Charles Ellicott Commentary Luke 10:37

Charles Ellicott Commentary

Luke 10:37

1819–1905
Anglican
Charles Ellicott
Charles Ellicott

Charles Ellicott Commentary

Luke 10:37

1819–1905
Anglican
SCRIPTURE

"And he said, He that showed mercy on him. And Jesus said unto him, Go, and do thou likewise." — Luke 10:37 (ASV)

Go, and do you likewise.—This was the practical, though not the formal, answer to the question of the lawyer. If he acted in the spirit of the Samaritan, he would need no “nicely-calculated less or more” of casuistic distinctions as to who was and who was not his neighbour. Fellowship in the same human nature, and any kind of even passing contact, were enough to constitute a ground for neighbourly kindness. Of such a question it may be said, Solvitur amando. We love, and the problem presents no difficulty.

Nothing should lead us away from recognising this as the main lesson of the parable. But there is another application of it which, within limits, is legitimate enough as a development of thought, and which has commended itself to so many devout minds, both in ancient and modern times, that it at least deserves a notice.

Christ Himself, it is said, is the great pattern of a wide, universal love for man as man, acting out the lesson which the parable teaches in its highest form.

May we not think of Him as typified in the good Samaritan, as accepting, in that sense, the name which had been flung at Him in scorn? Starting from this thought, the circumstances fit in with a strange aptness.

The traveller stands as representing mankind at large. The journey is from Jerusalem, the heavenly city, the paradise of man’s first estate, to Jericho, the evil and accursed city (Joshua 6:17), the sin into which man entered by yielding to temptation. The robbers are the powers of evil, who strip him of his robe of innocence and purity, who strike him severely, and leave him, as regards his higher life, half-dead.

The priest and the Levite represent the Law in its sacrificial and ceremonial aspects, and they have no power to relieve or rescue. Christ comes and helps where they have failed.

The beast on which He rides is the human nature in which the Word dwelt, and it is upon His humanity that He calls us to rest for comfort and support. The inn represents the visible Church of Christ, and the host its pastors and teachers. Even the two pence, perhaps, represent the ordinances and means of grace committed to the Church.

There is an obvious risk, in all such application, of an element that is fantastic and unreal; but the main line of parallelism seems to commend itself, if not to the reason, at least to the imagination of the devout interpreter.