Luke 17:11-19 · Ten Healed of Leprosy
Gratitude Takes Practice
Luke 17:11-19
Sermon
by Maxie Dunnam
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If any life was lifeless, it was the life of the lepers. Lepers were, in Jesus day, "the walking dead." They were considered outcasts. Their skin diseases were mistakenly considered contagious and, therefore, they were segregated in order to protect the healthy parts of society from their diseases.

But something deeper than disease was also at work. Lepers generally were presumed to be people who were being punished for their sins. Their illness was evidence that God was punishing them. Can you feel just a bit of the awfulness of such a condition? If people are both contagious and sinful one would not want to have anything to do with them. So lepers were segregated in the society, pushed into little colonies where they all lived together in anguishing isolation.

When they came into the presence of others, they were subject to diminishing themselves even more in a cruel way. By law they had to announce their own uncleanness. So they would shout as they would approach others, "Unclean! Unclean!"

Our story is full of lessons for us "clean" folks. One of the big lessons is about gratitude which is our primary focus on this Sunday before Thanksgiving. But before we get there, let's note briefly two other lessons.

I.

First, there is a oneness in suffering binding us together as nothing else does.

I see it all the time. It's especially dramatic in Intensive Care waiting rooms. Family members of persons "on the edge of death" share a oneness with each other. They pray and cry together. I've seen black and white folks, who otherwise would have little or no relationship, embracing each other, sharing the depth of suffering, becoming one with others in an empathy that dissolves all barriers, because their loved ones are suffering.

Shouldn't that be learning for us? At the depth of life all God's people are one. We're all alike in our heartaches and sorrows, our hearts beat with the same throbbing love and desire for life. One of my favorite musicals is Big River, Mark Twain's wonderful story set to music. One of the moving scenes is when Huck and his black friend Jim, sing that heart-gripping ballad "Worlds Apart" from "BIG RIVER":

"I see the same stars through my window that you see through yours, but we're worlds apart, worlds apart. And I see the same skies through brown eyes that you see through blue, but we're worlds apart, worlds apart. Just like the earth, just like the sun, two worlds together are better than one. I see the sunrise in your eyes that you see in mine, but we're worlds apart, worlds apart. I see the same stars through my window that you see through yours, but we're worlds apart, worlds apart. And you see the same skies through brown eyes that I see through blue, but we're worlds apart, worlds apart. Just like the earth, just like the sun, two worlds together are better than one. I see the friendship in your eyes that you see in mine, but we're worlds apart, worlds apart. Together, but worlds apart. And a mockingbird sings in an ole yonder tree, twad-dle-ee ah dee dee dah dee dee dee." (Music and Lyrics by Roger Miller, copyright 1985 by Tree Publishing Company, Inc. and Roger Miller Music, 8 Music Square West, Nashville, TN 37203)

So, that's a learning for us. There is a oneness in suffering, binding us together as nothing else does.

II.

A second learning is this: Often we have to act in faith before the work of faith is actualized. Let me say that again. Often we have to act in faith before the work of faith is actualized. I read recently about a crowd that stood around a 100-foot diving tower at the fairgrounds waiting for the featured performer. Finally, a feeble old man walked out, leaning on a cane.

"Good evening," he said into the microphone. "I am 99 years old, and I am going to amaze you. I'll climb to the top of that tower and dive into this teeny, tiny tub of water. Are you ready?"

"Oh, no don't do it!" gasped members of the audience. "Okay," said the little old man. "Next show at 10 o'clock."

He fooled them, but he makes my point: Often we have to act in faith before the work of faith is actualized. If that's a bit fuzzy, it will become clear as we look at the faith action of the lepers.

These ten lepers began to call out to Jesus, "Have mercy on us." Jesus does something very interesting. He doesn't tell them that he's going to heal them. Rather he sent them to the priest. Now remember, leprosy was considered to be both a religious and a medical problem. So if you were a leper and you got better, the way you established your health was to go to a priest to be confirmed as "well." Jesus did not tell them they were well. He did not touch them and heal them. He just said, "Go and show yourself to the priest." Luke says something very interesting. "As they went", they noticed that they were clean.

