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Ten lepers, seeing Jesus, "raised their voices and said, “Jesus, Master, have mercy on us!” Jesus healed all ten, telling them to, "Go, show yourselves to the priests." All left, but only one eventually returned, prompting Jesus to say: “Were not ten cleansed? Where are the other nine? Has no one returned to praise God except this ...
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According to the Gospel of Matthew, when Jesus Christ came down from the mountain after the Sermon on the Mount, large multitudes followed him.A man full of leprosy came and knelt before him and inquired him saying, "Lord, if you are willing, you can make me clean."
Luke 17 is the seventeenth chapter of the Gospel of Luke in the New Testament of the Christian Bible.It records "some sayings of Jesus" [1] and the healing of ten lepers. [2] The book containing this chapter is anonymous, but early Christian tradition uniformly affirmed that Luke the Evangelist composed this Gospel as well as the Acts of the Apostles.
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According to local tradition, lepers would first be blessed by the priest of St Nicholas' Church, which is in Codsall, before making their way to the Leper Well to bathe. It has been speculated that a nearby farmhouse, which bears the name "Leper House", could have been the site of a leprosy hospital.
In medieval Latin, a place for the isolation and care of lepers was known as a leprosaria, leprosarium, or leprosorium, names which are sometimes used in English as well. [2] The Latin domus leprosaria was calqued in English as leper house , [ 3 ] with leper colony becoming by far the most common English term in the 1880s as the growing number ...
The events in this verse are paralleled in Mark 1:41, [1] with the notable change that Mark has Jesus acting because he pitied the leper. Matthew removes the emotional motivation, throughout his gospel Jesus' emotions are only rarely mentioned, reducing the references to the humanity of Jesus.