Luke 7:1-10 · The Faith of the Centurion
Keys That Unlock Miracles
Luke 7:1-10
Sermon
by King Duncan
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H. L. Mencken was for a long time the editor of the American Mercury magazine. One day he startled his employees by suddenly shouting, “It’s coming in the doors!” Everyone stopped what they were doing and looked at their boss.

“It’s up to the bottom of the desk!” Mencken continued, “It’s up to the seats of our chairs.”

“What are you talking about?” asked one of his confused colleagues.

“It’s all around us. Now, it’s to the top of our desks,” shouted Mencken as he jumped to the top of his desk.

“What do you mean?” inquired the newsroom staff.

“Mediocrity. We’re drowning in mediocrity!” Mencken shouted as he jumped from his desk and exited, never to return. (1)

I know how he felt. We live in a time of moral and spiritual mediocrity. All around us are mediocre institutions and mediocre leaders and often we lead mediocre lives ourselves.

So did many characters in the Bible. There are few shining heroes in the scriptures. The Bible is honest in its portrayal of human nature all who have ever lived, except Christ, are flawed. As the Scriptures say, “For all have sinned and fallen short of the glory of God” (Romans 3:23).

There are few episodes in the Scriptures that reveal every participant at his best, but our lesson for today is one of them. Jesus has just finished teaching and he enters the town of Capernaum. He is surely tired. He had just finished giving the address we know as the Sermon on the Mount. Perhaps he had come into Capernaum for refreshment and relaxation.

But there was a delegation there to meet him. It was a group of Jewish elders. They had a request for him. This is interesting. So often the New Testament spotlights conflicts between Jesus and the religious establishment. But in this story, even the Jewish elders are cast in a positive light.

The elders had come to Jesus concerning a Roman centurion in their town a man who was much respected by them all. The centurion had a servant for whom he had great affection. This servant was suffering a painful affliction and was near death. The centurion asked for Jesus to come to heal his servant.

For the moment Jesus forgot his fatigue. Some soul was in distress and needed his attention. He went with the elders. They were nearing the centurion’s house when the centurion sent friends out to them with an amazing message. The message the centurion sent out went like this: “Lord, don’t trouble yourself, for I do not deserve to have you come under my roof. That is why I did not even consider myself worthy to come to you. But say the word, and my servant will be healed . . .”

Luke tells us that when Jesus heard this message from the centurion he was amazed at the centurion’s faith. There are only two times in the New Testament when Jesus was said to have been amazed. The first time was when he began his public ministry in his hometown of Nazareth. Do you remember what happened there? Jesus was rejected by those who knew him best. The Gospel of Mark tells us that Christ “was amazed by their lack of faith.” (Mark 6:6).

The second time the word “amazed” is used is this encounter with the Roman centurion. This time Jesus is amazed not by a lack of faith but by how genuine this Gentile’s faith was. Jesus turned to those who were with him and said, “I tell you, I have not found such great faith even in Israel.”

Evidently that faith had an impact, for Luke tells us that “when those who had been sent by the centurion returned to the house, they found the servant well.”

What happens in this story that made it possible for this centurion’s servant to be made well? Of course this healing occurred because Jesus willed it, but there is more here than that. There are three elements in this story that are always helpful to the healing process whether it is personal healing or the healing of a family or the healing of a society. There are three keys here that are present in every miracle.

The first is the power of caring. Where people truly care, there is healing. Where people care, miracles take place.

We see the centurion’s love for his servant. Probably the servant had been a trusted member of the centurion’s household for many years. Actually, “servant” is too nice a term. The Greek word used in this story is doulos which literally means “slave.” The man about whom the centurion cared was a slave.

Dr. Leith Anderson notes that in Roman times slavery could often be quite cruel. Under Roman law slaves were considered to be property, giving the owner complete rights to do whatever he wanted without legal jeopardy. If he wanted to, he could kill a slave without getting into any trouble.

“Sick slaves and old slaves were especially at risk. It was a frequent practice to just ‘put them out’ when they couldn’t work any longer. This did not set them free; it let them die in desperation.

“That the centurion so highly valued his slave and wanted to take the best care of him in his sickness is a most unusual expression of voluntary kindness.” This does not in any way condone slavery, but it does show this man in a comparatively good light within an otherwise evil system. (2) The centurion cared about his servant.

Just as important, someone had cared enough about the centurion to tell him about Jesus. Otherwise he wouldn’t have known where to turn in this time of need. How fortunate we would all be if more people were more open in talking about Jesus. Open sharing of our faith and our friendship will always yield benefits.

Have you ever thought of how powerful a word spoken at just the right time is? It is said that on some of the Alpine slopes at certain times in the year guides forbid travelers to speak a word. They fear that the mere tremor of the human voice will loosen and bring down a deadly avalanche. But the human voice can be powerful in other ways. It can bring healing to broken hearts, help to those in despair.

It was a mere human voice that sent the centurion to the source of healing for his servant. Someone cared enough for the centurion to tell him about Jesus. The centurion, in turn, cared enough about his servant to call in the Jewish elders and ask them to bring Jesus to him.

In the same way, the Jewish elders cared enough about the centurion to overcome their prejudices. Can’t you imagine that it was difficult for them to request Jesus to come to heal the servant? Can you imagine a delegation of clergy from the finest churches in our town going to an itinerant faith healer in a run-down store front mission and asking his assistance in healing someone in the mayor’s household? That took a lot of humility. They cared enough to swallow their pride and go to Jesus.

