May 3, 2010

Day 82

Luke 17:11–19 (NIV)

11 Now on his way to Jerusalem, Jesus traveled along the border between Samaria and Galilee. 12 As he was going into a village, ten men who had leprosy met him. They stood at a distance 13 and called out in a loud voice, “Jesus, Master, have pity on us!”

14 When he saw them, he said, “Go, show yourselves to the priests.” And as they went, they were cleansed. 15 One of them, when he saw he was healed, came back, praising God in a loud voice. 16 He threw himself at Jesus’ feet and thanked him—and he was a Samaritan. 17 Jesus asked, “Were not all ten cleansed? Where are the other nine? 18 Was no one found to return and give praise to God except this foreigner?” 19 Then he said to him, “Rise and go; your faith has made you well.”

Pray for God to show you something to use from the passage

Read the Passage

Who is in the passage?

What action verbs do you see?

What other words stick out in your mind

Helpful information

Leprosy was an unattractive skin disease (not limited to what is called leprosy today) for which the Bible had prescribed quarantine from the rest of society (Lev 13:45–46), although the Bible did not go so far as many Jewish teachers in blaming the disease on the leper’s sin. Lepers were thus outcasts from the rest of society, the kind of people most healthy people preferred to ignore.

In this story Jesus is seen breaking down barriors and we also get a glimpse of true thankfulness.

Samaritans- people of mixed Jewish and Gentile ancestry who claimed descent from Jacob and worshiped the God of Israel, but felt that Mount Gerizim rather than Jerusalem was the holy site for worship. They engaged the Jews in bitter rivalry, often leading to political hostilities in Jesus’ day, sometimes requiring Roman intervention.

Keener, C. S., & InterVarsity Press. (1993). The IVP Bible background commentary : New Testament. Downers Grove, Ill.: InterVarsity Press.

Questions

What social boundaries is Jesus breaking in this healing?

Why would only one come back to thank Jesus? Do you ever forget to thank Jesus? What are the reasons that we sometimes forget? How do you keep from forgetting to thank God?

Notes

In this story we see Jesus breaking down barriers and also what it is to be thankful.

vs 11 Jesus traveling to tell of who He was leads him to all regions of Israel. Remember Samaritans and Jews do not get along. They worshipped the same God in two different places. The Jews felt the Samaritans had corrupted the true faith and were not true followers of God . (See Jesus conversation with a woman in John 4) Many Jews would add time to their journeys so as not to walk in Samaria. Jesus has already had dealing with them in Luke 9:51-ff and used one in a parable in 10:33.

vs 12- The leprosy would cause these who had it to stay outside of the city and to be noticeably different in appearance. They also were required to shout out unclean, unclean as a warning for people to stay away from them. (Lev. 13:45-46) That is why they stand at a distance away from Jesus.

vs 13- Their cry is for mercy and healing. In calling Jesus Master they recognize His power.

vs 14- Jesus does not touch them it appears, but this doesn't mean he is afraid. He has already touched one with leprosy in 5:12-13. His command to show themselves to the priests was following the biblical view of rejoining society. The priest would examine and pronounce one clean then you could join back into society. (Lev 14:3)

The healing doesn't take place till they are on their way.

vs 15-16 only one comes back. Note how he comes. Praising, shouting, Throwing himself at Jesus' feet, thankful. Reminds me of the sinful woman in 7:37- 48

Go back to vs 7-10 in yesterday's study. Do you get the attitude Jesus is trying to get us to see we should have towards Him? It's not about deserving anything, it is about being grateful for what Jesus has done!

vs 16 The big shocker- This one wasn't a Jew but a Samaritan!

vs 17-18 Jesus asks rhetorical questions to make a point. The one who would be least expected to offer thanks does so.

Where are the others that were healed? All should be thankful yet only this one comes back to show thanks! Do we thank God for what he has done or do we believe we deserve it?

vs 19- most commentaries believe there is more in Jesus' words than the idea of healing here. It is the understanding that the Samaritan has now of Jesus that has made him well spiritually as well as physically and given him faith. remember the disciples wanted to increase their faith in vs 17:5. Did Luke put this story here as a way to answer the disciples' question of how to increase their faith? Faith is understanding what God has done, is doing and will do in your life and being grateful for it! It is seeing God in control; not us, not circumstances, not enemies, not Satan!

