Luke 17:11-19 · Ten Healed of Leprosy
The Dailyness of Healing Measures
Luke 17:11-19
Sermon
by Leonard Sweet
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Thank God for the daily gift of health - physical and spiritual health - and for the surgeries and healing measures that keep us well.

Last fall there was a much-publicized "shootout at the ratings corral" between two highly touted new doctor shows. In their mysterious wisdom, the network executives decided to face "E.R." and "Chicago Hope" off against each other. After opening night, though, the battle was all over. "Chicago Hope" lay bleeding on the floor, while "E.R." rode off as the hero.

"E.R." reflects what an emergency room physician really does. The very nature of an "emergency" room suggests that when you walk in its doors, there is clearly something wrong. The E.R. physician's job is far more straightforward than that of an internist or an oncologist. E.R. doctors sew it up, put it in a cast, send it upstairs for surgery, give it a pill or send it to the morgue. Once out of the E.R., the patient is someone else's responsibility, someone else's worry. Although emergency room physicians may someday save your life, you will never know them like you do your family physician. And they will never know you. It's just not their job.

We all sort of like that kind of anonymity. It saves us the trouble of feeling too dependent upon another human being for our well-being. It's not surprising, therefore, that the nine lepers healed on their way to Jerusalem responded to their restored health much as most of us would. Undoubtedly, they were overjoyed and enthusiastic about their new condition. But they chose to validate it only through the safe, established routes of human sources. They continued on to the temple to see the priests there who were invested with the power to "officially" proclaim them cured and make them ritually clean once more. Only the Samaritan leper "sees" that what he has experienced is more than physical healing - it is salvation itself.

The Samaritans thought of themselves as Jews - descendants of Joseph's line instead of Judah's, worshiping at the "true" center of faith at Mt.Gerizim - but Jews nonetheless. The rest of Judaism branded Samaritans as "Gentiles" - lumping them in with all the other pagan religions.

The health the Samaritan leper celebrates at Jesus' feet is a feeling of wholeness he has never before experienced. It is something no priest, no doctor, could measure or prescribe. The Samaritan returns to the source of his healing at Jesus' feet to offer praises of thanksgiving "with a loud voice." He whoops it up in joy!

What are some of the daily healing measures God carries out in your life? Have you remembered to thank God for:

  • a good night's sleep
  • a day of blue sky and sunshine that gets you outside
  • a day of gray skies and drizzle that keeps you inside
  • the unexpected voice of a distant friend on the telephone
  • the comfort of the Psalms
  • the beauty of John 1
  • Mozart
  • Haagen-Dazs
  • uncontrollable laughter
  • unashamed tears
  • Tylenol
  • your spouse
  • your children

The greatest instrument of healing God has ever used in this world only needed to be employed one time. That single act of healing was the Cross. Our greatest wounds, our most serious infirmities, our most malicious malignancies, were all wiped out by this radical act of spiritual surgery. Through Jesus' sacrifice, the destructive power of death was crushed, leaving in its place our choice for health and wholeness.

But God gives us healing measures - physical and spiritual - every single day. What are some of the healings that have taken place in your life this past week? (Go now into a karaoke sermon where you get your people to talk about what healing is taking place in their midst.)

ChristianGlobe Networks, Inc., Collected Works, by Leonard Sweet