Luke 19:1-10 · Zacchaeus the Tax Collector
A Lesson Learned from a Snake
Luke 19:1-10
Sermon
by King Duncan
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Mrs. Billie Cannon--a Knoxville, Tennessee homemaker--was preparing to paint her back porch. In order to protect the floor, she very carefully placed around the edges of the floor a strip of Scotch tape--the kind with adhesive on both sides. It was her plan to place a drop cloth over the floor and secure it with the tape.

Having succeeded in placing the tape around the entire surface, she went back inside the house to get a drop cloth. Returning to the porch sometime later, she found that all of her carefully placed tape was gone. She was completely mystified. Where could it be? Who would possibly have taken the time to pull up that tape and why?

As she was surveying the situation and mulling over her puzzling predicament, she noticed something moving in her back yard. Looking closer she discovered that it was a snake. It was a rather large creature of its species, but it was no threat to her. One reason it was no threat was that it was hopelessly immobilized by being totally enmeshed in a large ball of Scotch tape.

Evidently while Mrs. Cannon was in the house the snake had crawled up on the back porch and had eased itself onto that tape with the adhesive on both sides. Sensing that the tape was sticking to its skin, the snake obviously put up a terrible struggle. In doing so it pulled every bit of tape from the floor. The harder it fought, however, the more hopelessly it became entangled in its cellophane prison until now it was totally captive. * 

That poor snake reminds me of many people I have known. Somewhere along the way they have made a serious mistake. Then, rather than calmly analyzing their situation and correcting their course, they have reacted impulsively. Soon their lives are like that snake’s. The more they struggle, the more entangled they have become until eventually they are totally immobilized psychologically, emotionally and spiritually. 

Perhaps Zacchaeus was in such a state when he sought out Jesus. Here was a wealthy chief tax collector who was so desperate to see Jesus that he climbed a sycamore tree. Every child in our Sunday School knows why he climbed the sycamore tree. He was short of stature and could not see over the crowd that had gathered to welcome Jesus to Jericho.

Can you imagine one of our prominent city officials climbing a tree in order to catch a glimpse of a popular religious figure? It is truly an absurd picture. It indicates to me that Zacchaeus was really in a desperate state of mind. He was unhappy about something in his life. Something was gnawing at his insides--something that money or position or power could not satisfy. Perhaps this striking teacher from Galilee could help him untangle his life. It was a long shot, but it seemed worth it to Zacchaeus or he would not have been up in that tree. 

Nevertheless, Zacchaeus could not have been prepared for what happened next. As he sat upon his precarious perch in the sycamore tree he heard someone call his name. Lo and behold, it was the visiting teacher. Somehow the Master had spotted Zacchaeus perched in the tree. “Zacchaeus,” said the Master, “come down immediately. I must stay at your house today.”

Luke tells us that Zacchaeus did come down immediately and received Jesus joyfully into his house. Somehow Zacchaeus knew that Jesus could set him free. Somehow he knew that this was exactly what he had been looking for. The effect of Christ’s presence on Zacchaeus was so profound that with an overflowing heart he stood following the meal and said to Jesus, “Look, Lord! Here and now I give half of my possessions to the poor, and if I have cheated anybody out of anything, I will pay back four times the amount.” If there was any doubt about Zacchaeus’ sincerity, Jesus erased it by declaring, “Today salvation has come to this house . . . .” 

Notice, first of all, that Jesus was more eager to see Zacchaeus than Zacchaeus was to see Jesus. Even though Zacchaeus climbed the sycamore, it was Jesus who called out to Zacchaeus, rather than the reverse. That says to me two things.

In the first place it speaks of Jesus’ purpose for coming into this world. “For the Son of Man came,” says Jesus, “to seek and save the lost.” That was his entire reason for being. 

If you are feeling lost his morning--if your life is in a helpless tangle--if you feel immobilized by doubt or fear or guilt--Jesus is looking for you. You may have come to this place looking for him. But even more surely, he is here looking for you. 

Jesus was looking for Zacchaeus more diligently than Zacchaeus was looking for Jesus. That says something about Jesus’ purpose, but it also says something about Zacchaeus’ potential. 

Have you ever thought what a difference you could make for the Kingdom of God if somehow Christ could make the change in your life that he made in the life of Zacchaeus? God sees within your life and mine an awesome potential of which we are probably not even aware. It’s always inspiring when we hear of someone who sees potential in a person that no one else sees.

Many of you have seen the delightful Broadway musical and motion picture, “My Fair Lady.” It is based on George Bernard Shaw’s wonderful play, “Pygmalion.” It is about a brilliant professor, Henry Higgins, who transforms a humble flower girl, Eliza Doolittle, into an elegant English lady.

In the midst of her brilliant transformation, Eliza falls in love with Henry Higgins, but he treats her only with disdain. Towards the end of the play, she expresses her complaint to their mutual friend, Colonel Pickering.

“You see,” she says, “Really and truly apart from the things anyone can pick up (things like dressing in the right fashions and the proper way of speaking, and so on), the difference between a lady and a flower girl is not in how she behaves, but how she is treated. I shall always be a flower girl to Professor Higgins, because he always treats me as a flower girl, and always will; but I know I can be a lady to you, because you always treat me as a lady, and always will.” 

It is both interesting and encouraging to notice how Jesus treated people--whether it be a woman of the streets or a tax collector in a tree. He saw something no one else could see. He could see potential. He could see a life changed. He could see a vessel of the kingdom. That is the first thing we need to see. Jesus was more eager to see Zacchaeus than Zacchaeus was to see him. 

