Friday, 7 October 2022

The Power of Thank You!

(Homily 28th Sunday in Ordinary Time, Yr. C)

     At the heart of today’s message is the theme of gratitude or thanksgiving. Gratitude is disarming; it paves way for favors and benevolence. On the other hand, as Shakespeare wrote in his play King Lear, “How sharper than a serpent's tooth it is to have a thankless child”. Truly, nothing is quite so hurtful as to be consistently taken for granted, without ever a word of thanks or praise. In fact, the Gospel passage gives us a glimpse into the heart of Jesus, when he receives or does not receive gratitude. Indeed, one of the most satisfying feelings is to receive a sincere “Thank you” for a service rendered and appreciated. It was because of ‘thank you’ that Naaman went back to Elisah, because of ‘thank you’ the Samaritan leper went back to Jesus, and equally because of gratitude St. Paul remained in chains for fidelity and appreciation of what Jesus has done in his life. Alongside the theme of gratitude is that of the obedience of faith, which helps us to reflect on the readings of this Sunday by considering them together in order to be aware of certain significant facts. The ten lepers in the Gospel passage in obedience trusted the words of Jesus and they embarked on a journey to present themselves to the priests, in order that the later, will certify that they have been made clean. Again, in the first reading Naaman the Syrian after much hesitation obeyed the words of Elisha, by the help of his servant, immersing himself seven times in the River Jordan, and thus he was made clean. It is on account of obedience of faith that St. Paul ended in chains and had to suffer greatly for his faith and trust in God, for the encounter with Jesus on his way to Damascus healed him of spiritual blindness and hatred towards Christians, little wonder, he succumbed to the obedience of faith even to the extent of suffering harshly. Truly, Jesus is the great Physician of both body and soul.

     In the first reading (2Kgs. 5:14-17) we see the figure of a certain Naaman, an “army commander to the King of Aram” (2Kgs. 5:1). Naaman was infected with leprosy on the body and his soul was unclean for he worshipped in the temple of Rimon (2Kgs.5:18) a pagan god. He was told to go and wash at River Jordan seven times in order for him to be cleansed. At first he refused, and later agreed upon the insistence of his servant, he agreed and bathed seven times in the River Jordan and was healed. Afterwards, he went back to thank Elisha with a present, but Elisha refused, because is God that healed him, his healing came forth as a handiwork of God. As Naaman experienced and confirmed his total cleansing and healing, he made his profession of faith thus: “Now I know there is no God anywhere on earth except in Israel” (v.15). Indeed, Naaman experienced double-healing, for he was cured of the physical (leprosy) and spiritual (uncleanliness) ailments.

       Extrapolating from the above scenario, it is important to trust the ministers of God, His authentic ministers and messengers. In the first reading when Naaman the leper learnt from Prophet Elisha that he has to go to the river Jordan to wash himself seven times in order to be healed, he rebelled and protested: “Here was I, thinking he would be sure to come out to me, and stand there, and call on the name of Yahweh his God, and wave his hand over the spot and cure the part that was diseased. Surely, Abana and Parpar, the rivers of Damascus, are better than any water in Israel? Could I not bathe in them and become clean? And he turned round and went off in a rage” (2Kg. 5:11-12). But he would later follow the counsel of the prophet and he will be healed. When the ministers and messengers of God speak in the name of God, they are to be trusted and listened to. In the words of Jesus: “As the Father sent me, so am I sending you” (Jn. 20:21) and again “Anyone who listens to you listens to me, anyone who rejects you rejects me, and those who reject me reject the one who sent me” (Lk. 10:16).

 

     The two episodes of the Word of God this Sunday especially in the first reading and the Gospel, presents a sort of affinity and evident points of convergence between them. In fact, the passage from the 2 kings can be considered as a kind of prelude or prophetic anticipation of the narrative in the Gospel passage by St. Luke. They two episodes present two cases of healing, one by immersion in the River, through the instrumentality of Prophet Elisha, and the other by the words of Jesus, the New Priest of the New Covenant.

