Luke 17:11-19 · Ten Healed of Leprosy
Grateful For The Giver
Luke 17:11-19
Sermon
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I

Imagine a man who will conduct forty to fifty funerals a day, burying nearly 4500 people in all. Among those dying would be his wife. Towards the end, the deaths would be so frequent that the bodies would just be placed in trenches, without burial rites.

Imagine also that this person would be so thankful for these experiences that he’d write a hymn that would be sung by Christians 300 years later on another continent.

A fantasy?

Not if you’re describing Martin Rinkart, a Lutheran pastor of Germany during the Thirty Years’ War. He lived in a walled city, the walls being the reason it was a place of hiding for thousands of refugees. The over-crowding brought on epidemic and famine. All other officials and pastors fled, leaving Rinkart alone to care for the dying. The hymn he composed: "Now Thank We All Our God." For you see, gratitude does not depend upon the circumstances.

Imagine if you will another man, one who would be wiped out financially. Let’s make him a farmer and let’s say there was just too much rain - everything covered with water. Let’s also specify that when the land reappears and dries a bit, he’ll offer one-seventh of his remaining assets as a thanksgiving to God.

Incredible?

Not if you’re describing Noah. For you see, gratitude does not depend upon the circumstances.

Invent an army general, whose lines of supply would fall apart. Let’s say his men will be starving, their uniforms ragged, their shoes bottomless. When the ordeal is over, he’ll issue a proclamation of thanksgiving.

A fairy-tale?

Not if you’re describing Washington, "the father of our country." For gratitude does not depend upon the circumstances.

Create a character who’ll have no family and no home. He’ll he afflicted with a loathsome disease, perhaps one that causes matter to ooze from the eyes, making people hate to look his way. Decorate his body with scars all over from rods and whips and stones. Let’s say that in nearly every letter he writes - even when he’s in jail unjustly - he thanks God for the privilege of suffering for him.

Unreal?

Not if you’re speaking of the Apostle Paul. For gratitude does not depend upon the circumstances.

Here’s a man making $500 a week, his wife earning $300 a week more, and together they offer $2 each Lord’s day for the Gospel. Here’s a widow with a pension of $400 a month of which $160 is for rent and $20 is for her pills. And she also offers $2 a week for the Gospel.

Untrue to life?

Every congregation’s books can tell this story. For gratitude does not depend upon the circumstances.

We see this vividly in Jesus’ healing of the ten lepers, for the circumstances were the same for all but the gratitude was not.

They all had leprosy; that is, they were all dying by inches. Leprosy is a curse of the skin. There are sores that may end up as holes, exposing the joints. The ears can swell up and hang down. The nose might disappear and the tongue become thick and cracked. Whether all ten were equally deteriorated made little difference. It was only a matter of time; what one was, the others would become.

They all had the same living conditions; that is, they were all outcasts. They were required to cover their faces and leave their hair uncombed. They had to warn others to keep their distance by crying out, "Unclean! Unclean!" Anything they touched and any house they entered was pronounced unfit for others until it was cleansed by a special ritual. If they did come to a synagogue, they had to sit in a special place. You and I might have felt sorry for them - but their families probably not. Their rabbis taught that leprosy was God’s punishment for some gross sin. The marks of their sickness etched into their bodies were big signs reading, "Here walks the scum of the earth." So their misery did not excite pity but scorn.

Yes, they all had the same living conditions.

They all even shared a trust in Jesus. They all went to him. They all came as close as they dared. They all appealed for help. Their prayer we borrow every Sunday: "Lord, have mercy upon us!"

More than that, they all obeyed Jesus. He ordered them to show themselves to the priests (the Department of Health of their country). And they all went before they had any sign of a cure, for as Luke reports: "As they went they were cleansed."

They were furthermore all alike in being healed. Leprosy deadens the sense of feeling but now there was feeling in their fingers. Leprosy gives an unholy tint to the skin but now there was pinkness in their flesh.

As they heard the priest declare them fit to be with, they were probably all alike in their excitement:

"I haven’t seen the old farm in years."

"I wonder how my shop’s been doing."

"My little boy was just crawling when I had to leave home. I’ll bet he can pick me up now."

We can see them, each looking at the other in open wonder, all in the same circumstances. But nine scattered to the winds and only one turned back to offer thanks.

It’s painfully clear then that gratitude does not depend upon the circumstances. What can account for the difference between the nine and the one?

II

It could well be this, that the nine wanted the gift but not the Giver. They were out to exploit God, to get what they could from him. Like others today, they only needed him when they were in a spot. Something like some soldiers in World War II who gave us the proverb, "No atheists in foxholes." When the bullets and the bombs were screaming, oh how they prayed. (Couldn’t do any harm.) But when the crisis was over, so was the praying. It was in this sense the nine former lepers were still sick. The public health department pronounced them whole but Jesus did not.

Any relationship that’s exploitative is sick. Where a man uses a woman or a woman uses a man - even though they might be married - the relationship is sick. People using their neighbors - that’s sick. In a re-run of The Mary Tyler Moore Show we saw Mary coming into her apartment staggering under two overflowing bags of groceries. In comes neighbor Phyllis who thanks her for "picking up a few things" since she was going to the store anyway. Then we saw Mary take out just one quart of milk for herself, while Phyllis grabbed all the rest and carried it all away. Funny but sick.

The Bible sometimes shows us leprosy as a picture of sin. This disease of the nine that deadens the sense of feeling and eats away muscle and organ and bone is a symbol of how selfishness numbs our conscience and consumes our integrity.

Our Lord by his selfless living and dying and rising has cleansed us of the gnawing guilt that erodes our personality and befouls our human relationships. Our faith in him makes us well. Being loved by God without strings, we’re set free to love one another without strings.

That this can happen (or has happened) to you and me helps us understand what Jesus said to the Samaritan. Didn’t the nine also become clean? Didn’t Jesus admit that when he mused, "Were not ten cleansed?" Why did he tell this one, "Your faith has made you well," when the nine were also cured? Yes, they’d lost their leprosy but they hadn’t found the Samaritan’s humility. They enjoyed the gift but they didn’t want the Giver.

The nine had experienced the grace of God that lets his rain and sunshine bless the evil as well as the good. The nine - by the grace of God - could gather with their families for a dinner of reunion. The nine - by the grace of God - could also enjoy the chatter and chuckles of cousins and the aromas and tastes of roast and dessert. For the grace of God comes without strings; it delivers daily bread even to the wicked without their prayers. If often delivers even cake.

But the children of God (whose faith has made them well - that is, whose humble trust has taken hold of his offer of forgiveness through Christ) these have learned to know the Giver, so that their delight in his gifts is multiplied. Like the grateful leper, they can’t think of the blessings without thinking of God and they can’t think of him without offering him thanks.

We could sum it all up then by saying that our gratitude and our giving and our service to our neighbor don’t depend upon our circumstances but in being made whole, or right with our Lord. We’re grateful for the Giver.

CSS Publishing, Lima, Ohio,