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Luke 17:11-19                                            

 

Luke is careful to give us just enough geographic information to alert us that the disciples are navigating between two treacherously non-Jewish territories. We don’t know the name of the city; we aren’t given any clues since it is apparently not pertinent to Luke’s storytelling, nor are we privy to even an approximate location of Jesus and disciples.

• Luke records that the lepers approached, but stood “at a distance.” What was the written/unwritten rules pertaining to lepers during this period of Israel’s history? How far away did these lepers stay from the populace? (Cf. Torah’s sayings.)

• What is the core of gravity in this narrative? What part of the story receives the greatest emphasis? Assuming that Luke could have told the story in a variety of nuances and settings, what particular slant does he choose to give the story of the ten lepers? Is the story about the healing of ten lepers?

 

What must these lepers have felt in their marginal existence? Shamed? Carrying the stigma of having been cursed by God? Laughed at? Butt of jokes? A project? An object lesson, the “fool” from Hebrew and Egyptian Wisdom literature? A charity case? Sub-human? Rejected? Despised? No dignity? Proof that God selects some for higher purposes while condemning others to a meaningless existence?

• What might have been their experience? Never touched. No hugs,. No interaction with children-laughing, arguing, wrestling, jostling? No human being will ever be close to them? Living in the dumps. Homeless. No kisses. No embraces. No feeling in their appendages-if in fact, Hanson’s Disease is the implied “leprosy.”

• The one who returns to worship really stumbles into grace, I think, because he knows only too well his heritage-and what he is not-and thus, healing is a surprising, not expected gift to him.

 

For a sample, please refer to this week's sermons