Luke 6:27-36 · Love for Enemies
Saint Who?
Luke 6:27-36, Luke 19:1-10
Sermon
by Scott Bryte
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He gets shorter every time we tell the story. Sunday school children sing about the "wee little man." Illustrated Bibles and everything from stained-glass windows to coloring books depict a tiny elf of a man, perched bird-like in a tree. "Poor little Zacchaeus." Or maybe "rich little Zacchaeus." Either way we've got a short story about a short man who had to climb a tree to get a good view of the parade. So, how short was he? Was he fantastically tiny? Spectacularly diminutive? Would his picture have made it into the Guinness World Records? To be honest, nobody knows. All we know is that he was shorter than the people standing in front of him, all eager to see Jesus, and so he had to climb a tree to get a good look. Well, maybe that's not exactly all we know. We know that he didn't ask politely to be let through to the front of the crowd, where he would have had a better view. We know that he didn't plow his way through, either. Instead of counting on the courtesy of the people who were blocking his line of sight, Zacchaeus opted for a less direct solution to his problem and climbed a tree. That was hardly the easy way to do it.

We also know why Zacchaeus chose to shimmy up a tree rather than simply asking to be let through to the front. He didn't ask because he knew what the answer would be. Zacchaeus was a tax collector. We may grin knowingly at that and agree that working for the IRS would not help to make you a big hit at parties. No one, after all, actually enjoys paying their taxes. But being a tax collec­tor at that time and in that place was even less of a popularity booster than it is now.

It had been a long time since Israel was a truly independent country. The land of Israel had been promised, time and again, to the descendants of Abraham. It was supposed to be theirs forever. They had God's word on that. But the Babylonians invaded and took the place over and carted away a big chunk of the population. A generation or so later, the captives were allowed to return, but it was never quite the same. The Assyrians, then the Greeks — it seems that everyone had a turn at running Israel, except for the people who actually lived there.

By the time of Jesus, Israel was under the boot of the Roman empire, and nobody but the Romans was happy about that. Well, maybe not exactly nobody. There were some who found a way to profit from the Roman occupation. There were some who put per­sonal gain or personal security ahead of loyalty to their nation, ahead of love of their own people, and ahead of respect for the promises of God. Zacchaeus was one of them. Zacchaeus was working for the wrong side. He was aiding the enemy. Zacchaeus helped those who were keeping his own people down. His job was to take money from the people of Israel, and then hand that money over to help pay for the Roman presence in Israel. Zacchaeus had made a fortune by going directly against what God had promised to do. The descendents of Abraham were to live forever in the land and God would be in charge. Zacchaeus seemed to want Caesar to be in charge. After all, the Romans paid better. Zacchaeus was a sell out and a traitor.

There were many who were offended by what Zacchaeus did; many who knew deep down in their hearts how utterly wrong his actions were. Zacchaeus was one of them. Zacchaeus didn't push his way to the front. He didn't even politely clear his throat. There, at the back of the much taller crowd, Zacchaeus found his own solution to his problem. There was one thing, however, that Zacchaeus had apparently not counted on; a grown man in a tree — a disreputable businessman at that — is rather hard to miss.Jesus didn't miss him.

We talk often about our need to invite Jesus into our hearts and into our lives. Jesus knocks on the door politely and somewhat timidly, hoping we'll open up and let him in. But it doesn't always work that way. Jesus doesn't always wait for an invitation. Some­times Jesus just barges on in. That's what he did with Zacchaeus. Jesus didn't stand at the foot of the tree and subtly clear his throat. Jesus walked right up to the little traitor and invited himself to dinner.

"You better get down from there quick," says Jesus to Zaccheaus. "Party at your house."

Maybe it's surprising that Jesus wasn't more polite. But Jesus is in charge. He doesn't sit by demurely until we come up and ask for the dance. Jesus leads. Jesus didn't wait for an invitation. He was just there, unbidden; in Zacchaeus' face and in Zacchaeus' house and in Zacchaeus' life. There weren't any conditions. Jesus didn't say, "Okay, Zacch, if you quit working for the enemy, and if you pay people back, and if you get rid of all this dirty money, then I'll come to you." It wasn't like that at all. No, Jesus was just there, accepting Zacchaeus and loving him and spending time with him.

Zaccheaus didn't expect this. He didn't ask for it. But now Jesus was on his way over for lunch and Zaccheaus would have to deal with it. Now Jesus was in his life, and Zaccheaus would have to deal with that, too. And he did. Zacchaeus dealt with it. "Zacchaeus stood there and said to the Lord, ‘Look, half of my possessions, Lord, I will give to the poor; and if I have defrauded anyone of anything, I will pay back four times as much' " (v. 8). Zaccheaus turned around. He changed his ways. He became less selfish. Did he do this to win Jesus' favor? If that were the case, he's a little too late. No, Zaccheaus cleaned up his act because he already got Jesus' favor. Zacchaeus had done some pretty rotten things, and lived a pretty rotten live; a life that Jesus couldn't have approved of. But Jesus approved of Zacchaeus.

Jesus leads. Jesus comes into our lives. Jesus offers us love and forgiveness and hope and a new chance, we don't even have to ask. All that's left for us is to deal with it. All that's left for us is to trust in that love and forgiveness; to believe in that hope and that new chance. Jesus loves you. You didn't do anything to make that happen, but he loves you. So deal with that. Live like someone who's lovable. God forgives you. You didn't do anything to earn that. God doesn't owe you a clean start, but God gives you one. God's forgiveness is honest and complete. So deal with that. Be forgiving to others; give them another chance.

Jesus rose for you. He didn't ask you first, he just did it. Deal with it. Live for your neighbor.

Jesus comes to us. Our shameful past, our dirty little secrets, our wrongheaded attitudes; none of it keeps him away. Jesus in­vites himself into our lives. He forgives us and he loves us and he gives us hope. May God grant us the faith to deal with it. Amen.

CSS Publishing Company, Sermons for Sundays after Pentecost (Last Third): Knowing Who’s in Charge, by Scott Bryte