2016-07-17 Luke 17:11-19 There's a New Temple in Town
Notes
Transcript
THERE’S A NEW TEMPLE IN TOWN
(Luke 17:11-19)
July 17, 2016
Intro – Texans love their state – even newcomers. I asked a guy one time if
he’d been born in TX. He replied, “No, I wasn’t born in TX, but I got here as
fast as I could.” That would be a good attitude to have toward the Kingdom of
God. We’re not born there but it would be good to get there as fast as we can.
But the question is how? How do we become part of God’s kingdom?
The usual answer is, “Be good. That’s the ticket. Reform yourself.” Moralism
– trust in what you can do! That’s what the Pharisees were teaching. Moral
reformation. Jesus hated that idea! His message: it’s not moral reformation
that is needed but spiritual transformation – a rebirth resulting from
repentance. Moral reformation might make better sinners, but what is needed
is forgiven sinners. That’s the message of this passage of Scripture.
This text is often used to teach thankfulness. But the heart of the passage is
asking the question – moral reformation or spiritual transformation? And the
answer is spiritual transformation, illustrated by the contrast between the 9
lepers who never returned and the one who did. Let’s look at it in 3 parts.
I.
Common Condition (11-13)
11
On the way to Jerusalem he was passing along between Samaria and
Galilee. 12 And as he entered a village, he was met by ten lepers, who stood at
a distance. 13 and lifted up their voices, saying, “Jesus, Master, have mercy on
us.” Leprosy in its worst form (Hansen’s disease) is an awful disease of the
skin and peripheral nerves. It consisted of oozing sores, flattened nose, and
loss of sensation leading to wearing away of extremities. In Bible times it was
a virtual death sentence. Lepers were permanently separated from family,
friends and society. Considered ceremonially unclean, it was a helpless,
hopeless sentence of isolation and death.
Ten such outcasts, who’ve formed their own colony have heard of Jesus, so
they meet Him on the outskirts of a small village. They keep their distance as
required by law and shout their request, “Jesus, Master, have mercy on us.”
Mercy is their only hope. There is nothing they or any other person can do to
change their condition. Jesus is their only hope and so they plead for mercy.
Significantly, they are a mixed group. At least one is a Samaritan (v. 16).
That’s important bc it shows the horror of leprosy created a common bond
between people who normally would never have associated with one another.
They were enemies bound by their shared isolation and hopeless condition.
Luke shares this on purpose. Leprosy is the Bible’s most vivid depiction of the
horror of sin. This dreadful physical reality teaches an even more abhorrent
spiritual truth. Luke is bringing into focus the hopelessness of our human
condition, hoping that we will take the only action possible. So what does this
teach us about our common condition?
A. Sinfulness is the universal condition of mankind – The
leprosy of sin is universal. No one who has ever lived has been free of a
natural penchant to rebel against God. Isa 53: 6) “All we like sheep have gone
astray; we have turned—every one—to his own way.” That is the essence of
sin – to pursue our own way as opposed to God’s way. Paul says in Rom 3:1011, “None is righteous, no not one . . . no one seeks for God.” This is who we
are by birth and by choice. Some are worse than others. Thankfully not
everyone is a murderer or a sexual predator – not outwardly at least. But God
reminds us in Jas 2:10, “10 For whoever keeps the whole law but fails in one
point has become accountable for all of it.” Guilt is universal. That is Luke’s
message. This is our common condition. We are united in our lostness.
B. Sinfulness creates an insensitivity that destroys -- One of the
greatest dangers to lepers was the increasing insensitivity. Given their
deplorable sanitary condition, rodents would eat away at their bodies while
they slept, gradually destroying them. Similarly, insensitivity to sin leads to
spiritual destruction. “The wages of sin is death,” declares the Lord. Mankind
disagrees. Our society has a full-blown cultural insensitivity to sin. The word
is anathema – even in most churches today – which is equivalent to saying,
“Let’s build a hospital where the word cancer will not be tolerated,” as
though by avoiding the word we can deny the condition. Denial does not
trump reality, and sin destroys however much we ignore the fact.
C. Sinfulness is incurable by human means – Leprosy was
terminal – and so is sin. Jer 17:9 warns, “The heart is deceitful above all
things and desperately sick” – literally “terminally ill.” No human intervention
can cure it. Ritual will not work. Good works cannot erase bad ones. They,
themselves, are a form of rebellion. Good works as a cure for sin is like
saying, “I’ll cure my asbestos poisoning by avoiding old buildings in future.”
Too late, Beloved. It’s terminal. God says we’re “dead in the trespasses and
sins.” Dead people don’t cure themselves. Lazarus didn’t raise himself.
