A priest happened to be going down the same road, and when he saw the man, he passed by on the other side. 32 So too, a Levite, when he came to the place and saw him, passed by on the other side. 33 But a Samaritan, as he traveled, came where the man was; and when he saw him, he took pity on him.

The priest and the Levite came by and kept going

Hugh Rudd, CBS newsman, came home late one night after putting on the CBS late news and was let off by a taxi at his home on the East Side of New York. As he stepped away from the cab, four scruffy-looking youths surrounded him and said, “Give us your money.” He did. Then one of them took a pistol and beat him over the head. Rudd fell into the gutter, just a few steps from home. For seven hours on the fashionable East Side of New York, he lay on that street. He was semi-conscious. A whole parade of people went by: milkmen, people coming home from parties, people going out to work on an early shift. As they passed by him, he kept saying, “Help me, help me.” They would shrug and look the other way. His wife, worried sick, finally called the police. They came and found him at 7:00 the next morning. R. Kent Hughes preaching the word Luke volume 1

II. Real love is willing to take a risk

There was the risk of criticism and ridicule

There was a racial divide (400 years)

He could have seen him differently

He had be the brunt of jokes

He probably had experienced discrimination

So in Jesus’ day the hatred was ingrained and utterly implacable. The rabbis said, “Let no man eat the bread of the Cuthites (Samaritans), for he who eats their bread is as he who eats swine’s flesh.”

The ultimate insult came in the arsenic-laced Jewish prayer that concluded, “… and do not remember the Cuthites in the Resurrection.

****This was common knowledge

Add to this the fact that in Jesus’ day some Jewish travelers had been murdered in Samaria, and that some Samaritans had defiled the temple with human bones, and you can begin to imagine the shock of Jesus’ introducing a Samaritan not as a villain but as a hero! Indeed, if the Jew in the story were not half-dead, he would probably push away the loathsome Samaritan as Jews were forbidden to receive acts of kindness from Samaritans

III. Real love is not concerned about its own comfort

34 He went to him and bandaged his wounds, pouring on oil and wine. Then he put the man on his own donkey, took him to an inn and took care of him.

He rendered aid and placed him on his beast, he walked so that the injured person could recover

IV. Real love does not consider the cost

35 The next day he took out two silver coins and gave them to the innkeeper. ‘Look after him,’ he said, ‘and when I return, I will reimburse you for any extra expense you may have.’

Two silver coins was enough to feed this man for about 24 days

His love is demonstrated by his willingness to bear all the cost

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