The Good Samaritan

 

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The Good Samaritan Bible Notes

by John Wesley (Taken from John Wesley's Notes on the Bible)

Luke 10:25:
Mt 22:35; Mr 12:28.

 

Luke 10:27:
Thou shalt love the Lord thy God - That is, thou shalt unite all the faculties of thy soul to render him the most intelligent and sincere, the most affectionate and resolute service. We may safely rest in this general sense of these important words, if we are not able to fix the particular meaning of every single word. If we desire to do this, perhaps the heart, which is a general expression, may be explained by the three following, With all thy soul, with the warmest affection, with all thy strength, the most vigorous efforts of thy will, and with all thy mind or understanding, in the most wise and reasonable manner thou canst; thy understanding guiding thy will and affections. De 6:5; Lev 19:18.

 

 

 

 

Luke 10:28:
Thou hast answered right; this do, and thou shalt live - Here is no irony, but a deep and weighty truth. He, and he alone, shall live for ever, who thus loves God and his neighbour in the present life.

 

Luke 10:29:
To justify himself - That is, to show he had done this. Lev 18:5.

 

Luke 10:30:
From Jerusalem to Jericho - The road from Jerusalem to Jericho (about eighteen miles from it) lay through desert and rocky places: so many robberies and murders were committed therein, that it was called the bloody way. Jericho was situated in the valley: hence the phrase of going down to it. About twelve thousand priests and Levites dwelt there, who all attended the service of the temple.

 

Luke 10:31:
The common translation is, by chance - Which is full of gross improprieties. For if we speak strictly, there is no such thing in the universe as either chance or fortune. A certain priest came down that way, and passed by on the other side - And both he and the Levite no doubt could find an excuse for passing over on the other side, and might perhaps gravely thank God for their own deliverance, while they left their brother bleeding to death. Is it not an emblem of many living characters, perhaps of some who bear the sacred office? O house of Levi and of Aaron, is not the day coming, when the virtues of heathens and Samaritans will rise up in judgment against you?

 

Luke 10:33:
But a certain Samaritan came where he was - It was admirably well judged to represent the distress on the side of the Jew, and the mercy on that of the Samaritan. For the case being thus proposed, self interest would make the very scribe sensible, how amiable such a conduct was, and would lay him open to our Lord's inference. Had it been put the other way, prejudice might more easily have interposed, before the heart could have been affected.

 

Luke 10:34:
Pouring in oil and wine - Which when well beaten together are one of the best balsams that can be applied to a fresh wound.

 

Luke 10:36:
Which of these was the neighbour to him that fell among the robbers - Which acted the part of a neighbour?

 

Luke 10:37:
And he said, He that showed mercy on him - He could not for shame say otherwise, though he thereby condemned himself and overthrew his own false notion of the neighbour to whom our love is due. Go and do thou in like manner - Let us go and do likewise, regarding every man as our neighbour who needs our assistance. Let us renounce that bigotry and party zeal which would contract our hearts into an insensibility for all the human race, but a small number whose sentiments and practices are so much our own, that our love to them is but self love reflected. With an honest openness of mind let us always remember that kindred between man and man, and cultivate that happy instinct whereby, in the original constitution of our nature, God has strongly bound us to each other.

 

(Study notes on the Good Samaritan Parable taken from John Wesley's Notes on the Bible).



Good Samaritan Parable

Commentary & Sermon Aids
(interpretations on the parable)
Good Samaritan Commentary Commentary by Matthew Henry
The Meaning of the Good Samaritan Commentary by Alexander MacLaren
Good Samaritan Study Notes by Albert Barnes
Bible Notes by John Wesley
Good Samaritan Explanation notes by Adam Clarke

Parable Exposition by Charles Spurgeon
Good Samaritan Sermon by Charles Spurgeon
Homily on the Good Samaritan Luke 10:33 (Charles Spurgeon)


Bible Versions

Good Samaritan - Luke 10 American Standard Bible Version
Luke 10 KJV King James Version
Luke 10:25-37 Youngs Literal Translation
Good Samaritan Modern Version World English Bible
Good Samaritan for Kids Bible in Basic English
Good Samaritan - Catholic A Catholic Version of Luke 10:25-37


Soothing instrumental music
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The serenity prayer
the meaning and history behind this beautiful prayer

Good Samaritan Online links to related sites
Other Links links to other useful resources
Statement of Faith - The Nicene Creed


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