Luke 10:25-37
Won’t You Be a Neighbor
James Sledge May
5, 2019
Perhaps
you are familiar with the old, proverbial saying, “Charity begins at home.” Many
assume it is from the Bible, but it’s not. Its first written appearance is in 1600s
England, when the word “charity” was used somewhat differently than today.
In
the old King James Bible, the Apostle Paul’s famous words on love instead speak
of charity. And now abideth faith, hope, charity, these three, but the greatest of
these is charity. And so the old proverb’s understanding of charity
would include “Christ-like love.”
Originally,
the proverb spoke of how people learned to be loving and caring by witnessing
such behavior at home. You could say much the same of other behaviors. A strong
work ethic begins at home. Good citizenship begins at home. Love of learning
begins at home, etc.
However,
I typically hear the proverb used quite differently. “Why should our government
send financial aid overseas when there are needy people here? Charity begins at
home.” Here the proverb is taken to set limits on charity. Only after those
close by are cared for should it be extended to others.
I
take it that the lawyer who questions Jesus in our gospel reading would have
used the proverb in this latter fashion. He’s concerned with rules and limits. “What
must I do…?” He’s is an expert
in the Law of Moses, so he knows the answer, easily providing appropriate
scriptures. “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.”
Jesus
is happy to confirm that this is indeed the correct answer, adding, “Do
this, and you will live.” But the lawyer is a “charity begins and ends
at home” sort, and so he wants Jesus to clarify the boundaries, the limits. “And
who is my neighbor?”
If
I have to love my neighbor, I want to know where the neighborhood ends. Is it
people who live on my street? Is it my religious group or church? Is it people
of my race? Is it citizens of my country? Where can I stop, Jesus?
Jesus
doesn’t really answer the question, but he does tell a famous story. It’s a
somewhat troubling parable about what happens to a man who’s been robbed and
left for dead, although some of its more troubling aspects get lost in
translation and its familiarity.