Skip to content
Search AI Powered

Latest Stories

Priest Schools JD Vance After He Gets Concept Of 'Love Thy Neighbor' Completely Wrong

Screenshot of J.D. Vance
Fox News

James Martin, a Jesuit priest, had to give JD Vance a blunt fact-check on the story of the Good Samaritan and what Jesus meant by "love thy neighbor."

James Martin, a Jesuit priest and the editor-at-large of America Magazine, fact-checked Vice President J.D. Vance's interpretation of the story of the Good Samaritan and what Jesus meant by "love thy neighbor" after Vance evoked the Great Commandment during a Fox News interview.

RELATED: Viral Political Cartoon Perfectly Captures How Bishop Budde Put Trump In His Place


Vance appeared on Fox News personality Sean Hannity's program to explain why "America First" is actually a brand of positive nationalism, suggesting those on the left have spent too much time caring about others around the world instead of those at home.

He said:

"There's this old school, very Christian concept that you love your family, then you love your neighbor, then you love your community, then you love you fellow citizens in your own country, and then after that, you can focus and prioritize the rest of the world."
"A lot of the far-left has completely inverted that. They seem to hate the citizens of their own country and care more about people outside their own borders. That is no way to run a society. And I think the profound difference that Donald Trump brings to the leadership of this country is the simple concept, of "America First.""
"It doesn't mean you hate anybody else, it means you have leadership -- and President Trump has been very clear about this -- that put the interests of American citizens first."

You can hear what he said in the video below.

Vance's remarks soon caught the attention of Martin, who took the opportunity to fact-check Vance by employing a Biblical story many of us are familiar with.

The Parable of the Good Samaritan tells the story of a traveler, presumed to be Jewish, who is attacked by robbers, stripped of his clothing, beaten, and left for dead along the road.

A Jewish priest and later a Levite pass by but choose to avoid the injured man. Finally, a Samaritan—a member of a group traditionally at odds with the Jewish people—comes across the traveler. Instead of ignoring him, the Samaritan shows compassion, tending to his wounds and ensuring he receives care.

On this note, Martin said:

"Actually no. This misses the point of Jesus's Parable of the Good Samaritan (Lk 10: 25-37). After Jesus tells a lawyer that you should "love your neighbor as yourself," the lawyer asks him, "And who is my neighbor?"
"In response, Jesus tells the story of a Jewish man who has been beaten by robbers and is lying by the side of the road. The man is helped not by those closest to him (a "priest" and a "Levite"), but rather by a Samaritan. At the time, Jews and Samaritans would have considered one another enemies."
"So Jesus's fundamental message is that *everyone* is your neighbor, and that it is not about helping just your family or those closest to you. It's specifically about helping those who seem different, foreign, other. They are all our "neighbors.""
"But Jesus's deeper point can only be understood from the point of view of the beaten man: our ultimate salvation depends, as it did for that man, upon those whom we often consider to be the "stranger.""

He added:

"NB: Jesus was often critical of those who would put family first. When Jesus' own family came from Nazareth to Capernaum to "seize" him, he was told that his mother and brothers were waiting outside a house in which he was preaching."
"Jesus said, "Who is my mother, and who are my brothers?”... Whoever does the will of my Father in heaven is my brother and sister and mother" (Mt 12:46-50). For Jesus, ties to the Father were more important than family ties. And responsibilities to family took second place to the demands of discipleship."

You can see what he said below.

Many appreciated Martin's remarks—noting how far Vance has strayed from the lessons of this story.



Martin has previously called out Republicans for appropriating, mischaracterizing, and perverting the Christian faith.

For instance, a couple of years ago, he came to the defense of former Transportation Secretary Pete Buttigieg after the Catholic League claimed in a tweet that Buttigieg's marriage to his husband—educator, author and activist Chasten Buttigieg—is a "legal fiction."

The organization linked to an article in which it criticized Buttigieg for defending his marriage in a recent interview with Fox News anchor Bret Baier, who suggested Buttigieg should not have taken his husband as part of an official delegation to the Netherlands for the Fifth Invictus Games.

Bill Donohue, the Catholic League's president, said Buttigieg doesn't actually "have a husband" because he "has been disqualified by nature."

In response, Martin said that regardless of whether people agree or disagree with same-sex marriage, Buttigieg "is married in the eyes of the state, and his church, as much as anyone else is." He criticized Donohue further, saying that "to claim otherwise is to ignore reality."

More from News/political-news

bride and groom cutting wedding cake
Wedding Dreamz on Unsplash

People Who Smashed Wedding Cake In Their Spouse's Face Reveal How Their Relationship Is Going Now

According to The Knot wedding resource magazine and website, smashing cake into the face of a spouse after tying the knot is a tradition tied to medieval England. To celebrate the marriage, the bride would toss a piece of piece of cake over her shoulder for good luck.

This evolved into newlyweds feeding a piece of cake to one another, then taking frosting or a small bit of cake and rubbing it gently onto each other's faces—usually the cheek or tip of the nose.

Keep ReadingShow less
Screenshots of U.S. Army veteran who criticized Donald Trump
@btnewsroom/TikTok

U.S. Army Vet Goes Viral With Blistering Speech Ripping Trump For Deploying Troops To L.A.

A U.S. Army veteran went viral after she spoke out to encourage other current and former military members to publicly condemn President Donald Trump for using them as "pawns" to suit his own ends after he deployed the National Guard and Marines to Los Angeles amid ongoing protests against his administration's immigration raids.

Trump has activated over 4,000 National Guard members and 700 Marines, despite opposition from city and state leaders. He has painted a bleak picture of Los Angeles—claims that Mayor Karen Bass and Governor Gavin Newsom say are wildly exaggerated.

Keep ReadingShow less
Barack and Michelle Obama
Andrew Harnik/Getty Images

The Obamas Just Shared A Rare Family Photo With Their Adult Daughters To Celebrate Sasha's Birthday

Former President Barack and First Lady Michelle Obama warmed hearts when they shared the same photo to their respective social media accounts, showing them with their adult daughters, Sasha and Malia, to commemorate Sasha's 24th birthday.

Sasha Obama was born in June 2001, nearly eight years before the family moved into the White House at the start of her father's first term in January 2009. She and her older sister, Malia, now 26, spent their formative years in the presidential residence, growing up there throughout their father’s two terms, until the family departed in 2017.

Keep ReadingShow less
Donald Trump; Joe Biden
Brendan Smialowski/AFP via Getty Images; Scott Olson/Getty Images

Trump Dragged After Hilariously Flubbing Insult About Biden's Mental Acuity

The term malaphor means when two or more colloquial phrases or idioms get confused and combined to create something nonsensical. According to the National Institute of Health (NIH), malaphors are a common symptom of frontotemporal dementia or other cognitive impairments.

So when a person seeks to accuse someone of being unintelligent, their use of malaphors is ironic and possibly very telling—narcissists will always accuse others of their own faults and failures.

Keep ReadingShow less
Christy Walton; Donald Trump
Alberto E. Rodriguez/Getty Images; Andrew Harnik/Getty Images

MAGA Now Calling For Walmart Boycott After Heiress Funds Ad Promoting Anti-Trump Protests

MAGA fans are boycotting Walmart after Christy Walton, one of the retail giant's heirs, took out a full-page ad in The New York Times promoting the “No Kings” protests planned against President Donald Trump's military parade.

Walton, who is worth an estimated $19.3 billion and ranks among the wealthiest women in the U.S., urged critics of Trump to "mobilize" against the parade—echoing a similar message she shared in a New York Times ad back in March.

Keep ReadingShow less