The message given in the Sunday night worship service in the Gettysburg United Methodist church October 9, 2022. The Bible verses used are Luke 17:11-19.
Do you feel joy? Would you like to?
I assume we’d all like to. Joy is defined
as a feeling of great happiness, and who would not want that? I cannot
imagine being in a situation where I’d say, “Nah, I don’t want joy. I
don’t want happiness. And especially not great happiness. I’d
rather just feel mediocre.”
We all want to feel joy. But the thing is
that joy is just that, a feeling. Joy is an emotion. It's a wonderful
emotion. It's one that we all need to feel sometimes. But the
problem with emotions is that they change. Emotions are momentary.
They are never permanent. No matter how intense a feeling of joy is,
there's going to come a time when that emotion fades. So while it's great
to feel joy, what we really want is not just a momentary feeling of joy.
What we really want is a feeling that we are one with God. What we really
want is a feeling that God is with us and that we are with God, and that
there's no separation, no distance between us and God. Because that’s a
feeling that will give us more than joy. That will give us a feeling of
peace and contentment and love.
So let’s look at our Bible reading for
tonight. Ten people are suffering from leprosy, and Jesus heals
them.
Now, understand that leprosy is a very serious
illness. It’s an infectious disease that causes severe, disfiguring skin
sores and nerve damage in the arms and legs. It's not necessarily fatal,
but what it would do is put you in a position where you could not do any
physical work. And because everything people did back then involved
physical work of some kind, and since there were no welfare or disability
payments at that time, if you could not work you either begged or died.
So, even though the disease itself was not fatal, it pretty much amounted to
the same thing. It was not a highly contagious disease, but people were
scared to death of getting it because of what it would do to them. Because of
that, people would have nothing to do with people who had leprosy.
So these ten people with leprosy approach Jesus,
but they keep their distance. They did not know how Jesus would react to
them. They also did not know how those with Jesus would react to them,
either. Still, they call out to Jesus, “Jesus, Master, have mercy on
us!” Jesus responds, “Go and show yourselves to the priests.”
We’re not told what the ten people
expected Jesus to do, but I’d guess that this was not it. I'd guess that
they might have expected Jesus to lay hands on them, the way he did with other
people. And even if they thought Jesus would not touch them, because of
the leprosy, they certainly hoped he would call on God or something. But
Jesus did not do any of that. In fact, as far as they could tell, Jesus
did not do anything. He just said, “Go and show yourselves to the
priests.”
They must have really been disappointed.
After all, Jesus was probably their last hope. No doctor had been able to
cure them. No priest had been able to help them. They were probably
thinking, “Show ourselves to the priests? The priests are the ones who
declared us unclean in the first place. They won’t even let us into the
temple, because they’re afraid we’ll ruin it for everyone. Show ourselves
to the priests? The priests won’t even talk to us.”
Still, they went off to show themselves to the
priests. Maybe they had faith in Jesus and believed that something was
going to happen. Maybe they just figured they had nothing to lose.
Whatever they thought, they did it. And on the way to show themselves to
the priests, they were healed. We don't know how that happened. We
don't know how far they'd gone when it happened. But at some point, on
their way to the priests, they were healed.
And one of them came back to Jesus. We’re
told nothing about the one who came back, other than that he was a foreigner, a
Samaritan. He praised God with a loud voice and threw himself at Jesus’
feet, thanking Jesus for healing him. Jesus tells him, “Get up and go on
your way; your faith has made you well.”
We don’t know what happened to the other
nine. We’re told all ten were healed. There's nothing in the Bible
that says they paid any penalty for not coming back to thank Jesus.
Nothing says they got their leprosy back or anything. Maybe the other
nine went to the priests, were pronounced clean, and then went on to live their
lives the way they wanted to. We don't know.
So maybe you’re thinking, “Well, so what?
I mean, good for the one. He did the right thing. But what did it
get him, really? Did he get a gold star in heaven or something?
