DAILY DEVOTIONS, LIFELONG FAITH

What It Means to Love Thy Neighbor: Fifteenth Sunday in Ordinary Time

11 Jul 2025

A scholar approaches Jesus to test Him with a legal question; Jesus answers with a question Himself.  Why?

Gospel (Read Lk. 10:25-37)

This Sunday we are reading a very well-known portion of St. Lukeโ€™s Gospelโ€”the parable of the Good Samaritan. ย It is fascinating to watch the progression of this episode. ย It begins with the approach of a โ€œscholar of the Law,โ€ a man who was an expert in explaining the details of the Mosaic Law. ย He wanted to test Jesus. ย Why? ย We donโ€™t know much about this man, but we at least know that his question was not looking for an answer as much as an outcome, although it sounds very noble:

Teacher, what must I do to inherit eternal life?

By this time in His public ministry, Jesus had created an enormous buzz. ย Even Herod was asking, โ€œWho is this?โ€ (see Lk. 9:7-9).ย Perhaps the scholar was suspicious that Jesus was a charlatan, attracting large crowds out of a large ego. ย We can assumeย his question has some element of hostility in it because Jesus answered it by asking another question, His frequent response to a trap (seeย Mt. 22:15-22): โ€œWhat is written in the Law? ย How do you read it?โ€ ย 

The quiz of Jesus now turns into aย quiz of the scholar. ย He answers wellโ€”love God with all that you are and your neighbor as yourself. ย Jesus is pleased with his answer. ย This way of life is indeed the key to eternal life. ย End of discussion, right? Not exactly . . .

But because he wished to justify himself, he said to Jesus, “And who is my neighbor?โ€ ย 

With this additional question, we find out much more about the scholar. ย Why did he feel the need to โ€œjustify himselfโ€? ย What does this mean? ย It could mean that the scholar was frustrated that his test didnโ€™t produce the desired outcome. ย Did he ask the first question out of a desire to expose Jesus in some kind of infraction of the Law? ย Did he have misgivings that an itinerant preacher with such a huge following of ordinary folk could be qualified to be a teacher in Israel? ย 

Because Jesus didnโ€™t actually answer the first question, there was no way to find fault with Him. ย That was not the scholarโ€™s desired outcome, so he pressed on. ย Did he think Jesus would so expand the meaning of the word โ€œneighborโ€ that He would inevitably get tripped up in the many rules that tightly governed the relationship Jews were allowed to have with people both inside and outside their community?ย ย If the scholar exposed Jesus in an error, his testing (and self-righteousness) would be โ€œjustified.โ€

To answer this question, Jesus told a parable. ย It might help us to know an Old Testament story aboutย howย some Samaritans, whom the Jewsย hated as half-breed foreignersย and corrupters of true religion, once (hundreds of years earlier) showed great mercy to people from Judah captured in battle. ย The soldiers wanted to make everyone who survived the battle their slaves, butย several Samaritan โ€œprincesโ€ย protestedย this brutality. ย In their kindness, they โ€œassistedโ€ the captives, put them on their โ€œdonkeys,โ€ and took them peacefully to โ€œJerichoโ€ (see 2 Chr. 28:8-15). ย 

Was Jesus drawing on this historical incident to teach about the meaning of โ€œneighborโ€? ย Notice that the two men who โ€œpassed by on the opposite sideโ€ were caretakers of the Temple and part of the religious elite in Jerusalem (a โ€œpriestโ€ and a โ€œLeviteโ€). ย The Samaritan, on the other hand, did all that he could to assist the fallen man. ย Even our scholar had to admit that he was a true neighbor to the robbersโ€™ victim. ย 

How far this exchange has come from where it started! ย The discussion moved from one about who qualifies to be treated as a neighbor into one about how a good neighbor treats others. ย Loving our neighbor isnโ€™t a matter of trying to figure out who he is. ย Rather, it is a matter of knowing that whenever we see someone in need,ย heย is our neighbor, and we are to respond to him as the Samaritan did: โ€œGo and do likewise.โ€

In addition to the instruction this parable gives us about loving our neighbor as ourselves, it is also a beautiful metaphor of how Jesus, the โ€œforeignerโ€ from heaven came to save us after the Law of Moses (represented by the priest and Levite), as good as it was, could not.  Man, after Adam was robbed by Satan in the Garden and left for dead, needed supernatural healing in order to keep Godโ€™s law, which is precisely what the long history of Israel revealed.  Jesus comes as the Good Samaritan, with His anointing of the Holy Spirit and the wine of His Presence in the Eucharist, to take us to the inn of the Church for new life.  He, like the Samaritan, pays our debt and promises to come back to us.

