Zacchaeus had an image problem. His name meant “righteous, pure one,” but no one believed it. He stood barely five feet tall with his shoes off, there’s nothing wrong with being short—and that wasn’t his problem anyway! He was head tax-collector for the Roman in the town of Jericho and this made him both the richest man in town and the least popular. Everyone assumed that he was so rich because he was skimming off the top of what he collected.
When Jesus came to town, nobody would make
room for him to see, so he shinnied up a sycamore tree so he could see
something more than just the backs of other people's heads, and that's where he
was when Jesus spotted him.
"Zacchaeus," Jesus said for all to
hear, "get down out of there in a hurry. I'm having dinner tonight at your
house!" All of Jericho must have been stunned. I suspect that Zacchaeus
was too. It’s a wonder that he didn’t just fall out of the tree in shock!
And he was not the only one stunned and
surprised, but probably not in a good way. If Jesus were running for office and they had
attack ads in the first century, you can almost hear the ominous music and the
deep bass of the voice over artist saying: “Jesus eats with tax-collectors.
Jesus. Wrong on taxes. Wrong for Judea.”
But in fact Jesus knew what he was doing. When
Jesus called to Zacchaeus and invited himself to dinner, he shows us just who
it is that God is seeking, who God welcomes into the reign of God, and what God
wants us to be. Most of all Jesus is invites us to see the world through God’s eyes
and shows us God’s over-the-top generosity and grace.
That’s the heart of Jesus’ message in the
Gospel of Luke. All through this part of the Gospel, we see Jesus seeking out
people who live on the fringes of society and the community of faith. We hear
Jesus welcome little children (18:15-17). Then Jesus welcomes a rich man who
has followed the law his whole life but can’t let go of his wealth and instead
walks away sad (18:18-30). Jesus heals a blind beggar (18:35-43). Finally, in
today’s Gospel, Jesus welcomes and eats with a rich scoundrel that no one likes,
Zacchaeus . Luke’s Gospel is telling us that if Jesus can welcome into God’s reign
children, blind beggars, and scoundrels, then surely he has room for the likes
of us.
Now notice something here: Zacchaeus did not
change jobs. He apparently did not stop being a tax-collector. When Jesus
called another tax-collector named Levi, also known as Matthew, to be an
apostle, he dropped everything and followed Jesus. Today’s Gospel reminds us
that not everyone who followed Jesus put aside their occupation. Instead, some
people put their money and their words together in God’s service. In the Gospels,
the followers of Jesus don’t just say “hey, Jesus, thanks! That’s nice.” In the
Gospels, the followers of Jesus act! They put their words and actions together.
I have a theory, and that is that while most
preachers (including me!) have seen this story solely as a conversion story, I now
think of it as a "coming out" story. I have come to think that Zacchaeus was, in fact, as righteous as his name implies, but it
took his encounter with Jesus demonstrate that he was really serious about it–
and for others to put aside their judgements and see him as the faithful
follower he was. When he said that he would return many-fold any money that was
fraudulently taken, he was not buying his salvation but declaring his honesty
before God, before Jesus, and before a skeptical crowd. It turns out that his generosity
reflected the faithfulness and change that was already going on inside of him—if
there was no yearning for wholeness and reconciliation, then why would have risked
climbing that tree? When Jesus entered his home, he discovers salvation—being made
whole by God.
I suspect that Zacchaeus’ journey towards God…
was well underway when he got up in that sycamore tree. But it took a while for
people—not just Zacchaeus but all the people who knew him, or thought they knew
him—to catch on.
Zacchaeus sought Jesus. Jesus sought and
affirmed Zacchaeus. And his affirmation of faith and repentance and the salvation
that Jesus proclaimed in Zacchaeus’ house made him whole… his inner search and
struggle for faith and acceptance met the outward expression of repentance and
generosity.
The big take away from today’s Gospel is this:
When we seek Jesus, we find that Jesus is seeking us. Jesus meets us precisely where
we need to be met, at the point of our greatest need. When we seek Jesus we are
allowing him to the most vulnerable part of our selves so that his saving love
might heal us. In meeting Jesus, we are changed from the inside out. And when
we change we act.
For one thing, as Zacchaeus shows us, our
relationship towards our possessions and our things changes. We move from
people who uses our stuff to protect us against, or at least distract us from,
pain or to compensate for whatever feels short or incomplete or unlovely in our
lives.
The other take away is that Jesus’ invitation
to this person on the fringe revealed a faithfulness that no one could see
because it did not occur to them that people on the fringe even deserve
salvation.
So, there are two lessons going on here that
we can all use in our Christian living:
First, faithful people show up in unexpected
places. When Jesus met people at the fringes of respectable society, he was calling
out and raising up people living as faithfully as they could but who, up until
then, were marked as “outsiders” because of their status, their nationality,
their way of life, or their occupation. He was telling them that their faith,
no matter how outside the norm, makes them whole.
Second, Zacchaeus learned (and then taught us)
that everything we have comes from God. Our task is to use what God has given
us for God’s purpose. So, as our faith grows, as we learn and do the work of
Jesus, we can choose to use our time, our talent, our things, and yes, our
money, for God’s purposes.
And what is God’s purpose? That we love God
with all our heart, soul, and mind. We love our neighbor. And more than that,
that we love one another the way Jesus loves us. With everything we have.
Jesus’ love for us is sacrificial and meets us where we are with what we need.
So, are you a student? Use what you have for
God’s purpose. Do you have a place to live and food to eat? Use it for God’s
purpose. Do you have talent and skill? Use them for God’s purpose. Do you have
a profession or a responsibility? Be ethical, competent, and generous…use it
for God’s purpose. And what is God’s purpose? The Catechism in our Prayer Book
says that our purpose is “To restore all humanity and creation to unity with
God and each other in Jesus Christ.” As you orient your stuff to God’s purpose,
you will discover how to learn and do the work of Jesus in your everyday
living!
That’s what was going on for Zacchaeus. He
went looking for Jesus and found Jesus looking for him. Jesus invited himself
into Zacchaeus’ home, because Zacchaeus made room in his home and heart for
God.
It’s
funny, isn’t it? We might not know how much we’ve changed until we find
ourselves out on a limb looking for Jesus looking for us. And when we make room
for Jesus, we find that Christ is already at home in us.
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Here is a link to the Scripture readings.
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