And when Jesus was entered into Capernaum, there came unto him a centurion, beseeching him,
Matthew and Luke are not at odds here; one says the centurion came, the other that he sent messengers on his behalf. Both describe the same event from different angles. What strikes me is that this man, a Roman soldier stationed in a depraved seaport town, rejected the superstitions of his own people and embraced the worship of the one God. Before Christ healed his servant, the Lord had already healed him.
AI summary
Here stood a soldier, a Roman, a Gentile, dwelling among the Jews as a badge of their subjection, yet godly and zealous. Christ received him and favored him; therein He teaches us to do good even to our enemies and shows Himself a light to the Gentiles as well as the glory of Israel. Grace conquers where it is least expected and proves itself more than a conqueror.
AI summary
Commenting on Matthew 8:5-13
A centurion commands a hundred men, though some accounts place the number higher. He comes not in person but through messengers, and the Jewish saying holds: a man's messenger is as himself. Christ's power extends to both Jew and Gentile, master and servant alike.
AI summary