Sermon preached by Rev. Margie Quinn on Sunday, October 12, 2025
In our story this morning, we meet ten lepers. And you've heard us talk about leprosy before — this skin disease that was seen as being really contagious. One theologian reminded me this morning that having leprosy in that time made it look like you were dying, like your skin was slowly becoming corpse-like. And when people saw you, they were reminded of the imminence of death.
Anyone suffering from leprosy would have been in social isolation. They would have been removed from their families. They wouldn't have received any more loving touches or looks with dignity. They were seen as outcasts and pariahs, and only fear met them.
They weren’t made to wander in the desert, as we might think. They weren’t — we might think they weren’t, you know, just off that far away. What we learn very quickly in this story is that Jesus enters a village, which means that they were on the outskirts of society, but they were still witnessing the life of a community that they could not be a part of — which, I don’t know about you, but for me, that almost makes it worse.
So Jesus is making his way to Jerusalem, and as he enters this village, he sees ten of these people who are afflicted. And they approach him — and you probably caught this — they approach him at a distance. Yeah, that’s what they’ve been conditioned to do. They approach him at a distance. Were they trembling in fear? Were they still a little bit suspicious of this man they had heard whispers about, who was able to heal people and perform miracles? Were they desperate for his mercy?
They call out to him, “Master, have mercy on us. Have mercy on us.” And when Jesus sees them, he says, “Go and show yourselves to the priests.” Priests, church, at that time were the ones responsible for declaring whether someone was healed or not — not this radical rabble-rouser from Nazareth — but the priests made the decision in the end. And so this group obeyed him, and they went. And somewhere along the way — we don’t quite know where — they were made clean.
Imagine that feeling of having these sores on your body, of feeling like a corpse, of the pain of these wounds — and then being made clean. The ones who appeared to be dying, church, were given new life, which is a little bit of foreshadowing, is it not? But not because the priests declared it so, but because they were made clean along the way. No — it’s because Jesus made it so.
And we then learn that one of the ten — only one of the ten — after seeing that he is healed, after seeing that he is made clean, turns back. He leaves the company of these men and women that he may have been with in distance, in their own broken and outcasted community. And he turns back.
And he’s not just some regular man who was healed from a disease — he was a Samaritan. He was a Samaritan. He was a hated religious outcast. He was seen as a heretic. He was seen as a foreigner. He was seen as the villain in this story. And he is the one who turns back toward Jesus. Yeah. He turns back.
And we’re reminded in this moment that the gospel often has this wild sense of humor — that in this story, we learn neighbor love from the character that people are most likely to despise. The person we want to hate and want to send back to Samaria, back to where they came from, is the very one who introduces grace and gratitude to us.
He goes back — scripture says he praises God with a loud voice. He’s not afraid to speak up anymore. He is healed. He doesn’t have to cower in shame or fear. He can be as loud as he wants to and say, “Praise God from whom all blessings flow.”
In that moment of complete and wild joy — maybe for the first time he could do that in years. This time he doesn’t cower. This time he doesn’t distance himself. This time he prostrates himself and kneels in front of the one who healed him. And he thanks him. He thanks him.
I have to wonder what he said to Jesus as he knelt at his feet when he said thank you. I wonder if he said, “Jesus, thank you — when no one else would look at me, you did. Jesus, thank you for the healing that I’ve heard you’ve done for so many others — to the bent-over woman and the boy with the demon, to the bleeding woman and the widow’s son, to the centurion’s servant and the man with a withered hand, to the paralytic, to the man with an unclean spirit. I’ve been hearing about what you’ve been doing. Thank you that you would do this for the outcast and the rejected, for the misunderstood and the dejected. Thank you.
Thank you for risking your reputation and your dignity, for being willing to heal us even though it might deem you one of the marked ones. Thank you. Thank you. I’ve heard you even healed people on the Sabbath, bending the laws in order to spread this gospel of love. Thank you. Thank you for seeing us as human beings — even the ones outside the gate, even the ones for whom the dogs were licking their sores. Thank you.
Thank you for treating me, a foreigner and an outsider — a villain in so many people’s eyes — with the respect and the care that I had forgotten that I deserve. Praise God for you, Jesus. Praise God for showing us mercy. Praise God for the blessings you have bestowed on my life. Praise God that I could be welcomed back into this community for the first time in ages. Praise God that my suffering is gone, that my pain is no more, that my wounds are healed, that my skin is smooth again, that my sores have vanished. Praise God that I get to hold my baby boy, that I get to hug my husband, that I get to have a meal with my cousins, that I get to embrace my friends — for how I have missed them. So praise God for you. Thank you.”
What a remarkable, remarkable moment of grace, is it not?
And putting ourselves in the shoes of the ten — or the nine, at this point — when Jesus asks, “Wait, weren’t ten made clean? Where are the other nine, guys and gals?” I’ve got to wonder — as maybe N. T. Wright hints — maybe those nine were afraid to go back and identify with this man who would now be deemed a marked one for the ways he was healing and touching people that were deemed untouchable. They didn’t want to be associated with him. They had just received this blessing and this cleansing.