D. Begging for mercy is the only hope – It’s the only option,
Beloved. The lepers didn’t come and say, “Look, Lord! Look how I used
peroxide on my sores this morning. Look how I have covered them with
bandages. Look, I’m cured. Please accept me back into society.” No! They
cried out, “Jesus, Master, have mercy on us.” So sin can only be dealt with
like the tax collector in Lu 18:13: “God, be merciful to me, a sinner!’
But to pray that, you’ve got to know you’re lost. We don’t like that word, but
outside Christ, that’s exactly who we are despite our best efforts. I found these
words on the wall at one of our favorite restaurants: “I have taken the pill. / I
have hoisted my skirts to my thighs, / Dropped them to my ankles, / Rebelled
at the University, / Skied at Aspen, / Lived with two men, / married one. /
Earned my keep, / Kept my identity, /And frankly . . . / I'M LOST.” Our
common incurable condition outside of Christ is – we’re lost.
II.
Common Command (14)
14
When he saw them he said to them, “Go and show yourselves to the
priests.” And as they went they were cleansed. Jesus didn’t heal them right
away. He gave a command. He told them to go show themselves to the priests.
Why? The priests could not heal them. No. But the priests were kind of like
health inspectors for leprosy. God gave guidelines to determine if it was
really leprosy. Occasionally a condition would clear. So they would have to go
the priest and submit to an elaborate 8-day process to get a health certificate
declaring them clean. So Jesus sends them to the priests before healing.
When Jesus healed a leper in Lu 5:13 He said, “Be clean.” Then He sent him
to the priest. But here – He sends them without healing. Why? Because Jesus
doesn’t always work the same way. Here, He is soliciting faith that is not
dependent on any outside influence – just obedience to His Word. Why would
you go show yourself to the priest and you’re still a leper? Jesus said so, and
you believe Him rather than your lying eyes. Or your lying emotions. Or
whatever else is keeps you from assurance of your salvation. Assurance is
based on His Word – not on what we see or how we feel or what someone else
says. Saving faith clings only to the Word and simply trusts Him!
Did they debate the command? We don’t know. But we know they left still
filled with sores, “And as they went they were cleansed.” Literally -- “While
going, they were cleansed.” They weren’t cleansed and then decided to go.
They went and then were cleansed. Saving faith isn’t just agreeing to certain
facts about Jesus. Saving faith acts on them. That’s what Luke is telling us.
A drowning man suddenly sees a life-buoy thrown his way from a ship. He
instantly believes it can save him. But is he saved? Not even close, right? Not
until he reaches out and acts by placing the life-buoy around him, right? Only
then is he saved. Saving faith is not a simple assent to the facts about Jesus. It
is reaching out and taking it by turning from sin to Jesus. That’s the active
faith Jesus is showing us when He sends these men off before they are healed.
III.
Uncommon Commitment (15-19)
However, there is a sad reality to this story. It is this. While the physical
cleansing of these men illustrates how to be cleansed spiritually, 9 of them
never made that connection. They had a spark of faith to receive God’s
blessing of physical healing. But only one made the total connection. The rest
used God for a temporary benefit. But they tragically missed their moment of
decision that would have led to eternal life. John Calvin says, “It is too
common a disease that, when we are urged by strong necessity (leprosy,
illness, cancer), and we have obtained our wishes, ungratefulness swallows
up that feeling of piety. Thus poverty and hunger beget faith, but abundance
kills it.” So with the 9. Incredible but temporary physical blessing prevented
eternal spiritual renewal. It’s not about thankfulness; it’s about regeneration.
15
“Then one of them, when he saw that he was healed, turned back, praising
God with a loud voice;” Everything’s been common until now. But no longer.
Something happened in the heart of one that did not happen to the others.
One grasped the true implications of what had happened to him. And he
wanted more than mere physical healing. What he had longed for ever since
leprosy overtook him – healing – he now saw as of minor importance
compared to what needed most – forgiveness and reconciliation with God. He
saw his physical cleansing was symbolic of something far greater and he
turned around. Did he invite the others to come? We don’t know. But we
know that he got something they didn’t get. Why? Look what he did.
He “turned back, praising God with a loud voice (φωνῆς μεγάλης –
megaphone!); 16 and he fell on his face at Jesus’ feet, giving him thanks.” Who
did he praise? God. Where did he do it? At the feet of Jesus. Did Jesus stop
this impromptu worship service? No! The implications of this are staggering.
Luke is showing us again in unmistakable terms the deity of Jesus Christ.
