Luke 17:11-19 · Ten Healed of Leprosy
Where Are the Nine?
Luke 17:11-19
Sermon
by Richard Hasler
Loading...

The mother of a little boy questioned him, “Why didn’t you pray last night like you usually do?” His frank response was, “I didn’t want anything from God last night.” But is prayer only petition and intercession? Surely, “thanksgiving” is an integral part of prayer.

People in Jesus’ time were threatened by leprosy, even more than we are today by the advent of AIDS. Definite regulations had been set up for the Jewish community to protect themselves from coming in contact with lepers. For example, in Leviticus 13:45-46:

“The person who has the leprous disease shall wear torn clothing and let the hair of his head be disheveled; and he shall cover his upper lip and cry out, “unclean, unclean.” He shall remain unclean as long as he has the disease; he is unclean. He shall live alone: his dwelling shall be outside the camp.”

When a band of lepers met others while walking, they must call out that they were lepers, and some ancient authorities said in the first century that at least fifty yards of distance must separate lepers from ordinary people.

Although lepers were not given much hope in biblical times, Jesus had compassion for them and gave them hope. In our scripture for today, Jesus healed all the lepers in the band, and then he told them to go to the priest to be examined. If found clean they would be admitted into the camp and into normal society.

All ten had been healed, but only one returned to thank Jesus. In keeping with Luke’s emphasis upon the universality of the gospel, he has the one returning, a Samaritan. The Jews and the Samaritans were bitter enemies; the common cause that brought them together was the fact that they all were lepers.

It may seem strange to us that Jesus would send a Samaritan to a Jewish priest in order to be certified that he was cleansed from leprosy. Fred Craddock, New Testament scholar, seeks to resolve this problem by suggesting that what we have here are two stories: a healing story and a story of the salvation of a foreigner.[1]

Keith Nickel in his commentary on the gospel of Luke added another insight: “‘Your faith has made you well’ (v. 19) refers to more than the cleansing. It encompasses the discernment of the presence of the rule of God that brought the Samaritan back in glad and joyful celebration as a kingdom participant. ‘Rise’ means more than ‘get up.’ It alludes to participation in resurrection life…”[2]

Here we have a picture of human ingratitude. Jesus cured ten lepers, but only one came back to thank him. Often God helps us in a special way, but we too often forget to thank God for divine gifts.

Most of us here today have been born in the United States. If we had been born in Haiti, in Somalia, or in Iraq — how different would our lives be right now? There is nothing we did to be born in the United States. It was a gift. Most of us were born in homes where we have love and support. We could have been born in a home where no one cared for us, where we would have had to somehow survive on our own.

Allen Emery, the author of the delightful little book titled, A Turtle on the Fencepost, argued that if you see a turtle on a fencepost you can be pretty sure that the turtle did not get there by itself. If that turtle brags about getting there itself, we know it is lying.

As people of faith we give thanks and give credit to the one who has put us where we are. We are extravagantly grateful but we express our gratitude in a variety of ways.

Our gratitude often reflects our unique personalities.

Brant Baker in his book, P.R.A.Y.E.R.: Guidance for Church Leaders, teaches others how to teach prayer to those for whom they have a responsibility. He mentioned Isabel and David Kersey, good Catholics as they are and how they have used outstanding Catholics in history to show a variety ways this might be done. In a rather fascinating way using the different personality types represented in the Myers-Briggs Type Indicator they show how people pray in different ways according to their personalities.

The first prayer mentioned is the Thomistic Prayer. This type of prayer is “logical; enjoys mental challenges, tends to rearrange environment (organizers); leaders, perfectionists, critical, demanding, likely to schedule even play time; communication tends to be precise, with a reluctance to state the obvious; straightforward; future oriented; desire for competency.”

The second type of prayer is what they call the Ignatian Prayer.

This second type of prayer “wants to feel useful; typical of givers, rather than receivers; practical; work ethics; strong sense of tradition; conscientious; can be pessimistic — ’’If I don’t do it who will?’; tends to enjoy ceremony and ritual; typical of great law and order people; careful, cautious, accurate; industrious; and always prepared.”

The third type of prayer is called the Augustinian Prayer.

The characteristics of their prayers: “usually creative, optimistic, verbal; persuasive; outspoken great need for self-expression; tends to communicate with others easily; typical of good listeners; hates conflict, prefers face-to-face encounters; deep feelings; committed to helping others; compassionate; enthusiastic; always searching for meaning, authenticity, and self-identity; natural rescuers.”

The final type of prayer is the Franciscan Prayer.

 This prayer is “free; unconfined; impulsive; dislikes being tied down to rules; loves action; easily bored with the status quo; crisis-oriented; good trouble-shooters; flexible; open-minded; adaptable; willing to change position; tend to live very much in the present; dislikes practice and prefers to ‘just do it.’”[3]

 Do you fit into one of these four categories when you pray and express your gratitude to God? It is good to be aware of different personality types since we all don’t express prayer and thanksgiving in the same way, even though we may be as authentic as the next person.

Our gratitude may have a tinge of humor in it. Desmond Tutu imagines what would happen if Mary had been unresponsive to be the mother of Jesus:

“Knock, knock, come in. Yes Mary, God would you like to be the mother of his Son?

What? Me? In this village you can’t even scratch yourself without everybody knowing about it! You want me to be an unmarried mother? I’m a decent girl, you know. Sorry, try next door.” [4]

Fortunately, we know Mary did not respond this way.

Our gratitude may be as simple as the privilege of watching the birds. Robert Raines, the director of Kirkridge, a retreat center in the heart of the resplendent Pocono Mountains of Pennsylvania has this explanation:

“I delight in a daily blessedness that visits me each morning in the wild birds at our feeders. Since 1978 we have had a bird log registering residents and visitors like rose-breasted grosbeaks, scarlet rangers, indigo buntings, and other outrageous birds who arrive annually during the first two weeks in May. Yes, I’m bragging, really celebrating the gorgeous invasion of the merry, merry month of May… We do not tire of watching cardinals appearing at dawn and dusk, or hearing the distant tom-tom sound that the pillaged woodpecker makes as it rat-a-tats a dead tree in the forest.”[5]

Finally, our core gratitude to God may be all that might be required. Meister Eckhart, the Christian mystic, once wrote that “if the only prayer we ever prayed our whole life was ‘Thank you’ that would be enough.”[6]

Amen.


[1]. Fred B. Craddock, Interpretation: Luke, A Bible Commentary for Teaching and Preaching, 202-203.

[2]. Keith Nickel, Preaching The Gospel of Luke: Proclaiming God’s Royal Rule, 177.

[3]. Brant D. Baker, Teaching P.R.AY.E.R: Guidance for: Pastors and Church Leaders (Nashville: Abingdon Press, 2001), 105-109.

[4]. Desmond Tutu, God Has A Dream: A Vision of Hope for Our Time (New York: Doubleday, a division of Random House, 2004), 61.

[5]. Robert Raines, A Time to Live: Seven Tasks of Creative Aging (New York: A Dalton Book, published by the Penguin Group, 1977), 71.

[6]. Wayne Muller, Sabbath: Finding Rest, Renewal, and Delight in Our Busy Lives (New York: Bantom Books, 1999), 128.

CSS Publishing Company, Inc., The last days: Cycle C sermons for Proper 18, Ordinary Time 23, Pentecost 13 through Christ the King Sunday on the Gospel texts, by Richard Hasler