Luke 17:11-19 · Ten Healed of Leprosy
Thanks, Lord
Luke 17:11-19
Sermon
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On the way to Jerusalem he was passing along between Samaria and Galilee. And as he entered a village, he was met by ten lepers, who stood at a distance and lifted up their voices and said, "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 cleansed. Then one of them, when he saw that he was healed, turned back praising God with a loud voice; and he fell on his face at Jesus’ feet, giving him thanks. Now he was a Samaritan. Then said Jesus, "Were not ten cleansed? Where are the nine? Was no one found to return and give praise to God except this foreigner?" And he said to him, "Rise and go your way; your faith has made you well."

If I were a sick person going to a "healer," I would anticipate being near the healer and kneeling before him/her and having the healer touch me. But there is none of this contact in Luke’s account of the healing of the ten lepers. Consequently, some of the other accounts of the healing of lepers appeal to me much more than this report from Luke. For example, Matthew gives this warm picture of the healing of a leper:

A leper came to him (Jesus) and knelt before him, saying, "Lord if you will you can make me clean." And he stretched out his hand and touched him, saying, "I will; be clean." And immediately his leprosy was cleansed. (Matthew 8:2-3)

In this account, there is a physical closeness between Jesus and the leper. The Lord touches the leper, and there is instant healing. Neither of these conditions exists in the account of the healing of the ten lepers given by Luke. He writes:

He (Christ) was met by ten lepers who stood at a distance and lifted up their voices and said, "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 cleansed. (Luke 17:12-14)

There is distance, no touching and no instant healing. There is the voice of command and dutiful obedience. Some of the warmth that I feel in the Matthew story is lost. There is coolness in Luke’s report. A coolness brought on by distance, command and blind obedience. But herein lies a part of the beauty, meaning and power of this passage of Scripture.

The Disease

Leprosy was a dreadful disease.1 It brought discoloration and deterioration of the skin. Parts of human flesh were eaten away and this "rotting away" continued until death came as a merciful angel. There were three types of leprosy, and some of these brought more suffering than others. But all were bad and very much dreaded by the people who lived in Jesus’ time.

In addition to the physical pain and suffering, the leper received humiliating treatment from the people. He/she was banished from society and made to live outside the camp. "He shall remain unclean as long as he has the disease; he is unclean; he shall dwell alone in a habitation outside the camp." (Leviticus 13:46) The leper was cast out to roam in the wilderness. His/her clothing must be torn, hair disheveled and upper lip covered. One was not allowed to greet a leper even in an open place, and if a leper placed any part of his/her body inside a home, everything in that house was made unclean, even the beams of the roof.

A leper was allowed to enter a village and go to a synagogue, but the diseased person had to be the first one in and the last one out of the building. While inside, the leper was confined and isolated to a small chamber called the Mechitsah which was only ten feet high and six feet wide. Walled cities, including Jerusalem and the temple, were out of bounds for the leper.

Sometimes these sick people were abused, and one Rabbi boasted of always throwing stones at them. If they were discovered inside a walled city where they were not allowed to visit, their already diseased and painful bodies were given forty stripes. The lepers were both feared and despised by the people around them.

In the middle ages things changed very little. Lepers were not allowed to enter the church buildings for worship, but they were allowed to watch from the outside. For this purpose a hole was cut in the wall of the church building so the lepers could gather on the outside and see into the Lord’s table. These openings were called "leper squints," and through these the lepers were able to watch and to worship. There is evidence of these leper squints in some of the old churches remaining today.

As callous as it was, in the Middle Ages, when a person was diagnosed as a leper, the priest would take the sick person into the sanctuary and read the burial service over him/her. The person was considered dead.

Leprosy is never referred to in the Bible as a type of sin. The leper was ceremonially unclean and banished from the people, but this diseased person was not seen as a sinner or as a victim of sin. The presence of leprosy was regarded as an act of God and therefore, whenever a leper was healed it was interpreted as a miracle of God. It had come from God and could be taken away only by God.

All of this may be difficult for us to visualize; but it is factual. Lepers were treated like this. They were banished outside the normal circles of life in their society and left to survive in whatever ways they found possible. Leprosy was a dreaded disease.

The Cure (Miracle)

Unlike the leper who came to Jesus in the story in Matthew 8, the ten lepers in Luke’s story were obedient to the law and kept their distance. No one was allowed to stand closer to a leper than four cubits (six feet) and these lepers kept their distance. They did not feel a need to get close to Christ or to kneel before him because they believed that all he had to do was to speak the word. He did not have to hand them any secret symbol. He did not have to annoint their wounds with any kind of mysterious ointment. All he had to do was to say the word, and they would be healed. They did not have to break the law and come closer to him than the law allowed because his power was not dependent upon proximity. They could be healed at a distance.

