In a short, concise, and to the point story Luke tells us about Jesus and ten leprous men (Luke 17:11-19). The men had cried out to Jesus for mercy and it was mercy He gave them, mercy in the form of physical healing. Then He sent them off to church so that the priests could see that they were healed. If the priests were satisfied then a process could be started that would allow these ostracized men to enter again into the community and get their lives back.
One of the men put his trip to the priests on hold, turned around and came back to Jesus to thank Him for the act of mercy that had been extended to him. Luke says the man was “glorifying God with a loud voice, and he fell on his face at [Jesus] feet, giving thanks to Him” (vs. 15-16). Jesus had asked none of the ten to do this and none of the ten did, except this one man who had two issues going against him – he was a leper and he was a Samaritan.
Jewish folks and Samaritan folks didn’t get along too well and I’m not sure that just any priest would have received this Samaritan. We’ll leave that to the speculators. What we do know is that this Samaritan man came back to this Jewish man, fell on his face before Him and gave thanks.
Jesus was impressed. He knew this man was a “foreigner” (vs. 18), and He knew this man’s issues. Maybe that’s why He was impressed, that instead of an act of narcissism, this one lone Samaritan-foreigner forgot about himself for a moment and fell on his face before this One who had made such a profound impact on his life.
Putting the future on hold just to give thanks. That’s the kind of guy I would like to know. That’s the kind of guy I want to be.
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