Here is the second thing. Zacchaeus was changed not only by what Jesus saw in him but also by what he saw in Jesus. Two words seem to characterize what Zacchaeus saw in Jesus--hope and holiness.

Jesus represented hope to Zacchaeus or he would not have sought him out so eagerly. He knew in his heart of hearts that here was more than just another religious leader. Here was the man who was the answer to his problems. 

There is a story about an ancient Persian king who had injured his ankle quite severely. None of his court physicians knew how to help him. A member of his court told him about a certain slave who was said to have a great insight into matters of the body.

The Persian king sent for the slave who was brought to him weighted down with chains and dressed in rags. However, the slave was indeed able to give him great assistance with his problem. The pain ceased and the ankle soon healed. The king was elated and justly grateful for the slave’s help. He was so grateful that he sent the slave a gift--a new set of golden chains. The slave was greatly enriched, but he was still a slave.

Some people shy away from religion because they are afraid that they may be trading in one set of chains for another. Religion can do that to people, but not a relationship with Christ. Christ sets us free! 

Zacchaeus saw in Christ hope, but he also saw holiness. Why is it that Zacchaeus offered to give half of his wealth to the poor and to make fourfold restitution to anyone whom he had defrauded? Could it be that he saw in Jesus such love, such purity, such honor that he was suddenly aware of how sordid his life was in comparison. 

William Barclay once told of an event that occurred while riding a train from Glasgow to London. While riding south across the Yorkshire moors, he saw a lovely white cottage. It was shining brightly in the afternoon sun and looked so clean and white.

A few days later Barclay was returning home along the same route. A lovely snow had fallen. Soon the white cottage came into view. But in contrast to the snow, the clean cottage looked “drab and soiled and almost grey--in comparison with the virgin whiteness of the driven snow.”

That is how Zacchaeus regarded his own life in the presence of Jesus. Not because it was required of him, but as a natural response to the change that had taken place in his own heart, he wanted to resolve the contrast he saw between Christ’s life and his own and thus he sought to make restitution for his sin. 

That is important to us. Many of us want to be half converted. We want to see Christ as hope but not as holiness. We want to be set free from guilt--without changing--so we still wear the chains of slavery. We are still tangled in a prison of cellophane. We see now what Jesus saw in Zacchaeus. We also see what Zacchaeus surely saw in Jesus. 

What did the crowd see? That is the third thing we want to deal with. That crowd of people who had gathered mostly out of curiosity to see this popular religious figure who had come to their town--what did they see?  They also saw two things, did they not?

First of all, they saw Jesus go home with a sinner. That scandalized them. Luke tells us that they murmured among themselves. Nominally religious people always murmur among themselves. Have you ever noticed that? God save us from people who are converted just enough to criticize everyone else. 

Mark Twain was famous as a humorist, but he was bitterly cynical about religion. He said on one occasion that if Christ were here now there is one thing he would not be --a Christian. Unfortunately Twain was confusing deeply committed followers of Christ with the half-converted and that makes a tremendous difference. 

The crowd saw Jesus go home to eat with a sinner. But they also saw something else. They saw Zacchueus emerge from this encounter as a new man.

I believe that it was Corrie ten Boom who said that when light is turned on in a dark room, it’s obvious. If a corpse were to rise from its coffin and live again, there would be no need to hang a sign about the neck to tell the world there had been a change. When the doors of a penitentiary swing outward and a prisoner walks into freedom, it is immediately apparent. So it is when a man or woman genuinely encounters Jesus Christ. It was certainly apparent to Zacchaeus’ neighbors that something dramatic had happened in his life.

One of the most popular weekly programs in the early days of television was “Father Knows Best.” One of the stars of that show was little Lauren Chapin who played 11 year old Kathy Anderson. Those of you of a certain age who are familiar with this wholesome family program remember little Kathy in all of her innocence and charm.

Unfortunately Lauren Chapin’s real life was nothing like Kathy Anderson’s. We are told that Lauren’s mother drank very heavily. When the “Father Knows Best” series ended, Lauren couldn’t get another job in television. Alienated from her mother and from the world of make believe that had given substance to her life, she began running wild. She turned to drugs, casual lovers and fast company. The next several years of her life were filled with eight miscarriages, welfare, a mental hospital and a host of time in and out of jails. 

At 38 years of age, Lauren Chapin encountered Jesus. In the midst of her wildness the Prince of Peace came to her and moved her from pandemonium to peace.  She said that when she accepted Christ, it occurred to her with a sudden clarity that she was an individual, worthy in her own right, who no longer had to live up to the impossible example of Kathy Anderson.  “All my life I’ve wanted to be loved,” she said. “God’s love is the most complete love, and I think that’s what I was looking for.” 

That is why the Son of Man came into the world--to seek and save the lost--to free us from our hopelessly entangled lives. Jesus sees within each of us more potential than we see in ourselves. In him we see both hope and holiness. That is why in any encounter with Christ, the believer seeks to correct the problems in his or her own life, not out of duty, but out of joy--out of a determination to resolve the difference between Jesus’ life and ours.

No wonder Zacchaeus welcomed Jesus so joyfully into his home. Wouldn’t you, if you believed that such a change could take place in your life today? A snake entangled in cellophane--is that a metaphor for your life? Isn’t it time you find the clarity that Lauren Chapin found by giving your life to Christ?


1. A true story related by her pastor, the Rev. Jerry Anderson. 

2. From a sermon by Dr. Joe Harding.

Dynamic Preaching, Collected Sermons, by King Duncan