THE MAN IN THE DITCH (Day 2)

The Man In The Ditch

"He chose a dangerous road, and the consequences were devastating. But before we judge the man in the ditch, we ought to remember that every one of us has been there."

Romans 3:23 (CSB)

"For all have sinned and fall short of the glory of God."

Devotional Thought


The parable opens with a man making a journey from Jerusalem to Jericho, and that detail matters more than most people realize. Jerusalem was the city of God's presence, the place of worship and safety. Jericho sat below it, and the road between the two was notorious for danger. It wound through desolate terrain where bandits waited for travelers who were foolish enough to go alone. So when the Bible says this man "went down" from Jerusalem to Jericho, it is saying more than geography. He was leaving the presence of God, heading into dangerous territory, and he was going down in every sense of the word.

Now watch this... the text says he fell among thieves, and they stripped him of his clothing, wounded him, and left him half dead (Luke 10:30). That is the progression. First the fall, then the stripping, then the wounding, then the abandonment. It is the same pattern the enemy uses today. He does not destroy a life all at once. He does it in stages, and by the time you realize how far you have gone, you are lying in a ditch wondering how you got there.

Here's what I see in that phrase "half dead." How can someone be half dead? And yet the Scriptures say that without Christ, we are dead in our trespasses and sins (Ephesians 2:1). We are breathing, walking, functioning, but spiritually lifeless. The man in the ditch is a portrait of every human being apart from the saving grace of God. Stripped of dignity, wounded by the consequences of choices both personal and inherited, and unable to do a single thing about it.

Because that is the truth we so often resist. We want to believe we can fix ourselves. Every January we make resolutions, promises that this year will be different, that we will do better, try harder, change on our own strength. And by now, the first day of March, most of those resolutions are broken because we simply cannot save ourselves. The man in the ditch could not climb out on his own. His injuries were too severe. His strength was gone. He needed someone to come to him.

Paul understood this when he wrote to the Ephesians. "For you are saved by grace through faith, and this is not from yourselves; it is God's gift, not from works, so that no one can boast" (Ephesians 2:8-9). Salvation was never a self-help program. It was always a rescue mission. The gospel is not advice for people who are doing mostly fine. The gospel is life for people who are dead in the road.

And the honesty required here is uncomfortable. It is easier to look at the man in the ditch and think, well, he made poor choices, he should have known better. But Isaiah reminds us, "We all went astray like sheep; we all have turned to our own way" (Isaiah 53:6). Every one of us chose a dangerous road at some point. Every one of us ended up wounded and unable to save ourselves. The only difference between the man in the ditch and the man standing over him is that someone stopped for one of them.

Tomorrow we will look at who came by first, and why their response should make every churchgoer deeply uncomfortable.

Application Questions

1. When was the last time you personally shared the gospel with someone outside the walls of the church, and what held you back if it has been a while?

2. Have you slipped into maintenance mode in your own faith, going through the motions of church attendance without carrying the mission into your daily life?

Today's Challenge

Ask the Lord to bring one specific person to your mind today, someone who does not know Him. Write their name down. Begin praying for an open door to share the love of Christ with them this week.

Today's Prayer

Father, forgive me for the times I have settled into comfort and forgotten the mission You gave Your church. I do not want to be someone who simply attends services and goes home unchanged. Stir something in me again. Give me eyes to see the people around me the way You see them, as worth reaching, worth pursuing, worth loving. Open a door this week that I cannot ignore, and give me the courage to walk through it. I want to be part of what You are doing. In Jesus' name, amen.
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