Or maybe they were so excited to see their families, they just sprinted away to go find them. I would have done that, too. Or maybe — I don’t know — maybe they didn’t think they had any right to go back and look for the one, the Son of God. Maybe the priests told them not to go back, because the priests were the ones who declared them cleansed, not this rabble-rouser.
In any case, they are not there. And when Jesus asks, “Was none of them found to return? Was none of them found to return and give praise to God except for this foreigner?” we know the answer.
I wonder if Jesus was hurt by this or confused by this. I wonder if he was saddened by the reality that despite everything he had done for God’s people, they would still leave him in the dust, alone.
But to the one who returned, one thing is clear: Jesus doesn’t care about this man’s religious status. Jesus doesn’t care about his citizenship status when he heals him. He doesn’t say, “Show me your papers, and then I’ll heal you.” He doesn’t believe in separating this man from his family. He doesn’t care if he’s going to get in trouble with the authorities or not. He doesn’t call for or approve state-sanctioned violence and send armies to go and beat and imprison this man — to deport and demean him. He doesn’t care about that. No, our God doesn’t work that way.
His healing is not limited by language or ethnicity, by nationality or economic status. His healing doesn’t care even about the quantity of this man’s faith — because we heard last week from Pastor Sele, all you need is the faith of a teeny-weeny little mustard seed. He doesn’t care about the quantity; he cares, church, about the nature of this man’s faith. The nature of this man’s faith. He cares that he came back. He cares that he returned and said thank you. He cares that he praised God. He cares that the attitude of this man’s faith was gratitude.
I did not mean to rhyme there, but there you go.
And as John Buchanan writes, faith without gratitude is not faith at all. He says, “There is something life-giving about gratitude.” There is something life-giving about gratitude.
And I could read you all these studies that I read this week about the science behind gratitude and the statistics about what it does for your mental health, for your physical health, for the chemical balance in your body. And I could say, “You need to write more thank-you notes.” And I could say, “You need to say thank you to five people every day.” And I could say, “You need to be more grateful. You need to make a list every single evening with everything that you want to say thank you for — for the sun, for this amazing family and baby that was dedicated, for the food in front of you this day, for a body that got you here, for a church community that surrounds you in love, even when you’re annoying, even when you get it wrong.”
But I don’t need to tell you that, because this story speaks for itself, does it not?
This story — this leper, this man — he returns not to get healed; he returns because he was healed. Oh, that’s powerful. His desire is not transactional for the Savior. His desire is simply to say thank you.
And this is no small act — especially in the Gospel of Luke. And this is the only gospel where we hear this story. This double outcast — this leper and this foreigner — his faith is made complete because it includes gratitude. Our faith is made complete because it involves praise.
And we see it so often in the Gospel of Luke. Remember Simeon and Anna and how they praise God. Remember all of the witnesses to the miracles of Jesus who see them and then praise God. Remember especially the centurion at the foot of the cross, who sees Jesus’s final selfless and compassionate last moments and praises God — these unexpected characters who teach us something about faith, who flip the script for us over and over again, that the villains become heroes and that the outcasts become our guideposts for how to be in this world.
Praising God was a very natural response to what they saw and what they experienced. The last sentence in this passage — the very last one — echoes a lot of what Jesus says in his previous healings in Luke. He says, “Get up and go on your way; your faith has made you well.”
One of the things I love most about this man — and this God made flesh — is that he does not stop at physical healing. That’s never where the story ends. He stops at wellness. He stops at being made well.
And I think that’s a really important distinction, because as people in the medical trade know, it is one thing to bandage up someone, and it is another to show dignity and welcome them back into a community that embraces them — that doesn’t judge them. Jesus wants us to pay attention to this, and we see it over and over again. And it looks like being given the opportunity to fully participate in the life of a community again. That our skin is not made smooth for nothing, but that we return — turned back — to a place that ushers us into the kingdom of God and says, “Welcome back. We missed you. Welcome back. We’re so sorry we didn’t see you. Welcome back. You have every right to be here.”
Healing first, but wholeness finally.
And to the ones who didn’t turn back to find Jesus — because I would have been one of those nine, absolutely — Luke doesn’t say that they were any less healed. He just implies that they were less grateful. That’s the distinction. And here he insinuates that it’s in the thanking that saves this grateful leper.
And this kind of thankfulness — it’s available to us every day and every second, and it’s free of cost.
So, as we look to Mary’s Magnificat of praise, as we look to Simeon and Anna, as we look to the centurion, as we look to the witnesses of so many miracles, and to this outcast and to this leper, we sing every week a song of gratitude.
So — will you be the one who turns back? Will you be the one who turns around and runs and seeks the face of Christ and kneels at his feet and can’t help but praise him — to this God who not only heals but makes us well?
And as we will sing soon — as we sing every week — as a reminder of the importance of praise:
“Praise God from whom all blessings flow.
Praise God, all creatures here below.
Praise God above, ye heavenly host,
Creator, Son, and Holy Ghost.”
And we say amen. Amen. And amen. And we say thank you.