Locating God

Luke 17:11-19

In the name of the Father and of the + Son and of the Holy Spirit.

St. Luke 17:15-16  And one of them, when he saw that he was healed, returned, and with a loud voice glorified God, and fell down on his face at His feet, giving Him thanks.

Dear fellow redeemed in Christ our Lord…  Almost every aspect of the Christian life is packed into today’s account of the healing of the Ten Lepers.

First, we see a great need.  Ten men had leprosy. This is a debilitating skin disease that ate away at the flesh, ejected a person from his home, from his town, and caused him to be shunned and avoided by his countrymen, and forced one to live in a colony of sick people on the outskirts of the towns and villages

Leprosy was a horrible disease, but in a way, it was a blessing, because it forced the leper to recognize his uncleanness, to deal with his need.  He couldn’t pretend that everything was OK in his life.  He couldn’t just live his life day to day and get fat on this world’s self-deception that life on earth is supposed to be easy and pleasant and happy.  It’s not.  In reality, life on this earth, for as beautiful as it can be at times, is still always infected with ugliness and disease and death.  People with healthy bodies may buy into the deception that they are spiritually healthy, too, even as they’re rotting away on the inside from sin.  But for the leper, his every waking moment is a testimony to his great and desperate need.

Sin makes us needy before God: needy of His healing, the healing of forgiveness.  But as mortals living in a world corrupted by sin, you and I have other needs, too.  We need food and clothes and daily bread.  We need help when the sins of other people cause us pain and grief.  We need comfort in distress and in the face of sickness and death.  We need guidance.  We need support and strength as we bear the cross of persecution and affliction and temptation as one who bears the name of Christ in a world that hates Christ.  Not one day or hour goes by in which we are not needy of God’s help.

Second in our Gospel, we see love—the love of Jesus, who is on His final, purposeful journey to Jerusalem to lay down His life out of love for the world that hated Him, and still does.  We see the love of Jesus as He chooses not just to get to Jerusalem as fast as possible and get it all over with, but instead goes through these towns and villages of Samaria and Galilee, as our Gospel tells us, to preach to the people there; to heal their diseases and call them to repentance and faith in Him.  There was no personal gain for Jesus in making these journeys.  These people had done nothing for Him.  It was just love for His neighbor that made Him become the servant of all.

In the same way, God calls us to love and serve our neighbor, not in order to get something in return, but to walk as Jesus Himself walked.  Part of that love is telling people the truth about their sin, whether their sin is homosexuality, as we see paraded in the news these days, or regular old adultery or men and women living together outside of marriage, or whether their sin is despising the preaching and teaching of God’s Word.  Christian love is truthful and honest.  It gives and it doesn’t worry at all about receiving anything in return.  It gives gladly, knowing full well that the one who loves will not always be loved back, and in most cases, will never even be thanked for it.

Third in our Gospel, we see faith—a great example of faith in the ten lepers, all of them.  Their faith in Jesus came from hearing the word about Jesus, that He is kind and merciful and receives all who come to Him, even lepers, even sinners.  So they went out to meet Jesus when they heard He was coming by.  They offered Him nothing—just presented themselves before Him with their uncleanness, their disease, their unworthiness and their miserable condition.  They stood there, confident that Jesus would hear and help, and they called out from a distance, “Jesus, Master, have mercy on us!

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…Which brings us to the fourth key element in the Christian life: mercy.  The lepers pleaded, “Jesus, Master, have mercy on us!”  And Jesus did.  See how His mercy was given.  “Go,” He said, “show yourselves to the priest.”  The priests in Israel were charged with examining someone who had had leprosy to see whether or not the person was cured.  Jesus’ word healed them, something they would discover as they went their way.  In faith, the lepers sought mercy from Jesus, and in mercy, Jesus rewarded their faith

Mercy is God’s desire to help needy people.  It can’t be bought.  It can’t be earned.  God’s mercy is inspired only by man’s wretchedness, and that’s a good thing for us sinners.  But the most important mercy we need from God is not the cleansing of our bodies, but the cleansing of our record of sin, and that is exactly the mercy that God always promises to show to the one who seeks it from Jesus.  The mercy of sins forgiven, for the sake of the holy, innocent, bitter sufferings and death of Christ, is guaranteed to all who believe, and is given in Holy Baptism, Holy Absolution, and in the Holy Supper.  The mercy of eternal life and resurrection from death and glory in the Paradise of God is guaranteed to all who believe in Christ, and is given at the end of our earthly life.

