This mission is not reserved for a select few but is the calling of every person who has submitted their life to Jesus. It is the core purpose of the church and the natural outflow of a life transformed by grace. This call to make disciples is an invitation into the ongoing work of God in the world, a work that He desires to do through each of His followers. It is a continuation of the prayer to become people who move toward others. [00:39]
“Go therefore and make disciples of all nations, baptizing them in the name of the Father and of the Son and of the Holy Spirit, teaching them to observe all that I have commanded you. And behold, I am with you always, to the end of the age.” (Matthew 28:19-20 ESV)
Reflection: Who is one person God has already placed in your everyday rhythms that you could begin to pray for and come alongside as they journey toward Jesus?
The call to love our neighbor is a call to move toward the people God has put in front of us. It is an active compassion that sees a need and gets involved, making another’s problem our own. This kind of love is demonstrated in tangible action, not just vague feelings of sadness. It chooses to engage rather than to find a reason to avoid the cost or the messiness of another person’s life. [22:35]
“But a Samaritan, as he journeyed, came to where he was, and when he saw him, he had compassion. He went to him and bound up his wounds, pouring on oil and wine. Then he set him on his own animal and brought him to an inn and took care of him.” (Luke 10:33-34 ESV)
Reflection: When you consider the opportunities God has recently placed in your path, what is one practical way you could move toward someone with mercy instead of finding a reason to pass by on the other side?
True neighborly love is not an abstract concept but is proven through concrete, often costly, steps. It invests time, resources, and personal comfort for the good of another. This love is willing to be interrupted and inconvenienced, reflecting the character of God who moved toward us in our greatest time of need. It is a love that acts, not just a love that feels. [22:48]
“And the next day he took out two denarii and gave them to the innkeeper, saying, ‘Take care of him, and whatever more you spend, I will repay you when I come back.’” (Luke 10:35 ESV)
Reflection: What is one tangible, albeit potentially costly, action you could take this week to demonstrate God’s love to the person you identified?
We are often tempted to define the limits of our responsibility, asking who we are required to love. Jesus reframes the entire conversation away from justifying our limits and toward becoming the kind of person who shows mercy. The focus shifts from identifying who qualifies for our love to examining our own hearts and our willingness to obey. [24:07]
“Which of these three, do you think, proved to be a neighbor to the man who fell among the robbers?” He said, “The one who showed him mercy.” And Jesus said to him, “You go, and do likewise.” (Luke 10:36-37 ESV)
Reflection: In what specific relationship or situation are you currently tempted to ask, “Is this really my responsibility?” and how might Jesus be inviting you to “go and do likewise” instead?
Our ability to move toward others in mercy flows from receiving the profound mercy God has shown us in Christ. We do not muster this love through our own effort; it is the natural response to being loved by the One who did not pass us by in our sin. Our mission begins not with trying harder, but by sitting in and wrestling with the overwhelming grace we have been given. [34:25]
“We love because he first loved us.” (1 John 4:19 ESV)
Reflection: How can intentionally reflecting on the specific ways God has moved toward you in mercy empower you to move toward others with that same compassion this week?
Over the last weeks of focused prayer and fasting, the church committed to becoming a people who make disciples by reworking everyday rhythms. Luke 10 frames that mission as moving toward others with mercy, truth, and love—an obligation for every follower, not a specialty reserved for a few. Common excuses—lack of time, not knowing non-Christians, feeling unqualified, or hiding behind “boundaries”—receive direct challenge: disciple-making usually begins by paying attention to the people already present in daily life and taking one faithful step. The lawyer’s question in Luke 10, “Who is my neighbor?” exposes a heart that seeks limits; Jesus answers by telling a story that overturns expectations. The priest and Levite pass by, avoiding mercy; the Samaritan, an outsider, stops, uses his resources, and commits to ongoing care. Neighborly love proves itself in costly, concrete actions—bandaging wounds, covering expenses, sharing time—and not in abstract sentiment or moral performance. The command to love God and love neighbor functions as a mirror that reveals need for mercy rather than a checklist to earn favor. Practical application calls believers to start where they are: identify one specific person God has placed nearby and ask what tangible mercy would look like—conversation, a meal, a ride, forgiveness, or simply consistent presence. Passion for distant causes remains valid, but it must not become an excuse to ignore the people one can actually reach. Finally, authentic witness flows from having first received God’s mercy; only those who have been carried and forgiven can genuinely carry and forgive others. The work of becoming a neighbor begins with being held by mercy and moves outward in patient, sometimes messy, acts of love that create openings for the gospel to spread.
And Luke 10 is really gonna push in on this uncomfortability because the question isn't, can you justify why you pass the opportunity by to do what the Lord has asked you to do. The question is this, will you move toward the person that God has actually put in front of you? This is the question.
[00:05:17]
(30 seconds)
#MoveTowardOthers
Over time, what the Lord has been working in me is this. He has rarely asked me to do something dramatic. In fact, what he usually has done in my life is he's asked me to pay attention to the people he's already put in front of me and then to take one faithful step toward obeying him.
[00:05:48]
(29 seconds)
#StartWithOneStep
I'm an AI bot trained specifically on the sermon from Feb 25, 2026. Do you have any questions about it?
Add this chatbot onto your site with the embed code below
<iframe frameborder="0" src="https://pastors.ai/sermonWidget/sermon/who-is-my-neighbor-luke-10" width="100%" height="100%" style="height:100vh;"></iframe>Copy