By: The Very Rev. Robert S. Munday
The centurion was one of the most unlikely persons ever to know Jesus. He was a Gentile. Doubtless he had a pagan upbringing. He was a Roman, stationed in Palestine to subject the Jews to the Emperor’s rule. He was a man of war. He achieved the rank of centurion by showing leadership but also by distinguishing himself above others in hand to hand combat. Not exactly the résumé you would expect for becoming one of the Bible’s great heroes of faith. So what in the world had happened to this man? We don’t know. But there he is in Capernaum, a miracle of God’s marvelous grace. And he is a firstfruit and a foreshadowing of what Jesus had come to bring about—the spread of the Gospel to the ends of the earth. He was a living illustration that “many [would] come from the east and west and recline at table with Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob in the kingdom of heaven” (Matthew 8:11).
This centurion is also a reminder to us that “man looks on the outward appearance, but the Lord looks on the heart” (1 Samuel 16:7). I think we will be surprised someday when Jesus doles out rewards. Most of the great ones among us will probably have lived in obscurity. Jesus is not as impressed with titles, degrees, and achievements as we are. He is impressed with those who really, simply, and humbly trust Him. In the context of saving faith or healing faith, we are not talking about orthodoxy, i.e., faith as right belief; we are talking about faith as trust. Now, to be sure, faith as trust has to begin with right belief: The centurion had to know and believe who Jesus was before he could trust him to heal. But then, in the light of knowing who God is, knowing His Word and His promises, we have to trust Him. Faith is our answer to God’s promises, our response to God’s grace and mercy. Faith is not fantasy; faith is a covenant relationship. Billy Graham has been quoted as saying, “God will not reward fruitfulness; He will reward faithfulness.” The centurion was faith-full, full of faith. How do we grow to be full of faith? By not merely knowing the facts about God but by knowing God, through his Son Jesus, and by trusting Him to be all that He says He is and all that He wants to be in our lives.