May 2, 2010

Day 81

Luke 17:5–10 (NIV)

5 The apostles said to the Lord, “Increase our faith!” 6 He replied, “If you have faith as small as a mustard seed, you can say to this mulberry tree, ‘Be uprooted and planted in the sea,’ and it will obey you.

7 “Suppose one of you had a servant plowing or looking after the sheep. Would he say to the servant when he comes in from the field, ‘Come along now and sit down to eat’? 8 Would he not rather say, ‘Prepare my supper, get yourself ready and wait on me while I eat and drink; after that you may eat and drink’? 9 Would he thank the servant because he did what he was told to do? 10 So you also, when you have done everything you were told to do, should say, ‘We are unworthy servants; we have only done our duty.’ ”

Pray for God to show you something to use from the passage

Read the Passage

Who is in the passage?

What action verbs do you see?

What other words stick out in your mind

Questions

How does one go about increasing your faith?

What is Jesus’ point about being called “unworthy servants” ? How does that make you feel?

Do you expect God to reward you for what you do? Why is that a wrong attitude to have?

Notes

vs 5 Increasing of faith- it is a worthy desire. Are the asking for more faith to be able to do what Jesus says in vs 1-4? It seems more of an add on to me. As they think about what they need to do as disciples they also realize they need more faith. Jesus has told them as much (Luke 12:28) .

So the disciples almost see it as something that Jesus can just give them like you would give someone more money when they are running low. The disciples see it as something to be passed out by God.

Jesus in his answer doesn't really answer their plea directly.

vs 6 - even with a little faith you can do the impossible- The mulberry tree is a big tree with deep roots. To move it to the sea is a way for Jesus to shows what a little faith can do. - The disciples have already seen what faith can do when miracles are done. Even they have been able to do healings through faith. So why does Jesus answer them this way? Jesus is saying that faith is not something that is distributed out but rather it is something that comes from belief in God. It is already available to you. You have to recognize it. It is not up to Jesus to increase their faith they already have it if they will see it.

vs 7-10- the parable talks about a servant of an owner who doesn't have a lot of wealth. Therefore one servants takes care of the household task. From working the small field to feeding and waiting on his master.

Jesus' point is that the servant is doing what he is expected to do. Just because he works in the fields doesn't mean he isn't also suppose to wait on the master first. As a servant he takes care of the master's needs before his own. That is what is expected. And the master doesn't owe the servant anything, he isn't obligated to the servant for doing the expected tasks. In fact vs 10 states that it should not change the relationship of the servant to the master just because he does what he is suppose to.

So why does Jesus bring this up? Some say it is in response to the disciples asking for something from Jesus. That they do not have the right to ask anything from Him because He has already given them much and they should recognize their relationship with Him. To me that doesn't fit Jesus in how He looks at the disciples. He already has told them to seek, ask, knock (Luke11:9).

Is the parable a way to have the disciples not to get bigheaded about their position? I think that is in here. Is it based on the motive of why the disciples wanted their faith increased? Were the disciple asking with the wrong motivation, so they would be above others? I really don't see that either. Jesus isn't rebuking their question.

Rather in the parable maybe Jesus is answering the request of increasing our faith. Perhaps the way to increase faith has to do with understanding who you are in the order of things. Faith is already available. It takes recognizing that your faith comes from seeing who God is and what he can do. Faith is an expected part of a disciple that comes when you realize who you serve. It is not about something magical. Much like the Centurion in Luke 7:1-9 it is realizing what God already has given you the ability to do it in your everyday servant's life. The ability (the faith) isn't in improving you; its is in asking God, believing that He can.

Couple of thoughts- do we feel uncomfortable being called unworthy servants? What worth do I bring to God? Think of the prodigal son's attitude when he comes back. He would be grateful just to be a servant. We also should be grateful just to be a servant to the Almighty. (God gives us more but we shouldn't expect it. Remember )

Paul starts his letters and sees himself as this servant. If Paul sees himself as a servant who am I that I believe I have a right to be more than that to God?