October 11, 2020 "Where Else to Go?" Rev. Dal McCrindle
Thanksgiving Sunday
When in your life have you been the most grateful? Was it at your wedding? … a special Christmas? … when your kids graduated from school, from college; when they got married? … produced your first grandchild? Gratitude is one of the most underrated emotions. We take so much for granted these days, thinking we deserve everything we have and that’s it. But I tell you, living a life of gratitude is important both to our health and to the community that we live in. The ability to say thank you, to be thankful for someone dropping a card off, to say thank you for treating me to lunch, thank you for showing up when I know you had better things to do with your time. Thank you.
One of the huge differences between people of faith and those without faith is the ability to be grateful in the grand sense, in a “who am I in the universe sense.” People lacking faith have no one ultimately to thank. Christians like others of faith have someone to be grateful to, God, whereas those lacking faith have just the universe or nature to be thankful to. We have a specific person we can thank, they have a nebulous and undirected feeling of being thankful for their lives, for their good fortune, for whatever good that happens.
Thankfulness should be one of the defining characteristics of a Christian. If we are ungrateful, then we really don’t understand who we are before God, or what God has done for us.
On his way to Jerusalem, Jesus traveled along the border between Samaria and Galilee. We know the story, of the ten lepers only one return to give thanks, praising God in a loud voice. “Rise and go,” Jesus said, “your faith has made you well.”
In chapter 9 of Luke, Jesus “set his face toward Jerusalem” and in chapter 19 Jesus arrives in Jerusalem, ready to do what is required for all.
But “on the way,” in chapter 17, Jesus is still traveling toward Jerusalem. In fact, He’s near the border. Samaria you might remember, was a land of people who were half-breeds, at least in the eyes of the Jews. The Samaritans were half Jews, half local Middle Eastern people. Their religion was a corrupted version of Judaism; they didn’t worship at Jerusalem, but had chosen an alternate site on a mountain in Samaria. Like the Jews, they were waiting for the Messiah, but unlike the Jews, they really didn’t know what the Messiah would look like or do. As it turned out, many of the Jews didn’t recognize the Messiah when He showed up anyway, since Jesus wasn’t what they expected. Because of their religious differences, Samaritans were considered to be bad people by the Jews. They were avoided, they were looked down on, and discriminated against. And because of the way they were treated, the Samaritans weren’t very fond of the Jews either.
Lastly, it is important that you know a little about leprosy. This was and is an awful disease, one that has, thankfully, nearly been stamped out in the world. There are some leper colonies still in existence, mainly in India. Leprosy is a disease of extremities, a person with leprosy gradually loses the feeling in their fingers and toes, then their hands and feet. Those affected appendages can be hurt without the leper knowing, like they can step on a nail and not feel it. Eventually the fingers and toes fall off the affected person. Leprosy is a terrible disease. Back in ancient Israel lepers had to live away from other people, in their own little wretched communities. They had to beg for a living, and they were not allowed contact with normal people lest they spread the disease. They were ceremonially unclean, and had to yell “unclean” when they went into villages in order to warn people away from them.
Occasionally, miraculously a leper would be healed from the disease. And in order to be declared cleansed of the disease, that leper would have to present themselves to a priest. Then they would be welcomed back into society, back into the synagogues, back into life.
With all that then, we get to look at an encounter of Jesus with some lepers. They stood at a distance and called out in a loud voice, “Jesus, Master, have pity on us!”
Somehow these lepers had learned of this healer, this teacher named Jesus. They had heard of him as he traveled through the land, as He traveled toward Jerusalem healing and teaching and confronting the Scribes and Pharisees. It strikes me that someone must have told the lepers about Jesus, that in Jesus there was the possibility of healing, true healing. Perhaps it was a relative who spread the good news that healing was possible, that they could be freed of their terrible disease. I can’t think anyone else would risk coming into contact with the lepers other than a family member, but that is just speculation on my part. Somehow, though, they knew of Jesus, knew enough about him and his activities to seek Him out, to ask for healing.
They stand at a distance and yell as prescribed in the Book of Leviticus, so as not to infect anyone else. They stand and call. They cry out for healing, they cry out to be restored to their families and homes, to their communities and friends. They cry out in desperation to a God who hears, and a God who acts. Sometimes we do the same thing. We cry out for a touch from God’s hand, for a touch of God’s presence in our time of need. What a gift to know that God cares for us even in our pain and suffering and we should always be grateful.
Luke says that all 10 were healed. As they went, they were cleansed of that terrible disease. One of them, when he recognized that he was healed, came back, praising God in a loud voice. He was a Samaritan. Why did Luke tells us that? Well, quite simply, we know one of the 10 was a Samaritan, maybe there were more. Being cleansed was one thing; being declared cleansed by the priest was the ticket back into society. And this Samaritan knew that he and any other Samaritan wouldn’t be welcome at the Temple, certainly wouldn’t get an audience with the priest! So he returned to the only place he knew he could go – to Jesus.
Maybe Luke wanted to emphasize that Samaritans Gentiles too, could be healed and loved by God. Maybe he wanted to show that the Jews weren’t all that special in God’s eyes. Anyway, only 1 came back. Only the Samaritan, the hated outsider, the Gentile came back to thank Jesus for giving Him freedom from leprosy.
Were all 10 cleansed? Where are the others? Were none found to return and give thanks and give praise to God except this foreigner? We don’t know if the others went off to the Temple if they could get in to thank God. But you’d think they would have returned to thank Jesus for their lives. But they didn’t. They took their healing and ran off to restart their lives. They forgot to say thank you. They took for granted their healing and Jesus who made it possible. Or maybe they needed the blessing and acceptance of the priest?
But they never came back to express their gratitude, they never stopped to think about what else Jesus might have for them. When I read parts of the Hebrew Scriptures, the OT, I get the distinct feeling that one of the greatest sins of the Israelites was that they took God for granted. They had forgotten God, except when they needed Him to bail them out of trouble. We ought never to take God for granted. We ought to live grateful lives for how he has come to us, offering us the gift of life eternal, we ought to be grateful for every little thing we have been given; our homes, our families, our church community, our jobs, everything. It’s times like today when we need to just say thank you, over and over to God. We are to live our lives in an attitude of gratitude, rather than believing that everything we have is a result of our own doing. Take some time right now to express your deep thanks to God, and remember in these coming weeks to say thanks to God for all that has been done for there is nowhere else to go! Maybe that’s what Luke wants us to know: when we feel or discover that there’s nowhere else to go – there is Jesus.
At least that’s the way I see it!