424
      
      
         The Desire of Ages
      
      
        them all. Man’s destiny will be determined by his obedience to the
      
      
        whole law. Supreme love to God and impartial love to man are the
      
      
        principles to be wrought out in the life.
      
      
        The lawyer found himself a lawbreaker. He was convicted under
      
      
        Christ’s searching words. The righteousness of the law, which he
      
      
        claimed to understand, he had not practiced. He had not manifested
      
      
        love toward his fellow man. Repentance was demanded; but instead
      
      
        of repenting, he tried to justify himself. Rather than acknowledge the
      
      
        truth, he sought to show how difficult of fulfillment the commandment
      
      
        is. Thus he hoped both to parry conviction and to vindicate himself
      
      
        in the eyes of the people. The Saviour’s words had shown that his
      
      
        question was needless, since he had been able to answer it himself.
      
      
        Yet he put another question, saying, “Who is my neighbor?”
      
      
        Among the Jews this question caused endless dispute. They had
      
      
        no doubt as to the heathen and the Samaritans; these were strangers
      
      
        and enemies. But where should the distinction be made among the
      
      
        people of their own nation, and among the different classes of society?
      
      
        Whom should the priest, the rabbi, the elder, regard as neighbor? They
      
      
        spent their lives in a round of ceremonies to make themselves pure.
      
      
        Contact with the ignorant and careless multitude, they taught, would
      
      
        cause defilement that would require wearisome effort to remove. Were
      
      
        they to regard the “unclean” as neighbors?
      
      
        Again Jesus refused to be drawn into controversy. He did not
      
      
        denounce the bigotry of those who were watching to condemn Him.
      
      
        But by a simple story He held up before His hearers such a picture
      
      
        of the outflowing of heaven-born love as touched all hearts, and drew
      
      
        from the lawyer a confession of the truth.
      
      
        The way to dispel darkness is to admit light. The best way to deal
      
      
        with error is to present truth. It is the revelation of God’s love that
      
      
        makes manifest the deformity and sin of the heart centered in self.
      
      
         [499]
      
      
        “A certain man,” said Jesus, “was going down from Jerusalem to
      
      
        Jericho; and he fell among robbers, which both stripped him and beat
      
      
        him, and departed, leaving him half dead. And by chance a certain
      
      
        priest was going down that way: and when he saw him, he passed by
      
      
        on the other side. And in like manner a Levite also, when he came to
      
      
        the place, and saw him, passed by on the other side.”
      
      
         Luke 10:30-32
      
      
        ,
      
      
        R. V. This was no imaginary scene, but an actual occurrence, which
      
      
        was known to be exactly as represented. The priest and the Levite who