That’s a great faith. Jesus proclaimed it as great. In the seventh chapter of Luke, we are told about a centurion who had a slave who was dying. He sent some elders of the Jews to Jesus to ask him to come and heal his slave. Jesus went with these elders to visit the centurion and the slave, but when he was still some distance from the centurion’s house, the slave owner sent some friends to Jesus to tell him not to bother coming to the house. He did not have to trouble himself with a house call. The centurion was a man of authority, and he knew that all Jesus had to do was to speak the word. Even at a distance, his slave could be healed.

When Jesus heard this he marveled at him, and turned and said to the multitude that followed him, "I tell you, not even in Israel have I found such faith." (Luke 7:9)

That’s where the ten lepers were in this story. They had such great faith in Christ that they did not have to break the law and get close to him. All he had to do was say the word and they could be healed. The healing could take place at a distance.

This is the faith we have when we pray to the Lord for health, healing and wholeness in our lives today. It’s a great faith that believes God can minister unto us at a distance.

That’s only part of the picture. These lepers not only had faith in Jesus, but they also had faith in treatment that was available to them. Jesus said to them, "Go and show yourselves to the priests." (Luke 17:14) They were obedient and on the way to the priests, they were made clean. This command of Christ and obedience of the lepers is filled with meaning.

In Leviticus 14, there is a detailed explanation of the ritual through which one must go to be declared clean after having been declared unclean. In other words, if healing took place from any skin disease which had appeared like leprosy, there was a process through which one was able to go and be declared clean. It all centered around the priests who examined the leper. It was a long and involved process but it included some of the following highlights.

Two healthy birds were taken, one of them was killed over running water. The living bird, along with cedar, scarlet, and hyssop were dipped into the blood of the dead bird and then the living bird was allowed to go free. The "leper" washed himself and his clothing and shaved and waited seven days to be re-examined. Then he shaved his head and his eyebrows and more sacrifices were made. These included lambs, flour and oil. The person was then touched on the right thumb, the tip of the right ear and the right big toe with blood and oil. There was a final examination and if he was found to be clean, he was given a certificate of cure.

In sending the lepers to the priest, Jesus was telling them not to neglect the treatment available to them. He had healed them, and yet he sent them to the priests for their treatment. In giving such emphasis, Jesus is reminding you and me that we do not get miracles by neglecting the medical treatments which are ours, but by taking full advantage of them and marrying them to the faith we have in our own lives. It’s not either/or but both/and. The greatest miracles of health come when we do all that we can do through medical technology and bring to that process our own faith-filled lives.

William Stringfellow was very sick in a New York City hospital when he was visited by the late Bishop James Pike. Dr. Stringfellow was facing critical surgery and after visiting with him for a few minutes, Bishop Pike asked the nurse for some Vaseline. A jar of the jelly-like substance was provided, and the Bishop prayed over the ointment. After consecrating it in this way, he came to the bedside of his friend and made the sign of the cross on his forehead and said:

I anoint you, in the name of God; beseeching the mercy of our Lord Jesus Christ, that all your pain and sickness of body being put to flight, the blessing of health may be restored unto you. Amen.2

Shortly after this William Stringfellow was taken to surgery. When the doctor came to visit him the next morning and give him his prognosis, he reassured his patient that his recovery had been spectacular. The doctor was surprised that his patient had done so well. To this Bill Stringfellow replied, "That doesn’t surprise me at all. I was anointed with Vaseline by Bishop Pike - what else would you expect?"3

It’s this marriage of medicine and faith that brings great miracles of healing and health. Jesus seems to have indicated this when he sent the lepers for their cleansing treatment from the priests.

Thanksgiving

Ten lepers were healed, but only one of them returned to give thanks to Christ. Obviously, this was a response that impressed Jesus very much. He was glad that this person had returned to give thanks. He mentioned the other nine, but he did not dwell on them. Hopefully, we won’t either. The positive side of the picture is the one who did return to give thanks, and he stands as a symbol for each of us. All of our lives are to be lived in joyful thanksgiving to God for health, strength and life.

When William Stringfellow was released from the hospital following his surgery, he went to his home on Block Island. In gratitude and thanksgiving to God he did several things. First, he had a meal with two of his closest friends. He calls it a celebration. People of faith broke bread together and feasted in their fellowship with one another and with God. Such a celebration is one of the ways we have of expressing our thanks to God.

Second, he decided to write a book about God, faith, love and health. The book was written as a joyful expression of his hope in God as revealed to us in Jesus Christ. Again, this was a way of offering God thanksgiving and praise.

Third, he put a sign up on his property of Block Island. He explains that it is customary for people to name their homes on this island, and, although he had purchased the sign before he was hospitalized, he had not posted it. On the first morning after returning home, he mounted the sign on the gatepost and named his home ESCHATON which means that God is in the world working to overcome sin and death and to complete what was begun in the creation.4 In this sense, the home and the sign offer praise and thanksgiving to God. That’s the best way to respond to God’s goodness.

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