Sermon for the Third Sunday after the Epiphany
“Speak the word only”
The Gospel which orders our thoughts on this The Third Sunday after Epiphany is the double healing of the leper and the Centurion’s servant by Jesus Christ. Epiphany season abounds in miracles. They belong to the making visible of the glory of God. A miracle, after all, is a sign of wonder. The healing miracles are a wonder. But what exactly do we see? Only the signs of the glory in the effects of what is said and done. The wonder, really, is the wonder of Christ.
Christ heals a leper and he heals the paralysed servant of the Centurion. He speaks and he acts. There is healing. The healings are within Israel and also beyond Israel. “He came and preached peace to you who were far off and peace to those who were near.” It is at once universal and particular. Such are the properties of God. Through the history and meaning of Israel the glory of God is not only made known to the world but for the world. The leper is healed within the context of the particular customs and practices of Israel and is held to the requirements of the Law in Israel. But with the Centurion’s request, Jesus acknowledges something more: there is the wonder of faith which coming out of Israel transcends Israel. “I have not found so great faith, no not in Israel,” Jesus says about the Centurion. For both the leper and the Centurion, Christ is the wonder. There is an epiphany. Something is make known about who God is for us in Jesus Christ.
He is the wonder before he puts forth his hand and before he speaks. The healing miracles are surprisingly not the glory. They are only the making visible of the glory which is present in Christ Jesus. He is the glory. And he is the glory which is somehow known and known not just in his effects but in his person.

