In Luke 7, Jesus goes to Capernaum. A Roman centurion’s
servant was deathly ill and so he asked some of the Jewish elders to go ask
Jesus to intervene.
“When they reached Jesus, they
pleaded with Him earnestly, saying, ‘He is worthy for You to grant this,
because he loves our nation and has built us a synagogue.’” (7:4)
This is interesting because the Jews did not like the
Romans. But they liked this Roman because he had done some nice things for them
(and maybe he would keep doing nice things for them). They make their case to
Jesus basically like this: he has done nice things for us so you should do nice
things for him. Apparently they weren’t paying attention to the whole love your enemies thing in chapter six.
But again, we aren’t so different, are we? We often follow
the same logic: if I do nice things for God, then he will do nice things for
me. This is the basis upon which we try to make trades with God. This is how we
try to bargain with him. Or, if we are not that active, this is at least how we
expect God to treat us. Thus, we spend a lot of time trying to establish our
own worth.
This makes the response of the Roman centurion all the more
interesting. Here is this outsider to the faith, this guy who has barely earned
their conditional acceptance, and he is the only one who gets it right:
“Jesus went with them, and when He
was not far from the house, the centurion sent friends to tell Him, ‘Lord, don’t
trouble Yourself, since I am not worthy to have You come under my roof. That is
why I didn’t even consider myself worthy to come to You.’” (7:6-7)
![]() |
http://www.inspirationalposter.org/poster-6635-6093652/jesus-heals-centurions-servant-matthew-viii-5-13-giclee-print/ |
This centurion takes a completely opposite approach to his
Jewish advocates. They said, “This guy is worthy, so help him out.” But he
says, “I am not worthy, please help me.” And here is the reason why he says
that: he realizes that the good that
Jesus can and will do for us is not based on who we are, but on who Jesus is.
“But say the word, and my servant
will be cured. For I too am a man placed under authority, having soldiers under
my command. I say to this one, ‘Go!’ and he goes; and to another, ‘Come!’ and
he comes; and to my servant, ‘Do this!’ And he does it.” (7:7-8)
The power comes from Jesus, not from us. It is based on his
authority, not our worth. You can rest easy. You can stop trying to prop up
your own worth with flimsy attempts at good works and a polished exterior.
Instead, you can turn to Jesus and trust fully in his goodness and his love. That
is what faith is all about. You can hang all your hopes on him; he will not
fail you.
“Jesus heard this and was amazed at
him, and turning to the crowd following Him, He said, ‘I tell you, I have not
found so great a faith even in Israel!’ When those who had been sent returned
to the house, they found the servant in good health.” (7:9-10)
1 comments:
Post a Comment