     The Gospel periscope (Lk. 17:11-19) narrates the episode and encounter of Jesus and the ten lepers. Situating us into the historical context of that time, leprosy then was a symbol of divine punishment for one’s sin. It was regarded equally as a contagious disease. Little wonder, the person infected with it is ostracized. And to cure it, requires divine intervention or even a miracle that is why a person cured from leprosy has to show himself to the priest, so that according to the custom, the priest will certify truly that he has been made whole, and thus can be welcomed back to the community. For the fact that lepers are isolated from the rest of the people, the ten lepers maintained some distance from Jesus as they made their request, our evangelist says: “They stood some way off” (v.12b). On encountering Jesus, the ten lepers were imploring him to help them from afar, because according to the prescription of the Law: “Anyone with a contagious skin-disease will wear torn clothing and disordered hair, and will cover the upper lip and shout, “Unclean, unclean”. As long as the disease lasts, such a person will be unclean and, being unclean, will live alone and live outside the camp” (Lev. 13:45-46). But Jesus did not run away and treat them that way, when he encountered them. They called Jesus and pleaded him: “Jesus! Master! Take pity on us” (v.13). And when Jesus said to them, “Go and show yourselves to the priests” (v.14a), as the custom demands. And immediately without ifs and buts, they set out to go to the priest, and instantly the miracle of healing and cleansing took place: “Now as they were going away they were cleansed” (v.14b). Just at the words and invitation of Jesus, they were healed. There is power indeed in the words of Jesus, “he sent forth his word and cured them, and rescued their life from the abyss” (Ps. 107:20).   

      Jesus told the ten lepers to go and present themselves to the priests, but it is important to know that only cured lepers can present themselves to the priests, so that they can certify the healing. For as stipulated: “This is the law to be applied on the day of the purification of someone who has suffered from a contagious skin-disease. Such a person will be taken to the priest, and the priest will go outside the camp. If he finds on examination that the person has recovered from the disease, he will order the following to be brought for purification…” (Lev. 14:2-4). So, one may well presume that Jesus’ invitation to them to go and present themselves to the priests when they have not been healed, sounds like a joke. Instead they trusted in the words of Jesus and on their way they discovered that they have been healed. This is what it means to believe in Jesus and his words: to trust in him completely, to accept his words without hesitation and to put it into practice without looking for excuses, even when he asks us to do something that contradicts the human logic and understanding. It was similar to the episode where Jesus told Peter to throw the net, and Peter said: “Master, we worked hard all night long and caught nothing, but if you say so, I will pay out the nets” (Lk. 5:5).

     Behold, the second part of the story is quite interesting, encouraging and discouraging at the same time. For while they were on their way to the priests, “Finding himself cured, one of them turned back praising God at the top of his voice and threw himself prostrate at the feet of Jesus and thanked him. The man was a Samaritan” (vv.15-16). Indeed, Jesus wondered why only one came back to say thank you, and he said to him: “It seems that no one has come back to give praise to God, except this foreigner. And he said to the man, ‘Stand up and go on your way. Your faith has saved you” (vv.18-19), for his healing was not only physical but also spiritual. Little wonder, Jesus alludes to his faith. His healing was indeed, an integral healing. The emphasis on the fact that this man was a Samaritan reveals that God’s salvation is for all, it is no birthright of any people. As a matter of fact, at first, the situation and ailment of the ten lepers led them to Jesus, but it was faith that led the Samaritan back to Jesus to thank him. For he (the Samaritan) recognized in Jesus the Priest, for this, he out of faith went back to him. Instead of going back to the Old Priests for certification, he comes to the New Priest (Jesus) to say thank you and Jesus certified him. Truly, Jesus manifested that he is the New Priest of the New Covenant: “Stand up and go on your way. Your faith has saved you”. Child of God, when you are battered and embittered by the trials and difficulties of this life, to whom do you go? The ten lepers went to Jesus. And one of them still returned to him to thank him, when we receive favor, blessings and healing from God, do we remember to show gratitude? Indeed, the Samaritan teaches us to go to the New Way, and not the old way as did the other nine lepers.

