Oh but in your paradigm, the person can refuse the help, in fact they can only refuse.
I mean the man was so very helpless, blind, deaf and enjoying the life of being beaten up every time, in fact he was slave to being
beaten up and held captive by Satan

...... most likely walking the roads each day waiting for it to happen.
He, like all men, cut from the
exact same fallen nature cloth determined to only behave in one way, because of course we always use
scripture to make wide sweeping generalizations removed from the entire point of the passage, was born at enmity with the Good
Samaritan, probably cursing him day in and day out

trying to avoid him at all costs.
And well, the Good Samaritan planned it that way.
So then we why would the man accept any help if it was presented to him, I am absolutely sure he could not recognize his wounds
and need for help, he was a slave to the beatings.
Obviously the man's only response would be to fight tooth and nail against the Good Samaritan, I just wonder how the Good
Samaritan managed to subdue him

probably had to force him onto that donkey.
Oh my goodness!!!!
Of course, eureka!

the Good Samaritan gave the man a special unique divine regeneration/intervention so then the man could respond positively to the Good Samaritan's help.
Yes indeed
every sin has been taken care of .... the point in
@cv5 analogy are valid and pertain to directly to how/why someone receives the gift of salvation.