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this Sermon
June 13, 2004
2nd Sunday after Pentecost
Luke 7:1-10
Pastor Joel Zank
Lord, Give Us Such a Faith as This!
(Luke 7:1-10) When Jesus had finished saying all this in the
hearing of the people, he entered Capernaum.2 There a centurion's
servant, whom his master valued highly, was sick and about to die.3
The centurion heard of Jesus and sent some elders of the Jews to
him, asking him to come and heal his servant.4 When they came to
Jesus, they pleaded earnestly with him, "This man deserves
to have you do this,5 because he loves our nation and has built
our synagogue."6 So Jesus went with them. He was not far from
the house when the centurion sent friends to say to him: "Lord,
don't trouble yourself, for I do not deserve to have you come under
my roof.7 That is why I did not even consider myself worthy to come
to you. But say the word, and my servant will be healed.8 For I
myself am a man under authority, with soldiers under me. I tell
this one, 'Go,' and he goes; and that one, 'Come,' and he comes.
I say to my servant, 'Do this,' and he does it." 9When Jesus
heard this, he was amazed at him, and turning to the crowd following
him, he said, "I tell you, I have not found such great faith
even in Israel."10 Then the men who had been sent returned
to the house and found the servant well.
In the name of him who is the Giver of every good and perfect
gift, dear fellow redeemed,
It would take something pretty spectacular to amaze the Son of
God, wouldn't you agree? After all, amazement comes on the heels
of the unexpected. To be amazed means to be surprised or to be filled
with a sudden sense of wonder. Since Jesus is our all-knowing God,
we wouldn't expect that anything could amaze him. But remember,
Jesus is also fully human, and as such he chose to live his life
on earth experiencing nearly all of the emotions and feelings that
are so familiar to us, including that of amazement. So what is it,
then, that might possibly amaze the God-man, Jesus? St. Luke tells
us in verse 9 of our text: "When Jesus heard this, he was
amazed at [the centurion], and turning to the crowd following him,
he said, "I tell you, I have not found such great faith even
in Israel."
Jesus was amazed at the great faith he found in such an unlikely
place-in the heart of a foreigner - a Roman soldier who by birth
was not a part of God's Israel. And yet God had been pleased to
give this man a faith that was characterized both by great humility
and by great confidence. Since the Bible teaches that we sinners
are saved from sin's punishment through faith alone, we will want
the Lord to do for us what he did for this Roman soldier. The Holy
Spirit has already been at work in our hearts. He brought us to
faith in Jesus when we were baptized; because this is true, it is
by the Spirit's power that we can and want to pray that the Lord
keep increasing the faith he's given us until he brings us safely
to himself in heaven. So let's take a closer look at the amazing
faith of a Roman centurion all the while praying, Lord, Give Us
Such a Faith as This: 1) a humble faith; and 2) a confident faith.
From the first verse of our text we learn that Jesus is spending
time in the northern most part of Israel where he is teaching the
people about their need for him and the sin-sacrifice he will soon
make for them. His travels bring him to Capernaum, a town he has
visited so often that it might well be considered his home. Since
the road passing through this city is a major trade route between
Damascus and Jerusalem, a group of Roman soldiers have been stationed
here to keep the peace. This is how we come to meet their commander,
the centurion spoken of by St. Luke. He is a man with a awful problem.
His dear servant is sick and about to die; and in spite of all his
authority and influence the centurion can do nothing to help his
loyal friend. But he has heard of someone who can.
St. Luke reports, "The centurion heard of Jesus and sent
some elders of the Jews to him, asking him to come and heal his
servant" (Luke 7:3). Roman citizens enjoyed great rights
and privileges throughout Caesar's empire. But we quickly learn
that the centurion is not summoning Jesus the way a privileged member
of society might send for a peasant. Quite the opposite. Though
he is an officer in the most powerful army on earth, this soldier
displays nothing but humility-humility that showed itself first
of all in a deep love for the Jewish people.
The Jewish leaders who served as spokesmen for the centurion "...pleaded
earnestly with Jesus, "This man deserves to have you do this,
because he loves our nation and has built our synagogue" (Luke
7:4-5). With these high words of praise, the Jewish elders describe
for Jesus and us a man who, in true humility, put the interests
of others before his own, so much so that he used his own money
to build a church for the Jews of Capernaum. Why would he do such
a thing? It seems quite likely that his gift was nothing less that
an expression of gratitude to the Jewish people for sharing with
him the saving promises of their God. More likely than not, this
man had come to believe in the promise God made to send a Savior
from sin. The promise had been made to God's people, Israel. But
as we were reminded in our Old Testament reading for today, the
promise was never intended for the Jews alone. God had always planned
to save all people from sin - the Israelite and the foreigner alike.
In humble thanks to God for his saving love, this centurion built
a synagogue so that many others could learn of and believe in the
coming Savior.
The Jews who benefited from the centurion's great generosity pointed
to his kindness as the reason why Jesus should grant his request
and heal the dying servant. But the soldier himself couldn't have
disagreed more as his friends soon explained. Moved by all that
the Jews had said, Jesus "...went with them. He was not
far from the house when the centurion sent friends to say to him:
"Lord, don't trouble yourself, for I do not deserve to have
you come under my roof. 7 That is why I did not even consider myself
worthy to come to you" (Luke 7:6-7).
