On the way to Jerusalem he was passing along between Samaria and Galilee. And as he entered a village, he was met by ten lepers, who stood at a distance and lifted up their voices, saying, “Jesus, Master, have mercy on us.” When he saw them he said to them, “Go and show yourselves to the priests.” And as they went they were cleansed. Then one of them, when he saw that he was healed, turned back, praising God with a loud voice; and he fell on his face at Jesus' feet, giving him thanks. Now he was a Samaritan. Then Jesus answered, “Were not ten cleansed? Where are the nine? Was no one found to return and give praise to God except this foreigner?” And he said to him, “Rise and go your way; your faith has made you well.” – Luke 17:11-19
Wasn’t the tenth leper healed of leprosy? Isn’t that why he came back to thank
Jesus? It’s understandable that Jesus
would commend the healed man for his gratitude.
We should be quick to express our thanks to and praise of the Lord and
what He has done. But the words of Jesus
seem to indicate that the man who returned received something that the other
nine lepers did not – even though, as Jesus Himself says, all ten were cleansed
of their disease.
One thing that Jesus repeats on occasion in the gospel
accounts is something like “be it unto you according to your faith.” He says it in different ways but the idea is
that God’s response to an individual is defined to a greater or lesser extent
by what that person believes. If, like
the centurion, they believed that Jesus could simply say the word and someone
miles away would be healed instantaneously, that is what happened. If they believed that their sight, hearing,
or bodily strength could be restored, it was.
If, in other words, they believed Jesus was a healer, they were healed.
Let me offer a brief aside by stating that much of what
Jesus did in healing, raising the dead, and working miracles were signs. His works were meant to make it clear to
people that the Messiah had come, that God was present with them in the
flesh. I say this because I am not fully
convinced (perhaps I just lack sufficient faith to say) that healing and
miracles are accessible exactly as they were during the Incarnation. Maybe so.
I don’t know.
In some cases, the people who saw and heard Jesus in His
earthly ministry believed that He was a prophet or a teacher or someone gifted
with miraculous powers like Elijah or Elisha.
Others thought He was, perhaps, a charlatan. However, a few believed that He was more than
a great prophet. This is the difference
between the leper who returned and the nine lepers who went on. They received a gift from the healer. The tenth man received everlasting life from
God.
He saw the miracle of his healing, and his eyes were
opened. He received not just good skin
and deliverance from a horrible disease but a revelation. As he walked along, he suddenly realized who
Jesus HAD to be. The power of this
insight was so transforming that he turned and ran back for the chance to thank
the Lord and acknowledge Him.
No doubt
he was grateful and thrilled to be healed, but that is not why he went back. His faith was of a different kind. The other nine men were healed. They were former lepers. They were also still outside of the
kingdom. They did not see the Messiah,
only a powerful prophet. The tenth man
was healed and reconciled to God, made whole. The others merely had their bodies restored, the ravages of leprosy halted and reversed. Perhaps later on some or all of them came to
understand the significance of what had happened to them.
Most Christians understand the power of Cross for deliverance
from the penalty of sin. I suppose that
preaching how Jesus died for our sins is the most important part of the
gospel. A lot of people seem to think
so. It is where we have to start. If leprosy is your problem, you need to be
made clean from leprosy. If sin is my
problem – and it most certainly is – then I need to be cleansed from sin. But that is just stepping in the front door,
or through the gate. Life is much more,
and God offers us much more.
I do not know what God wants to do in the lives of different people. I don't even know what He wants to do in my life. I do know that I don't want to be the governor. I don't want my inability to believe in the greatness and goodness of God to be what limits His ability to work in my circumstances. I don't want to stop God from making me whole.
Be it unto
you according to your faith.
3 comments:
One thing that Jesus repeats on occasion in the gospel accounts is something like “be it unto you according to your faith.”
Good point. You receive at the level you believe.
Related: "Forgive us our trespasses as we forgive those who trespass against us.
Took me a bit of time to understand there is that there is a principle of quantity/quality/depth implied in that statement.
Mush, I haven't read this post yet, but I wanted you to know that I'm still trying to figure out how to keep up around here. I feel a bit like Lucy in that episode when she takes the job at the chocolate factory.
I hope to catch up soon. At best lately, I read your posts (such good consistent work, and daily as it seems it should be) but don't comment. Or I comment on some post you wrote a week before. I feel like these posts are best interacted with the day they happen.
I can't keep up, is all. Just wanted you to know and that the work is appreciated. Just knowing you're doing it has great value. Don't change a thing. BRB.
I know how it goes, Rick. Work has been hectic and posting/commenting or responding gets slipped in now and then.
Yes, John, that's true. You start on forgiveness, and it amazing what you find "attached" to it.
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