The Eve of National Thanksgiving 
Healing, Then Healing Again 
Grace, mercy, and peace to you from God our Father and our Lord and Savior 
Jesus Christ! Amen. Tonight’s Gospel has two parts. In the first part, Jesus 
says to ten lepers, “Go and show yourselves to the priests,” and as they went 
they were cleansed. In the second part of this Gospel, Jesus says to one 
person, a Samaritan, “Rise and go your way; your faith has made you well.” 
Dear Christian friends: 
In His Scriptures, God uses simple, direct speech: “The one who sins is the one 
who will die” (Ezekiel 18:20, NIV). But God knows how easily we miss the point, 
even with such simple Words. God sincerely desires for us NOT to miss His 
point, either concerning sin or its deadly consequences. Therefore God has 
filled His Bible with many figures of speech and analogies for sin. God has 
packaged sin in terms of common and earthy things so that we may NOT miss the 
point. For example, God says that sin is 
•       captivity awaiting its release: “The Spirit of the Lord is upon Me,” 
said Jesus. “He sent me to proclaim liberty to captives” (Luke 4:18). 
•       hunger that needs to be satisfied: The Virgin Mary sang, “He has filled 
the hungry with good things” (Luke 1:53). 
•       disease in need of a cure. Jesus was speaking about sin when He said, 
“It is not the healthy who need a doctor, but the sick” (Luke 5:31). 
That third analogy—sin as disease needing a cure—that third analogy will help 
us with tonight’s Gospel. God uses disease in this Gospel as a way of showing 
us the two ways He cares for us on a daily basis. In light of these two 
constant and daily gifts that God gives, perhaps we will finally realize that 
the Samaritan in this Gospel had the right idea: “He fell on his face at Jesus’ 
feet, giving Him thanks.” 
I. God depicts His first daily gift for us in the first part of tonight’s 
Gospel, where Jesus heals ten lepers by saying to them, “Go and show yourselves 
to the priests.” At this point in the Gospel, the leprosy is not an analogy for 
sin. The leprosy here is leprosy, a real affliction of the physical body. These 
ten men carried a terrible disease and Jesus acted to relieve their daily 
suffering. Thus our Lord teaches us to think rightly upon the Fourth Petition 
of the Lord’s Prayer, “Give us each day our daily bread” (Luke 11:3). By 
healing the bodies of these lepers, Jesus is showing us that daily bread 
includes more than food for the belly, clothes for the back, and a roof for the 
head. Daily bread also includes the health of our bodies, the relief of our 
afflictions, and even the closeness of those loved ones who draw near to us. 
Leprosy was not merely a disease. It meant also daily torment of the body and 
isolation from family and
 society. By healing these lepers, Jesus did more than give them their bodies 
back. He also gave them peace and relief and the closeness of fellow human 
beings once again. 
“As they went, they were healed.” Among other things, these Words allow us to 
see that God’s gift of daily bread includes: 
•       the healing of our bodies when we contract illness or suffer injury. 
Jesus sent the lepers to the priests, but His powerful Word did ALL the 
healing. In the same way, Jesus also gives us doctors and medicines and 
therapies for our bodily good. Yet this Gospel indicates the Word of Jesus is 
the power that heals our bodies and cures our diseases. 
•       not only physical healing but relief and peace from bodily affliction. 
If you have ever broken a bone, you might have felt joy when you at last could 
move your arm or leg again. If you have ever had a rash, then perhaps you have 
also noticed the peace of NOT itching any more. If you have ever suffered chaos 
for days on end, then you also know the sheer delight of one hour’s peace. This 
is a gift from God. This is daily bread. 
•       the closeness of family and friends. These lepers, no longer 
contagious, were finally allowed to have people near them again. So, too, God’s 
gift of daily bread includes also family, neighbors, co-workers and the like. 
