Luke 19:1-10 · Zacchaeus the Tax Collector
Sycamore Blues
Luke 19:1-10
Sermon
by Lori Wagner
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“Nothing in all creation is hidden from God’s sight. Everything is uncovered and laid bare before the eyes of him to whom we must give account.” (Hebrews 4:13)

There are no secret sins.

But oh, we LOVE our secrets, don’t we?

We have secret rendezvous, secret accounts, secret passwords, secret societies, secret meetings, secret diaries, secret pasts, and secret habits. Some of us even have secret desires and secret aspirations that we never share with anyone but our closest and trusted friends.

All to protect ourselves from thievery that would deprive us of our privacy, our assets, our dignity, and our peace of mind.

But all us know, don’t we, that nothing in our lives or our past or our workplace or in our church is ever secret from Jesus, especially those desires and compulsions that we most WISH we could hide from the face of God.

God sees everything. God knows everything. That means God sees and God knows every part of us.

You may be able to hide your spending from your spouse, or your injury from your boss. But you can’t hide your soul from Jesus.

Wherever you are, whatever you do, Jesus sees in and through YOU.

He knows you. He knows all of you. Yet he loves you more than anyone else in your life.

In last week’s sermon, we talked about hiding ourselves “in” God, a way to garner strength and courage. This week, we are going to talk about hiding “from” God –a completely futile endeavor that weakens us and deprives us of God’s healing and forgiving grace. Yet we all do it.

Today’s scripture is about a man named Zacchaeus. Zacchaeus is a big-wig tax commissioner for Rome. He’s not just a tax collector. But he’s the Big Cheese, the top of the heap, and he’s very, very rich!

He’s got a LOT of money. He’s a billionaire. He’s part of the 1% of the 1%. But the thing is….we can pretty much know that not all of that money came to him on the up-and-up. In fact, one of the reasons that tax collectors were so despised in Jesus’ day is because of their notorious way of “overcharging,” of extracting over the top, and gaining interest on the side. Zacchaeus took more than he was supposed to on behalf of Rome, and padded his own wallets to quite a comfortable degree. He defrauded his own people. Rome knew he was doing it. His own people knew was doing it. He was the first century version of Bernie Madoff.

And yet, Jesus doesn’t label him lousy, but labels him lost.

“The Son of Man comes to seek and save the lost,” Jesus said.

The amazing thing about this story is that Jesus and Zacchaeus didn’t just sit down one day to have a conversation about money. No. Jesus never works quite that way.

Rather, Jesus discovered Zacchaeus in a very interesting way. Zacchaeus was looking for him. The inquisitive tax collector just didn’t realize why.

Zacchaeus was curious about this guy who was garnering so much attention. He wanted to get a peek, to get up close but not personal. Probably knowing he wouldn’t see a thing from within the crowd (the scripture tells us he was short), he ran ahead of the oncoming messiah, and put a leg up into a nearby Sycamore (or Sycamine) tree, a large shade tree with abundant leaves and low-lying strong branches that grew by the side of the roadways outside of Jericho.

Was he trying to stay out of sight? Or simply trying to get a better view? We can’t be entirely sure. But I can tell you that the story reminded me of one told to me by my father, who lived on a farm when he was a young boy. Whenever he found he had done something he shouldn’t have, he would crawl underneath the tomato vines or behind the corn rows, so that he could see his parents coming, but they (hopefully) couldn’t see him.

Well, maybe Zacchaeus was hiding, and maybe he wasn’t. But he surely wanted to be the one in control. So, he climbed “out on a limb” so he could see just what was coming. What happened next surprised him.

Jesus looked up, and looked into Zacchaeus’ eyes. Then he told Zacchaeus to come down from the tree branch. “I’m coming to stay with you,” Jesus said.

Everyone in the crowd began mumbling and complaining that Jesus would speak to this tax collector, the notorious Zacchaeus. Then to go with him to his home for a meal! Unthinkable! Incorrigible! How could you give such a scoundrel the time of day?

But Jesus saw something in Zacchaeus that he couldn’t see in himself, until their eyes met.

And then….something phenomenal happened. Something miraculous. Something entirely unexpected.

Zacchaeus’s spirit changed.

His spirit was cleansed. His mind was healed of his iniquities. His soul was opened. And Zacchaeus reversed his stingy ways, and began to give….and give…..and give.

Jesus had seen through the film of Zacchaeus’s flimsy veneer and saw the seeds of a sturdy faith. He saw through the twisted branches of Zacchaeus’s many sins and saw repentance; he saw through his stubbornness, and shame, and the pride of Zacchaeus’s lonely soul, and he saw hope.

Jesus recognized in Zacchaeus a “son of Abraham,” not a son of greed. Jesus saw in Zacchaeus a beloved child of God, not a hated villain.

And do you know what?

Jesus recognizes in you the very same.

You can’t hide your soul from Jesus.

“Come down!” said Jesus to Zacchaeus.

“Come down!” says Jesus to all of us. Come down from your high horses and hidden perches and stand before me in your sadness and your shame. You have no secrets from me. I see you.

I see YOU. And the more I see YOU, the more I love YOU.

Give to God your secrets, and “There is no Secret What God Can Do.

What He’s Done for Others, He’ll Do For you.

With Eyes Wide Open, He’ll Pardon You,

There is No Secret, What God Can Do.”

Stuart G. Hamlin was inspired to write that song after trying to explain to his friend, actor John Wayne, what difference it would make if he opened up his life to Jesus. Stuart Hamblin kept saying to John Wayne, “John, there is no secret what God can do, if you only turn your life over to him. What he’s done for others, he’ll do for you. God right now is standing there with arms wide open. He’ll welcome you, no matter what you’ve done. There is no secret, John, what God can do.”

