"God Gives So Much More"
Twentieth Sunday after Pentecost
October 10, 2010
Luke 17:11-19

Nine were healed. Only one was made well.

Ten walked away from Jesus having been cleansed of their leprosy. You
can safely assume they were glad of their new lease on life. One of
them returned to actually express his gratitude. They all had been
healed. It is this one who was made well. He was like all the rest in
that he was no longer shrouded in a disease that had consumed his
body. We was distinct from the rest in that he had been given
something else.

The others, nine of them, could show themselves to the priests and be
declared clean. They could now go about in normal society and do the
everyday things normal people do. But they we were not well. That’s
because they had not been made well by the one they had cried out to
for mercy. Was it that Jesus didn’t want to give them more than just
what they had asked for? Maybe they didn’t want more than that.
Perhaps they didn’t realize there was more than that. When you are
defined by a disease that rots away your skin and your are barred from
society, being cleansed of that is all you could really ask for.

As it happens, the one who returned to Jesus didn’t want more. He had
asked for mercy and had received exactly that. He walked away in
recognition that he didn’t deserve it for a moment. The priests would
have to wait. Jesus needed to hear his confession. No, Luke doesn’t
tell us he confessed his sins to Jesus. But it’s there in what this
man did when he is now before Jesus. His falling on his face, his
giving thanks, these were signs that he was unworthy. He could ask
nothing more of Jesus, he had received more than he could have ever
imagined.

And that’s when he now saw that he was receiving exactly that. More
than he could ever have imagined. Your faith has made you well. Go on
your way. Isn’t it interesting that this time He doesn’t tell him to
go to the priests? He had already been cleansed. He has now been made
well.

Is it because he was more thankful than those other nine ungrateful
slobs? Was it because he had more, or better, faith? Could it have
been because he was a Samaritan and therefore unencumbered with all
the religious baggage of the other nine?

No, it wasn’t because of himself. That’s why he went back to Jesus and
fell on his face before Jesus. He knew he was unworthy, he knew he was
sinful, he knew that he could do nothing but simply give thanks and
praise God. He was made well because his faith was in one who was not
himself. It was in one who was another. And his faith was not just in
some other person. Say, for example, in the priests he had been sent
to. No, it was faith in the one who is the only one in whom you can be
made well.

You probably have known people who do not believe in Jesus who have
been healed of illness or injury. But you will not find anyone who
does not trust solely in Christ for their salvation who has been made
well. We see this here in these ten men. Nine were healed. Only one
was made well. The account of the Ten Lepers isn’t so much about the
one leper as compared with the other nine. Of course we should be more
like the one leper who was grateful. But mostly we should see the one
in whom we have our wholeness, our being made well, our salvation.
Things start off with eleven people, Jesus and ten lepers. Nine are
out of the picture quickly and we’re left with two. But almost as
quickly, he’s out of the picture as well and we’re left with only
Jesus. We’re left with His words to the man: “Go your way; your faith
has made you well.” And even as He says those words to the man He
Himself will continue on His way He had already been going on. Luke
tells us that at the beginning. He was on His way to Jerusalem.

He was going there because it was the place where He would accomplish
the act that would make people well. Jesus could have been born, grow
up, set up shop in Nazareth, or perhaps Jerusalem, and accomplish all
day long every day what He had done for those ten lepers. There’s lots
of sick people. Lots of people who need help. Many people cry out to
God for help. Jesus could have been more than busy just taking care of
all these needs.

But what did He do? He made His way toward Jerusalem. He didn’t buy a
permit and set up a clinic. He entered Jerusalem and got Himself
killed. He proclaimed a message that was blasphemy to the religion in
power: salvation is in the one whom God has sent. Oh, and by the way,
that’s Me. If all you do is help people you’ll probably get government
funding. But if you’re telling people that they are lost forever apart
from you, you’ll get yourself killed. This is why Jesus was heading to
Jerusalem. He didn’t come to help people, He came to save them.

I looked at twenty-nine English versions of the last verse of the
Gospel reading, and all but five of them gave the words of Jesus as
“your faith had made you well,” or something similar. Only five gave
His words as “your faith has saved you.” Languages usually allow words
to be used in several different ways. If you say, “God saved me,”
you’re referring to the fact that you are a sinner but God has saved
you from your sin and its punishment. You could also say, “I was out
in the hot sun all day and working hard, drinking that water really
saved me.” No one is going to think that you believe that drinking
that water is your literal salvation from your sins and hell. You are
using the word ‘saved’ in a figurative way: without it, things would
have been much worse for you, but with the water you were able to make
it through.

