Sermon Notes October 8, 2017 Gratefulness Brian Walton. (slide of individual) This is Jody Mitic. You might recognize him. He

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1 Sermon Notes October 8, 2017 Gratefulness Brian Walton (slide of individual) This is Jody Mitic. You might recognize him. He was a sniper with the Canadian Armed Forces. He went to Afghanistan, twice. He loved the camaraderie of being with a group of people who had a common mission. He liked the sense of adventure and, in some way, he felt he was doing his part to make the world a better place by routing out the Taliban. This is Jody Mitic. (slide of amputee) You might recognize him. He brought the torch from Afghanistan to Canada to initiate the recently held Invictus Games. He qualified for the honour by losing his two legs. He was well into his second tour of duty, out on a night patrol when he and his men were clearing an area of Taliban. They were covering each other and moving slowly through a series of fences. One soldier would go first, and then another, each covering the other lest they find combatants. He stepped forward to lead the way into the next yard and stepped on a land mine. This is Jody Mitic. (slide from Amazing Race) You might recognize him. He races cars, he writes books, he was elected to the Ottawa city

2 council, he participated in the Amazing Race Canada. He married the medic that treated him and together they created two daughters. I don t know if I would like Jody. He seems to have the kind of aggressive energy that makes me uncomfortable; but I admire him. Who wouldn t admire someone with the grit and determination to come back from hell, from the blinding light of a life shattering explosion, to rebuild, to contribute to community, to create and love a family. What intrigues me most about Jody is a comment he made toward the end of his profile on the W5 program about the Invictus games. He said, Thinking of my wife Allanah, and the girls, and how much of that wouldn t be if I hadn t stepped on the landmine. The Afghan experience was one of great loss and great gain at the same time, but I wouldn t trade it. I salute his grit, I envy his courage, I celebrate the love he has found, but I am stopped by his comment, I wouldn t trade it. That sounds like gratefulness. Despite the explosion, the rehab, the pain and the ongoing mobility challenges he lives with gratefulness. David Steindl-Rast is a Benedictine monk. (slide of monk) He spends six months of each year in his community living a simple life and maintaining the daily prayer practices of his order. He spends the other six months on speaking tours talking about God, Life and Gratefulness. I

3 recently watched a YouTube video in which Brother David made this comment, (slide of comment) You can t be grateful for every moment, but you can be grateful in every moment. He helped me understand Jody Mitic. I doubt if Jody is grateful for the moment of the explosion or for the daily challenge of living without limbs, but it appears he has chosen to be grateful in each moment inhaling the morning air, hugging his daughter, straining in the gym perhaps because he lives gratefully in each moment, he is able to say I wouldn t trade it. (slide goes to black) There are so many insights which arise from Jesus encounter with the lepers. Consider the devastating disease of leprosy and its impact on ancient people. Leprosy could be understood as punishment from God, was thought to be highly contagious and, therefore, led to the ostracizing of its sufferers. Ironically, leprosy created community among its outcasts. Rich and poor, Jew and Samaritan, suffered the same pain and indignity. In today s lesson, we discover a mini-community of lepers travelling together and approaching Jesus. They appeal to him: Master have mercy on us. We don t know whether they hoped for food or money or simply acceptance but Jesus discerns their deepest need is to be made well. There are no special effects in this miracle story, he simply tells them to go and show themselves to the priest and lo and behold, on their way, they

4 are healed. Their open sores close, the white patches on their skin return to normal, rotting flesh is made new. Talk about something to be thankful for! yet, nine of the ten disappear, they carry on beyond the story, they return to living their life. One of them, seemingly the only foreigner in the group, a Samaritan, returns from the roadside miracle to give thanks to Jesus. At first read, the moral of the story seems too obvious. It is good to give thanks, especially when you get your life back. When my daughter had a bout of serious illness corrected by an attentive and effective physician I was indescribably grateful I became emotional every time I saw the doctor in the hallway. I wanted to say thanks. Nine lepers did not return to say thanks, but when the tenth does, we affirm his decision. Even Jesus questions, Were not ten made clean? Where are the other nine? Yet, the scholars suggest that the most important words of Jesus rest in the last line, your faith has made you well. Earlier in the passage Jesus tells the lepers they shall be clean. Later the narrator of the story says that they were healed. Yet here, in the final verse, Jesus says the tenth leper has been made well The ancient Greek word well implies so much more than simple healing, it implies wholeness your faith has made you whole; your gratitude begins a new

5 way of living in the world. While his comrades return to their world, the tenth leper returns to Jesus and begins a life marked by gratefulness. He wants to dwell fully in this God-given moment. When we encourage our children or grandchildren to say thank you they normally acquiesce with a perfunctory thank you but when our daughter wrote to us expressing thanks for having supported her in her illness both she and we knew that we had stood in the midst of something holy, that all our lives should now be marked by gratefulness. We can t be grateful for every moment of struggle and fear, of pain and disappointment; but, we can be grateful in every moment for the life that is before us. Nancy, a woman living with multiple sclerosis, tells how she prayed for healing after her diagnosis. Now she reflects: My MS wasn t healed but I was made whole as the scattered fragments of my life settled into a single experience of living as fully as possible each day. Now I wake up grateful for each morning. Rose, a woman of Navajo ancestry went through her tribes Nakkai ceremony. She explains, It is called a healing ceremony, not because I am healed of cancer but because now I see the wholeness of my life, and for this I am grateful. Brother David explains that to live a grateful life (final slide repeat of saying not grateful for but grateful in) we must first stop and see, before

6 we go. Nine who lived with leprosy kept going. It is so tempting to keep going through life one day after another; to push through struggles hoping we get to the other side; to consume the good moments with epicurean delight; it is so tempting to keep on keeping on that when advancing age finally stops us we wonder where it all went. One who lived with leprosy stopped, turned around, seized the moment, met Jesus, lived gratitude, was made whole. Brother David suggests that it is when we stop and fully experience the possibility of each moment that we live with gratefulness. When we live gratefulness into each moment life is richer, deeper, sustaining - we see the brilliant orange of the leaf, taste the hint of nutmeg in the pie, feel the warmth of those gathered around our table. When we live with gratitude for each moment, we too might say, I wouldn t trade it for anything.