And, of course, Jesus cared enough to go with them to the servant.

When people care that much, something good has got to happen. I wonder how many people occupy hospital beds today simply and solely because they don’t believe anybody cares about them. I wonder how many young people end up in gangs because they think that nobody cares for them. There is healing in knowing that somebody is praying for you, looking in on you, telling others about you. That is what the church ought to be a caring community of persons who seek to lift one another’s burdens.

We see the power of caring. We also see the power of character. Where there are people of character, miracles take place.

We are not told of the servant’s character, but may we not assume that it was of the highest order? How could a servant win the high esteem of his master if the servant had not proven himself a reliable and trustworthy steward of his master’s property?

We do know the centurion’s character. He was sent by Rome to command a garrison of soldiers at Capernaum. It is not easy to mix soldiers with an oppressed civilian population. But somehow this centurion had carried out his orders in such a way that he had the respect of the Jewish elders. They report to Jesus about the centurion. “He is worthy to have you do this for him, for he loves our nation, and he built us our synagogue.”

So we know he was a generous man and a charitable man. We know that he was concerned about the well-being of the people over whom he ruled and the servants in his own household. He was a man of character. Such character seems rare in our present world, but it does exist.

For some of us Nelson Mandela of South Africa has come to represent this kind of character. Pastor John Ortberg tells us that when Mandela was imprisoned on Robbins Island for his opposition to South Africa’s system of apartheid, he was issued a pair of shorts not long trousers but shorts. His captors kept him in shorts so that they could think of him, and he would think of himself as a “boy” rather than as a “man.” This would cause most people to burn with a deep, unrelenting anger, but not Mandela.

“During twenty-seven years in prison, he suffered and learned and grew. He called his prison ‘the University.’ He became both increasingly committed to justice and opposed to hate, and by the end of his captivity, even his guards were won over by his life. The final official charged to watch him used to cook Mandela gourmet meals.”

When Mandela was finally released from prison he became a healing influence in South Africa. As President he sought to lead the country to peace through the Truth and Reconciliation Commission, established on the biblical principle that ‘the truth shall make you free.’” (3)

Mandela is a man of character just as the centurion was a man of character. Wherever such character exists there is healing. Part of the centurion’s character was his great humility: “Lord, don’t trouble yourself, for I do not deserve to have you come under my roof. That is why I did not even consider myself worthy to come to you . . .”

How easy it is for some persons of authority and even of widely acknowledged virtue to allow their position in the community to cause them to esteem themselves more highly than they ought. Not this centurion. He was a good man in every sense of the word. Jesus undoubtedly loved him. “The prayer of a righteous person is powerful and effective,” writes James in his epistle (5:16). There is healing in such character.

So we have these two powerful elements caring and character. But there is a third element we dare not ignore: it was the centurion’s confidence in Christ. Where people have confidence in Christ, miracles take place. That is another term for faith. The centurion was so confident that Jesus could heal his servant that he had his messenger say, “. . . do not trouble yourself to come under my roof . . . but say the word, and let my servant be healed.”

Just a word from the Master would be sufficient that was the centurion’s faith. There is power in that kind of confidence. You can move mountains if you have that kind of faith.

Clarence Forsburg tells about a mother with five children years ago who became so desperate because of health and financial problems that she decided that life was not worth the struggle. She took her youngest child, a preschool girl, into the bedroom of their tiny house. Carefully she cinched the windows with rags and newspapers, and then turned on the gas heater without lighting it. She lay down on the bed with her arm around her small daughter. She could hear the gas escaping.

She could also hear another sound, however. Suddenly it occurred to her that she had forgotten to turn off the radio in the next room. For some reason it seemed important to her. She got up to do so. Someone on the radio was singing an old gospel hymn: “Oh what peace we often forfeit, O what needless pain we bear. All because we do not carry everything to God in prayer.”

In that instant she realized the mistake she was making. She had forgotten the resources of her own faith. She rushed back into the bedroom, turned off the gas, and opened the windows wide. Then she picked up the little girl and held her tight. When she spoke about it later she said, “I began to pray. I did not pray for help. I prayed a prayer of gratitude to God for his blessings. I thanked him for life. I thanked him for five wonderful children. I promised him that I would not forget my faith again.” Then she added as an afterthought: “and so far I have kept that promise.” (4)

We began this message talking about the moral and spiritual mediocrity that is seeping into our life as a nation. There is not a single case of mediocrity in this story of the Roman centurion. It is a beautiful story that features a caring community; it features character and humility; it features confidence in what Jesus can do for us when we remember to pray. When you have those three elements at play all in one place caring, character and confidence in Christ miracles take place. You can heal a body, you can heal a family, you can heal a community, you can heal a world.

No wonder the centurion’s servant was healed. With such forces at work in our lives, no battle would be too great for us.


1. Glenn Van Ekeren, Speaker’s Sourcebook II (Englewood Cliffs, NY: Prentice Hall, Inc., 1994), pp. 142-143.

2. http://www.higherpraise.com/outlines/woodvale/Luke7a.htm.

3. John Ortberg, The Me I Want To Be: Becoming God’s Best Version Of You (Grand Rapids: Zondervan, 2010), p. 26.

4. From a message by Dr. Joe Harding.

ChristianGlobe Networks, Inc., Dynamic Preaching Second Quarter 2013, by King Duncan