Christ recognized no distinction of nationality
or rank or creed. The scribes and Pharisees desired to make a
local and a national benefit of all the gifts of heaven and to
exclude the rest of God's family in the world. But Christ came
to break down every wall of partition. He came to show that His
gift of mercy and love is as unconfined as the air, the light,
or the showers of rain that refresh the earth.
The life of Christ established a religion
in which there is no caste, a religion by which Jew and Gentile,
free and bond, are linked in a common brotherhood, equal before
God. No question of policy influenced His movements. He made
no difference between neighbors and strangers, friends and enemies.
That which appealed to His heart was a soul thirsting for the
waters of life.
He passed no human being by as worthless, but sought to apply the healing remedy to every soul. In whatever company He found Himself, He presented a lesson appropriate to the time and the circumstances. Every neglect or insult shown by men to their fellow men only made Him more conscious of their need of His divine-human sympathy. He sought to inspire with hope the roughest and most unpromising, setting before them the assurance that they might become blameless and harmless, attaining such a character as would make them the children of God.