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What We Learned

  • The Good Samaritan wasn’t the person anyone expected to be the hero.
  • Being kind sometimes means doing something inconvenient.
  • Helping is brave—even when you feel nervous.
  • Small acts of compassion can change someone’s whole day.



  • A neighbor isn’t just someone who lives next door—it’s anyone who needs help.

Story Beats Recap

  • We land on the dangerous Jericho road
  • A happy traveler is attacked and left injured
  • A priest passes by
  • A Levite passes by
  • A Samaritan stops
  • Bandages, lifts, walks, and pays
  • Kids complete a Kindness Ninja training
  • Belief Backpack reflection
  • Secret Samaritan weekly challenge

📘 Parents & Educators Section

Why This Story Matters

The Good Samaritan parable has been told for thousands of years because its message is timeless:

Doing the right thing isn’t about who you are—it’s about what you choose to do.

This episode helps kids:

  • Build empathy
  • Recognize people who need help
  • Practice compassion across differences
  • Understand that kindness takes courage
  • Apply the message to real-life situations at school, home, and beyond

Conversation Starters

Use these in the car, at dinner, or in a classroom circle:

  • “What surprised you about the story?”
  • “Why do you think the first two helpers walked away?”
  • “Has there ever been a time when you wanted to help but felt nervous?”
  • “What’s one thing you can do this week to be a Secret Samaritan?”
  • “What does kindness look like? Not just feel like?”

Classroom & Home Activity Ideas

  • Make a Kindness Map: Draw places where kindness is needed—cafeteria, playground, bus, home.
  • Role-Play Scenarios: Act out moments when someone needs help.
  • Kindness Bingo: Fill in a card with small actions (sharing, helping, inviting, noticing).
  • Design a Donkey Companion: Create Barnaby the Donkey with crayons or digital art.

🔍 Dive Deeper

Explore Other Faith Traditions About Compassion

Pair this episode with:

  • The Turbaned Tornado: Meet Fauja Singh — Sikh values of service
  • Listening Hearts: Discovering the Power of Prayer — global compassion practices
  • Ubuntu: I Am Because We Are — African philosophy of community
  • Three Sisters: Haudenosaunee Beliefs — cooperation and care
  • Shabbat Table — rest, peace, and noticing each other

Books to Extend Learning

1. The Good Samaritan and Other Parables

by Tomie dePaola

Tomie dePaola’s warm illustrations and gentle tone make this a perfect introduction to the Good Samaritan for children. He retells several parables with clarity and charm, creating a book families return to again and again.

Best for: Ages 4–8

Why we love it: It’s classic, comforting, and visually beautiful. A wonderful way to talk about kindness at bedtime.

2. The Good Samaritan (Level 2 — I Can Read! / Adventure Bible)

by Zondervan, illustrated by David Miles

Perfect for early readers, this book blends simple storytelling with early-reader independence. The sentences are short, the pacing is quick, and the illustrations help children follow the action.

Best for: Ages 5–8 learning to read independently

Why we love it: It empowers kids to read themselves — and feel proud doing it.

3. The Science of the Good Samaritan: Thinking Bigger about Loving Our Neighbors

by Dr. Emily Smith

This one is for grown-ups! Dr. Emily Smith, an epidemiologist known as “The Friendly Neighbor,” explores why loving our neighbors is both deeply human and scientifically measurable.

Best for: Parents, teachers, and anyone hungry for modern meaning

Why we love it: It shows that kindness isn’t random — it’s powerful, contagious, and actually changes communities.

4. The Good Samaritan

by John Marrs (2025 — NOT FOR KIDS)

A psychological thriller loosely inspired by the idea of “helping,” this book is not appropriate for kids but worth mentioning for your adult readers. It’s gripping, twisty, and dark… the total opposite tone of the parable.

Best for: Adults who enjoy suspense

Why we included it: Same title, very different journey!

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30 episodes