Luke 7:1-10 · The Faith of the Centurion
Amazing Faith
Luke 7:1-10
Sermon
by Arley K. Fadness
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Twice in Jesus' ministry, Jesus is flabbergasted.

Once, in Mark 6:6, after Jesus is rejected in Nazareth, his own hometown, he is dumbfounded — stunned — at their unbelief! To­day in Luke 7, Jesus is astonished again, this time by just the oppo­site — he is flabbergasted at a Roman centurion's amazing faith. Jesus turns to the crowd following him and says, "I tell you, not even in Israel have I found such faith!" (v. 9).

Who is this man of such faith who causes Jesus to stop in his tracks and marvel? We learn he is a Roman soldier, a centurion, in charge of 100 soldiers. He is a foreigner, a Gentile, a non-Israelite. He has a slave who is ill. He approaches Jesus for healing. Despite his protestations of worthiness, his Jewish friends know he is a noble man. He is humble. He loves his slave. He respects the Jew­ish people and their faith so much that he builds a synagogue for them. He does not consider himself even worthy for Jesus to come and enter his home or worthy enough to approach Jesus directly.

But the centurion's insight into Jesus is even more remarkable. He perceives that Jesus, like himself, is a man under authority. Just as a centurion can command soldiers and slaves because of an au­thority derived from elsewhere, so Jesus has an authority derived from elsewhere. Because of this authority, Jesus can simply say a word and the centurion's slave will be healed. Such depth of in­sight — such faith — Jesus had not encountered even among his own people.

Walter Wangerin Jr., author, poet, columnist, and Lutheran pas­tor, received a letter in the mail with a single question in it. It was written with a purple felt-tipped pen and it asked this question: "Dear Walt, how can I find faith? Karen." Have you ever wondered, how is it that some have faith and some do not? Ever struggled within yourself when you waver from faith to unbelief, from unbelief to faith? You feel like Karen, "Dear Walt, how can I find faith?" One can go to the university and ask a professor. "Teacher, how can I find faith?"1

"Well Karen, sit in my classroom and I will explain faith. Faith is notitia, assensus, and fiducia."

"Huh? I'm not sure I get it."

"Let me explain:

* Notitia is basic knowledge. The word "notice" comes from notitia. Faith assumes some basic "noticing" of objective knowledge. Faith does not begin with emotion, though emotion may color the experience. Knowledge brings to mind an awareness of sin and of grace and of forgiveness.

* Assensus is agreement, affirmation, ascent. We ratify, approve, and confirm the gift of faith.

* Fiducia suggests estates, bequests, trusts. One may have notitia and assensus but without receiving an inheritance from beyond oneself faith would be incomplete.

So Karen, faith involves notitia, assensus, and fiducia."

Jim Henderson, in his book, Jim and Casper Go to Church, believes the clue to finding faith is not to simply define the faith nor to defend the faith but to "defend the space" — that is, the space for dialogue instead of engaging in debate between believers and nonbelievers. Jim Henderson, a longtime Christian, sets out on a quest to find out how non-Christian guests might interpret what they hear and see at a Christian worship service. He hires atheist Matt Casper to visit twelve prominent churches in America with him and then to talk honestly about observations, feelings, and opinions. The "space" is the relationship and time where authentic listening and frank talk may respectfully occur.

Jim discovers through the experience with his friend, Casper, that many well-meaning Christian communities come off arrogant, having all the answers, displaying dogmatic certitude, appear slick and distant from what Jesus really expects of his followers in the kingdom of God. Jim champions "defending the space" between seekers, atheists, agonistics, searchers, and authentic Christians. Jim learns that Casper, the atheist, who loves the teachings of Jesus as well as Buddha, Teddy Roosevelt, and others, functions on his own developed high moral ground with a hope and vision for the future. His ethics are based in nature and nurture and not necessar­ily the Bible or any Christian apologetics.2

In his best seller, Blue Like Jazz: Nonreligious Thoughts on Christian Spirituality, Donald Miller sees finding faith beginning with confession. Donald Miller, whose problem is with Christian­ity, at least how it's often practiced, tells about setting up a confes­sional on the campus of Reed College. People who enter the con­fession booth intending to recall and admit their sins, but before they could begin, a Christian would begin apologizing to them for all the sins the church had committed against them. This surprising action caught people completely off guard and instigated a whole new kind of relationship between a Christian and a person consid­ered lost.

Telling someone, "I'm sorry for the way Christians have misrepresented Christ," always surprises non-Christians. Frankly, most non-Christians have learned to see Christians as arrogant and unconcerned about their opinions ... "defending the space" means we practice apologizing to non-Christians for the sins Christians have committed against them. We simply say something like, "I'm sorry that we've failed: that really doesn't look much like Jesus, does it?"3

For some faith is perceived as a rational choice. By my will I choose to believe. I choose God. For others faith is totally unrational. Paul Scherer once said, "Faith is more like courtship than the court­room." Faith is like falling in love. One doesn't choose faith, one is wooed by God's love. We respond back with faith and trust in our lover God.

