Luke 7:1-10 · The Faith of the Centurion
An Army Officer Deeply Concerned
Luke 7:1-10
Sermon
by King Duncan
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There is a ridiculous story going around about a country church one Sunday morning, where the preacher gave an invitation to the altar. “Anyone who has a special need that you would like prayed over,” he said, “please come to the front.”

With that, a young man named Leroy got in line. When it was his turn, the preacher asked, “Leroy, what do you want me to pray about for you?”

Leroy replied, “Preacher, I need you to pray for help with my hearing.”

The preacher put one hand on Leroy’s ear, placed his other hand on top of Leroy’s head, and then prayed and prayed and prayed. He prayed up a “blue streak” for Leroy, as they say in the country, and the whole congregation joined in with great enthusiasm.

After a few minutes, the preacher removed his hands, stood back and asked, “Leroy, how is your hearing now?”

Leroy answered, “I don’t know. My hearing ain’t ’til Thursday.” (1)

It appears Leroy needed help with a different kind of hearing than his pastor thought he did. We’re in our series, When Good People Have Bad Times. Today’s story from scripture is drawn from Jesus’ ministry of healing.

It begins with a Roman centurion, an officer in the Roman army, who had a servant who was very dear to him. The servant was critically ill. The centurion was deeply concerned. He heard that Jesus was teaching nearby, so he sent some respected Jewish leaders who were his friends to plead earnestly with Jesus to come help his servant. 

The Jewish leaders did as they were asked. “If anyone deserves your help,” they said to Jesus, “it is this man for he loves the Jews and even paid personally to build us a synagogue.” Wouldn’t you love to have a man like this as a neighbor? He was caring toward his servant and generous to the local synagogue, even though he was not of that faith.

Jesus knew this was a special individual. He went immediately with these Jewish leaders to see what he could do. Just before arriving at the house, however, the centurion sent some friends to Jesus to say, “Sir, don’t inconvenience yourself by coming to my home, for I am not worthy of any such honor . . .”

Can you believe this man--compassionate, generous, and deeply humble as well? “Just speak a word from where you are,” he continued, “and my servant will be healed. I know because I am an officer. All I have to do is speak and my men obey. So just say, `Be healed!’ and my servant will be well again!” 

The Bible tells us Jesus was amazed. Turning to the crowd he said, “Never among all the Jews in Israel have I met a man with faith like this.”

Luke concludes this story with these words: “Then the men who had been sent returned to the house and found the servant well.”

In this story, it wasn’t the centurion who was the good person facing hard times, but his servant. However, can’t we surmise that the servant was a person of character as well? That’s why the centurion valued him so much. And so, when the servant became gravely ill, this caring man, a Roman centurion, sought to find help for him. He heard that Jesus could help his servant and so, even though he wasn’t Jewish, he sent some Jewish friends to ask Jesus for help.

This is important. Faith isn’t the special province of one particular people. There are good people, faithful people all over this world. This man was a Roman, yet he was a man of compassion, generosity, humility, faith. He was a good man. Did you realize that such people as this centurion exist even today? 

There was an article by Richard Marosi in the Los Angeles Times dated October 17, 2013 about the death of Sister Antonia Brenner at the age of 86. Several years ago Parade magazine did a full-fledged story on Sister Antonia’s amazing ministry.

Sister Antonia was born to Irish immigrant parents and grew up in Los Angeles. Her father grew wealthy running an office supply business, and the family counted Hollywood stars such as Cary Grant among their neighbors. Antonia married and raised four daughters and three sons, all the while becoming deeply involved in charity work.

In 1977, after her children were grown and two marriages had ended in divorce, Antonia did something quite amazing. She gave away her expensive clothes and belongings, left her Ventura apartment and moved to La Mesa penitentiary in Tijuana, Mexico. She had delivered donations in the past to the prison, each visit filling her with compassion. But now she threw herself completely into a new life of total service to the inmates of this less-than-desirable penitentiary.

