This SOAP Journal based one originally used last year in our Luke study. Our guest, Dr. Glen Burris, spoke this last Sunday (following a regioinal missions conference), from Luke 10 on the subject of "Mercy". We thought it would be appropriate to post a SOAP journal related to that text.
S = 10:30,33 “Jesus
replied, “A man was going down from Jerusalem to Jericho, and he fell among
robbers, who stripped him and beat him and departed, leaving him half dead… But
a Samaritan, as he journeyed, came to where he was, and when he saw him, he had
compassion.”
O = Within this parable—teaching us to live with a view
towards treating everyone as a “neighbor” by showing mercy to them—is an
illustration of what the world does to us (robs, strips, beats, and leaves for
dead when we are of no further use) and of what we can all too often do to
others. There is also the illustration of how Christ shows compassion (lit. “to
enter into the suffering of another”) on us—binding up our wounds, cleansing,
carrying, and caring for us.
A = Do I realize what the world’s ideas do to my soul—that
before I experience the saving work of Christ I am half-dead and helpless on
the road? Many don’t. Do I see the robber in my own heart and how I can begin
to treat others unlovingly as a result? Do I see Jesus as a judge or as the One
who truly enters into my suffering and brings healing to me at great cost to
himself? Will I follow the example of mercy to others—both family &
stranger—this week? Or will my empty religion in the Temple of Self take me by
on the other side? How big does mercy make my neighborhood?
P = O Lord, thank-you for healing me and saving me from the
fall through your costly love. May I be sensitive to the ones in need I meet
this week. May my words and deeds help to bind up the broken hearted and my
solidarity with the one on the road lead me to go to them and show your mercy
as you give opportunity. Melt my heart, bridle my tongue, and guide my hands
today. Amen.