Falling in faith, acknowledges the dead human will, for as Martin Luther taught, our wills are in bondage to sin and we can­not free ourselves apart from the work and activity of the Holy Spirit. Faith is not trying but trusting.

Finding faith is worth the hunt. There are three activities faith accomplishes: Faith heals, faith saves, and faith works.

Faith Heals

After Jesus says, "I tell you, not even in Israel have I found such faith," Luke records in verse 10, "When those who had been sent returned to the house, they found the slave in good health."

One day a young newlywed came to my office at the church. She was ill physically, emotionally, and spiritually. She shared her dilemma and after a while I introduced her to our ritual of confes­sion and forgiveness. She confessed, we prayed, and she went home.

Her father asked me later what happened. His daughter is now well and functioning beautifully, whereas before, her parents were worried sick about her welfare and her future. Faith heals.

Faith Saves

My then 88-year-old dad wrote a sermon titled "Saved." I found the sermon, probably never delivered, in his papers after he died. He was not a preacher. He was a farmer with an eighth-grade edu­cation. Dad told in his sermon about a Native American who was lost in a blizzard in northeastern South Dakota where Dad lived. With the swirling, whirling snow and frigid weather, the traveler apparently got disoriented, because in the spring they found his body only a few feet away from safety. The man had been turned away from a white settler's cabin. For my dad, this illustrated, "al­most saved but lost." Then there was another blizzard and Dad's older sister, Marmien, was at the school, and the students started out for home, but realized they could never make it. However, they found refuge in a neighbor's house, and were saved, and Dad told this story to illustrate "almost lost but saved."

Saved meant for Dad and his "congregation" that by the life, death, and resurrection of Jesus we are saved. Baptism is our con­nection in which we are grafted into that new life in Christ.

Sir James Simpson, discoverer of chloroform, was asked, "What do you regard as your greatest discovery?"

Up to that time it had been claimed that the discovery of the use of chloroform saved more people from pain than any other single medical discovery. The interviewer expected Simpson to say, "My discovery of chloroform."

Simpson answered, "My greatest discovery was when I dis­covered Jesus Christ is my Savior."

Faith Works

Faith is action. James 2:17 says it simply, "So faith by itself, if it has no works, is dead." Jesus perceived that the Roman centurion's faith was alive — for he loves his slave, he loves the Jewish people, he builds a synagogue, he trusts Jesus for healing, and he is humble beyond a fault. Just as a rose cannot help but bloom, and an oak tree produce acorns, so an alive faith cannot but help overflow in love, mercy, and justice.

Faith is never an arrogant dogmatic certitude. Faith is always a sure confidence in the midst of uncertainty.

Sweeping across Germany at the end of World War II, Allied forces searched farms and houses looking for snipers. At one aban­doned house, almost a heap of rubble, searchers with flashlights found their way to the basement. There, on the crumbling wall, a victim of the Holocaust had scratched a Star of David. And be­neath it, in rough lettering, this message:

I believe in the Sun — even when it does not shine.
I believe in love — even when it is not shown.
I believe in God — even when he does not speak.
4

Faith always believes in the future.

A young lady on a cruise ship kept glancing at an attractive young man. The young man could not help but notice her attention and was intrigued. Finally he mustered up the courage to approach her. "Pardon me," he said. "It may be my imagination, but I could not help but notice that you keep looking in my direction. Do I know you? Is there something?"

She blushed and said shyly, "Oh no, it's just that I can't help notice how much you resemble my first husband."

The young man looked puzzled and asked, "How many times have you been married?"

She gave a flirtatious smile and answered, "Oh, I haven't been yet."5

Walt's short answer to Karen's question, "How can I get faith?" is this:

Oh, Karen, this is how I answer you, though I tremble at the pain that goes before your peace. I say the love of God is all around you, even now. Faith is your fi­nally falling upon that love, and your knowing who it was that caught you.6

Amen.


1. Walt Wangerin Jr., The Lutheran (Augsburg Fortress, November 2, 1988), p. 5.

2. Jim Henderson and Matt Casper, Jim and Casper Go to Church (New York: Barna, an imprint of Tyndale House Publishers, Inc., 2007), p. 24.

3. Rapid City Journal, Rapid City, Iowa, Associated Press article, January 19, 2008, p. C6.

4. Source unknown.

5. Source unknown.

6. Op cit, Wangerin.

CSS Publishing Company, Sermons for Sundays after Pentecost (First Third): Veni, Spiritus Sanctus, Veni, by Arley K. Fadness