426
      
      
         The Desire of Ages
      
      
        his ass going astray, thou shalt surely bring it back to him again. If
      
      
        thou see the ass of him that hateth thee lying under his burden, and
      
      
        wouldest forbear to help him, thou shalt surely help with him.”
      
      
         Exodus
      
      
        23:4, 5
      
      
        . But in the man wounded by robbers, Jesus presented the
      
      
        case of a brother in suffering. How much more should their hearts
      
      
        have been moved with pity for him than for a beast of burden! The
      
      
        message had been given them through Moses that the Lord their God,
      
      
        “a great God, a mighty, and a terrible,” “doth execute the judgment
      
      
        of the fatherless and widow, and loveth the stranger.” Wherefore He
      
      
        commanded, “Love ye therefore the stranger.” “Thou shalt love him
      
      
        as thyself.”
      
      
         Deuteronomy 10:17-19
      
      
        ;
      
      
         Leviticus 19:34
      
      
        .
      
      
        Job had said, “The stranger did not lodge in the street: but I opened
      
      
        my doors to the traveler.” And when the two angels in the guise of
      
      
        men came to Sodom, Lot bowed himself with his face toward the
      
      
        ground, and said, “Behold now, my lords, turn in, I pray you, into your
      
      
        servant’s house, and tarry all night.”
      
      
         Job 31:32
      
      
        ;
      
      
         Genesis 19:2
      
      
        . With
      
      
        all these lessons the priest and the Levite were familiar, but they had
      
      
        not brought them into practical life. Trained in the school of national
      
      
        bigotry, they had become selfish, narrow, and exclusive. When they
      
      
        looked upon the wounded man, they could not tell whether he was of
      
      
        their nation or not. They thought he might be of the Samaritans, and
      
      
        they turned away.
      
      
         [501]
      
      
        [502]
      
      
        [503]
      
      
        In their action, as Christ had described it, the lawyer saw nothing
      
      
        contrary to what he had been taught concerning the requirements of
      
      
        the law. But now another scene was presented:
      
      
        A certain Samaritan, in his journey, came where the sufferer was,
      
      
        and when he saw him, he had compassion on him. He did not question
      
      
        whether the stranger was a Jew or a Gentile. If a Jew, the Samaritan
      
      
        well knew that, were their condition reversed, the man would spit
      
      
        in his face, and pass him by with contempt. But he did not hesitate
      
      
        on account of this. He did not consider that he himself might be in
      
      
        danger of violence by tarrying in the place. It was enough that there
      
      
        was before him a human being in need and suffering. He took off his
      
      
        own garment with which to cover him. The oil and wine provided for
      
      
        his own journey he used to heal and refresh the wounded man. He
      
      
        lifted him on his own beast, and moved slowly along with even pace,
      
      
        so that the stranger might not be jarred, and made to suffer increased
      
      
        pain. He brought him to an inn, and cared for him through the night,