Our Loving Neighbor now makes it possible for us to be loving neighbors, too.

Possible response:  Lord Jesus, please help me have my eyes and heart open to any neighbor who needs my love.

First Reading (Read Dt. 30:10-14)

As Moses was close to death, he exhorted the people of Israel to keep the covenant God had made with them, loving Him โ€œwith all your heart and all your soul.โ€  He goes on to tell them that, contrary to the Gospelโ€™s scholarโ€™s notion that definitions and clarifications were necessary before men can do the will of God, โ€œthe command that I enjoin on you today is not too mysterious and remote for you.โ€  Jesus makes this exceedingly clear in our Gospel reading.  When the scholar wanted more details about what leads to eternal life, Jesus simply told him a story in which everyone (including the suspicious scholar) can recognize a loving, compassionate neighbor.

Our problem is almost never about knowing what to do; no, as Moses said, โ€œit is something very near to you, already in your mouths and in your hearts.โ€  Our problem is that we donโ€™t like what Moses said next: โ€œYou have only to carry it out.โ€

Possible response:  Heavenly Father, I excel in making excuses to avoid doing what I know is right and good.  Please forgive me.

Psalm (Read Ps. 69:14, 17, 30-31, 33-34, 36-37)

The psalm helps us understand why merciful and compassionate love for those in need lies at the heart of our relationship with God. ย That is what He is like! ย โ€œSee, you lowly ones, and be glad; you who seek God, may your hearts revive! ย For the Lord hears the poor, and his own who are in bonds He spurns not.โ€ ย The Incarnation revealed this kind of Love in all its fullness. ย We can, therefore, have confidence to sing,ย โ€œTurn to the Lord in your need, and you will live.โ€ย ย 

Creatures made in Godโ€™s image and likeness will only be truly happy when they live in harmony with Godโ€™s design. ย The commandment to love our neighbor simply puts light on the path to this happiness.

Possible response:  The psalm is, itself, a response to our other readings.  Read it again prayerfully to make it your own.

Second Reading (Read Col. 1:15-20)

St. Paul, in what he writes about Jesus as the โ€œimage of the invisible God,โ€ sheds some light on why the scholarโ€™sย secondย question in our Gospel took him in a direction away from eternal life. ย He wanted to know who was included on the list of neighbors to be loved . . . which also means who could be left off. ย Yet here St. Paul describes the dynamic of Divine Love that always, always seeks toย unite, even enemies (as it did in the parable). ย 

Jesus, in His Body, came to โ€œreconcile all thingsโ€ because โ€œall things were created through Him and for Him.โ€ ย When we contemplate this, our minds begin to touch on truly mysterious heavenly truths. ย Some have suggested that in the mystery of the Eucharist, we have the firstย down payment, as it were, that somehow,ย inย someย way all thingsโ€”even material things like bread and wineโ€”really are reconciled, made one,ย withย Him.

Amazing, isnโ€™t it?

Possible response:  Lord Jesus, our world is so full of separation and disunity.  It is hard to imagine how it can all be put back together.  But love of neighbor is a good start today.


Image from Wikimedia Commons

Gayle-Somers_avatar-1

Gayle Somers is a member of St. Thomas the Apostle parish in Phoenix and has been writing and leading parish Bible studies since 1996. She is the author of three bible studies, Galatians: A New Kind of Freedom Defended (Basilica Press), Genesis: God and His Creation, and Genesis: God and His Family (Emmaus Road Publishing). Her latest book, Whispers of Mary: What Twelve Old Testament Women Teach Us About Mary is available from Ascension Press. Gayle and her husband Gary reside in Phoenix and have three grown children.

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