Intro
Love God and love your neighbor.  What could be simpler?  You can condense the 
entire Law of God in one word: Love.  Is God’s Law that simple?  Not when the 
lawyers are through with it!

Main Body
A lawyer, an expert in the Torah, came up to Jesus to test Him.  That was his 
first mistake.  Test Jesus, and you will find Him testing you.  So, to test 
Jesus, the Pharisee asks him the fundamental question: “What must I do to 
inherit eternal life?”  

The Pharisee asks the most basic of all religious questions.  But let’s parse 
his question for a moment.  What does a person do to inherit anything?  
Nothing: someone dies, and you happen to be on the receiving end of the 
inheritance.  

Jesus realizes the Pharisee is testing Him, so He answers his question with a 
question.  “What does the Law say?”  Here, Jesus uses “Law” to mean the books 
of Moses: The Torah.  What did Moses say?  What is in the Torah?  How do you 
read it?  

The lawyer responds with the Law: Love God with your entire being and love your 
neighbor as yourself.  That is what he believes someone must do to inherit 
eternal life.  To inherit, you must love God and love your neighbor.

The Pharisee still uses the language of inheritance, even while the meaning is 
no longer there.  You can’t do anything to receive an inheritance: someone 
bequeaths it to you after he dies.  You can’t do anything, except to be born 
into the right family.

So the Pharisee uses the right language even while his self-made theology 
stripped away the meaning of the word.  He understood the Torah as a set of 
works: works someone needs to do to make himself right with God.  If you do 
what God expects of you well enough, you’re in—if not, you’re out.  

But then, it wouldn’t be an inheritance, but earned wages—something you do to 
deserve it, not something God does.  We’re wired that way from the fall into 
sin.  If we do care about God, it is a god of our making, who rewards us 
because of what we do.

The Gospel, what God did and does to save you, all too often degenerates into a 
religion of works.  Why was Luther excommunicated from the Roman-Catholic 
Church, followed by the Reformation?  The life-creating power of sins forgiven 
because of Jesus degenerated into a religion of good works aimed at deserving 
God’s grace.   

Now, two ironies confront us.  The first was having to earn an inheritance.  
The second is doing something to be a benefactor of God’s grace.  Now, if you 
can do something to get God’s grace, it is no longer grace.  The language is 
there, but is the meaning stripped away from us, as well?

So, how does Jesus answer the Pharisee’s question?  He doesn’t, but instead 
asks a question in return.  Jesus redirects the spotlight, and the lawyer is 
now on the stand.  The lawyer answers, “Love God and love your neighbor.” 

Jesus agrees: “You gave the correct answer.  Do this and you will live.”  If 
you want your works to save you, love God and neighbor without flaw, and you 
will live.

The lawyer realizes he is cornered, which is what happens when you use the Law 
to justify yourself.  The Law will turn on you and condemn you.  Why is that?  
God didn’t give His Law to makes us right with Him.  The Law is to kill sin and 
the sinner and to silence every mouth.  The hammer of the Law exposes our sins 
and keeps hitting us until we realize we need a Savior from sin!

Lawyers, however, can’t be silent; their vocation requires them to speak.  
Trying to wriggle away from the unblinking stare of the Law, he responds to 
Jesus: “Who is my neighbor?”  If I can define who he is, I can gut the Law, and 
I can stand, uncondemned.  Now, I can be good enough.

Ah, if you want to be right with God based on what you do, Jesus will always 
give you something you can’t do—always!  So, Jesus tells a parable of a man who 
got beat up while traveling from Jerusalem to Jericho.  The road was a hideout 
for bands of thieves, who robbed and beat this poor man and left him for dead 
in the ditch. 

Three men passed by the man who looked to be dead.  Three men had the 
opportunity to be a neighbor to the man thrown into the ditch.  The first man 
was a priest, who was returning home from his priestly duties at the Jerusalem 
Temple.  

The Priest spots a crumpled shadow of a man lying in the ditch.  Now, if he 
happened to touch something dead, he would become unclean and could not serve 
as a priest for a while.  The Priest would need to be purified and offer a 
sacrifice.  He finds it easier to do nothing.

