Who is your neighbor? (Luke 10:21-37), September 27, 2015

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Today’s Scriptures

Today’s Bible reading plans include:

Ready – Luke 10:21-37

Set – Haggai 2; Luke 10

Go! – Haggai 1-2; Psalms 129; Luke 10

Luke 10:21-37
21 Then Jesus Himself became elated. The Holy Spirit was on Him, and He began to pray with joy.
Jesus Thank You, Father, Lord of heaven and earth. Thank You for hiding Your mysteries from the wise and intellectual, instead revealing them to little children. Your ways are truly gracious. 22 My Father has given Me everything. No one knows the full identity of the Son except the Father, and nobody knows the full identity of the Father except the Son, and the Son fully reveals the Father to whomever He wishes. 23 (then almost in a whisper to the disciples) How blessed are your eyes to see what you see! 24 Many prophets and kings dreamed of seeing what you see, but they never got a glimpse. They dreamed of hearing what you hear, but they never heard it.
25 Just then a scholar of the Hebrew Scriptures tried to trap Jesus.
Scholar: Teacher, what must I do to experience the eternal life?
Jesus (answering with a question): 26 What is written in the Hebrew Scriptures? How do you interpret their answer to your question?
Scholar: 27 You shall love—“love the Eternal One your God with everything you have: all your heart, all your soul, all your strength, and all your mind”—and “love your neighbor as yourself.”
Jesus: 28 Perfect. Your answer is correct. Follow these commands and you will live.
29 The scholar was frustrated by this response because he was hoping to make himself appear smarter than Jesus.
Scholar: Ah, but who is my neighbor?
Jesus: 30 This fellow was traveling down from Jerusalem to Jericho when some robbers mugged him. They took his clothes, beat him to a pulp, and left him naked and bleeding and in critical condition. 31 By chance, a priest was going down that same road, and when he saw the wounded man, he crossed over to the other side and passed by. 32 Then a Levite who was on his way to assist in the temple also came and saw the victim lying there, and he too kept his distance. 33 Then a despised Samaritan journeyed by. When he saw the fellow, he felt compassion for him. 34 The Samaritan went over to him, stopped the bleeding, applied some first aid, and put the poor fellow on his donkey. He brought the man to an inn and cared for him through the night.
35 The next day, the Samaritan took out some money—two days’ wages to be exact—and paid the innkeeper, saying, “Please take care of this fellow, and if this isn’t enough, I’ll repay you next time I pass through.”
36 Which of these three proved himself a neighbor to the man who had been mugged by the robbers?
Scholar: 37 The one who showed mercy to him.
Jesus: Well then, go and behave like that Samaritan.

Today’s Devotional

From today’s background scripture God might say:

As you try to get through the message of Good Samaritan, it probably doesn’t register very well with you today. You’ve heard the story many times and you’ve heard how Jews had a deep dislike for the Samaritans. You’ve heard about the failure of the priest and the Levite, two individuals who should have gone to the aid of the injured man. But you probably don’t get the whole picture because you didn’t live in the culture of the day.

Put your emotions into the story. Suppose the characters are updated a little. Let’s make the priest a well known pastor, the Levite a Christian Sunday School teacher, and the Samaritan an ISIS soldier, does that make a difference in how you understand the story? Now, who is the injured man’s neighbor? That’s what the scholar heard from his visceral emotions. He felt about the Samitans as you probably feel about those who behead the children of Christians in Syria.

So how could any of those among ISIS do any good? How could you think well of any of them? They are still My creation. They still have a living, eternal soul that I died to save. I still long for them to learn of Me and find My grace and the truth of My salvation. They are special to Me just as you are special to Me. I wove together every bone and sinew of their bodies just as I did yours. Have they been led astray by Satan’s lies? Yes. Can they be saved? Yes! Will they be saved? As readily as anyone who calls on My name for the forgiveness of their sins and believes in Me as the Son of God.

I hold no prejudices against any nation, race, gender, creed, or color. I died for all humanity. But I let you choose whether or not to believe in Me. Can you get over your prejudices? Think again about the story of the pastor, the Christian, and the ISIS soldier. Who is your neighbor? Who do you lift in prayer? How can you show Christ to those who seem unloveable? I died for them. What will you do?

The Voice Bible Copyright © 2012 Thomas Nelson, Inc. The Voice™ translation © 2012 Ecclesia Bible Society All rights reserved.
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