11 Now on
his way to Jerusalem, Jesus travelled along the border between Samaria and
Galilee. 12 As he was going into a village, ten men who
had leprosy met him. They stood at a distance 13 and
called out in a loud voice, “Jesus, Master, have pity on us!”
14 When
he saw them, he said, “Go, show yourselves to the priests.” And as
they went, they were cleansed.
15 One of
them, when he saw he was healed, came back, praising God in a loud
voice. 16 He threw himself at Jesus’ feet and thanked
him—and he was a Samaritan.
17 Jesus
asked, “Were not all ten cleansed? Where are the other nine? 18 Has
no one returned to give praise to God except this foreigner?” 19 Then
he said to him, “Rise and go; your faith has made you well.” Luke
17:11-19
We saw last time how Jesus responded to the ten lepers whom
he “cleansed” of their disease, and how disappointed he was that only one of
them turned to give him thanks - and “he was a Samaritan”, not a member of the
chosen people of Israel. We drew the obvious point: Jesus is for anybody and
everybody who humbly cries out to him. And we also felt (I hope) the sharpness
of the challenge: that we should cleanse our hearts of any hint of prejudice or
hatred (easier said than done, I think, if we are ruthlessly honest with
ourselves).
But there was more also to think about…
First, the importance of gratitude.
This is what the tenth man demonstrated in an extravagant
way. “Praising God in a loud voice”, he “threw himself at Jesus’ feet…” And
this is what gave Jesus such pleasure to see, even though the person in
question was a mere “foreigner”.
Somebody scored a goal for my team the other day, his first
ever for the club. He launched himself into a succession of mid-air cartwheels (and
could have ended up with a broken neck, I thought). But you couldn’t help
smiling as you watched.
Well, our childlike trust in God will not necessarily take
that form, but even it doesn’t, it can and should form the inner essence of our
very personalities: not carping or grumbling or complaining, but quietly
content with the lot he has given us. Here is a prayer of the poet George
Herbert (1593-1633): “Thou hast given so much to me… Give me one thing more – a
grateful heart”. May God hear our loud ”Amens”.
An old children’s song went: “Count your blessings,/ Name
them one by one./ Count your blessings,/ See what God has done./ Count your
blessings,/ Name them one by one./ And it will surprise you what the Lord has
done.” (There is no law forbidding adults from singing children’s songs, so
feel free…)
Being always thankful may sometimes seem to be asking too
much, and I certainly don’t mean to make light of the really bad times when we
feel close to despair. But by God’s grace hopefully we can shape our
personalities over time into a basically positive mould.
A second issue raised by this story is the age-old
puzzle of healing.
These ten men were “cleansed” of their leprosy pretty well
immediately, such was their implicit confidence in Jesus’ command to “go and
show yourselves to the priests”. Strictly, they don’t in fact ask for healing,
just that he will “have pity on us”. And he doesn’t tell them he will; it just
happens in their act of faith and obedience: it was “as they went” that they
were cleansed.
Which leaves us wondering, “Why is healing such a rare
event in most of our lives? Have we got the method wrong? Or would just
a small increase in faith make a
difference? No. And no again. There is no “correct” method, and there is no “required”
level of faith. Jesus tells us that faith as tiny as a mustard-seed can move
mountains; but he also chastises his disciples for their lack of it.
Every healing is unique. In the Bible itself it comes in
different forms; we seem to be told that if we have faith it will happen
(no ifs, no buts: for example James 5:15-16), but we also know the plain
reality of our experience – and there are verses like 2 Timothy 4:20, about
Paul’s colleague Trophimus, who was “left ill in Miletus”. (We feel like
asking, “Er, why, Paul?”)
One thing we can say with certainty is that the New
Testament never tells us that the gift of healing, and miracle-working in
general, is withdrawn completely from the church. This means that we should
have no qualms about crying out to God for his healing grace if it’s in our
hearts to do so. We may feel it right to accompany such prayer with the laying
on of hands or anointing with oil or the use of tongues – but as I said
earlier, there is no fixed method or magic formula.
Over my time as a Christian and as a pastor I have got
involved in many long and sometimes heated discussions about miracles,
including healing. But I have concluded that it is too serious and, often, too emotional,
a topic to be reduced to the level of arid intellectual debate. It touches us at
a deep and personal level. So – dare I put it this way? – why not give it a try
if the circumstances call for it? No, there is no guarantee (whatever some
Christians may say). But there is always hope. We never know what God might see
fit to do; and is he not our loving Father in heaven?
Father, please help me to develop a personality moulded by gratitude for every good gift I have received from your hand; and also the faith to believe in your power to heal. Amen.