Is the lesson of the good Samaritan lost on most Jehovah's Witnesses? (Luke 10) In Jesus' parable, the priest and Levite refused to help the victim who had been robbed, beaten and abandoned. Both "passed by on the other side" rather than help the poor man. Both would have had a considerable knowledge ("the truth") of scriptural understanding of their times and would have been intimately associated with "Jehovah's organization." (The temple)
But it was the Samaritan who had compassion for the victim. He attended his wounds, brought him to a safe place and paid for his expenses. The Samaritans were despised by the Jews and considered as unworthy "apostates" having rejected "God's organization" in Jerusalem and having set up their own organization in Samaria. Yet, it is the Samaritan that Jesus uses as an example of a good neighbor.
When Jesus confronted the Pharisees about his disciples picking grain on the sabbath he quoted a scripture in Hosea to expose their hypocrisy: "For I desire mercy, not sacrifice, and acknowledgment of God rather than burnt offerings." (Hosea 6:6; Matthew 12:7) Jehovah's Witnesses boast about their association with "God's organization" and offerings and sacrifices of service to Jehovah. But do they lack "mercy" and "compassion" for their fellow humans?