Luke 17:11-19 · Ten Healed of Leprosy
Once More with Feeling!
Luke 17:11-19
Sermon
by Stephen M. Crotts
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It's that holiday season again. Friends and loved ones are making plans for a visit. Christmas decorations are out in the store windows. Once again people's hearts are swelling with optimism. Jack Frost has left his calling card. The smell of wood fires curls from the chimneys, and inside, mothers work their magic as fathers are heard to say, "Make some of those sugar cookies that you made last year, the ones with the sprinkles."

Yes, it's Thanksgiving week, and I'm supposed to preach on gratitude. And you're supposed to be thankful. Ah, but the civil courtesy of gratefulness does not come with the picture-perfection of a Currier and Ives print. The years can be hard. Disappointments crowd in. Thankfulness can be hard to muster.

The text tells us it happened to nine out of ten people in Jesus' day. Remember the story? Ten men. Ten severe cases of leprosy. Chalky skin. Loss of feeling. Highly contagious. Wrapped in rags. Made to dwell apart. Ten different stories of life interrupted. Careers ruined. Families broken. Dreams shattered. Then came Jesus. He healed them all, and pell-mell they began to rush back into the city. Each had an agenda, a thirsty desire to pick up the life they'd had to abandon.

One man, seeing he was healed, returned to fall at Jesus' feet to give gratitude. The other nine? They were "no shows." Perhaps they felt lucky. Or maybe they were just plain impolite. Or could it be they were just in a hurry and didn't have time?

Christ looked at the thankful man at his feet. He looked at the trail over which the others had fled. He said, "Were not ten cleansed? Where are the other nine?"

Since it is the season for great feasts and big family gatherings, I'd like to share one of my recipes with you. It is a recipe for the best Thanksgiving ever! Where did I get this recipe? I got it from God himself. It comes from the Bible.

All you really need is a mixing bowl and several simple ingredients. It is not a very complex recipe. Why, your very life can be the mixing bowl. And here is what you first put in it. 1 Thessa-lonians 5:18 says, "Give thanks in all circumstances; for this is the will of God in Christ Jesus for you." So the first ingredient in this happy Thanksgiving recipe is thanksgetting.

Thanksgetting

Many of you are familiar with the old spiritual that goes, "Count your blessings, name them one by one." Well, this is not such a bad song to be whistling or singing while you mix in several cupfuls of thanksgetting. Just stop and think for a moment! Which of you has gone hungry during the past year? Consider your clothing. How many pairs of shoes do you have in your closet right now? How about that job and your health and your family? My, my! When we count our blessings one by one we just have to thank the Lord! Our list of blessings is longer than your arm! We feel like the country woman who said, "The Lord has blessed me so good He's done filled my cup and run it over into the saucer, too!"

Jesus, while he was here on earth, gave a group of people something to be thankful for. He healed ten men of leprosy. Flesh that had been cancerous was made pure as a baby's skin. And the healed ones were so excited that they ran pell-mell to the village for a reunion with their families. But one of the men took time to stop and thank Jesus for his healing. Now one out of ten is not a very good average. I suppose we still live in that same kind of thankless world today. When you do something nice for somebody else, they are just too busy or too tired or too something to say a sincere thanks. Why, it seems like the words thank you are becoming more and more rare. Thanksgetting is sort of like an endangered species these days. It may even become extinct like the great whales or the whooping cranes.

Why don't we just stop for a moment and see how much thanksgetting we can find. After all, there's no use going on with our recipe if we cannot find all the ingredients. How about you? Can you find any thanksgetting? Is there something for which you would like to say thank you?

Thanksliving

The second ingredient you will need for this happy Thanksgiving recipe is a heaping amount of pure thanksliving. You don't have to be particular about it. Just stir it right in there along with the thanksgetting. Use the same bowl. It will be big enough to hold it all.

Now it's easy enough to thank God for the healings, the food, the peace, the luxuries he sends our way. But how about the setbacks, the pain and grief? Can we be thankful for them, too? 1 Thessalonians 5:18 says, "Give thanks in all circumstances; for this is the will of God in Christ Jesus for you." This is not just an isolated verse either. The same recipe is taught in Ephesians 5:20. There, God says, "Always and for everything give thanks in the name of our Lord Jesus Christ to God the Father."