Here is how Parade magazine described her work: Upon arrival at the penitentiary, each inmate is introduced to his overseers through a ceremony called grito, which is Spanish for “scream.” Alone, he is paraded between rows of guards and prison officials as he repeatedly calls out his name, his crime, the length of his sentence and his aliases.  Before being led to grito, however, the prisoner is briefed by a white haired, blue-eyed woman, known as “La Sister.”  This is Sister Antonia.

“Do not be frightened or embarrassed,” she says to them. “The Lord was a prisoner, just as you are a prisoner. You have something in common. Remember that when you go through grito.” 

Her words, a former inmate recalls, affected him deeply. “I’m not a religious man,” he says. “I’d spent two years in another prison before being transferred to La Mesa and had turned off all my feelings, turned off the world. But when she spoke--mister, she’s the most warm, caring person to walk the face of this earth. Her love changed the life of every prisoner she met.” (2) 

What a wonderful testimony to one woman’s life. Do you understand that there are caring people like Sister Antonia all over this globe? Some are married, some are single, some are divorced. They come from all walks of life, they speak every conceivable language. They are simply people who care about other people.

The famed writer Robert Louis Stevenson was such a person. Stevenson spent his last years in Samoa where his genuine appreciation for the Samoan people was reciprocated with love and admiration. When Stevenson died a group of Samoans who were very close to him bore his coffin to the place of interment on the mountain top.

A stranger appeared at the funeral, to which only close personal friends were invited. The man was a Scotchman who explained that, some years before, Stevenson had met him on the road on a day when the Scotchman was contemplating suicide. Stevenson talked him out of it. The man said he owed Stevenson his life.

The Samoan chiefs also counted themselves privileged to have known a man as compassionate as Robert Louis Stevenson. As a memorial, they tabooed the use of firearms on the hill of Stevenson’s grave, that the birds might sing there forever undisturbed. (3)  I don’t know about you, but it encourages me to know that a famous writer was also a man of kindness and love. Such people are found in every walk of life.

Paul M. Stevens in his book Gathered Gold tells about a Japanese magazine that had a picture of a butterfly on one of its pages. The butterfly was printed with special inks that appeared to be a dull gray until it was warmed by the touch of a hand. If you touched it with your hand, the chemicals in the ink would react and the dull gray would be transformed into a rainbow of colors. (4)

That butterfly is a metaphor for the power of love to heal human hearts. That love is lived out each and every day all over this world. We certainly see it in the Scriptures. The centurion sent for Jesus to heal his servant. Andrew heard Jesus preach and he ran to get his brother Peter. Four men removed tiles from the roof of a house where Jesus was speaking and lowered a man through the ceiling so that Jesus could touch him. Do you know people like that--people with that kind of concern, that kind of compassion? Hopefully you are that kind of person. There are many people like that still around in our world today. 

They will tell you that loving people is its own reward. That is the second thing we need to see. You will never get closer to heaven than when you help one of God’s children. “When you did it unto one of the least of these,” said Jesus, “you did it unto me.”

Oh, I am not saying that helping others builds up brownie points for us in heaven. We do not have a “works” theology. I am saying, however, that showing love to another human being has its own reward.

The late, great baseball manager Sparky Anderson discovered that. Between the fifth and sixth games of a World Series several years ago, a newspaper story told about Sparky’s devotion to a friend. Sparky was at that time manager of the Cincinnati Reds. Sparky had attempted to win the World Series twice before and failed, but winning it this time, the story said, was not nearly so important to him as it once had been. The reason for his changed outlook was a friend named Milton Blish, who lived in Southern California.

Sparky had discovered through a letter from a friend that Milton had cancer and was given about eight weeks to live. Every day during the play-offs and the World Series, Sparky Anderson called Milton to ask him how he was getting along, and to tell him he was thinking of him. To the reporter who was interviewing him, Sparky said, “Somehow, winning the world championship doesn’t have the intense attraction that it once had for me. Now I see what life means in a deeper dimension. Now I’ve somehow discovered what is really there. And win or lose, there’s a new peace in me.”

