Blog
Dear Trailhead family,
His name was Sam.
(His name was most definitely not Sam, but for our purposes today, his name is Sam).
Sam could not have predicted a year ago the place he now found himself. Just a few months back, Sam had found a mysterious spot on his skin. No matter how he rubbed at the spot, put ointment on the spot, or ignored the spot, the spot was there. While Sam did not know the technical term for his skin disease, the law had plenty to say about how it was to be addressed.
Sam dutifully showed the spot on his skin to a priest and waited the required week. The week was long, lonely, and agonizing. And the skin issue only worsened—significantly worsened, in fact.
After the week in isolation, Sam went before the priest again and heard what he feared most.
It was leprosy, a defiling skin disease.
His life was forever altered.
He was unclean in the eyes of his community and unclean in the eyes of his God.
Sam was considered cursed by God, and Sam felt it to his core.
Following the expectations of the law and his community, Sam tore his clothes, let his hair go unkempt, covered a portion of his face, and moved out of his home. His goodbye to his wife and children felt like what hell must be like. The pain was stifling, crushing.
Now that he was a leper, instead of offering a blessing of Shalom to those he passed by, he was to shout “unclean, unclean.”
Unclean was the opposite of shalom.
Eventually, Sam found a clan of similar people. Some were Israelites, some were Samaritans, but the painful reality of their leprosy brought them together in an unfamiliar truce. Contempt for the other vanished as they all found themselves in a horrible category more profound than nationality, that of the living dead.
This was Sam’s reality.
His days were filled with begging, seeking enough handouts to sustain life.
A life, Sam thought bitterly, that he no longer wanted.
Then one morning, a ripple spread across the community of the unclean. Jesus, the roving teacher, was rumored to be approaching. Curiosity got the best of Sam and soon he found himself moving with his company of lepers to a place near the road.
And there the Teacher was, walking along, young, healthy, full of life, conversing with his traveling companions. Jesus looked so at peace, so whole, so happy that Sam shrank back, aware that his presence could only detract from the moment. Sam knew that his best gift to this rabbi and his friends was to remain invisible. And so he did.
But not all of the lepers were so considerate.
“Mercy! Have mercy on us!” one of them cried out.
Jesus stopped mid-conversation and looked around. His gaze fell on the disfigured company of outcasts.
His gaze fell on Sam.
Shalom had been broken.
And Sam knew what came next. Jesus would shake his head sadly while pointing out to his companions that this is why we must live holy lives, devout lives. For if you didn’t, well, just look. This group of tattered men served as a warning as to the effects of sin, of lawlessness, of disobedience before God.
Sam braced his soul for the words but Jesus said none of that.
“Go,” Jesus said to Sam and those around him, “present yourself to the priest.”
“Why?” Sam thought. “Go to the priest just so he could pity us and confirm what we already know, that we are unclean?”
But the leper to Sam’s left immediately started off, clearly intending to do what Jesus had said. Soon another broke rank and followed the first. Then another and another until nine men were moving away.
Sam suddenly felt very alone. And even though he had no desire to be scrutinized by a priest again, he followed along behind the leperous crew.
They were all he had.
And that is when a most curious thing happened.
The man who had first cried out to Jesus now let out a shriek. Sam looked up immediately, expecting to see kids throwing stones at his friend or Roman soldiers using the butt of their spears to move his friend out of the way.
Instead, the lead leper was pulling at his clothes as if they were suddenly burning hot or filled with biting insects. But the clothes were not what was garnering his attention, rather, it was what was beneath the clothes.
Flesh, glowing, vibrant, healthy flesh.
And then the next man yanked back his tunic and the next and the next. Each in turn reacted to their skin with a start. One man fell to the ground sobbing, one let out a curse, another began to run, another simply touched his skin as if he had never seen skin before.
And then Sam felt something. A tingling sensation, like a blanket that had been hanging near the fire, was now being wrapped around his body. Sam looked at his hands and his breath caught in his throat. Whose hands were those sticking out from his tunic? Surely those hands were not his hands? Where had the angry, open sores gone? How could clear, healthy skin suddenly appear without a hint of scarring or other damage?
How indeed?
A few years later, Sam’s life had almost returned to normal. He had been reunited with his wife and kids, and the joy he felt every time he remembered his homecoming filled him with awe. To hold the hand of his child, share a hug with his wife, or simply offer a blessing to a passing stranger would often cause Sam to tear up or outright sob.
Sam was living again, his life had been rescued that day when Jesus had instructed ten lepers to make their way to the priest.
And a day never went by that Sam failed to remember that moment.
And a day never went by that Sam wished that he had gone back to thank Jesus.
Now on his way to Jerusalem, Jesus traveled along the border between Samaria and Galilee. As he was going into a village, ten men who had leprosy met him. They stood at a distance and called out in a loud voice, “Jesus, Master, have pity on us!”
When he saw them, he said, “Go, show yourselves to the priests.” And as they went, they were cleansed.
One of them, when he saw he was healed, came back, praising God in a loud voice. He threw himself at Jesus’ feet and thanked him—and he was a Samaritan.
Jesus asked, “Were not all ten cleansed? Where are the other nine? Has no one returned to give praise to God except this foreigner?” Then he said to him, “Rise and go; your faith has made you well.”
Luke 17:11-19
Grace and peace be upon you,
Grant
p.s. Happy Thanksgiving friends; may our lives be marked by gratitude to God and each other!