     The episodes of the first reading and the Gospel propel us to make a two-fold consideration: ●First, God in his actions towards men and woman is absolutely free, and as such, cannot be conditioned by anyone, neither can He be confined within any ethnic, religious and political barrier nor can He be manipulated by human presumptions. In the two episodes the two persons that were made whole, one was a pagan and the other a stranger, that is, two individuals outside the Jewish religious circle, those considered to be excluded from God’s Kingdom. And in fact, Jesus made reference to this episode when his kinsmen were indulging him to do miracles for them as he has done in other places, “And in the prophet Elisha’s time there were many suffering from virulent skin-diseases in Israel, but none of these was cured – only Naaman the Syrian” (Lk. 4:27). No one indeed, has the monopoly of God’s benevolence.

●Second, is the obligation of gratitude towards God. We need to learn how to recognize the benefits and blessings of the Lord in our lives, and as such, we cannot but praise and thank Him. Conscious of this, St. Paul admonished: “I urged then, first of all that petitions, prayers, intercessions and thanksgiving should be offered for everyone” (1Tm. 2:1), elsewhere he insistently urged the Christian communities to be “overflowing with thanksgiving” (Col. 2:7). Thus, we need to cultivate the attitude of thanking and praising the Lord for the benefits and favors he continues to bestow on us. How often do we find time and consider it necessary during our moments of prayer to thank the Lord for his benevolence. We need to cultivate more the attitude of gratitude and do less of spiritual begging: ‘Lord give me this, give me that. Do this for me, do that for me’. In the first reading, Naaman recognized God’s intervention in his healing and as a sign of gratitude and thanksgiving he made a commitment to worship only the God of Israel, the True God and no more the false gods. Amongst the ten lepers healed by Jesus in the Gospel only one came back to thank and praise him, and as a result, more than the health of the body, he equally received salvation of his soul. But Jesus must have felt bad: “Were not all ten made clean? The other nine, where are they? (v.17).

     In the second reading (2Tm. 2:8-13) St. Paul was writing to his friend Timothy, he (Paul) was in prison and in chains. He was treated as a miscreant because of his preaching, but he writes: “It is on account of this that I have to put up with suffering, even to being chained like a criminal. But God’s message cannot be chained” (v. 9). On the example of Paul we have to be disposed to suffer for the love of Christ and his Gospel, “So I persevere for the sake of those who are chosen, so that they, too, may obtain the salvation that is in Christ Jesus with eternal glory” (v.10). St. Paul invites us to be ready to suffer all sorts of things, ranging from incomprehension, derision, blasphemy, marginalization and persecution, in as much as we bring someone to salvation in Christ. Let us implore the Lord to give us a generous courage and holy audacity, for as St. Paul assured us: “If we have died with him, then we shall live with him. If we persevere, then we shall reign with him” (vv.11-12). This attitude of Paul toward suffering could equally be seen as a way of showing gratitude to God for rescuing him from darkness, for healing him from his own “leprosy”. With that conviction, St. Paul maintained that God’s message cannot be chained; it has to be proclaimed to Jews and Gentiles as well. He reaffirms the universality of God’s salvation.

     Above all, this attitude of gratitude and incessant prayer of thanksgiving should not remain only at the level of verbal expressions and sentiments, but they have to be incarnated in action, especially in the joyful proclamation of our faith in the risen Christ. Naaman proclaimed his unalloyed loyalty to the God of Israel, the Samaritan leper came to thank Jesus because he recognized in Him the New Priest of the New Covenant and St. Paul as well exhorts us that the best way of praising and thanking God is to accept suffering and persevere for the sake of obtaining the salvation that is in Christ Jesus. Beloved in Christ, let us enroll ourselves into this attitude of gratitude and grateful witnessing, as we make effort to become the “mouthpiece” of the Word and heralds of God’s design of love. Lord Jesus help me never to fail to recognize your loving kindness and blessings. Help me to count my blessings with a grateful heart, Amen. Happy Sunday To You All!

(Fr. Vitus M.C. Unegbu, SC) 

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