Luke 17:11-19 · Ten Healed of Leprosy
Step into Your 'Adjacent Possibility'
Luke 17:11-19
Sermon
by Leonard Sweet
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Ever get overwhelmed? When my Gramma would get overwhelmed with work, anger, excitement, whatever she would exclaim: “I am just beside myself!”

What she meant was that there was just too much of what she was feeling to be contained by one person. To be “beside yourself” was not a good thing.

But what if where you are starting from is not the best place to be? What if where your life stands right now is not a good place?

Maybe if you could get outside yourself if you could get out of the space your heart and spirit are inhabiting, if you could somehow “get beside yourself” instead of being stuck in the same old place, perhaps your life could be made better? Perhaps your life could be transformed?

The possibility of being “beside yourself” has gone from a quaint old saying to a new general law of physics. Theoretical biologist and complexity physicist Stuart Kauffmann has proposed what he calls “Adjacent Possible Theory,” or “APT-ness.” Kauffman decrees the “adjacent possible” to be the fourth general law of physics. The idea of the “adjacent possible” suggests that at any given moment there is a space around every person (and around every institution) of untapped potential. To enter into a new field of energy is the lure of the “adjacent possible.”

In other words, a halo of possibility and promise is beside yourself.

Think about your living room. Most of us have the same furniture, placed in the same spots, for years at a time. When the house gets crowded on game days or holidays, you know where people are going to end up, what the traffic flow is going to be like, where there are going to be “traffic jams,” where the favorite spot to hang out always is.

Kauffmann’s law of the “adjacent possible” says real change takes place when you re-arrange the current configuration of things, opening up a new possibility for movement and matter. Rearrange your living room furniture, and see what happens. Without even adding one new chair or table, the whole feeling of the room is changed. People move about in the room differently. They interact with others in new groups. The energy in the room flows in a new configuration. All that just by moving around furniture.

What could happen if you re-configured the space in your soul? The “adjacent possible,” the halo of promise that lies just outside your standard zone of existence, is waiting for your presence.

In today’s gospel text the “standard zone” inhabited by the ten lepers was a truly bad place to be. They were cast out as outcasts. As designated lepers they were required to stay outside the boundaries of the community, outside the gates of the village. Not only were they socially isolated, which may have been the worst thing that could happen to them; they were also required to renounce themselves to all who passed nearby as “unclean.” It was their responsibility to keep themselves physically isolated from all other human beings.

Into their tiny, terrible world there suddenly walked one they all recognized-—both as a person and as a power. So powerful is his presence they call out to him “Jesus, Master, have mercy on us!” Even though these ten men called out to Jesus for help, they could not have known that they were encountering the greatest expansion of possibilities for the future the world had ever known.

Jesus not only could move them out of the space of being outcast and unclean. Only Jesus had the power to move them into a place a healing and wholeness.

Nine of these ten tortured souls accepted Jesus at face value. Nine saw him as one who was moved to reach out to them where they stood, and offer them healing, cleansing, a new chance at acceptance. Nine moved toward the temple in confidence, sure that the priest they encountered there would declare them to be “clean.”

But one of the ten lepers did something more. He moved into his “adjacent possible.” One out of the ten recognized as they traveled to the temple that his life had been transformed by the power of God. One out of the ten realized what it meant that he had been healed and “cleansed.” One out of the ten moved outside his own experience and saw beyond a trip to the temple. One out of the ten recognized the presence of God in his review mirror and he decided to back up, return to that redemptive power, and step “beside himself.”

The Samaritan leper did more than accept the healing that Jesus offered to him. Witnessing his own new “clean” status, the Samaritan leper saw his “adjacent possible,” He recognized that Jesus’ healing meant a new way of living life, not just a fresh layer of skin.

His trip to the temple, whether to the Samaritan temple at Mount Gerizim or to the Jewish temple at Jerusalem, was suddenly a pointless trip. He stepped outside the accepted boundaries of his existence and realized he had just encountered the very presence of Almighty God. He had just received the very infusion of God’s kingdom into this world. He had just received the very best gift anyone could ever hope to receive.

The only place he needed to go was back to the source of that presence, back to Jesus, back to the one whose very existence made all things new and possible.

We never hear anymore about the other nine lepers. They were cured. They took the traditional path and were ritually decreed to be “clean” according to whichever priest they sought out. But they never returned to Jesus. They gained admittance back into the world they had been banished from, but they missed out on their ticket to a new existence, to a new reality that was beyond anything they had ever known before.

Everyone here this morning is one of the nine cured lepers. We know the power of Christ’s touch. We know the gift of Christ’s sacrifice. We accept his love and forgiveness. But we keep within our carefully structured lives. We stay “within ourselves.”

What would happen if we chose to move into the “adjacent possible?” What would happen if we turned around and took a hop into the holy? What would happen if we leaped into the unknown that lies just barely outside our zone of comfort and safety? It’s not the one who takes the biggest steps that gets the biggest blessings. Sometimes it’s the smallest of steps that create the biggest changes if that step is into your “adjacent possible.”

How is a lobster able to grow bigger when its shell is so hard? How do crustaceans grow?

In order to get bigger crustaceans must periodically shed their “skin,” their carapace, their exterior shell that keeps them together, that keeps them safe. Unfortunately for the crabs off the Chesapeake Bay, this results in the annual frenzy of “soft shell crab” season. It is also the only way Maine lobsters ever get to be big enough to harvest.

When its body begins to feel cramped inside the shell, the lobster instinctively looks for a safe spot to rest while the hard shell comes off and the pink membrane just inside forms the basis of the new shell. But no matter where a lobster goes for this shedding process, it is vulnerable. It can get tossed against a coral reef or eaten by a fish. A lobster must risk its life in order to grow. If a lobster refused to become vulnerable, and malleable, it would never grow in length or in width. Once a shell is hardened into a safe armament, it no longer offers the lobster any room for new growth.

Disciples of Jesus, will you find the courage to move into your “adjacent possible?”

Is your shell too tight?

Are you tired of doing the same thing over and over?

Are you feeling stifled in your shell?

Oh, that shell keep you safe. But it won’t let you grow. And it won’t let other people in.

Will you shed your shell, despite the dangers, and prepare yourself for new and better adventures?

Look into your life. Look into your home, your job, your commitments, your family. Do you dare to see what might be possible if you would just shift your vision a bit more to Jesus.

Look into our church—-our mission, our educational programs, our worship. Do we dare to see what might be possible if we turned away from the temple and turned back to Jesus?

Jesus Christ is the biggest expansion of possibilities in the universe. You are one step away this morning from an explosion of energy that can totally transform your life. Will you take that one step?

ChristianGlobe Networks, Inc., Leonard Sweet Sermons, by Leonard Sweet