Sunday 13 October 2019

Genuine Gratitude: Trinity 17





Today’s Gospel story has often been a favourite of Sunday School teachers and parents too. After all, it is a simple story about saying thank you, isn’t it? And saying thank you is a basic social skill which we all want to drum into our children as early as possible. If you are a parent, and you are any good at it, you sit your children down straight after Christmas to write those thank you notes to people who’ve given them presents. Alas, I never quite was that parent – it was always an uphill struggle.  But we all know that it’s important to say thank you, and it’s good to be thanked. I’ve been very grateful and touched by all your kind messages of thanks and appreciation over the last week or so, to mark my 25th anniversary of ordination, and the sizeable gift of garden tokens, which I shall enjoy spending very much! Thank you for those.

Saying thank you matters. That’s why this story has so often been used to ram that home to children, and adults too. Look these ten men with leprosy. They are all healed, but only one comes back to say thank you! How rude!

The problem is, though, that the story isn’t really about rudeness and politeness. We trivialise it if we make it just a moral tale about good and bad manners.  Jesus doesn’t focus on the thanks of the Samaritan who comes back – in fact, he doesn’t even mention it. He says , “Was none of them – the other nine -  found to return and give praise to God.” That’s the point, that they don’t seem to have recognised where their healing came from, or given a moment’s thought to what that might mean for them in the long term. They are quite content with a healing that is, literally, skin deep.  

The thing about saying thank you is that it can just be a formula, something we feel we have to do if we want to look polite and well brought up regardless of how we really feel about the gift we’ve been given. We can write the most beautiful thank you letters without them meaning anything at all, for gifts which we don’t really want or need – we’ve probably all done so from time to time. All the proprieties will have been observed, but not a word of it is really meant, and that gift doesn’t make any real, lasting difference to us.

Genuine gratitude is far more than a simple thank you, however posh the stationary it is written on, and it’s this genuine gratitude which Jesus recognises in this Samaritan who has turned back. Genuine gratitude recognises not just the gift, but the love of the giver who gave it. Genuine gratitude is something which leads us into a deeper relationship with someone, because we see that they’ve given something of themselves in their gift. Genuine gratitude isn’t a momentary thing, something to be ticked off a checklist – thank you letter written – tick!; it changes us in the long term. It’s a recognition that a bond has been formed, that our lives have been reoriented, set off in new directions, influenced permanently for the good by someone else’s generosity to us.

That’s what this Samaritan leper is expressing when he “turns back and praises God.” He doesn’t just go back to his old life, as the other nine do. Something has shifted permanently in him. He has learned something that will change him forever. He has recognised in Jesus the wellspring of life, a place to which he can return, a place to which he must return, again and again.

The Gospel tells us, very carefully, that these lepers are living in the region “between” Galilee and Samaria, in the buffer zone, the nomansland, between these two states which normally didn’t get along. They had to live there. They’d been banished from their towns and villages because they were viewed as unclean. When they are healed, nine of them can’t wait to get back to their old lives. Showing themselves to the priests is the way they can be formally declared clean again and readmitted to their communities. That’s all they want. Only this Samaritan – a foreigner to Jesus – realises that there is something far better on offer than just a return to the way things were before he got this disease. And it comes, not from this tribe or that tribe, this religious system or that religious system, but from this man, Jesus, who embodies a God who is bigger than any clan or tribe, for whom there is no no-man’s-land, nowhere that is beyond the pale. That’s why he comes back and  throws himself at Jesus feet and praises God. Jesus tells him to “go on his way”, a new way into a new life, made whole not just in body, but in spirit too.

Genuine gratitude for a genuine, love-filled, gift can transform our relationships with one another. We know what it feels like when we find it. The same is true of our relationship with God, who gives us the best gift of all; himself. That’s why, week by week, we come together to celebrate this service - the Eucharist . The word eucharist  comes from the Greek word for thanksgiving, so the Eucharistic prayer, that prayer I pray asking God to bless the bread and wine of Communion, is a thanksgiving prayer. There are eight different prayers I could choose from. I put two in each of the service books we use at different seasons of the year and then choose which ever seems most appropriate as I come to it, but they are all the same in essence. They give thanks to God as Creator, Redeemer and Sustainer. They all say, in different ways, “this stuff we have, of which bread and wine are a reminder, all of it comes from you. Without you, God, we have nothing. With you, we have everything - heaven and earth and all that is in it!” In the Eucharist we are invited, like this Samaritan leper, to turn back to God, to acknowledge our need of him and put ourselves in his hands once again. And when we do that, we find that, in the shape of a small wafer, he has actually put himself into our hands. That  realisation, if we take it seriously, can reorient us,  transform us, just as it did the Samaritan leper.

But if it is so great, why did those other nine lepers not do as this Samaritan did? A new life sounds like a good thing, doesn’t it, but they didn’t seem to want it? Perhaps there’s a clue in our Old Testament reading, the story of Naaman, the Aramean military commander, who also had leprosy. What we find in his story is that receiving gifts, can be complicated and threatening,  especially such an important gift, transformative gift as healing. It means, for a start, admitting our need of that gift, and that can feel humiliating.

When Elisha sends a message to Naaman, telling him to bathe in the River Jordan, he is infuriated and offended. Elisha hasn’t even come out in person to greet him, and the River Jordan? Pah! There are far better rivers back home…

Philip and I went to the River Jordan earlier this year, and I can see Naaman’s point. It would have been bigger in his time – water extraction upstream has diminished it now – but it was never very wide, and it is one of the muddiest rivers I have ever seen. You’re dirtier when you come out than you were when you go in. It was bad enough that this big-shot, battle-hardened soldier had been laid low by leprosy, but the treatment must have sounded even more humiliating than the disease to him. He wanted something magical, esoteric, a cure that was grand enough to match his status. All he was offered was a remotely delivered prescription for a quick dip in a muddy stream. Naaman wasn’t used to being needy, powerless. He was usually the strong one, in command of others. This must have seemed like a particularly cruel practical joke, deliberate mockery. It is only the intervention of his servants which persuades him that, having come this far, he might as well give it a try.

But when he does, and is healed, his response is the same as that of the Samaritan leper who comes back to Jesus. He recognises that this God, of this place – strange though it seems – is the source of the life and healing he needs. If we read on, we discover that when he goes home, he takes some of the soil of Israel to stand on so that he can pray to Israel’s God, a symbol that would remind him that this unlikely place, this muddy river bank was where he found what he had needed all along. “Now I know that there is no God in all the earth except in Israel,” he says

I started by saying that the Gospel story isn’t a story about saying thank you, not in any simplistic sense anyway. It isn’t there to remind us of the need for ritual politeness. But it, and the story of Naaman, do have something to say to us about genuine gratitude, the recognition of the grace of God. Grace is God’s unmerited, unearned gift of himself to us. Grace comes to us not because we have deserved it but because we need it, often turning up in unexpected people and places, in foreign territory, out beyond the pale.

The Samaritan leper finds grace in a Jewish carpenter from Nazareth, who goes into no-man’s-land where only the rejected and despised make their home.  Naaman finds grace in the strange instructions of a scruffy foreign prophet, and in the muddy water of an unprepossessing river. He struggles to accept it, but when he does, his life is transformed. Both of them are made whole in spirit as well as in body, set on a new course, by the gracious gift of God. Their stories are reminders that we can be too, that day by day, we are offered God’s gift of grace, his help for our need, if we can find the courage to accept it. And for that, we can be truly thankful.
Amen


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