In great, but humble faith the centurion recognized Jesus as God
in the flesh, the very Savior he and his fellow believers had been
waiting for. But that's not all he recognized. At the same time
he saw his own sinfulness and how unworthy it made him to stand
in Christ's presence to say nothing of how undeserving he was of
the Savior's help.
Lord, give us such a faith as this - such a humble faith. We need
it don't we? We need the centurion's faith to protect us from the
vain conceit and selfish ambition that drives each and everyone
of us by nature. Our sinful pride and selfishness are enemies of
the faith God has given us in Christ, enemies that threaten to completely
destroy this precious gift. How often we go to Jesus, not in a spirit
of humility with our humble requests, but in a spirit of arrogance
with a list of demands. We go expecting that God, like everyone
else, owes us something. If you think I'm wrong, just remember how
cheated you felt the last time God didn't give you what you wanted.
Do you remember thinking how unfair it was of God to ignore your
request? You took the time to talk to him and he didn't even bother
to listen to you. How dare he! Doesn't he value the time you give
him in worship and all the love you try to show him?
You've had such thoughts. So have I. Oh they don't sound quite
so blasphemous in the moment of anger or disappointment as they
do here in the middle of a sermon, but that is what they always
are, blasphemous and damning. Even when they last for only a second,
such thoughts and feelings reveal our natural contempt for God and
our sinful love of self. If we foster these thoughts, if we permit
them to flourish, our faith will soon become hollow and we will
become the living damned. You see, faith in self, faith in our own
worthiness is no faith at all. We can't earn God's love or favor.
Left to ourselves we earn only his anger and deserve only the punishment
of hell. So please, Lord, give us a humble faith like the centurion's,
a faith that always sees our sins for the damning offenses they
are, a faith that turns to you alone for relief from our sins and
the troubles they cause us, a faith that trusts only you to provide
the help we don't deserve at the moment we need it most. Lord, give
us such a faith as this!
But aren't we asking for the impossible? Can such faith really
exist? If we can't earn and don't deserve God's help, then how can
we be sure we'll have it? How? Because someone else has earned God's
help for us - that someone is Jesus our Savior. Look again at the
centurion's faith. In humility the centurion did not want Jesus
to trouble himself for the likes of an unworthy sinner. And yet
at the same time, the centurion's faith was happy to accept the
fact that Jesus would trouble himself and grant needed help, not
because the centurion or his servant deserved this, but because
Jesus is the power and love of God in human flesh and blood. The
Savior's promise to love sinners, and his divine power to keep his
promise are all that are needed to inspire a confident faith in
weak and doubting hearts like ours. The centurion expresses just
such a faith when he says to Jesus, "...say the word, and
my servant will be healed.8 For I myself am a man under authority,
with soldiers under me. I tell this one, 'Go,' and he goes; and
that one, 'Come,' and he comes. I say to my servant, 'Do this,'
and he does it" (Luke 7:7-8). Do you follow the soldier's
logic? If he a lowly captain can speak a word that has others jumping
to attention, than how much more so Jesus, the King of kings and
Lord of lords. With his power there isn't anything he can't do!
In his love, there isn't anything he won't do!
Friends, think of what this means! Jesus says to you, "Your
sins are forgiven," and by the power of his word they are!
His is not an empty promise or mere wishful thinking. Jesus' promise
is backed up by his own divine authority. Our sins are forgiven
because Jesus, the Son of God and the Son of man humbled himself
to the point of claiming our many sins as his very own; in deepest
humility he carried our sins to the cross and suffered beneath their
awful weight in the dungeons of hell itself until our vain conceit
and selfish ambition and all our sins were punished and paid for
once and for all. And, then, in the power that is his as almighty
God, he broke the bonds of hell; three days later he snapped the
chains of death and now lives to keep every promise he has ever
made to us.
Jesus says the word and you are forgiven; but that's not all he
says. He speaks so many words to you. He says "I have loved
you with an everlasting love" (Jeremiah 31:3). He says,
"Never will I leave you, never will I forsake you"
(Hebrews 13:5). He says, "I know the plans I have for
you, plans to prosper you and not to harm you, plans to give you
hope and a future" (Jeremiah 29:11). He says, "Because
I live, you also will live" (John 14:19). The Roman centurion
had a faith that held to all these promises and more with complete
confidence, with absolute certainty. Lord, give us such a faith
as this - a confident faith.
This is our prayer, a prayer that Jesus is willing and happy to
answer. And how do we come to have such a faith? The Scriptures
tell us - "...faith comes from hearing the message, and
the message is heard through the word of Christ (Romans 10:17).
The humble and confident faith we seek is worked by God himself
through the gospel's power in Word and sacrament. As often as we
turn to Christ's promises, faith is given to us, faith that embraces
all that Christ is and all that he has done to save us. More than
that, this gift of God transforms us into Christ's likeness so that
as we live out our days on earth, studying the Scriptures, we actually
become more and more like our humble and confident Savior. And so
with the hymn writer we pray in all humility and with the greatest
confidence: "Lord, give us such a faith as this, And then,
whate'er may come, We'll taste even now the hallowed bliss of our
eternal home" for Jesus' sake. Amen.
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