Do you see? As they went they noticed they were clean. You see often, we have to act in faith before the work of faith is actualized.

These lepers provide us a marvelous model of faith. You see, faith means going on, even before you have evidence. Anticipating that what God promises is going to be given you. Or, faith means just keep on going. That's the role that you and I play in the faith dynamic to keep on. Now God's part is up to God. We believe that what God promises God will give, but we can't put a time line on that. So we have to act as though it were going to happen.

You see we can't control how God is going to act, nor can we control God's time table. But we can control what we do. So we walk in faith, we act in faith, we believe in faith, and we wait for faith to be actualized.

Daniel Aldridge used to be the Chancellor of the University of California at Irvine. In 1986, he gave a Commencement Address in which he talked about a graduate of Irvine who returned his diploma in the mail, with a letter saying he was returning his diploma because it hadn't enabled him to get a job.

Aldridge sent it back to him with a letter explaining what it means to be an adult and the meaning of a university. The purpose of a university is to help you become self-sufficient, to become concerned about and involved in society. A university is here to help you gain wisdom, morality, and maybe even, he concluded, the purpose of the university is "to equip you for the struggles of life, not to guarantee you victory."

Well, that's a model of faith as well. That's what faith enables us to do to continue the struggle, to keep on, to refuse to give up. Because, often we have to act in faith before the work of faith is actualized. As the lepers went their way they noticed they were healed.

III.

With those two learnings, we come now to the focus of the sermon: Gratitude Takes Practice. Let's read verses 15-18 again: 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?

Let me underscore two lessons about gratitude, or reasons we fail to practice gratitude. One, we forget too soon.

"In our hurried lives with so many pressing demands and frantic schedules, it's very easy to be so much on the run that we forget the benedictions that have blessed us, the gifts which have come to us, the love we've been privileged to share. Only later and sometimes too late do we realize all we have forgotten and how much we've lost in our frantic haste and business preoccupation." (Donald Shelby, "Unremembered and Overfamiliar")

My friend Donald Shelby tells of an experience he had with a husband who asked him to remain after the graveside services for his wife. When everyone else had dispersed, this man took from his pocket a little book of poetry and he said to Don, "Would you read some of these over Virginia's grave?" Then he added, "All our married life she wanted me to share her appreciation for poetry. She would come ask me to listen as she would read aloud verses which had special meaning for her, but I was always too busy. How I wish I would have listened," he chokingly said.

So, Don read some of Virginia's favorite lines which he had marked and which he had missed hearing her read because he was in a hurry. We can fail to be grateful, and we can miss much of the richness of life, because we forget too soon. But there's another lesson we need to learn. When we assume too much, gratitude takes a back seat in our lives.

There's a story about a man who decided to sell his farm. He listed it with a realtor who asked the farmer to describe its selling points. The realtor even came out to look over the farm and take some photos of it. In a few days he had an ad ready for the newspaper in a farm real estate digest and called to check it with the owner. After the realtor had read the ad, the farmer asked him to read it again. The realtor complied. There was a silence on the other end, then the farmers voice said, "I've changed my mind! I don't want to sell the farm, cause you see, I've been wanting a farm like that all my life."

We can become so familiar with things that we don't see them for what they are we can assume too much, and miss the richness of life.

We can get so used to the familiar things of life that we never really see them as the gifts of God they are: life, love, friends, beauty, work and worship. We begin to take sunsets and sunrises, moon shadows and butterflies, a friend's smile, our child's face and loaf of bread so much for granted that we receive them as our just due.

The Holy Spirit of God can burst forth in the silent oratorio called "spring," and we never hear the glorious oratio sung by every tree, shrub and blade of grass. We can yawn at the blood -red path which the rising sun paves to our very door over the waters of the lake and never hear God's invitation, "Arise, and follow me." "We can witness reconciliation and recovery in others or experience love and victory in ourselves without the slightest impulse to give thanks." (Donald Shelby, ibid.)

