Luke 17:11-19 · Ten Healed of Leprosy
Can't Stay Away
Luke 17:11-19
Sermon
by Scott Bryte
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On the way to Jerusalem Jesus was going through the region between Samaria and Galilee. As he entered a village, ten lepers approached him. Keeping their dis­tance, they called out, saying, "Jesus, Master, have mercy on us!" When he saw them, he said to them, "Go and show yourselves to the priests." And as they went, they were made clean. Then one of them, when he saw that he was healed, turned back, praising God with a loud voice. He prostrated himself at Jesus' feet and thanked him. And he was a Samaritan. Then Jesus asked, "Were not ten made clean? But the other nine, where are they? Was none of them found to return and give praise to God except this foreigner?" Then he said to him, "Get up and go on your way; your faith has made you well." — Luke 17:11-19

What a bunch of ingrates, those guys — all nine of them! It's not like a little "Thank you" would have killed them. It wouldn't even have taken up all that much of their precious time. All they had to do was turn around, make a quick jog back to Jesus (maybe not even all the way back), and give a little wave from the dis­tance; a shout of, "Thanks for the healing" and they'd have been back on their merry way, the requirements of polite society all nicely filled. What would have been the big deal?

When we think of leprosy, we think disfigurement; the loss of fingers and toes. We think of what is now called Hansen's disease. Hansen's disease causes numbness and weakness in the limbs and deterioration of the extremities and the face, the nose in particular. It is a horrible thing. You can catch it from other people, but not easily. The problem is that you can have it for a long time, and pass it around, before you know there's anything wrong at all. It is on the rise, worldwide, mostly in places where the sanitary conditions are poor. It is highly treatable and almost always curable. Myco­bacterium leprae, the bacterium from which Hansen's disease de­velops, succumbs easily to antibiotics.

In the ancient world, on the other hand, it was quite a different story. They didn't know about bacteria, antibiotics, rates of infec­tion, or any of that. What they knew was this: Sometimes what starts out as a simple rash on the skin, can lead to some very bad things, and what starts with one person can end up affecting many more. So what did they do with that knowledge? They kept those "lepers" away is what they did. They separated them from other people, and didn't let them live with anyone or eat with anyone, or even talk with anyone, except for other lepers. A scaly patch on the back of your hand; a sudden discoloration on the end of your nose, could cost you your job. It could cost you your family and friends. A little shiny white spot on the thick of your thumb, and life as you know it is gone. Unclean — outcast — away — off you go, with the other "lepers." There were rules to make that happen, laws about how far away lepers had to stand from other people, about how they had to wear worn-out clothes and warn people in a loud voice whenever they were walking down the street. There were even commandments from God.

What if what you had wasn't anything nearly as devastating as Hansen's disease, but simply a rash that would clear up on its own? Well, there were laws about that, too.

Jesus is just walking into a little, unnamed town outside of Galilee when ten lepers see him, apparently recognize him, and head in his direction. They don't get too close, though, because the law says they can't. Instead, they yell to him from a distance, "Jesus, Master, have mercy on us" (v. 13). "Go and show yourselves to the priests" (v. 14), Jesus answers, so they turn back around and start to do precisely that. No sooner do they start walking, going where Jesus told them to go, than they are healed. One of them, a Samari­tan whom none of the priests would have given the time of day to anyhow, turned again to face Jesus.

Of course, he did. How could he not? He had his health back. He had his life back. How could he not, at the very least, take a minute or two to turn around and say, "Thank you"? But the others didn't — not a word. What a bunch of ingrates, those guys. Or maybe not. Of course they were thankful. Jesus gave them their health back. Jesus gave them their lives back. So they obeyed him. They did exactly what he told them to do; they went and showed themselves to the priest. But Jesus was disappointed. Something was wrong. The nine obedient lepers had somehow missed the mark and the Samaritan, the one who was bound to be an outcast healed or not, had somehow gotten it right. Jesus said to him "get up and go on your way, your faith has made you well" (v. 19), whatever that means.

The other nine lepers had faith. They called out to Jesus, be­lieving that he could heal them. They made tracks to go and show themselves to the priests even though they didn't look or feel any different when they started walking. They trusted. They acted on faith. And they were healed. The medical problems of the other nine, Hansen's disease or who knows what else, were cleared away as they walked. So what was it they did that was so wrong? What made them really different from the one who remembered to say, "Thank you"?

Here's the difference. All ten lepers were healed as they were walking away from Jesus. Nine of them kept walking. But one of them found that he couldn't leave. His life had changed. Jesus gave him his life back. Jesus restored his skin and probably also his job, his family, and his place in the world. He had to go back to Jesus. He had to return and give thanks. He just had to. He couldn't keep away. That's what faith is. Faith is being unable to stay away from Jesus. To have faith in Jesus is to be in love with Jesus.

Jesus loves you no matter what. Jesus heals you, he puts your life back together, makes you whole again with a whole life again, no matter what. Jesus died and rose. That's the plain and simple truth. Jesus calls us to be his people, his children, by baptism into his death and into his resurrection. That's the way it works. Faith­ful life does not ignore those truths. But Christianity is not just a bored nod of the head blandly acknowledging what Jesus has done for us.

To be made well, to live well, is to always stay by Jesus. Chris­tian life is a constant returning in praise and in thanks, in humility and in service, in gentleness and in mercy, to the Lord who has saved you, has healed you, and has made you whole. Healing and forgiveness always take us back to Jesus. Hope always takes us back to Jesus. Faith always takes us back to Jesus. It's not because it's polite to go back and say, "Thank you." It's because you're in love and you can't stay away. Amen.

CSS Publishing Company, Sermons for Sundays after Pentecost (Last Third): Knowing Who’s in Charge, by Scott Bryte