Twenty-eighth Sunday of Ordinary Time 2025 Franciscan Gospel Reflection

Sister JulieAnn Sheahan

October 08, 2025

Franciscan Friar Fr. Paul Gallagher reflects on the Gospel readings for the Twenty-eighth Sunday of Ordinary Time. Have you ever been the outsider? What do you remember about that experience?

The content is edited by Franciscan Sister of Christian Charity Sister Anne Marie Lom and Joe Thiel. The excerpts from the Sunday readings are prepared by Joe Thiel. To read or download the complete pdf with excerpts for your prayer, please click here: Franciscan Gospel Reflection October 12 2025. Excerpts are from the Lectionary for Mass for Use in the Dioceses of the United States of America, second typical edition © 2001, 1998, 1997, 1986, 1970 Confraternity of Christian Doctrine, Inc., Washington, DC. Used with permission. All rights reserved. No portion of this text may be reproduced by any means without permission in writing from the copyright owner. Photo:Cadetgray, CC BY-SA 3.0 <https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/3.0>, via Wikimedia Commons; public domain, Wikimedia Commons

Luke 17:11-19

As Jesus continued his journey to Jerusalem, he traveled through Samaria and Galilee. As he was entering a village, ten lepers met him. They stood at a distance from him and raised their voices, saying, “Jesus, Master! Have pity on us!” And when he saw them, he said, “Go show yourselves to the priests.” As they were going they were cleansed. And one of them, realizing he had been healed, returned, glorifying God in a loud voice; and he fell at the feet of Jesus and thanked him. He was a Samaritan. Jesus said in reply, “Ten were cleansed, were they not? Where are the other nine? Has none but this foreigner returned to give thanks to God?” Then he said to him, “Stand up and go; your faith has saved you.”

Background:

In the Gospel from last week, the disciples asked for greater faith. In response, Jesus told a parable that likened faith to the smallest of seeds, the mustard seed. Today’s Gospel follows last week’s text, and it continues to focus on faith–the faith of ten lepers.

The Babylonian Exile (587-537 B.C.) was a very difficult time for the Hebrew people. They were forced to leave their homeland, their places of worship, and especially their temple in Jerusalem. They wondered why God who had freed them from slavery, led them through the desert, helped them defeat their enemies, and helped them become a nation, would now let them become captives to the Babylonians. Ezra, a Hebrew priest, believed God had turned his face from them because they had not kept themselves pure. He blamed their captivity on the fact that some had taken non-Jewish women as wives. In doing so, the boundary between God’s holy people and the rest of humanity had been broken. He believed that in order to regain God’s favor, they needed to reestablish that boundary and maintain purity. As part of the effort to regain their purity as a nation, he advocated that non-Jewish women and their heirs be expelled from their community. Those who were expelled and their descendants were the Samaritans.

The Hebrew people, influenced by Ezra and others who adopted his reasoning, became very concerned with maintaining proper boundaries as a way to maintain ritual purity. The traditions that dealt with social, physical, and personal boundaries took on more importance. For example, the involuntary discharges of body fluids became a breach of the natural boundary of one’s body. The leprosy referred to in this passage was not what we know of today as Hansen’s disease, but a skin condition that left the skin flaky or scaly. It was repulsive because the flakes would get on clothing, etc. The flaking broke the boundary of the body of the human person. A group of lepers might include both Hebrews and Samaritans, because both had been excluded from God’s people. Those infected forfeited all privileges and status. The law forbade them to enter cities and participate in the normal activities of life.

Jesus’ ministry, especially in Luke’s Gospel, challenges the clear boundary between the pure and holy people of God and those who were not. Luke often portrays Jesus reaching across those boundaries to people in ways that challenge the clear distinctions of the day. Luke knew he was challenging his audience by including these texts in his Gospel.

When Jesus encounters these lepers, they keep the appropriate distance and call to him as “Master.” Master was the term only the disciples used for Jesus. Without normal relationships with others, begging was the lepers’ way of survival.  Here, the begging lepers do not request alms, but mercy. In this culture, everyone would recognize that the lepers are asking Jesus to give them what is owed to them, to meet his interpersonal obligation. Jesus had already confronted the strict boundaries between the people and the blind, the lame, and sinners. The lepers were saying that Jesus owed them the same kind of consideration. They were also owed what every other Jew of the day is owed, the right to participate in the religious rituals.

For his part, Jesus acknowledges their relationship to him and their relationship to every other Jew of the day. He sends them to the Jewish priests. Priests are the ones who can verify that a cure has taken place and can allow the person to re-enter normal relations within the community. The ten lepers apparently leave without seeing any change in their condition, and they have to trust in Jesus’ instruction.

The one who returns is known as a Samaritan, something that did not matter when he was a leper. He, like the others, has acted on faith; trusting that by following Jesus’ instruction, the request would be fulfilled. However, unlike the others, he is a Samaritan and an outcast. He would not be permitted to enter the temple in Jerusalem to make the appropriate offering in thanks for the cure that has taken place. So, instead, he returns to Jesus to express thanks to the agent of God through whom the healing has taken place. But there is also the fact that in expressing his thanks, the Samaritan is completing his obligation to repay Jesus. Usually, one waited for an opportunity to repay a good deed with another good deed, such as when the other was in need. However, the Samaritan knows that there will be no other opportunity. It is highly unlikely that he will ever encounter Jesus again. Jesus’ response to him states that his faith has not only cured him, but has also saved him.

Those who are witnessing this event know Jesus’ point. This Samaritan is no better or worse a person than the other nine. They were all the same. They were all lepers. Being cured of their illness has not changed who they really are. The others are now free to join the religious practices of the community and be included among God’s chosen people. The Samaritan is still officially excluded, and is seen as unworthy to be counted among God’s chosen. But Jesus’ last statement to him states what all who saw it or heard the story know in their hearts. God, who in his mercy was present to him as a leper, is also present to him as a Samaritan.

Discussion Questions:

  1. Have you ever been the outsider? What do you remember about that experience?
  2. Are there people who would not be received well in your congregation on Sunday morning?
  3. Samaritans and Jews who were leprous could live together because they were both outcasts. Where are the places in your community where unlikely groups of people can come together?
  4. Do you know people who are particularly good at looking past boundaries?
  5. What do you think happened as the ten left Jesus and one knew he could not show himself to the priest in Jerusalem?
  6. The disciples had asked that their faith be strengthened. After Jesus’ interaction with the Samaritan leper, he tells him that his faith has saved him. What does this statement say to you?
  7. Do you also know people who seem to foster a spirit of gratitude in their life? What impact does that have on them?
  8. When have you experienced a deep sense of gratitude? How did that get expressed by you?
  9. Can you take some time to talk with God honestly about whatever it is that seems most important to you in this Gospel text?

 

 

Article Comments:

Sister Anne Marie Lom 10/10/2025 @ 11:45 am

“The ten lepers apparently leave without seeing any change in their condition, and they have to trust in Jesus’ instruction.”
As I read this particular sentence, I was made aware of how important the virtue of faith is. The lepers left without seeing a change. The change happened as they went on their way. I was also reflecting on how often I have to have faith, how often I have to walk away be- leaving that the Lord will accomplish something within me, within another, or within a situation. That gift of faith is so important and in this coming week I hope to be more aware of the need of faith in my life.

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