A Different Take on The Good Samaritan (Richard Trudeau February 2026)
UUMUAC (You Me Act): The Unitarian Universalist Multiracial ... by Barbara Jean Walsh
Episode notes
Rev. Richard Trudeau’s sermon invites listeners to reconsider the familiar parable of the Good Samaritan by challenging the interpretive frame supplied by the Gospel of Luke. Trudeau argues that Luke, writing as a non‑Jewish Christian several generations after Jesus, misunderstood both the cultural meaning of “Samaritan” and the nature of Jesus’s parables. Luke’s framing dialogue—“Go and do likewise”—is presented as a later moralizing overlay rather than Jesus’s own teaching, a point Trudeau underscores by noting that Jesus’s parables are rarely, if ever, straightforward morality tales. Instead, he insists, they function as puzzles meant to “tease the mind into active thought,” not as ethical instructions.
To recover Jesus’s original intent, Trudeau urges listeners to begin with what Jesus’s audience would have known implicitly: Samaritans ...