•       divine generosity and grace toward ALL people, including those who 
would otherwise have nothing to do with Him. In the same way that God causes 
His sun to rise on the evil and the good; in the same way that the rain falls 
upon the righteous and the unrighteous (Matthew 5:45), so God likewise heals 
the bodies of all—believing or unbelieving, righteous or unrighteous, thankful 
or ungrateful. 
You would think this would be more than enough for a Day of National 
Thanksgiving. But tonight’s Gospel pushes us forward: Of the ten, only one  
“turned back, praising God with a loud voice; and he fell on his face at Jesus' 
feet, giving Him thanks.” 
II. That leads us to the second part of tonight’s Gospel, where Jesus says to 
the one man, “Rise and go your way; your faith has made you well.” In this 
second part, Jesus is no longer speaking in terms of the physical body and He 
is no longer talking about daily bread. In this second part, Jesus is no longer 
raining daily bread upon the righteous and unrighteous alike. When Jesus says, 
“Your faith has made you well,” He is using illness and disease as an analogy 
and figure of speech for sin. When He says, “Your faith has made you well,” He 
is speaking about the forgiveness of sins and the promise of a resurrected body 
on the Last Day. 
We know that Jesus is using a figure of speech in the second part of tonight’s 
Gospel because He uses the Words, “Your faith.” 
•       Faith looks upon things that cannot be seen with the eye, as God says 
in Hebrews chapter 11—“Faith is the assurance of things hoped for, the 
conviction of things not seen” (v. 1). 
•       Faith perceives the needs of the spirit, needs that cannot otherwise be 
felt in the body, as God says in Romans chapter 7—“I would not have known sin, 
except by God’s Law” (v. 7). 
Faith did not make this man’s physical leprosy go away. The man’s physical 
leprosy had already gone away in the same moment that the leprosy of all the 
others went away: “As they went [to the priests] they were cleansed.” Stated 
another way, faith has nothing to do with God’s provision of daily bread 
(again, Matthew 5:45). Faith only causes us to realize our daily bread and 
receive it with thanksgiving. 
But Jesus says in the second part of tonight’s Gospel, “Your faith has made you 
well.” These Words indicate that something other than leprosy was likewise 
afflicting this man. I say again: faith did not make this man’s physical 
leprosy go away. Faith DID make it possible for this man to see that he was 
sick with a disease far worse than leprosy. This Samaritan was sick with a 
disease than can only be perceived by faith—and that disease is sin. 
What does Jesus do for this man?  By the same powerful Word of Jesus that 
healed his body, this Samaritan man likewise receives healing and medicine for 
the sin-diseased soul. “Your faith has made you well.” It is as if Jesus says 
to the man, “Faith has made it possible for you to see that you need something 
more than a sound and healthy body. Faith has drawn you back to Me, in order 
that you may receive the healing of your soul. Here is what you truly need and 
seek: I your sins are forgiven. In the same way that your body was earlier 
healed of leprosy, I now likewise heal the disease of your soul. You shall not 
die sin-disease. You shall live.” 
All told, this Samaritan has probably chosen a good place to be, sprawled out 
there before Jesus, worshipping at His feet. This man fulfills the Scriptures 
while the nine sons of Israel go tripping away. Thus it is written, 
What shall I render to the Lord for all His benefits to me? 
I will lift up the cup of salvation and call on the name of the Lord, 
(Psalm 116:12-13) 
    
This is a good psalm because it helps us to think practically about how we 
might go about rightly thanking and praising our God, both for our daily bread 
and for the rich forgiveness of sins He has given to us in Christ. Physically 
prostrating ourselves face down on the floor probably will not do it for most 
of us, if for no other reason than for the challenges of getting back up again. 
Where we cannot join the Samaritan on the floor, we can join the psalmist at 
the altar, lifting up the cup of salvation and calling upon the name of the 
Lord. The ancients called this eating and drinking “the Eucharist,” that is, 
the giving of thanks. Here is a place where we may truly join the Samaritan, 
“praising God with a loud voice.” Jesus’ Words to him are Jesus’ Words to you: 
“Your faith has made you well.” 
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