The mercy of God’s fatherly, divine goodness and providence is also guaranteed to believers during this life.  But that mercy looks different for different people.  It doesn’t always include riches or the healing of sickness or the prevention of tragedy.  On the contrary, sometimes God’s mercy includes earthly poverty, bodily sickness, and even death.  To our flesh, it doesn’t look like mercy.  But to our flesh, neither did the crucifixion of the Son of God.  And yet we know by faith that the cross is the surest sign of God’s mercy and fatherly love and goodness.

A fifth aspect of the Christian life is locating God.  Where is God when you need Him?  Where is God when you want to thank and praise Him?  Where is God present to help you and give you His grace?  The answer is not “everywhere!”  The answer is: God is present in the Person of Jesus Christ.  The ten lepers were cleansed of their leprosy as they walked along the path.  And when that one former leper realized it, he returned, and with a loud voice glorified God, and fell down on his face at His feet, giving Him thanks.  It makes it much clearer for us: the Samaritan glorified God and fell down on his face at “His” feet, giving “Him” thanks.  God is located for us in the Person of Jesus.  The leper wanted help from God, so He went to Jesus.  The leper wanted to give thanks to God, so He didn’t look up to heaven; instead, he returned to where Jesus was and gave Him thanks.

God is located for us in the Person of Jesus, with all His mercy and grace.  Jesus is located for us in the preaching of the Word of God and in the administration of the Sacraments, where He promises to help and heal and guide and strengthen you until your dying day, until He returns in glory.

And our response is the response of that one leper, the Samaritan.  We return over and over again to Jesus to give Him thanks, which is a sixth aspect of the Christian life.  But not all the cleansed lepers continued to locate God in Jesus.  Not all ten returned to Jesus to give thanks to God, and that should give us pause.  It’s a sobering warning, a demonstration of the truth that many who once believe in Jesus fall away.  Their temporal need is fulfilled, and so they forget that they are still needy.  They take God’s love for granted and their love for their neighbor grows cold.  Their faith withers.  They forget about Jesus, or marginalize Him as they go off and get on with their earthly life. Mercy is off their mind.  They stop locating God in Jesus; they stop looking for Jesus in the Means of Grace.  Nine out of ten lepers ended up this way.  “Were not all ten cleansed? Where are the other nine? Was no one found to return and give praise to God except this foreigner?

But to that one, to that foreigner, that Samaritan who fell down at God’s feet, the Word of God was sweet: “Rise and go; your faith has saved you.”   Salvation through faith is the seventh and final aspect of the Christian life portrayed in our Gospel today. Why?  Why does faith save?  Because the leper’s faith was a good work?  No, but because, in faith, the leper clung to God and to God’s mercy in Christ, and that means salvation every time, for everyone.  Faith makes you well, because faith means looking to Christ for mercy, and mercy is always there with Him to be found.

All seven of these aspects of the Christian life are not only packed into the Gospel of the healing of the Ten Lepers, but they are also packed into each and every Sunday in our Divine Service.  Here needy people come, with needs of body and soul, with needs caused by sin and caused by the cross. Here God’s love is on display as He invites you to come to Him for help and as He teaches you to love one another.  Here you come to Him in faith, praying for and seeking His mercy for the sake of Christ Jesus our Lord.  Here He has mercy on you and forgives you your sins.  Here, in this ministry of Word and Sacrament, God locates Himself for you, and gives you His own body and blood in bread and wine for your forgiveness and strength.  And you have come here to find God, not only to plead for mercy, but also to give Him thanks for the mercy He has shown.  Here God Himself speaks and delivers life and salvation to you.  “Your God-given faith has saved you.”

Remember why you come here and why you keep coming here each week: to receive God’s help in your every need, not to be like the nine lepers who went away from Jesus, but to remain faithful until death, so that you, like the one leper, may give eternal thanks and praise to God for saving you, too… which He has most certainly done in Christ!

In the name of the Father and of the + Son and of the Holy Spirit.