Tuesday, May 31, 2016

The Centurion's Approach to Jesus: Luke 7:1-2

Proper 4, Year C, 2016
1 Kings 18; Ps 96; Gal 1:1-12; Luke 7:1-10
Rev. Adam T. Trambley
May 29, 2016, St.John’s Sharon

In the gospel this morning, we find Jesus healing from a distance the slave of a centurion.  As the story unfolds, we see examples of a number of approaches to God, all of which receive a response from Jesus.  Yet we also see the most powerful and important one, a faithful recognition of Jesus’ power and authority over everything that we might encounter, including ourselves.

Jesus has just finished his “Sermon on the Plain,” which in Luke’s gospel describes a great teaching event of Jesus that parallels much of Matthew’s Sermon on the Mount.  We shouldn’t be surprised that this important material was shared by Jesus on more than one occasion in different locations. Jesus now returns to Capernaum, which is his “home base” in Galilee. This area on the north shore of the Sea of Galilee, like all of Palestine, was under Roman rule at the time of Jesus. 

The gospel says there was a centurion there with a slave whom he valued that was very ill.  A centurion was a high ranking Roman officer that would have been traditionally in charge of a 100 soldiers.  Centurions were some of the highest ranking Roman military in their areas and were charged with keeping the peace.  The more enlightened centurions would use their connections and resources to be civic leaders in ways that endeared them and the Romans to the native people.  In Jewish communities, some of them were true God-fearers who worshipped the God of Abraham but never officially converted, while others basically bought influence with focused philanthropy. 

Centurions also had slaves, but Roman slavery was not the same as later American slavery.  A household or professional slave could become a trusted friend and important piece of centurion’s life in a foreign land, so the slave’s serious illness could have been very troubling for the centurion.

The Centurion hears that Jesus, this miraculous healer, is in town, and his first approach to Jesus is through the local Jewish officials.  They come and tell Jesus how worthy the Centurion is to be healed.  He is a good man who helps them and loves them so much that he even built their synagogue.  This message probably came with more than a little bit of self-interest on the part of the Jewish elders, since if they could get the Centurion’s favorite slave healed by Jesus, they could probably leverage that for favors later.  Then the gospel states, simply, “And Jesus went with them.” 

When Jesus is a short distance from the Centurion’s house, some of the Centurion’s friends come with another message and that message has two parts.  The first part is their message to Jesus to stop because, “I am not worthy to have you come under my roof.”  We can assume that there is a true humility here on the Centurion’s part.  He probably does feel unworthy to receive this holy man having done whatever manner of things he would have had to do to rise through the ranks to become a Roman Centurion.  At the same time, he is also probably savvy enough to know that if Jesus actually comes into his house, there will be all manner of trouble for Jesus, and maybe for others.  At that time, a Jewish person couldn’t go into a Roman house without suffering religious and social consequences.  Now it is more than a little ironic that a Jewish person couldn’t to the home of the guy who paid to have their synagogue built, but that was the way things were.  By saying he was unworthy, the Centurion not only expressed his feelings, but he also gave Jesus a safe out.

Of course, the Centurion still wanted his slave healed, and he followed up the confession of his own unworthiness with, “But only speak the word, and let my servant be healed.”  Then he goes on to explain that he is under authority and he has people under him who do what he tells them.  While the Centurion doesn’t spell it out, what he is also saying is that he recognizes Jesus authority over his slave’s illness, and maybe his slave’s life, and probably over a whole lot of other things, as well.  The Centurion is saying who Jesus is – even if he doesn’t use words like Messiah or Son of God.  Jesus recognizes what the Centurion is saying, too.  Jesus is amazed and says, “I tell you, not even in Israel have I found such faith.”  The Centurion’s friends return home and find that the slave is in good health.

These three approaches to Jesus parallel the approaches we often take to God.

The first approach is the “Look, I’ve been very good and am worthy to have you help me, God” approach.  We may not come out and say we’ve built the synagogue, but people often have some expectation that God helps people who have been good or who are involved in church.  People fall back to whatever they think they have done that might “put in a good word” or even anything they can draw from family or other connections, trusting that such works can be used to merit the assistance of God or his people. 