At a time when Sparky needed help, Milton had given Sparky a job. Sparky never forgot his kindness. Calling his friend day after day enabled Sparky Anderson to put his own life into perspective. (5)

One of the stellar things that Sparky Anderson did while he was manager of the Detroit Tigers was to found a charitable organization which helped provide care for seriously ill children whose parents did not have health insurance or the means to otherwise pay for the care. He continued to support and participate in the charity well into his retirement. He said founding that charity was the best thing he did while he was in Detroit. Showing love for other people and particularly those who cannot repay you is its own reward.

A faithful missionary was asked, “What pay do you receive for the hardships you undergo and the sacrifices you make, living and working among these people?”

The missionary took a note from his pocket, worn by much handling and read two sentences from it written by a Chinese student:  “But for you, I would not have known Jesus Christ our Savior. Every morning I kneel before God and think of you, thank God for you, and pray for you.”

“That,” said the missionary, “is my pay.” 

Helping another human being is the most rewarding experience life has to offer. It can almost be a purely selfish experience--we help because it makes us feel so good. 

There are still people around who know how to love other people. Some of them are in this congregation. They will tell you it has its own reward. 

But Christ tells us that kindness not only is its own reward, but that it is also our major responsibility as his followers. It is not enough to speak piously about God’s love, we are called to transmit that love through concrete acts to specific persons. 

Some years ago the readers of Charles Schultz’s Peanuts comic strip saw Snoopy shivering out in a snow storm beside an empty food dish. He was looking longingly, expectantly toward the house.

Lucy came out and said, “Go in peace, be warmed and filled!” And then she turned and went back into the house and slammed the door.

In the last frame you saw a confused Snoopy looking toward the house, shivering and hungry and utterly baffled.  (6)

In the third chapter of John’s first epistle we read these words paraphrased in the Living Bible:  “We know what real love is from Christ’s example in dying for us. And so we also ought to lay down our lives for our Christian brothers. But if someone who is supposed to be a Christian has money enough to live well and sees a brother in need, and won’t help him--how can God’s love be within him? Little children, let us stop just saying we love people, let us really love them, and show it by our actions.”

People loving people. That is what our faith is all about. Where there is hunger, bringing food. Where there is loneliness, bringing love. Where there is doubt and despair, bringing hope and assurance. Where there is conflict, bringing reconciliation. Why else do we exist? 

Of course people loving people happens because people first were loved by God. This Roman centurion was a good man with many good traits. But notice that even he felt unworthy in Jesus’ presence. No one ever cared for people like Jesus cared. But because he cared, we too must care. Because it is rewarding, yes, but also because it is our responsibility as followers of the man from Nazareth. 

This is Memorial Day weekend when we remember those who have given their lives in service to their country. A pastor, Scott Knowlton, has an ex-brother-in-law who served 24½ years in the Marine Corps.  One day Scott saw a post on this Marine’s Facebook page.  Here is what he had written: “Some may ask ‘What Is A Veteran,’ so here is the definition: A ‘Veteran’--whether active duty, discharged, retired or reserve--is someone who, at one point in their lives, wrote a blank check made payable to ‘The United States of America,’ for an amount up to and including their life. As we remember those who have come before us, and those who will come after. We will always write that check for freedom.” (7)

Christ also wrote a blank check payable to us. It was written with his own life. He cared that much. Now he calls us to care. There are still good people, caring people, compassionate people around this world. How about if we join their company?


1. Contributed. Source unknown

2 (1-19-86. pp. 14-15). 

3. Contributed. Source unknown.

4. (Waco: Word Books, Brown Spots edition, 1975)

5. Bill J. Vamos, The Life That Listens (Waco:  Word Books, 1980). 

6. Contributed. Source unknown.

7. http://scottknowlton.wordpress.com/sermons/mark-1238-44-widows-mite-beware-of-religious-people-adoration-manipulation-salvation-free-written-sermon/.

Dy, Dynamic Preaching Sermons Second Quarter 2016, by King Duncan