After all, the nine who did not thank God were healed just the same as he
was. Seems like they all got the same thing, the thing they wanted.
What difference did it really make that he thanked God? It seems like
this story says it does not matter whether we thank God or not.”
Well, yes and no. It’s true that all
ten of them were healed from their leprosy. In that sense, the same thing
happened to each of them. There was no physical difference at all.
There was no physical difference, and yet there
was all the difference in the world. Because when the Bible talks about
what happened to the other nine, the scripture first says they were “cleansed”,
and then that they were “healed”. Jesus says the other nine were
“cleansed”, too. At the end of the verses, though, Jesus says to the one
who came back, “Your faith has ‘made you well.’”
Your faith has ‘made you well.’ See, it’s
one thing to have a physical healing. That’s important, of course.
Anyone who’s suffering from a serious illness, or who ever has, or who has a
loved one who is or has, knows how important physical healing is. Almost
every Sunday there are people for whom we ask God to bring about physical
healing, and it’s important that we ask God to do that.
Still, it’s one thing to be healed
physically. It’s another thing to truly be made well. To be well
means to be healed in body, in mind, in soul, in spirit, all of it. It
means that things are pleasing, that they’re good. It means that
everything is in a proper and satisfactory situation. In short, to be
made well means that things are as they should be in every way.
That’s what Jesus was saying to the one who came
back to say thank you. When that one person came back to say thank you to
Jesus, he showed that he had faith in Jesus as his Savior. Jesus told him
that because of his faith, he was not only physically healed, he was
well. He was well in every way: physically, mentally, emotionally,
spiritually. Everything about him was right. He was who he was
supposed to be, he was where he was supposed to be, and he was doing what he
was supposed to do.
When the nine had their pain go away, when they
were healed, I'm sure they felt joy. It may have been the greatest joy
they'd ever felt in their lives. But eventually, that joy went
away. Eventually, the joy faded, and they had to figure out a new way to
go on with their lives, to deal with whatever the rest of their life was going
to hold for them. And we have no idea what that was. Would people
have welcomed them back into society? Would people still have held them
at arm’s length, not trusting that they were really healed? Would they
have been able to find jobs? Did they even know how to do anything,
beyond just manual labor? Once their joy faded, life might have been
pretty tough for the nine. Yeah, they were healed, and that was good, but
life might still have been a really hard thing for them.
Now think about the one. I'm sure the one
who thanked Jesus felt joy, too. But he felt more than joy. And
after the joy faded, he was still happy. Because, when he felt
thankfulness in his heart, he had been made well. God was with him, and
he was with God. He was one with God. His life might not have been
all that great, either, but he did not have to worry about what the rest of
life was going to hold for him. He knew that, whatever it held, God would
be with him. He knew that, whatever life held for him, it would be all
right. He knew that because he had not just had his physical problem
taken away. He had been made well, in every possible way.
Have you ever felt that way? Have you ever
felt, even if just for a little while, that everything was right, that you were
who God wanted you to be, that you were exactly where God wanted you to be, and
that you were doing exactly what God wanted you to do? It’s a pretty
incredible feeling. In fact, it’s pretty much the greatest feeling in the
world. To know, in that moment, that you are who God wants you to be,
that you are exactly where God wants you to be, and to know you are doing exactly
what God wants you to do. There’s really nothing like it.
That’s what the one person who’d had leprosy
felt when he came back and thanked Jesus. And he did not just feel it for
that moment, he felt it for the rest of his life. He had been made
well. And we can be made well, too, if we truly live our lives giving
thanks to God.
It's a great thing to have moments of joy in our
lives. I hope we all do, and I hope we have a lot of them. But when
we live our lives with the awareness of what God has done for us, and truly
being thankful for it, we get something even better than joy. We get a
feeling of peace and contentment and love. When we get that feeling, we
know that we have been made well. We know that, no matter what life holds
for us, it will be all right. Because we are one with the all-loving,
all-caring God.
No comments:
Post a Comment