The Good Samaritan (Der barmherzige Sameriter) © Paula Modersohn-Becker,1907
Ethnocentrism, Racism, and
THE PARABLE OF THE GOOD SAMARITAN BY RON PETRUSHA
O
ver two millennia of Christian history, the meaning of Jesus’ parables has often been toned down. This is particularly true of the parable of the Good Samaritan (Luke 10:25-37), which is usually understood to mean that we should do charitable deeds for one another. Although we certainly should be concerned with good works, that most likely is not what Jesus intended to convey. Jesus’ parables were meant to be shocking, upsetting, and disturbing. For those who listened to and considered them, they aimed to lead to a reevaluation of the character of God, of one’s understanding of one’s faith, and of one’s relationship to the surrounding world. A fruitful starting point in understanding
any of Jesus’ parables is to ask what the disturbing element in it is. There are three in the parable of the Good Samaritan:
• Jesus’ response to the scribe’s question • Casting a Samaritan as the parable’s hero • The behavior of the priest and Levite The scribe’s question, “And who is my neighbor?” (Luke 10:29) is hardly an innocent one; the scribe expects Jesus to answer based on the Torah. Jesus, however, poses quite a different question, and in the process reaches a radically different conclusion than the scribe expects, and the Torah would seem to demand. The scribe’s question assumes that “neighbor” is an attribute, that some
possess this attribute while others do not. Neighbor is an exclusive rather than inclusive category, and the scribe’s question focuses on the limits of “neighbor.” For the scribe, “my neighbor” further suggests personalization, leaving open the possibility that his neighbor is not Jesus’ neighbor. Moreover, the scribe knows very well that the definition of neighbor: It is an Israelite (Leviticus 20:26-29; Deuteronomy 15:7) or an immigrant living among God’s people (Leviticus 19:33-34). Jesus’ response focuses not on neighbor as an attribute but on neighbor as a verb or an activity. While the scribe wants Jesus to define the people whom he should love as his neighbor, Jesus makes it clear that loving one’s neighbor means to be a neighbor.
A M AT T E R O F S P I R IT
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