We can become like that husband who asked Donald Shelby to read poetry over his wife's grave. We can become so busy, forgetting the gifts, but also assuming too much assuming that we're going to have our loved ones with us always, presuming on God, and the beauty and the blessing that he provides for us. The psalmist underscored it: "Bless the Lord, oh my soul, and forget not all his benefits."

Only those who praise do not forget how they've been blessed, only those who do not assume to much stay alive to the blessings that are being bestowed upon them daily.

It all comes down to this bottom line: Gratitude Takes Practice. It doesn't come natural for most of us. We have to stay alive. We have to keep our eyes open and our hearts sensitive to what's going on around us. And when something quickens our aliveness, we express gratitude for it. When someone moves in our direction, perhaps crossing over barriers that are difficult to cross, we can thank God for them and take a step in their direction. When a difficult situation is resolved, and we know it has taken the effort of others as well as our own effort, then we can be sensitive and thank God, but also express our gratitude to them.

Suicide is becoming a prime issue in our day. A wicked book on how to do it has become a best-seller. A few weeks ago (October 6), Benjamin Stein wrote one of the most helpful articles I have read. I was thrilled to find it on the editorial page of The Commercial Appeal. He listed 12 reasons for not committing suicide and called them "a sort of manual of why not to die." One of them was "There are a number of questions you should be asking yourself before you shuffle off this mortal coil:

Do I really want to never see another sunset?Do I really want to never hear by children laugh ever again?Do I never want to feel the warmth of another creature next to me?Do I really want to hurt people who love me?Do I want to leave a permanent hole in the life of my family?Do I have more to say to those close to me?Isn't there something or someone or someplace I want to see?Is my work really done?Do I never want to taste pizza again?Do I really want to never laugh at "Saturday Night Live" or Jack Benny again?

Those are not questions to ask only if you are contemplating suicide. They are questions which will lead us to practice gratitude. Because you see, gratitude takes practice. We have to stay awake and keep our eyes open to what's going on around us in order that we can express to God and to others, our appreciation.

I've said three things. One, there is a oneness in suffering, binding us together as nothing else does. Two, often we have to act in faith before the work of faith is actualized; and, three, gratitude takes practice.

Now in making the third point, gratitude takes practice, I said we fail to practice gratitude because of two things. One, we forget too soon; and two, we assume too much.

I close with this. Just before takeoff on an airplane flight, the stewardess reminded Mohammed Ali to fasten his seatbelt. "Superman don't need no seatbelt," replied Ali.

"Superman don't need no airplane either," retorted the stewardess. Ali fastened his belt. I like that story for two reasons. One I admire the quick wit and response of the stewardess. Arrogant braggers need to be brought down to size.

Two, no matter who we are, none of us is self-sufficient. We can't make it on our own. There is no Superman. We better fasten our seatbelts. And one of the ways to do it is to practice gratitude.

One of the lessons I seek to teach in my Workbook on Living Prayer is that God does answer prayer. You say, who needs that lesson? We all know that. But I invite you to do what I ask folks who use the workbook to do. I invite you to make a record this week of those things for which you pray. Write them down. Then three or four weeks from now I want you to come back to your notes of your praying this week and see how many of those petitions, those prayer requests have been answered. You'll make an amazing discovery two fold in nature. One, we pray for many things, but really forget that we've prayed for them and never check out whether they have been answered or not. And two, keeping a diary of prayer in that fashion will be so revealing in terms of God's activity in our life, that we will want to become more intentional about cultivating our awareness of God's activity.

You see, gratitude takes practice. We have to stay awake and keep our eyes open to what's going on around us in order that we can express to God and to others our appreciation.

Maxie Dunnam, MaxieDunnam.com, by Maxie Dunnam