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Sunday after Pentecost
   Proper 4 (9) year C
 

Texts & Discussion:

1 Kings 18:20-21,
(22-29), 30-39

Psalm 96
Galatians 1:1-12
Luke 7:1-10

Other Resources:

Commentary:

Matthew Henry,    Wesley

Word Study:
Robertson

This Week's Themes:

God's victory
Pleasing God, Not People

Faith Healing

 



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Prayer&Litanies
|  Hymns & Songs | Children's Sermons | Sermons based on Texts

 

 

Sermons:

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A Controversial Healing
based on Luke 7:1-10
by Rev. Frank Schaefer

Many of us are familiar with this story from Sunday school days. Jesus healed the servant of a Roman centurion. This story is actually recorded in Matthew 8:5-13 and Luke 7:1-10. When The centurion made his plea for his servant, Jesus had compassion for him and his slave and said he was willing to come to his house, though he apparently lived quite a distance away. It's absolutely remarkable that Jesus is actually willing to do this in light of the source of the request. The centurion is not only part of the occupying force he is an officer. Jesus truly practiced what he preached. He loved the enemy, he never turned anybody in need away.

What's also pretty remarkable is that the centurion could have had the most sought-after teacher and healer of the time come to his house. But he said there was no need for Jesus to come to his house. Perhaps he didn't want to trouble Jesus unnecessarily. Or maybe he was embarrassed about inviting Jesus into his house. We don't know. But apparently, this centurion truly believed that if Jesus simply spoke the word, his servant would be healed--long-distance. And Jesus was amazed at the centurion's faith and his servant was reported to be healed.

This is not your ordinary miracle story. This story is not only remarkable for the facts I already mentioned, it is also remarkable because there is a real possibility that the centurion and his “slave” were actually a homosexual couple.

This becomes clear when we look at the the Greek word used in Matthew’s account that refers to the servant of the centurion as pais. The word pais had three possible meanings depending on the social context. It could mean “son or boy;” it could mean “servant,” or it could mean a particular type of servant — one who was “his master’s male lover.” Often these servants were younger than their masters.

To our modern ears, the idea of having a love relationship with a servant seems outrageous. But we have to place this in the context of ancient cultural norms. Under the laws of Jesus' time, even a wife was viewed as the property of the husband, with a status just above that of slave. Like today, it was not uncommon for an older man to marry a younger woman. In that culture, a man gave money or goods to the father of his bride, then the father gave her away into marriage. A reminder of this is still present in the modern-day wedding ceremony in the symbolic ritual of the bride's father shaking the groom's hand, then giving his daughter to him in marriage.

Gay man in first-century Judea who wanted a male “spouse,” similarly acquired someone contractually to serve that purpose. A servant purchased to serve this purpose was often called a pais.

Is it possible that pais referred to in Matthew 8 and Luke 7 was the Roman centurion’s male lover? Let’s look at the biblical evidence:

Our text provides three key pieces of textual evidence for this possibility. [continue]