The flip side of this approach is the bargain with God.  “I’m not worthy now,” we pray, “but if you do this for me, I’ll do whatever you want” usually followed by some particular promise.  Now we know that we can’t really merit God’s love.  It is freely given, and God’s care for us is not dependent on what we have or haven’t done.  Yet, at the same time, we see Jesus willing to respond to this approach.  The Jewish elders say that the Centurion is worthy, and Jesus comes with them.  He may have come with them with a slight smile – he loves the Centurion’s slave and would have been happy to heal him without bunch of testimonials.  At the same time, if that good work gives someone hope that God will listen to them and provides a connection, God will use it.  Without the Jewish elders, the Centurion might not have believed that Jesus would come, so if the best we can do is tell God, “Hey, I did a good thing once, so please help me,” God will take the crack in the door of our life to burst it open with his love.   

The flip side of the first approach is the second, which just says, “I’m not worthy to have you come to me, Jesus.”  These words are true, but if they stopped there they would still be incomplete, because it still makes the whole thing about us and what we have or have not done.  Jesus would no more avoid us because we haven’t been good than he would run to us faster if we have been better.  Of course we are unworthy, but our sense of our unworthiness can either come from a true humility or from our own ego’s desire to protect itself from God and other people by claiming unworthiness. 

At its healthiest, telling God we are not worthy of him coming to us is merely an expression of his incredible awesomeness.  We recognize the gulf between him and us.  Then, ideally, we, like the Centurion, move from this confession to a profession of faith in God’s power and love.

Too often, however, our unworthiness becomes a barrier to try to shut the door to God.  We dishonestly tell ourselves that we are unworthy of love when in fact we are children of God whom God has created as worthy of love and being loved.  No matter what we have or haven’t done, nothing can take that special status away from us.  Nothing.  None of us have fully lived into the blessing that God intended for us by making us his children, but this falling short is why we have the cross and forgiveness and grace and mercy.  Sure, we aren’t worthy, but God doesn’t care and he has done a lot to reach out to us, and he will continue to do so, no matter how unworthy we are or how much we are afraid to let him in.      

The third approach to God, and the one Jesus commends, is the faithful acknowledgement of Jesus’ authority.  The Centurion combines it with what is best in the second approach, “I am not worthy, but only say the word and heal my servant.”  Actually some traditions use this as part of the preparation for receiving communion – “Lord, I am not worthy to receive you, but only say the word and I shall be healed.”  Here we are acknowledging that Jesus has the ultimate power and control over whatever we are praying about.  We are actually opening the whole situation to him in prayer and letting him take control.  This step may seem obvious.  I mean, why pray if we don’t believe that Jesus is more powerful than the situation and is able to fix it. Yet, too often, we do ask God for help, but without any belief that he might be able to fix it, or without a willingness to accept the way he might decide to fix it.  We hear the Centurion, “I tell people to go and they go, to do something and they do it.”  Are we able in prayer to say, “This situation is under your authority, Lord.  Tell us what to do and we’ll do it, and we know you’ll take care of the rest.”  These prayers are bold ones and powerful ones.  “We know you can do this, God, so come into the situation and make it right.”  When we ask in this way, God usually does come into the situation and starts to make it right.  Then we have to decide to either go along with it or not. 

This approach to God is also the basic one of the twelve step programs.  The steps tell us to admit that we aren’t in control, that there is a higher power who is in control, and that we need to turn things over in obedience to that higher power.  We here know that the name of that higher power is Jesus, the Son of God, who now sits at the right hand of God the Father Almighty with all things in subjection under his feet.  The God we worship has this much power and authority, but he gives us control of ourselves and our own lives.  Our prayer of faith is to recognize his authority and turn the situations of our lives that need healing and restoration over to him.  Whether we feel worthy or not, whether we have been good or not, whether we are scared to death to ask him to come to us or not, if we recognize him and invite him to come, he will, just like he did for the Roman Centurion two thousand years ago.


I would encourage you today, as you come to the altar, to come with these words, “Lord, I am not worthy to receive you, but only say the word and I shall be healed.”  Repeat the phrase together.  Open your life, especially in its broken places, to God in humility, and faithfully ask for his healing.  Then pay attention in the coming days, weeks and months to see just what God does.    

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