“Who is my neighbor?” I don’t know about you, but I think I’ve
heard that question often enough that I’m not sure it no longer stirs in my
heart what needs to be stirred. When I
realized this week that we could just as grammatically render it “Who is near
me?” it started to do a little more work.
Then, I thought that right now might not be the time for grammatical
fastidiousness, and I might need the freshness of this: “Whose lives matter?” “Who is my neighbor…? Who is near me…? Whose
lives matter?”
On June 23rdof this year, a county correctional officer had a heart attack in the District
Courts Building in Weatherford, Texas. The
only people who could see this, who would see this for another fifteen minutes,
were inmates in a holding cell, inmates who shouted and hollered and broke down
the door to their cell to get out and help their jailer. When deputies heard the noise, they feared,
knowing that the C.O. had keys and a gun on him, and ran down to find him
lying, unresponsive, with one handcuffed inmate bent over him, giving CPR, and
another reaching for his radio, located next to his gun. It’s a miracle that everyone got out of that
room alive. It’s a miracle. “Who is my neighbor…? Who is near me…? Whose
lives matter?”
We need to
keep asking “Who is near me?” because there’s a power in that question that
goes beyond the moralistic reading that says this text is basically about being
nice to people. I think it’s on the
basis of that kind of reading that our lectionary gives us the passage from
Deuteronomy as our first reading: an optimistic encouragement, “kindness is
natural, go, be good to one another!” And we should be, boy does this world
need kindness. This world needs more
than nice, it needs people willing to act riskily for the sake of another, the
sake of the other, to leave themselves open to the possibility of being
financially exploited by the inn-keeper like our Samaritan, to risk their lives
for their jailer like our Texan inmates.
But, to reduce this text to a moral is to blunt its gospel power. Because what if I don’t feel like a priest or
a Levite or Samaritan? What if I feel
like the man lying in the ditch? What if
I feel like the C.O. whose keys and gun do him no good now his heart won’t pump
blood? What if I feel like an inmate who
can’t break out of the cell, whether from the strength of the door or my fear? With all the violence of this past week, does
this text have no power now?
“Who is
near me?” God is near me. God is near us. God is moved with compassion. God approaches, anoints, bandages, lifts us
up and brings others into our care team.
God pays the price. When we are
worse than robbed, God is near us.
And this
good news is what animates the other moral that is often, and needfully, drawn
from this text, the moral that attends to the shock that it’s the Samaritan in
whom love incarnates in care, to remind us to not judge books by their covers,
to not reject whole classes of people as incapable of virtue. But what about when we do that out of fear? Does this text have no power then? Or is it an unbearable burden? No, for who is near me? God is near me. And God lifts us out of the ditch of fear,
God salves the wound of prejudice. When
we are worse than robbed, God is near us.
And it’s
precisely in the security of God’s embrace that we can embrace the risk of
costly love. It’s precisely being
tightly held that we go move out beyond our narrow interests and unreflective convictions
of who matters. It’s precisely being
lifted up that we can look down into others’ ditches, and rise to raise.
When I was
doing my stint as a hospital chaplain, I met a patient named Kay on the gen med
floor who told me, “I know why I’m in here.”
I expected a presenting problem, but I got, “I’m here to treat each and
every person that comes through that door a little more humanely than they
normally get, and that’s how I’m going to help heal all the rest of the
patients.” I did go on to learn that Kay
had a deep Christian faith, but she didn’t need to use God-talk in that
sentence for me to know that she got the power of this text. That she knew God was carrying her burden
with her, so she could have space to carry others.
When we try
and make sure that our good news doesn’t lack moral demand, that our theology
still has room for ethics, we often talk about the ethical flowing from the
theological, and that’s true on one level.
But, we can’t make that sound like a two-step process, like we have to
have it all together before we can help, to be done with needing healing and
holding to start loving. We can love in
a hospital bed, from a holding cell or in a ditch. Because if God is near us and God thinks we
matter then God will raise us, and we will see who else God is near.
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