Keep in mind, the leper who returned was a Samaritan. They worshipped at a
different temple than the Jews. Mt. Gerizim instead of Jerusalem. Remember
when Jesus met the Samaritan woman at the well in John 4? After she got
interested He asked her to fetch her husband. She said she didn’t have one and
Jesus says in 4:17, “You are right in saying, ‘I have no husband’; 18 for you
have had five husbands, and the one you now have is not your husband. What
you have said is true.” Exposed! So she changes the subject in 4:19:“The
woman said to him, “Sir, I perceive that you are a prophet. 20 Our fathers
worshiped on this mountain, but you say that in Jerusalem is the place where
people ought to worship.” She’s asking, “Which is the right one?” And Jesus
replies in v. 21: “Woman, believe me, the hour is coming when neither on this
mountain nor in Jerusalem will you worship the Father.” Now there’s a
showstopper. He’s a Jew. You’d expect Him to say – Jerusalem. You worship
in Jerusalem. Instead He says, “Neither. Neither place.” So what is going on?
Well, first we must, “What was the purpose of the temple?” And we know the
answer, right? At the center of the temple was the Holy of Holies – the place
where God met His people based on sacrificial atonement for sin. The temple
is where God meets His people. BUT – there’s been a change of
monumental proportions. It’s found in John 2. Early in His ministry, Jesus
cleanses the temple of the fraudulent money-changers and merchants. The
Jewish elite are apoplectic that at Him interrupting their lucrative business, so
we come to John 2:18 So the Jews said to him, “What sign do you show us for
doing these things?” 19 Jesus answered them, “Destroy this temple, and in
three days I will raise it up.” 20 The Jews then said, “It has taken forty-six
years to build this temple, and will you raise it up in three days?” 21 But he
was speaking about the temple of his body. 22 When therefore he was raised
from the dead, his disciples remembered that he had said this, and they
believed the Scripture and the word that Jesus had spoken.” Here’s what Jesus
was saying so casually that no one got it yet – not even the disciples. He was
saying, “Hey guys – there’s a new temple in town – and it’s me! There’s
going to be an ultimate sacrifice for sin who will be raised again in 3 days –
and it’s me! There’s a new place where God meets His people – and it’s
me!” That absolutely takes your breath away when you realize what it all
means, doesn’t it? It’s all Jesus, Beloved. He is the center of everything!
Now back to the 10th leper. When he heard Jesus say “Go to the priests,” he
had to be thinking, “What priests? The ones at Jerusalem or the ones at Mt.
Gerizim?” Like the woman at the well, he’s asking, “Which place is the right
place?” But while the 10th leper was contemplating that question suddenly his
oozing, hardened, scaley skin was as soft as a newborn baby, and listen – the
lights went on! He got what the others didn’t get. He realized, “It’s one thing
to go to the temple priest to get a certificate of physical health. But if I’m
going to get a certificate of spiritual health, neither Gerizim nor Jerusalem
will do.” There’s a new temple – a new place where God meets His people –
and it’s at the feet of Jesus Christ. I’m not suggesting he understood all of this,
but he got enough to know, “Jesus is everything! I must get back to Him.”
Make no mistake, Luke worded it this way on purpose. This man worshipped
God at the feet of Jesus because that is the only place God can be found.
Takes your breath away, doesn’t it?
And that’s just what Jesus is communicating when He says in 17: “Were not
ten cleansed? Where are the nine? 18 Was no one found to return and give
praise to God except this foreigner?” 19 And he said to him, “Rise and go your
way; your faith has made you well.” He sent them away, yes, but in the hope
that they would come back for the greater healing that comes not through any
temple or church – but only at His feet. It’s not thanks He was looking for
but the worship of the Father marked by saving faith. How do we know?
Because He says to the 10th leper, “Your faith has made you well.” Only that’s
not what He said. What He said was, “Your faith has σωζω you – saved you.”
All of them were made physically well. Only one was made spiritually whole,
forgiven, saved. Only one – and he a foreigner at that. Only one recognized
that the only way to the Father is through the Son. There is a new temple in
town, and it is Jesus. “He is the way, the truth and the life. No one comes to
the Father except through Him.”
Conc – So what happened to the other 9? Here is what happened. They were
like the 5-year-olds whose SS teacher was telling them about the how
Solomon built a great temple – and how when he was finished the presence of
the Lord filled the temple. The children’s eyes got wide with excitement. But
the teacher soon learned that their excitement was not that God had come to
dwell in the temple, but rather delight in imagining that huge building filled
with P-R-E-S-E-N-T-S from God. The nine never came back because they
were satisfied with God’s present of physical healing. Only the 10th got the
gift of the presence of God found at the feet of Jesus – the new temple in
town. Have you found that gift? Jesus said in John 17:3, “And this is eternal
life (here it is – the only thing that really matters, far more important than
healing from leprosy or cancer or anything else. This is eternal life), that they
know you the only true God, and Jesus Christ whom you have sent.” Only at
the feet of Jesus. If you haven’t been there, you can come right now. Let’s
pray.