Metropolitan Anthony Sourozh
Healing of the Ten Lepers
23 December 1990
In the Name of the Father, the Son and the Holy Ghost.
The Gospel - all the Gospel is a gift of God to us, and
although we are not continuously reminded of the need to be grateful,
how can we not respo nd
with gratitude to what the Gospel brings to
us? God has so loved the world that He has given His only begotten Son
that the world may be saved; and the Son has given Himself freely, in
the sovereign freedom of His Divinity to us; no-one has taken His life
from Him - these are His own words; He gave His life willingly, freely,
that we may live.
And today we have in the Gospel a short example of the
way in which we, most of the time, receive the gifts of God. Ten men
came, covered with leprosy, condemned to a cruel death by illness, but
also rejected ritually by their own people for the impurity of this
infectious disease. They came to Him, stood at a distance, because they
knew that according to the Jewish Law they had no right even to come
near Him to touch Him. And they asked for mercy. And God send them to
the priests to bring forth the sign of their gratitude for the healing
which they had not received; and they believed, and they went, and they
were healed before they reached their goal... We might have expected
that they rushed back to fall to the feet of Christ, to touch Him in
gratitude - no. Nine of them went their way; it was enough for them to
have been healed: it’s all they needed of God. One of them, however,
turned round, and came to thank the Lord.
Isn’t it an image of the way in which so often we also
behave? We pray; we ask the Lord for something that matters to us: it
may not be live and death, it may just be that we need so much one thing
or another; or that we don’t even need it so much, but that we long so
much for it. And then it is given us; and we
receive the gift, and we rush into life with this gift in our hearts,
this gift in our hands, we rush to life because it is enough for us that
our prayer was fulfilled. How seldom it is that we come back, leaving
our gift to be used later, but first of all turning to God and saying:
What wander! What is Your love! How great, how compassionate, how humble
that You have responded to my prayer...
One out of ten came back to the Lord Jesus Christ: how
many of us have ever come immediately, before they took advantage of the
gift to turn to God with a smile, like a child turns and say 'Thank
you!’, even with a smile, without words before taking advantage of what
is given. And we loose so much at not being grateful; because if we
learned to be grateful for the obvious gifts of God, we would gradually
discover that we can be grateful for a great deal more, for everything
that Providence puts in our way: not only things we rejoice in, not only
the wanders of life, but even the challenges of life, the things that
claims from us courage, greatness, nobility, the things which we are
afraid of. And how often we could overcome vanity by gratitude! Because
vanity consists in looking at ourselves, and thinking how wonderful we
are, forgetting that all that we are, all that we have is a gift of God.
If we only, every time we have said the right thing, done the right
thing, been worthy of our human quality, human greatness and nobility,
and also of the name of the disciples of Christ - if every time we
turned to God and said, ‘Yes! How wonderful are the words I have spoken,
how good is the action I have performed - and everything was of You: the
occasion was given by You, o Lord! I was able to perceive the need
because You whispered in my heart: Look! I could understand because I
had my mind enlightened by the Gospel! My heart responded because You
touched it, and from the heart of stone which I carry in my bosom most
of the time it became a heart of flesh full of compassion and of
understanding! And You gave me the means of meeting the need, and the
joy of meeting this need!.. If we could respond to everything this way,
we would discover that life is made into an act of worship and of
gratitude.
Let us reflect on this because we are coming within a
few weeks, a few days now to a day when our heart should be aflame with
gratitude: God has loved us so much as to become one of us; while we
were strangers, alien to Him, often inimical to Him, He came, and He
gave His life for us that we may live!.. We must prepare for it: joy,
gratitude, faith, openness to God does not happen of a sudden; we must
prepare for it. Let us reflect on what is going to happen; the thing
that happened nearly two thousand years ago we shall remember as an
actual event now, in a few weeks; and be ready, with a heart tilled,
deeply furrowed by faith, by reflection, having though out all our life,
ready to receive the Lord like a shepherd, in the simplicity and purity
of our hearts, or like the Wise Men in the deep understanding of wisdom.
Amen!
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