On one particular day ten men were lepers but walked away from Jesus
no longer as lepers. They walked away cleansed, healed. But one walked
away from Jesus a second time, because he had returned to Him. He
walked away having been made well. Or perhaps we could use the literal
word Jesus used in the Greek: saved. So did Jesus make him well, or
save him?

Ten men asked Jesus for mercy and received exactly that. One man
received something more: he was made well. Ten lepers asked for mercy
on their condition and received that. Their lives were consumed with
leprosy, but now no more. They were cleansed, free. But one man
received more than that. His faith was in this man who had freed him
from his leprosy. Could he do anything to repay Jesus? No, he could
only prostrate himself and express his gratitude. A new life had been
opened up to him when he looked upon his clean healthy skin. But now
he saw deeper within himself. A disease that infected his heart, that
went to the core of his very soul. If the outside of me looked like
that, what must I be like in my innermost thoughts? He didn’t need a
priest, he needed the one who could make him well, save him from the
illness that infected his soul.

When God’s people in the Old Testament, and still in Jesus’ day, were
healed of their leprosy they were declared clean by the priests. Today
we go to the doctor. But God was showing His people that the outward
infections of our body are signs of our inward illness. Jesus is the
High Priest. He is the only one who can declare you clean from the
illness you carry with you from your birth and to the grave. He does
it by His Word. He declares it in the speaking of it. “Go your way,
your faith had made you well.” You are cleansed, healed, saved.

This particular man realized it. Often when you do, you’re speechless.
Or at least in a way where you’re not able to give a cogent analysis
of your unworthiness, amazement, and gratitude. So your actions
usually speak louder than your words and your words are often simple.
The man fell on his face and simply gave thanks and praise. From his
perspective, Jesus had just happened to be passing his way. He didn’t
know Jesus was on His way to Jerusalem. And if he did, he didn’t know
that Jesus was on His way to take on Himself the man’s sins. He just
saw Jesus and cried out for mercy. Jesus healed Him and continued on
His way to the cross. The priests could still declare lepers clean,
but they couldn’t take on themselves the lepers’ disease. They
couldn’t do that anymore than they could take on themselves another
man’s sins. But Jesus could, that’s why He was on His way to
Jerusalem, to take on Himself the sin of every person. Every person
has been born into this illness. It doesn’t eat away at their skin,
but their soul. You may not know the words to say to describe your
unworthiness. You may not be able to formulate your thankfulness for
your Lord making you well, saving you from your sin. But He doesn’t
come down on you for that, He simply says to you: “Rise and go your
way; your faith has saved you.”

So what did the man do? He went his way. He went having been made well
to live out the new life His Lord had given him. There’s a big
difference between having the blessings God showers down on everyone
and living a life of gratitude in the particular gifts of salvation
God has granted in His Son’s suffering and death. Do you see that your
Lord has not just simply blessed you with the gifts He showers down on
all people but has delivered to you the particular gift of salvation
in your Baptism and that He gives to you often in His Holy Supper?

You could go from here and try to be more like that one man, as
opposed to the other nine. You could resolve to be more thankful, to
express your gratitude, and try to give God more praise in your life.

Or you could realize that nothing you can give back to God would ever
be enough. No thanksgiving, no praise, no dedication of your life to
Him could ever compare to what He has given you. He desires not simply
to give you blessings in this life but so much more. He gives you
salvation. Don’t be content with just enough to get by. God has in
store for you the very vault of heaven. You may go in peace. Your
faith has made you well. The leper was the recipient of Christ’s words
even as you are when He says to you, “Take and eat, this is My body;
Take and drink, this is My blood, for you.” You go forgiven, restored,
cleansed, renewed. If you want to express your thanks to God, live as
one who has been made well, forgiven and redeemed. Read and study His
Word. Share with others what Christ has done for them by suffering and
dying and rising for all of their sins. Don’t just go, don’t just
live, rest and rejoice in His giving you a whole new life, even to
eternity. Amen.


--
Pastor Paul L. Willweber
Prince of Peace Lutheran Church [LCMS]
6801 Easton Ct., San Diego, California 92120
619.583.1436
princeofpeacesd.net
three-taverns.net

It is the spirit and genius of Lutheranism to be liberal in everything
except where the marks of the Church are concerned.
[Henry Hamann, On Being a Christian]
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