The second man was a Levite, a priest’s assistant.  He also takes a look, but 
like the Priest, he keeps a safe distance.  The Law is the same for him.  The 
same Law, which commanded him to love his neighbor, also demanded him to be 
ritually pure.  He finds it easier to do nothing.  You have your way out.  Why 
should I love my neighbor, who might be dead?  Why risk ritual impurity when 
he’s most likely no longer alive? 

What do you do when God’s Law corners you and demands you to act?  What should 
you do when you must break a commandment to fulfill the Law?  Jesus confronts 
us with two answers: Legalism and Liberty. 

Legalism says you must keep the Law.  The Priest and Levite were not wicked or 
evil; they were legalists.  They knew what the purity laws demanded.  God’s Law 
will do that: He will command you to “love God and love your neighbor,” but the 
Law will not give you the ability to love as God commands.  You can legislate 
behavior, morality, but you can’t legislate the heart, love.  For love is an 
act of freedom, not the Law.   

Jesus now brings in the Samaritan, the half-breed, whom Jews hated and reviled. 
 We call him “good,” but we can do better; for sin dirtied the Samaritan just 
like the Priest and the Levite.  Oh, he looks to be the better man—but look 
deeper.  

The Samaritan is free of the Law, which allows him to act.  He isn’t required 
to be pure so he can act on his compassion.  He goes to the man and finds out 
he isn’t dead.  So, he treats his wounds, puts him up at a local inn, and even 
pays for his expenses.

So, of the three, who proved to be a neighbor to the man beaten up by the 
thieves?  The answer, of course, is obvious.  The one who showed him mercy—the 
Samaritan, who stopped and helped the man in the ditch.  

Jesus tells the Pharisee, “Go and do the same.”  If you are to do the works 
needed to earn eternal life, love the man in the ditch.  Whomever God places in 
your path, no matter the personal cost or inconvenience, love him!  Oh, now 
this begins to hurt!

Is Jesus serious with His answer?  Yes!  He is the greatest teacher who ever 
walked this earth, who gazed into the hearts of those who came to trap Him.  
The only way to break the hardened, legalistic heart is to take the Law and 
intensify it until the Law becomes undoable.  Ask a Law question and you will 
receive the Lawman’s answer.

Only someone freed from the Law is free to do the Law.  Remember that.  Only 
someone freed from the Law is free to do the Law.  

Until we believe “no condemnation now exists for those in Christ Jesus” (Romans 
8:1), we will never be free.  Until we realize “Christ is the end of the Law 
for righteousness to everyone who believes” (Romans 10:4), we will never have 
the Samaritan freedom to love others in need.  Without the freedom that comes 
in Christ, we will not love God and others without having some resentment.

In Jesus, God became our neighbor.  He joined us in the ditch, where sin had 
left us for dead.  The Word became flesh to live among us, to be God with us, 
and to fulfill the Law for us.  He frees us from the burden of the Law.  Christ 
became our neighbor, embracing us in our death.  

Jesus heals our wounds with His wounds, applying the healing wine and oil of 
His Word and His body and blood to restore us.  He forgives and frees us from 
the Law—so we might then do the Law: Love God and love our neighbor from hearts 
freed from having to be good enough to please God.  Now you can’t lose!

Examine the man left for dead in the ditch.  Does he resemble someone you know? 
 “Whatever you did for one of the least of these brothers of mine, you did for 
me” (Matthew 25:40).  That beaten and broken man in the ditch is Christ, hidden 
inside your Christian brother to serve.  

Dear baptized believer in Christ, living in Samaritan freedom, thanks to Jesus, 
you get to help him.  Your Christian brother (or sister) is a gift, an 
opportunity to serve as Jesus serves you, to love as He loves you.  

What must you do to earn eternal life?  Everything, more that you can ever do, 
and you must do it all perfectly.  Until all notions of doing something to make 
God delight in you are beaten and left for dead in the ditch, the Law must come 
to you to do that.

Conclusion
But if you have given up on yourself trying to earn God’s favor, then the Law 
has done its work.  What must you do to inherit eternal life?  Nothing.  For an 
inheritance is received, not earned!  You receive it because you were born from 
above into the right family, God’s family, in the waters of holy baptism.  Amen.
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