30 . . . Jesus said, “A man was going down the road from Jerusalem to Jericho. Some robbers surrounded him, tore off his clothes, and beat him. Then they left him lying there on the ground almost dead.
There was, last week, a man sitting on the pathway outside our church buildings . . .
31 “It happened that a Jewish priest was going down that road.
He was hypothermic and had drunk too much and it was below freezing and all he wanted was to die and his wish looked like coming true. We called an ambulance.
When he saw the man, he did not stop to help him.
The ambulanceman talked to him for a while. Because the man didn't 'consent' to come(though in fact he could not have moved if he did) . . .
He walked away.
He walked away and called a police officer.
32 Next, a Levite came near.
The police officer turned up in a big van.
He saw the hurt man, but he went around him. He would not stop to help him either. He just walked away.
She walked around and spoke on her radio. Because 'the man didn't consent' she drove away too.
33 “Then a Samaritan man travelled down that road. He came to the place where the hurt man was lying. He saw the man and felt very sorry for him.
But the volunteer workers in our Church Drop-In centre felt sorry for the man.
34 The Samaritan went to him and poured olive oil and wine on his wounds. Then he covered the man’s wounds with cloth.
Whether he consented or not they ushered him into the hallway of the church and put a blanket over him.
The Samaritan had a donkey. He put the hurt man on his donkey,
They called the man at Wycombe Homeless Connection, a Christian Charity run by our group of churches. He came and sat with the man. And talked with the man.
And persuaded the man to go with him until he could enter the Night Shelter that evening (run by volunteers from the churches)
36 Then Jesus said, “Which one of these three do you think was really a neighbour to the man who was hurt by the robbers?” 37 The teacher of the law answered, “The one who helped him.” Jesus said, “Then you go and do the same.”
And thankfully for the man in 21st century Wycombe - his followers still do.
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