Think for a moment of how easy it is to turn away from those who appear ragged and haggard. But, in truth, these are the very people who we should help. This is one of the most clear Christian ideals and yet, because of our natural bents towards entitlement and selfishness, many are too quick to dismiss charity altogether. Unfortunately, charity has become a term for an organization, but in its truest historical sense, charity is love actuated.
Consider Jesus' Parable of the Good Samaritan (Luke 10:30-37). A man leaving Jerusalem is mugged, stripped, and beaten, left for dead alongside the road. A priest, a man who has given his life to the service of the Lord, sees the man and crosses the road so as to ignore his misfortunes altogether. Then a Levite, a man groomed from birth as a servant of the Lord, does the same thing, going out of his way to ignore his compassion for this crestfallen man.
Finally, a Samaritan man comes along the road. Samaritans were considered lower-class Jews, half-breeds whose ancestors had mated with the pagan nations. In fact, although the mugged man was in a worse physical state, he was still the cultural superior to the Samaritan. Yet despite all this, the Samaritan man had compassion on the other man, binding his wounds, letting him ride his animal to the nearest village where the Samaritan even covered the other man's costs: true mercy, true compassion, and true godly love.
Jesus confirms this ideal when He says, "Truly, I say to you, as you did to one of the least of these my brothers, you did it to me (Matt. 25:40)." The idea is that we will not withhold our love and compassion from those who seem unworthy. Instead, we will always love and have mercy, especially to those people who no one else will love. This means that we will not turn away from the dregs or marginalized, but we will get into the trenches with them, by the love of Christ Jesus.
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