Our Gospel today is brief, merely four verses. And yet, with so few words, Matthew can tell us so much about who Jesus is and the way we ought to relate to Him. The leper (who we know nothing about), shows us in one line the proper posture we should have in prayer. Let’s look closely at what he says to Jesus.

First, the leper addresses Jesus as, “Lord.” In the Greek, Lord is Kyrios. In Hebrew, Adonai. Adonai is the spoken word used when the Jewish people wish to refer to God’s most sacred name, the unutterable YHWH as it appears in Scripture. To call Jesus Lord, Kyrios, Adonai, is to say that Jesus is God. In this single word of faith, the leper is announcing who Jesus is.

“If you wish,” follows the leper’s initial statement of faith. Something we have tried to teach our children is that when it comes to sharing, “The giver chooses when to share.” The person who desires the toy, book, turn, etc. is the one who has to wait. The giver, the one relinquishing the object in question, gets to decide when it is time to share. Now of course, we do insist that the giver be reasonable and not claim their turn will be over tomorrow. But to bring it back to the leper and Jesus, the leper is not demanding that Jesus heal him. He places the timing in Jesus’ hands. “If you wish” – at some point, someday, perhaps today, or perhaps not. It is Jesus’ choice.

“You can make me clean.” The leper has complete confidence in Jesus’ ability to heal him. While still showing deference to Jesus’ authority and will, the leper still boldly states what he most desires from Jesus. Jesus wants us to be bold in our requests. Jesus tells us to “knock and the door will be opened to you” (Matthew 7:7). If we do not muster the courage to knock, we won’t know what Jesus is waiting to give us behind the door of our desire. 

We believe in a God of the impossible. Scripture is full of stories where God shows up and does the impossible. Jesus, in His very person as the Incarnation, is seemingly the impossible. But with God, all things are possible. Why try to limit Him with small requests. Be bold and brave in your prayers, just like the leper. At the same time, remember who you are asking these things of. God, the giver of all good, knows exactly what you need when you need it and He will not withhold it from you. We have to trust His goodness and timing with the same level of boldness that we ask things of Him.

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