Sunday, October 12, 2025

 

28th Sunday in Ordinary Time
(2 Kings 5:14-17; 2 Timothy 2:8-13; Luke 17:11-19)

Many Americans recognize today’s Gospel because it is read at Mass on Thanksgiving Day. It reveals the natural desire of the human heart to give thanks to those who have done good to us. It also shows God’s expectation that His people express gratitude to Him. Let us first reflect on gratitude as the foundation of our thankfulness toward our benefactors.  Then we shall look at today’s readings for examples of this virtue

Gratitude is both an emotion and a virtue. We feel it most deeply when someone helps us out of goodwill, not obligation. Each of us has our own story of having been helped by someone who didn’t even know us. A man once told how he was stranded in a distant city when his car broke down on the night before Thanksgiving. By chance, he met an African-American mechanic. The man opened his shop early the next morning to repair the traveler’s car and charged him only for parts.

Like love, gratitude is also a virtue. It is a way of life shaped by our choice to be thankful and also by constant practice. It has been called “the foundation of the moral life” because it acknowledges a world of grace. In an act of faith, we recognize that God has given us life and everything we have. When we choose to respond to our Provider with words and actions giving thanks, we practice gratitude. By repeating this positive response whenever good is done to us, we develop the virtue to become kind, gracious, and loving people.

Yet it is possible to reject the goodness of others. Some people believe that everything they have has come solely from their own efforts. If they have ever received anything from others, they think it was owed to them. In an episode of The Simpsons, Bart is asked to say grace before a meal. He says something like, “Dear God, thanks for nothing; we paid for everything on this table.” We laugh because we recognize how absurd Bart’s words are.

Gratitude does not always come naturally. Some suffer so much in life that pain overwhelms any thankfulness. How can those with Huntington’s disease—an illness that attacks the brain and leaves its victims completely incapacitated in a short time—see God as good? How can the family of a child murdered in a random act of violence say “thank you” to God? Especially for them, gratitude is a conscious choice—an act of faith that affirms St. Paul’s teaching in Romans: “We know that all things work for good for those who love God.”

Memory also nourishes gratitude. Sometimes, after many years, we recall the kindness others have shown us. It may cause us to feel sorrow that they are no longer with us to receive our thanks.

With this background, let us examine today’s readings. In the first, the Syrian general acknowledges that the Lord God has healed him of leprosy. It is instructive that the prophet refuses the general’s gift. Elisha clearly wants to show that God acts freely, not out of obligation or for payment. In the second reading, it is the memory of Christ’s death and resurrection that moves St. Paul to respond with gratitude. Even though he suffers “to the point of chains,” he gives thanks to God for knowing Timothy. Finally, in the Gospel, the Samaritan leper returns to Jesus to show his gratitude as soon as he realizes he has been healed. Jesus expects all the healed to return with the same gratitude. He does not need their thanks, but such gratitude would mean that they have become people of virtue. Then Jesus could say to them, as he says to the Samaritan: “Your faith has saved you.”

Even the secular world recognizes the value of thanksgiving. Canadians celebrate their Thanksgiving tomorrow, and Americans next month. We Catholics give thanks to God every time we celebrate the Eucharist. May we, with the help of grace, be transformed into people of deep gratitude, ready to recognize every act of goodness that comes our way.