“You do realize that Jesus was talking to a group of Jewish people” said the professor in my first year of seminary. What is the big deal you might say, because Jesus often talked to such a crowd. For me, the big deal was the story was about a man who was beaten on the road, ignored by two men of the church passing by, and then cared for by someone considered unclean/unacceptable in the church of the day. Have you heard the story? Many know it by its title, “The Good Samaritan”.
I had not considered the tidbit of information about the crowd before that day. It made sense but I had never given it thought. It immediately got me to thinking. How would I have felt listening to a story about folks like me and finding out that someone my culture told me not to like, became the hero (or superhero as people like to say today) in the story. The Samaritan did not just stoop down and see that the man was breathing. He stopped, took out his resources, offered care and kindness, put him on his own donkey, and took him to an inn. When they arrived, the Samaritan was not finished. He made sure the man had a room, engaged the services of a stranger, and then offered to pay for any additional expenses.
For the crowd listening to Jesus tell the story, they might have easily explained away the actions of the first two as they were important people. After all, there were cleanliness laws to be considered – especially if the guy was dead or was not a “clean” person.
As for the third person who saw the injured man, to the crowd listening, this one was unacceptable (insert a group of people for whom we have negative stereotypes). Certainly, he would pass the man by because of who they thought he was. But Jesus was not having it. Surprise! The person they had been taught had no value, cared for someone who was another human being. He took what he had and offered it for the well-being of a stranger.
When we look at people who have been negatively labeled – people who are homeless, poor, have mental health issues, or are of another culture, what do we really know about them? What justifications do we use to see them as those whom we serve rather than people who have gifts to share? What would happen if we began to see the value in all people, sought to hear about their gifts and talents, and put aside systemic stereotypes in favor of personal relationships?
Mike Mather, author of Having Nothing, Possessing Everything, made this comment when talking about caring for the poor around the faith communities in which he served, “Our church and community began asking ourselves a set of new questions. For instance, we asked how we could use money to reveal the power and abundance we witnessed in others. We began to notice a subtle shift that moved us from asking how we could help to how we could become venture capitalists. Where could we invest our money in this neighbor?
What services or products that these gifted entrepreneurs offered could we multiply by helping them share their paintings, poetry, fishing talent, jewelry, carpentry, and more?”
As we live in the new reality of being the living and loving representatives of Jesus Christ in, and with, those around us, we cannot look at “those people” the same way as we did before 2020. We need to be like the Good Samaritan and cross the lines that culture has so destructively created.
But we cannot stop there. We must invest ourselves as individuals and faith communities. We must also see the abundance of those who have been the focus of our mission and see how we can invest in, and with, “our brothers and sisters”.
This is not about giving money to a great cause or creating a new mission to address a problem. The stewardship message today is to see and celebrate the abundance of opportunities around us to build bridges over chasms, engage in authentic relationships with neighbors, and see people for who they are, not what we think they need to be like us.