The parable of the Good Samaritan is well-known, even by those who aren’t Christian. Briefly, it goes like this: a man is robbed, beaten, and left for dead on the side of a road. First a priest, and then a Levite, passed him by, offering no help at all. But a Samaritan, a member of a group despised by many Jews, stopped and helped the man, even bringing him to further help and paying the necessary expenses.
There is a lesson in the story about priorities – what this Good Samaritan put first, and what he didn’t. But before covering his #1 priority, here are some things he did not prioritize, even though these aren’t necessarily bad things:
His first priority was not to fight for stricter laws against robbers. What the robbers did was probably already illegal, and definitely not morally right. We don’t know the fate of the robbers in the story, but they might have gotten away with this near murder. In modern times, if criminals are getting away with bad behavior, a movement sometimes grows to make something that is already illegal “more illegal.” If robbing is against the law, some might lobby to make the punishment harsher, or to focus laws on particular victims or perpetrators, but if they’re getting away with it now, how will these changes help? The Good Samaritan couldn’t do much about this immediately, so it wasn’t his first priority.
His first priority also was not to raise public awareness of violence along the highways. He didn’t create posters and social media hashtags (I write as if those things existed then). Such a campaign can have benefits. It could help people be more careful when traveling, it might encourage the government to allocate more of its limited resources toward highway safety, but it will never completely solve the problem. The Good Samaritan couldn’t do much about this immediately, so it wasn’t his first priority either.

So, what was the Good Samaritan’s priority? He focused on what he could control, and any other concerns came later. He focused on the problem right in front of him – a man beat up and near death on the side of the road. Sometimes we can focus so much on advocating, that we lose sight of doing. (I worry about that for myself as someone who spends so much time blogging.) But the Good Samaritan “proved to be a neighbor”[1] by taking care of the neighbor right in front of him.
We can also be deluded into thinking that our government and other institutions should be able to solve all of our problems if only we fight hard enough for it. However, they never will be enough, because any and all institutions are made up of people who too often deny their own responsibility for the problems of the world. Especially on social media, we often get the illusion that we can offload our responsibility for the world to others, and that what’s happening somewhere else is more important than what’s right in front of us.
While advocacy can be a good and necessary thing, God wants us to prioritize doing, which is what everyone in heaven will do! In heaven, everyone will be like the Good Samaritan (and like Jesus), and therefore we won’t need better laws, awareness campaigns powered by advertising and hashtags, or stricter enforcement of laws. The bloody victim by the roadside won’t exist. And that is something to look forward to!
In the meantime:
“I think each village was meant to feel pity for its own sick and poor whom it can help and I doubt if it is the duty of any private person to fix his mind on ills which he cannot help. This may even become an escape from the works of charity we really can do to those we know. God may call any one of us to respond to some far away problem or support those who have been so called. But we are finite and he will not call us everywhere or to support every worthy cause. And real needs are not far from us.” – C.S. Lewis
[1] Luke 10:36
You have made several great points/arguments in this post for personal responsibility and what our focus should be when helping others. Thanks, Todd! 🙂
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