Fifteenth Sunday
in Ordinary Time Year C
“What must I do to inherit eternal life?” The famous
parable of the Good Samaritan is the answer given to this question posed by a
lawyer, a professional scholar of the Mosaic Law. Being an expert of the Law,
he should have known the answer to his own question. So this is not a genuine
enquiry by someone seeking new learning but a rhetorical one made by someone
who already knows (or thinks he knows) the answer – a kind of a smart-alecky
question hoping to trap the teacher and put him on the spot, and in a way, show
off one’s own intelligence and knowledge. The passage confirms this motive as
it states that the lawyer posed this question because he wished to “disconcert”
our Lord. He had come to the Lord not to learn but to trap Him. But again we
are thankful for his question because IT IS indeed life’s greatest question.
“What must I do to inherit eternal life?” The question
gets to the heart of Christianity. We are Christians not only because our
religion provides us with moral guidelines. We are Christians not only because
it’s nice and wise to belong to some organised religion or a community of
like-minded people. We are Christians because we appreciate or at least should
appreciate that the goal of living is not just living well, but “inheriting
eternal life.” If you haven’t thought about, or asked this question before, you
should. It should be the principal guiding question of your life.
To this question our Lord replies with a question of
His own, “What is written in the Law?” - testing his interlocutor’s knowledge
of Scripture. Let’s be clear that it is not the Lord who is being tested or on
trial, but this lawyer. The lawyer quotes the two great commandments from the
Pentateuch: “Love God” (Deut 6: 3) and
“Love your neighbour as yourself” (Lev 19, 18). Our Lord agrees, commending
him, then commanding him to “Go and do the same yourself.” Doing so, however,
is not in some one-off act but, as the tense of the verb implies, in a
continual and habitual way. But the lawyer does not wish to be out-maneuvered
and attempts to make a comeback by posing an additional question, “And who is
my neighbour?” This is the end-game of legalism. For the lawyer, his legal
training has allowed him to see how narrow categories and definitions can often
be the means of wrangling your way out of an obligation. Our Lord Jesus Christ
gives us the parable of the Good Samaritan to silence the lawyer once and for
all.
There is a tendency to reduce the parable to just
another example given to us on how to be a do-gooder. Most would read this as
the foundation for any ethical humanitarian action. A common and not entirely
incorrect way of examining and interpreting this parable is to see our Lord
wishing the lawyer and all of us to be generous in loving and moving beyond
minimalistic legal requirements – to go beyond the call of duty. The lawyer
seems contented that he had the answer and perhaps may even be living out the
answer of fulfilling the dictates of the Law. But was that enough? Well, the
Lord’s telling of the parable reminds him, that the Law of Love cannot just be
confined to such narrow legal parameters and categories. Our Lord expands the
definition of “neighbour” to encompass more than what the lawyer and other Jews
were prepared to accept. Our Lord’s understanding of neighbour is from the
perspective of divine mercy (“can you be a neighbour to this person”) while the
lawyer’s original question was focused on himself (“Who is my neighbor?”). Thus
we are given the example of the Good Samaritan, who had no obligation to help
but he did.
Though the above may be true, the traditional
interpretation given to this parable takes us beyond this ethical question. In
fact, they see this story as a parable of salvation history. The clue to its
interpretation is found in the first question of the lawyer, “What must I do to
inherit eternal life?” The question shows that the lawyer saw his salvation as
based on human actions and merits obtained by observance of the Mosaic Law. The
question for him presupposes that eternal life can be inherited based on human
actions; and that there is a set checklist of the sorts of actions that one
must fulfill, in order to achieve this desired outcome. This is the heresy of
Pelagianism condemned by the Church which basically reduces our religion to one
where we can earn salvation by just doing good. Today, Pelagianism is an all
pervasive ideology. Modern man prides himself as the architect of his own
destiny and is deluded into believing that he can create his own earthly
utopia, a failed project as can be seen in the political and economic disasters
wrought by National Socialism (Nazism) and communism.
But the truth of the matter is that we cannot save
ourselves. We do not have the resources to obtain eternal life. No amount of
human effort or power could even come close to gaining salvation. We do not
have a rocket ship powerful enough to fly to heaven. We have no ladder tall
enough to climb there. We can never hope to “inherit eternal life” without a
Saviour. And this is what our faith professes - that if we are to inherit
eternal life at all, it is only by way of the freely-given mercy of God, through
the work and action of the Son of God who became man, our Saviour and Redeemer
who redeemed us through the sacrifice of the cross and opened the gates of
eternal salvation to us. Did we earn this? Certainly not. Keeping the
commandments of God, offering up acts of service to a loved one, are only expressions
of our accepting that gift. Not ways to earn it.
So, therefore the parable of the Good Samaritan is not
just merely an exemplary story of doing good beyond the call of duty, it is a
summary of salvation history, beginning with the Fall of Adam and continuing
through the founding of the Church even until the Second Coming of our Saviour
and the Day of Judgment. The Good Samaritan was no mere hypothetical straw man.
Jesus Christ is the Good Samaritan. Just like the Samaritan in the eyes of the
Jews, our Lord was hated, and yet He came to us and found us in our hopeless
condition and wounded by the diabolical powers of sin. Rather than judgment, He
showed us mercy. Yes, it is Jesus Christ who enters this world in mercy and
love, to bring healing and to carry us to the Church (“the inn”) and His
Father’s house; healing our wounds through His precious blood and by paying the
price for our redemption through His death, and lifting us to the Father in His
resurrection, and promising to return one day to make good what is still
lacking in us.
So, the next time you encounter this parable, remember
that this beautiful story is about more than caring for the poor or doing good.
It is also about the absolute need for grace. It is about us needing a Saviour.
Only with tons of grace and mercy do we even stand a chance in coming close to
loving God and neighbour. Only God can really give God, the love He deserves.
Only God can really love our neighbour as they ought to be loved. That is why
we have to die to our self and allow Jesus Christ to live His life in us. He
does this through the sacramental grace that flows through the Church. Those
who faithfully attend Mass and regularly receive communion worthily, those who
confess their sins frequently and fruitfully receive the graces of that
sacrament, those who faithfully and thoughtfully meditate on God’s Word, begin
to experience a transformation that enables them to love. The Church is the
“inn” where wounds are healed, the weak are made strong, and the sick recover.
Those who find comfort and solace within, will receive a new heart and a new
mind, the heart and mind of Christ. It is here that they begin to truly love
God above all things and their neighbour as their very self. And it is not they
who do it. Let us never forget this. It is Christ who does it in them.
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