John Wayne listened, obviously moved, and then said: “Stuart, you ought to make that into a song.” The actual song was written as Stuart was waiting for his wife Suzie to get dressed for a New Year’s Eve Party . . And now you know the rest of the story . . .

Let’s pray together now that God might see through you, and open your life to new possibilities and new life in Jesus.

Let’s pray: Lord Jesus, who sees my every thought, knows my every worry, is aware of each mistake I’ve made, I come to you revealed in all of my sorrow. Bless and heal me Lord, that I may bathe in your forgiveness, stand washed in your mercy, rise up in your joy, go out anew in your Holy Spirit. I open up every secret of my life to you. Amen.


Based on the Story Lectionary

Major Text

Jesus Sees Zacchaeus in a Sycamore and Invites Himself to Zacchaeus’s Table (Luke 19)

Minor Text

Adam and Eve Hide from God (Genesis 3)

Rehoboam Overtaxes the People (1 Kings 12)

Psalm 15: Those Who Dwell with the Lord Do Not Overcharge Others

Psalm 19: The Lord Refreshes the Soul

Psalm 139: There is No Hiding from God

Proverbs 22:2: Rich and Poor Alike

Proverbs 28:8-10: Those Who Overtax Others

The Story of Jonah

Blessed is the One Who Trusts in the Lord and Not in the World (Jeremiah 17:1-18)

Desire Gives Birth to Sin but God Saves (James 1:1-18)

Jesus Saves Sinners of Which I am the Worst Says Timothy (1 Timothy 1:12-17)

Jesus Sees Zacchaeus in a Sycamore and Invites Himself to Zacchaeus’s Table

Jesus entered Jericho and was passing through. A man was there by the name of Zacchaeus; he was a chief tax collector and was wealthy. He wanted to see who Jesus was, but because he was short he could not see over the crowd. So, he ran ahead and climbed a sycamore-fig tree to see him, since Jesus was coming that way.

When Jesus reached the spot, he looked up and said to him, “Zacchaeus, come down immediately. I must stay at your house today.”

So, he came down at once and welcomed him gladly.

All the people saw this and began to mutter, “He has gone to be the guest of a sinner.”

But Zacchaeus stood up and said to the Lord, “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.”

Jesus said to him, “Today salvation has come to this house, because this man, too, is a son of Abraham. For the Son of Man came to seek and to save the lost.”

Image Exegesis: Sycamore Blues

“Can any hide himself in secret places that I shall not see him? says the Lord.” (Jeremiah 23:24)

“There is no darkness, and no deep darkness, where evildoers can hide themselves.” (Job 34:22)

“My eyes are on all their ways; they are not hidden from me, nor is their sin concealed from my eyes.” (Jeremiah 16:17)

Like Jesus’ tales of the lost sheep, lost coin, or lost son, the story of Zacchaeus is also a “lost” story. But this “lost” story is not about an irresponsible son who squanders money, but about a man who loved money too much.

In fact, you might say that this story of “lost” and “found” is more an antithesis to Jesus’ Lazarus story. Although the story of Zacchaeus is not a parable, it is the “real-life” story of someone who did not take the “rich man’s” road as dives in the Lazarus story, but repented and received the gifts of heaven.

Interestingly, both revolve around house and most probably table.

Like Jesus’ parable of widow and judge, Zacchaeus was putting his faith in the wrong places…and like the rich man in the Lazarus story…was treating people like objects, not brothers and sisters.

But the most interesting part of the story is the emphasis on the “sycamore fig tree” outside of Jericho (known for its palm trees).

While Zacchaeus was surrepticiously scoping out Jesus, Jesus was in fact scoping out Zacchaeus, and hones right in on him, singles him out, and “calls him out.”

Was the sycamore a hiding place? Or simply a metaphor for the stubbornness, immovability, and inferior fruit that the sycamore may represent?

Sycamores were huge shade trees with lots of leaves and low lying branches. They have gnarly thick trunks and deep roots. Found by the roadsides, it would have been an easy tree to perch upon. The leathery leaves could make for awesome surveillance.

Because of the trees thickness and depth, they are difficult to move and transplant; still, the sycamore fig is said to represent “regeneration.”

Note the passage in Luke 17:6: “If you had faith as a grain of mustard seed, you might say to this sycamine tree, ‘be plucked up by the root, and be planted in the sea,’ and it should obey you.”

The fruit of the fig, while sweet, is sub quality to the fig tree. But its heart-shaped leaves emit a sweet fragrance.

When Jesus calls Zacchaeus down from the tree (calls him out) of the tree, and he stands face to face with Jesus, his attitude is miraculously changed. This intimate engagement between Jesus and the man initiates an unhindered relationship between Zacchaeus and God and heals him from his greed (initiates a process of redemption).

He is made into a new man.

One can’t help think of Jonah pouting under a tree, still stubbornly resisting God’s all-abounding grace to the Ninevites. Here, Zacchaeus is freed from his “sin,” freed from his abasement, and is invited to table with Jesus in front of all of his Abrahamic brothers and sisters. His brotherhood is restored.

The metaphor of the sycamore fig (his old fruit) is exchanged for a new relationship in which his true nature as God’s child is revealed. Even as Adam and Eve hid after tasting the forbidden fruit, here Zacchaeus is called out of hiding to stand side by side with Jesus.

ChristianGlobe Networks, Inc., by Lori Wagner