What is the first thing we should do when something upsetting happens? When we feel like the blessings have quit flowing? If you are driving down the road and you have a flat tire, do you curse and fume at your delay? What's the first thing you should do when you find out you have cancer or the television is burned out or your in-laws are coming for a two-week visit? You should stop and praise God. You should stop and thank him. "That's ridiculous, Pastor!" you say. "Aw, come on now. We're not really supposed to thank God for our misfortunes, are we?" The text says we should thank God in all circumstances. Not for the woe! But for God who has brought us to this day to show his power.

Last winter, a friend of mine named Roger lost his job in the carpet industry. The recession for him, and his family of four, became a depression. The first thing Roger did was to go home and take a walk with his wife, Heather. And as they were walking, the two of them praised God for shepherding their lives through all this. As the weeks passed, well-meaning friends tried to comfort Roger by saying things like, "Gosh! That's rotten luck, Roger!" Or, "I hear they're hiring workers in Alaska for the pipeline." Nonetheless, Roger kept the faith. He just kept praising God and thanking him. Then, several months later, Roger was hired by another firm in Charlotte in a management position with a much higher salary. The Bible says, "All things work together for good with those who love God, who are called according to his purpose" (Romans 8:28). For the Christian, God has a way of turning setbacks into promotions. This should not surprise us. This same God turned a cross into a crown, a grave into a resurrection! He can transform our hospital beds into blessings, our pain into poetry, and our misfortunes into fortunes. Our only responsibility is to live by faith. Our only task is thanksliving and praise.

Consider Saint Paul for a moment. He was the pastor of a growing church. Things were great! He had plenty of food to eat. He was safe, healthy, and quite satisfied. Then came a call to Macedonia. And Paul went. But what should happen? Paul was rejected by the Macedonians. He was brutally beaten and thrown into jail. If that had happened to most of the preachers today, they would have rattled their chains in self-pity and said something like this: "Well, God, you sure didn't know what you were doing this time. Just look at me! I gave up a high-paying job for this!" But that is not the route Paul took. The Bible says that Paul and Silas started singing hymns to God around midnight. Here they were beaten, bloody, and in jail, but they were praising God from thankful hearts. If you read Acts 16, you will see how God received glory by their actions. The Philippian jailer and his family were converted.

So, why be thankful to God during times of misfortune? Because the Bible commands it. "Rejoice always," says 1 Thessalonians 5:16. Why give praise to God continually? Why be thankful at all times? Because gratitude is a powerful healing force. Praise is an acknowledgment of God's goodness. It is faith, pure and simple. Thanksliving replaces complaint with satisfaction, self-pity with joy, and whining with creative love. Those who refuse to praise God and live with thanks during difficult times will grow bitter and pessimistic. But those who live thankfully will open themselves up to God's blessing. He can put their faith where it will be seen. Others can be blessed. All things work together for good. If our recipe for a happy Thanksgiving is going to be complete we have to have some thanksliving. Do you have any? Is there some problem or setback or pain that you are willing to praise God for, and thank him for bringing your way? Will you praise him from the prison of some affliction like Paul did? That is real thanksliving!

Thanksgiving

Use your life as the bowl and stir in a little thanksliving with the thanksgetting. Now we need one final ingredient. As we return to the cookbook to see what it is, we find written, "It is more blessed to give than to receive" (Acts 20:35). This is our final ingredient. In with the thanksgetting and the thanksliving we pour at least a gallon of thanksgiving.

Giving is nothing new to the holiday scene. Mothers work hard to give their family the best meal. Fathers work overtime at the plant to buy extra gifts for loved ones. Giving is a joy. It is such a privilege. Why, anytime we catch ourselves feeling really good and warm inside, if we check we will find that we have been giving to others. Jesus promised to bless the giver. If you give a single apple seed to the soil, you will reap an apple tree and thousands of apple seeds. Truly when we give, our blessings are multiplied. As Jesus put it, "It is in giving that you receive."

On the radio a reporter was conducting one of those man-in-the-street interviews. Out among the pedestrians he was asking, "What are you thankful for?" Some were grateful for their health. Some gave thanks because they had good jobs to provide for their families. One lady whispered in broken English, "Much happy to live in America." One man was even thankful because the doctor said he could eat all the turkey he wanted. But the most enchanting remark of all was that of a wee little girl who said, "I'm thankful I'm going to see my grandmother so I can tell her how much I love her." Now that is really thanksgiving. It is going beyond mere thanksgetting and thanksliving. It is taking your eyes off yourself and focusing on another.

