But he wanted to justify
himself, so he asked Jesus, "And who is my neighbor?" (Luke 10:29)
And who is my neighbor?
The one who I am most likely to neglect, negate, nullify,
Objectify into something, not a person, not even fully human
Not like me, not connected with me, to whom I have no
responsibility.
The stranger, the hungry, thirsty, sick, naked, imprisoned,
vulnerable reminders
Of my own weakness, contingency, propensity to death.
The one’s I want dead because their lives make my life
difficult.
Those outside the norm, outside my comfort zone, the
bothersome ones,
I wish they would go away
Be concrete, the alien, the widow, the orphan,
The immigrant and refugee, women, and children,
The death row inmate
The old
The unborn
The poor
LGBTQ
LGBTQ
Black and brown and red and yellow peoples—hey, anyone who’s
not white,
Everyone I’d like to segregate, not see, not be free.
The one’s I won’t list here because I don’t see.
Go beyond the humans I deny to
The creation I threaten
By taking too much, consuming too much,
In my drive to dominate, exploit, control
Destroying land, water, air, species.
Who is my neighbor?
Those not in my neighborhood.
Those I don’t want in my neighborhood.
Those I would never consider to be my neighbor.
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