One of the best parts of living in a major metropolitan area is the opportunity to see extraordinary people when we are hosting an event in town. Business leaders, activists, and world leaders appear occasionally in the Twin Cities and we welcome them with a dose of Minnesota Nice. Church leaders also appear in the Twin Cities as well. On May 1, 2017 I had the opportunity to worship with church leaders who had gathered in Minneapolis for the National Workshop on Christian Unity. That day was grey and cold and there was a light rain that afternoon and mixed with the light rain there were some little white specks that appeared so that Minnesota could uphold its reputation as the coldest state. The worship service that night was for conference participants and it was also open to the general public. It was quite an assembly as the heads of multiple denominations were represented including Bishop Eaton of the ELCA and there were leaders of synods and regions from a variety of denominations including from the Lutheran, Episcopal, Presbyterian, Methodist, and even Baptist traditions. At the start of the service there was a procession of these leaders walking into the worship space with their long flowing vestments and some wearing really cool hats. Watching the procession go right by me was the fulfillment of a church nerd’s dream. The preacher that night was Michael Curry who is the presiding bishop of the Episcopal Church. Curry had been elected presiding bishop two years earlier in 2015. He is the first African American to serve in the role which is a big deal because The Episcopal Church is predominantly white just like the ELCA. A year later Curry would become known to a larger audience as the preacher at the wedding of Prince Harry and Meghan Markle but the night I heard him preach he was still only famous to church nerds. Bishop Curry gave a very impassioned sermon on the Good Samaritan and he framed his sermon in the context of the 2016 Presidential Election which had just occurred six months earlier. Bishop Curry told us to think about who we voted for and then to imagine the opposition candidate as the Good Samaritan. Republican voters were asked to see the Good Samaritan as being Hillary Clinton and Democratic voters were asked to see the Good Samaritan as being Donald Trump. In a very divided country, it was an important and welcome message. Rather than despising our opponents we should view them as being capable of not only doing good but being capable of helping us directly in a time of great need. I left St. Mark’s Episcopal Cathedral that night in an upbeat mood and I was hopeful that our leaders could settle their differences and work for the common good.
Reflecting on Bishop Curry’s sermon from five years ago it is a bit discouraging that things are now even worse. Our political differences are now even larger. We lost over a million people due to COVID-19 and a just released National Academy of Sciences study has shown that one-third of the COVID-19 deaths in the United States could have been prevented with a universal healthcare system.[1] Anyone who has stopped by a gas station or a grocery store knows that the cost of living has significantly increased and has not been accompanied by an increase in pay. Gun violence is impacting our society and the mass shooting that occurred in the wealthy suburb of Highland Park, Illinois is proof that gun violence is not just confined to low-income neighborhoods. So many bad things are happening at once so we are losing sight of the worldwide climate crisis as heat waves are becoming more common, Sydney Australia is flooded and a glacier just collapsed in the Italian Alps. Right now, it feels like each and every one of us is the person who was beaten by robbers and who is laying alone on the side of the road.
Bishop Curry asked the assembly to view leaders like Donald Trump and Hillary Clinton as the Good Samaritan in this parable. Five years later neither one of these individuals holds a public office in the United States but it is clear to me that our political leaders are filling the roles of the priest and the Levite in this parable. The fact that our leaders continue to pass by on the other side and fail to address our problems is having consequences for all of society, but the impacts are felt most acutely by the poor and the oppressed. I have not yet missed a meal or even a snack and I have freely traveled using both my bicycle and my car but those individuals who are low income are not so lucky and are having to make very difficult decisions about how to spend their funds in order to meet their basic needs and travel to work. We also see this inequity in the impact that the recent Supreme Court cases will have as we move forward. The overturning of the concealed handgun restrictions in New York will more severely impact low-income neighborhoods because areas which experience severe poverty are more likely to have higher crime rates. The limitation of the EPA’s ability to regulate greenhouse gases will have a greater effect on low-income neighborhoods which are disproportionately impacted by pollution. The overturning of Roe v. Wade will be felt more acutely by those of limited financial means because wealthier people will simply access abortion by traveling to a different state. There are strong legal arguments on each side and that is why these cases were not unanimously decided. We can quibble about the law and the facts but there is no dispute that the poor and the oppressed will suffer more consequences from these decisions and the general inaction of our politicians. The poor are left to suffer while our leaders walk by on the other side of the road.
I recently took a class at Luther Seminary titled Ministry with Persons with Mental Illness and Their Families. Our professor was Hollie Holt-Woehl who has served churches in this area including House of Hope. She talked a bit about the topic of funding government programs for those with mental illness. In her experience with her son who has special needs she has learned that advocates for those with mental illness are called to work very hard and very persistently with the government to obtain the best possible support for those with mental illness and to pray very hard for systems to change but that one also has to be prepared to be disappointed when the government funding for a program does not work out as anticipated. That is where we are at right now in our nation. We hope for the best but we must be prepared to accept disappointment. Our leaders have consistently been walking by on the other side but that does not excuse us from engaging in the political process. As Maynard Jackson the first African American mayor of Atlanta said in describing the Civil Rights movement, “Politics, although not perfect, was the best available nonviolent means of changing how we lived... Politics is not an end, it's a means to an end.” There are ways for Christian leaders to be political without being partisan and in the coming election season I invite you to advocate for issues that are important to you and to this community and to help people to register to vote and encourage them to vote. Greater participation in the political process amplifies the voices of the poor and the oppressed so that they are heard so that our leaders are less likely to walk by on the other side of the road.
There has been a lot of law in this sermon so I also need to point out the good news in this text as well. The good news is that God does not let us remain abandoned on the road. Even as the priest and the Levite walk by the Good Samaritan eventually appears. The love that Jesus showed on the cross is so strong that even two thousand years later it continues to manifest in daily life. The suffering has been great during the pandemic but the response of many has been compassionate and has addressed the very real issues of human need. When people lost their jobs and businesses were damaged due to the impact of the uprising that accompanied the murder of George Floyd many people had nowhere to turn and it is amazing how quickly mutual aid groups formed in our community. Many of these mutual aid organizations were based in churches around the Twin Cities, however they were not necessarily run by the churches. People from the community identified an immediate need and started coordinating efforts to help others Donations flowed in and needs were met as churches served as staging areas where goods could be collected and distributed. During the tough times Good Samaritans emerge and people find ways to help each other as the hands that help us enable us to be the hands that help others. As a church we are called to spread the Christian message of love and service so that nobody is left alone on the road.
I would love the chance to listen to Bishop Curry preach on this text again five years later to hear what words he would proclaim about it in light of our current situation. We are called to study the word of God and listen to it being faithfully proclaimed by gifted individuals like Bishop Curry, and we also are called to not simply rely on our leaders but to use our own hands to meet the needs of our neighbors. The problems facing the world and our society are so great right now that we cannot simply wait for our leaders to take action and that is why Jesus invites us to be a neighbor to our fellow humans and to God’s creation. No matter how many times the priests and Levites pass by on the other side we know that the love of Christ empowers the actions of the Good Samaritans among us who bring healing and relief to those in our community who need it most.
- Vicar Kyle Anderson
[1] Sarah Elbeshbishi, “Lack of Universal Health Care Cost 300,000 American Lives in Pandemic, Study Shows,” https://www.usatoday.com/story/news/health/2022/06/23/universal-healthcare-save-american-lives-pandemic/7652206001/?gnt-cfr=1 (accessed July 6, 2022).