This spirit of giving to others from thankful hearts is perhaps the attitude which created the first Thanksgiving anyway. During that first holiday there was no turkey or pumpkin pie or cranberry sauce. The colonists were very poor. Epidemics and a harsh climate had thinned their ranks drastically. It was the Indians who helped them to survive. They had taught them to fish and build winterized huts. They showed them the secrets of fertilizing corn crops with fish. And come harvest time they all sat down for a three-day festival of thanksgetting and thanksliving and thanksgiving. The five surviving women in the settlement provided food for the combined party of 140.

Just as the Colonial era was a time for thankful giving by the Indians, so now is a time for giving on our parts. It is a time for the world of plenty to help the world of need. No! I'm not talking about welfare programs that encourage laziness or social handouts that rob incentive. I'm talking about involved, intelligent thanksgiving.

In our world two billion people are hungry. Four hundred fifty million a year face starvation. In the United States there are at least ten million people who are underfed. Many citizens of the third world live on about 27 cents a day.

How do we of plenty react to those in need? Do we say, "It's the fault of the socialists!"? Do we remind them that our ancestors were once hungry, too? Do we write them off as hopeless? Do we say, "I've got mine!? You get yours!"? I suppose we mostly are just overwhelmed. The problem just seems too big for us to deal with. So we ignore it, feeling a bit guilty. Every time we read verses like 1 John 3:17, we sort of cringe. "But if anyone has the world's goods and sees his brother in need, yet closes his heart against him, how does God's love abide in him?" Or how about Jesus' words, "I was hungry and you fed me. I was lonely and you comforted me. I was in prison and you visited me." They cut our consciences like a sharp knife.

The first time I ever saw real hunger was during a mission journey in Atotonillco, Mexico. I saw a four-year-old boy eating a dead rat. The next time was in Haiti. There were the hollow eyes of a child staring at me. They still haunt me. There were the bloated bellies. There was the silence. No crying. No sound except the sickening buzz of flies. Both times I emptied my pockets, but it didn't really help. A week later and the money was spent and they were hungry again. Most of our church's giving is like that. It is compassionate giving. It is emotional giving, but it needs to be intelligent giving as well.

A motto of the Peace Corps can be of help here. It says, "If you give a man a fish, you feed him for a day. If you teach him how to fish, you feed him for a lifetime." It does little good to give away a few thousand tons of grain. The hunger will go away for a while but it will return. What we need to give away are know-how, education, and helping hands. We don't need to give away fish. We need to teach them to fish. We need to teach them to farm and manufacture.

The answers to the world's problems are certainly very complex. None of us knows all the answers. But surely we can seek and ask and knock and make things a bit better than they are. Things may look bleak and all but impossible, but they must have looked much the same to those Indians and colonists that first Thanksgiving Day. We don't have to go to Haiti or India or Mexico to begin our work. We can begin helping those close at hand. There are those that don't know Christ here in this county. There are the prisoners, the orphans, the lonely, perhaps the hungry close at hand. Begin to give thankfully here and God will show you ways to give there in Mexico and Haiti or wherever.

Conclusion

What does it take to make a real Thanksgiving recipe? The family all at home? Health? Turkey and dressing? No, not really. All you need for the happiest Thanksgiving of all is a mixing bowl. Your own heart can serve the purpose quite well. Just mix in several heaping cupfuls of thanksgetting, an abundance of thanksliving, and a large quantity of thanksgiving. Then bring it to a boil with all of the warmth and love of our Savior Jesus Christ. You will have the best dish ever served!

You know, friends, traditions can grow very empty over the years. They can be little more than hollow liturgies filled with polite insincerities. People just go through the motions from force of habit. At the Spanish palace in Madrid, it was traditional for two soldiers to guard a certain bench in the palace gardens. No one knew why this was done. All they knew was that guarding it had been the custom for fifty years or more. Finally someone did some investigating, and found that years ago two guards were posted by the bench after it was freshly painted. Their job was to keep the king from sitting on wet paint. Someone forgot to retract the order and soldiers had been guarding it ever since. Is there a legitimate reason for this tradition we will observe this week? Shall we have another Thanksgiving? Oh, sure, it is the traditional thing to do. But is it worth it? Once more? Shall we? Yes! Yes! Once more with real feeling let us have Thanksgiving!

CSS Publishing Company, Inc., Sermons For Sundays: After Pentecost (Last Third): Rendering To God, by Stephen M. Crotts