2 Kings 5:1-3, 7-15c
Psalm 111
2 Timothy 2:8-15
Luke 17:11-19
Sermon by Pastor Joel
How many times a day do we say thank you? To the barista, the driver who lets us merge, the friend who passes the salt. We say it automatically, as a kind of social oil to keep things running smoothly. But how often do we really think about those words — their meaning, their power to connect, to heal, to change us?
In the Gospel story today, ten people with leprosy are healed by Jesus. They are outcasts — physically ill, socially excluded, spiritually branded as unclean. Jesus sends them off to show themselves to the priests, and as they go, they are made clean. But only one comes back — a Samaritan — to give thanks. He falls at Jesus’ feet, praising God with a loud voice. And Jesus asks, “Were not ten made clean? But the other nine — where are they?” Then to the one, he says: “Get up and go on your way; your faith has made you well.”
Notice that word — well. Not just healed, not just clean — well. It’s as if Jesus is saying that gratitude completes the healing. The returning leper doesn’t just receive the gift; he enters into relationship with the giver. His gratitude turns his healing into community, his restoration into connection.
The Gospel points us beyond individual healing toward mutual aid — the web of care that binds people together. Mutual aid is not charity; it’s a shared recognition that my wellbeing is tied to yours. It’s what happens when we feed the hungry and they, in turn, remind us of our abundance. It’s what happens when we check on a neighbour, when we offer help and receive help in return, when we realize we are not whole until all are made whole.
The ten lepers in this story form a small community of the suffering. But once they are healed, nine go off — perhaps back to their lives, their families, their plans. Only one returns, crossing the boundary again, not because he owes a debt, but because he recognizes something deeper: gratitude is not complete until it moves outward, until it becomes an act of relationship and solidarity.
In this way, thanksgiving becomes an act of mutual aid. To give thanks is to recognize that we belong to one another — that the gift of life is shared, not purchased. Gratitude makes us part of something larger than ourselves.
The Globe and Mail had a piece this weekend on the importance of Mutual Aid—this idea that community is better than isolation. Modern research has consistently confirmed that the single most scientifically supported secret to happiness is social ties. The article suggested that real change doesn’t need to be a massive project. The Bible says where 2 or 3 are gathered God will be there. It can start with making sandwiches, or cleaning a park, or welding a railing.
When we treat thanksgiving as a holiday rather than a habit, it becomes empty. When gratitude has no movement toward action and social connection, it loses its strength. The one leper who returned didn’t just say thank you; he moved his body toward relationship. His thanksgiving was mutual — it restored connection between himself and God, between the healed and the healer.
True thanksgiving always spills over. It changes how we live. When we give thanks in word and deed, we build up the kind of community where everyone can flourish — where mutual aid becomes a natural expression of gratitude.
Think of the mutual aid we are a part of as a church: the volunteers at the food bank who share their time and compassion, the neighbour who quietly brings soup to someone who’s unwell, the friend who offers a listening ear. In every act of shared care, thanksgiving is made visible. It’s no longer a polite word but a living practice.
The people who are most generous — in spirit and in resources — are often those who see gratitude not as a feeling but as a way of life. They know what it is to depend on others and to be depended upon. They live out mutual aid not as a duty but as a joy.
Let’s be honest: gratitude can feel impossible when life is painful — when the diagnosis comes, when the job is lost, when grief is raw. But even then, thanksgiving has power. It reminds us that we are not alone, that we are still part of a network of care. Mutual aid — the simple acts of being there for one another — keeps the light from going out. And sometimes, that’s enough.
I’ve sat with people in their more painful moments, and I’ve seen this truth over and over: those who manage to find something, even a small thing, to be thankful for — a kind word, a shared meal, a memory of love — are often the ones who are the most resilient. They are the ones who, like the Samaritan, return again and again to the source of hope.
So this Thanksgiving, let’s not only count our blessings; let’s share them. Let’s see gratitude not as a ritual, but as a movement toward one another — a kind of sacred mutual aid. Let’s give thanks not just with words, but with acts of kindness that ripple out into a world hungry for connection.
The one who returned shows us that gratitude is not a moment, but a way of being. It heals us by turning us outward. It builds community where there was isolation. It makes us — all of us — well.
And so, let us rise, as Jesus said, and go on our way — thankful, generous, connected — our faith making us whole.
Amen