Everyone loves a good story.
Stories are a powerful tool for communication.
Stories make connections between people,
Opening pathways for empathy and understanding.
Stories open our eyes to truths that facts could never convey,
They tell us who we are,
And whose we are.
Long before 23andMe and Ancestry.com came along
Stories told us where we come from
Creating the vantage point
From which we see ourselves
The world around us,
And our place in it.
In recent years,
There has been a cinematic explosion
Of superhero movies.
These live action comic books
Have leapt from the giant IMAX screens
And into our own narratives.
These movies have been so successful
In large part
Because they cross the boundaries
Of traditional demographic divides
And appeal to virtually everyone.
Women and men.
Adults and children.
Black, white, latinx
Gay, straight,
It seems like everyone
has their specific hero or heroine.
I think the compelling thing about these figures
Is how they became heroes and heroines
In the first place.
Now some are gods and demigods.
Some are alien beings.
But the most compelling characters,
I think,
Are the average folks
Who find themselves transformed
By some event
Or circumstance,
Into an unlikely hero.
I think of Bruce Wayne,
Who is orphaned by a robber
Outside an opera house.
His quest to find justice
Leads him to confront his fears
And work for a safer Gotham
As the Batman.
Or Peter Parker,
A scrawny science nerd
Who is bitten by a radioactive spider
And gains the attributes of a spider.
After Peter fails to act to stop a robber
And the uncle who helped raise him
is killed a result,
Peter fights crime
And works for a more just city
As Spiderman.
The stories explain to an audience
What motivates these characters
To act in ways we wish we could
Or wish someone would
When it seems like so many fail to act.
Ourselves included.
In today’s Gospel,
A lawyer comes to Jesus
to find the secret to eternal life.
Like a good rabbi,
Jesus points the lawyer to the law.
When the lawyer produces the right answer
“Love God with your entire being,
And love your neighbor as yourself”
And Jesus affirms that it is the right answer.
The lawyer is not satisfied.
So, he asks,
“Who is my neighbor?”
Now Jesus is a good teacher
So he tells a story.
A man was headed down the road to Jericho.
Some robbers nearly kill him,
Steal the clothes off his back,
And leave him to die in a ditch.
A Priest comes by
And does nothing.
A Levite comes by,
And does nothing.
But then a Samaritan comes by,
And he gives the man first aid,
Takes him to a nearby inn,
And gives the innkeeper a down payment
For the man’s medical care.
Then Jesus says to the lawyer,
“Which one of these was a neighbor?”
The lawyer responds,
“the one who showed mercy.”
Jesus says,
“Then go and do that.”
Jesus flips the script.
The lawyer wants to know who his neighbor is,
wants to know where his responsibility begins and ends;
“Who do I have to love,
and who can I ignore?”
Jesus says to go and become a neighbor .
What’s worse,
Jesus tells this expert in the Jewish Law
To go and act like this Samaritan.
This would be like telling a Westboro Baptist protestor
To go and act like RuPaul.
By the time the Gospels are written,
There have been centuries of mutual antipathy
Between the Samaritans and the Jewish people.
Mutual condemnations,
Reciprocal exclusion,
And a general disregard
For each other’s humanity.
Maybe it’s precisely this sense of rejection,
Of condemnation
Of dehumanization
That makes the Samaritan
Into the hero.
You see,
The thing that superheroes
And the Samaritan
Have in common
Is their trauma.
Just like the murder of Bruce Wayne’s parents
And the death of Peter Parker’s Uncle Ben
Made them into heroes who fight for justice,
The left-out-ness
experienced by Samaritan people
Made the Samaritan just the right person
To not only see the man in the ditch
But to bring the man justice.
This is how God works in the world.
And in our lives.
God takes our oppression,
our anxiety,
our loneliness,
our depression,
and uses us to bring hope
to the oppressed
the anxious,
the lonely,
and the depressed.
Our woundedness is our origin story,
The things that make us
uniquely able to see and bring justice
to those oppressed by the ways of the world.
We are empowered by the Holy Spirit
And gathered into the church
Because none of us can do this work alone.
The church is like our Justice League,
Our Avengers.
It is the place where we can band together
To not only see this person in the ditch
And bring this person justice,
But to fight
to make sure
that no one else
Ends up in the ditch
in the first place.
Part of the enduring power
of the stories of Batman,
and Spiderman,
and of the Samaritan
is that we have all
at one time or another,
found ourselves in the ditches of life.
And we can all think of the heroes and heroines
Who rescued us
Without cape or utility belt
Without spandex or mask.
Chances are,
Those heroes and heroines
Saw you at all
Because of their origin story,
Because God is always redeeming our wounds
Pulling us from the ditches of life,
And calling us to see and rescue others.
In this way,
God is our rescuer.
We are God’s mask,
God’s utility belt.
God’s command to love God
And love neighbor
Is not a call to use God and neighbor
As means to an end,
As though in loving God
And loving neighbor enough
We could earn some personal reward.
Love is not about transaction.
Love is about transformation.
It is not about finding a neighbor
worthy of our love
or abusing the needy to earn our heavenly reward.
Love is about becoming a neighbor.
It is about becoming a lover.
It is the cross that shows us this love.
It is the cross that transforms wounds
Into our redemption.
It is the cross that shows us how God loves
It is the cross that shows us how to be a neighbor.
It is the cross that shows us
that it is Jesus in that ditch
In the first place.
And it is the cross that shows us that
loving God
and loving neighbor
is the same love
after all.
Amen.