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2/8/26
Part 1: Who is My Neighbor?
Text: Luke 10:25–37
Speaker: Phillip Santillan
In this message from Clarity Church, we launch our new 4-part series Love Your Neighbor by sitting in Luke 10:25–37 and letting Jesus redefine the question, “Who is my neighbor?”
An expert in the law tries to draw a line so he can justify himself, but Jesus tells the story we all know as the Good Samaritan and flips the conversation. The issue isn’t identifying the right category of “neighbor.” It’s becoming the kind of person who moves toward someone in need with compassion, mercy, and costly love.
This sermon also connects the call to neighbor-love with the mission Jesus gives every follower of Jesus to make disciples. We address common objections like “I don’t have time,” “I don’t know anyone,” “That calling is for other people,” and “I don’t know enough yet,” and we talk about what it looks like to practice neighbor-love in your real life with real people God has already put in your path.
If you’ve ever felt tension between caring about big needs “out there” and actually showing mercy “right here,” this message will help you take one faithful step forward, grounded not in moralism, but in the mercy we’ve received from Jesus.
By Clarity Church in Brooklyn Park, MN5
11 ratings
2/8/26
Part 1: Who is My Neighbor?
Text: Luke 10:25–37
Speaker: Phillip Santillan
In this message from Clarity Church, we launch our new 4-part series Love Your Neighbor by sitting in Luke 10:25–37 and letting Jesus redefine the question, “Who is my neighbor?”
An expert in the law tries to draw a line so he can justify himself, but Jesus tells the story we all know as the Good Samaritan and flips the conversation. The issue isn’t identifying the right category of “neighbor.” It’s becoming the kind of person who moves toward someone in need with compassion, mercy, and costly love.
This sermon also connects the call to neighbor-love with the mission Jesus gives every follower of Jesus to make disciples. We address common objections like “I don’t have time,” “I don’t know anyone,” “That calling is for other people,” and “I don’t know enough yet,” and we talk about what it looks like to practice neighbor-love in your real life with real people God has already put in your path.
If you’ve ever felt tension between caring about big needs “out there” and actually showing mercy “right here,” this message will help you take one faithful step forward, grounded not in moralism, but in the mercy we’ve received from Jesus.