Would that we could know what Zacchaeus was thinking as he ran ahead of the crowd that day in Jericho! What would he have known or believed about the Galilean preacher? What did he think of the crowds that thronged the streets of Jericho, straining to glimpse the teacher as he journeyed toward Jerusalem? Could he have remembered that more than 500 years earlier Isaiah had promised there would be a day like this? Probably not. Zacchaeus had other problems.
To begin with, he was a short man. He had spent much of his life standing on tiptoe looking over the shoulders of others or peering between the people in front of him. Because he was a man of wealth and an official of the town, one might believe that the crowd would have gladly given him a place at the front of the row. But he didn't ask. Had he tried to push to the front, the crowd would more likely have given him serious bruises than a clear line of vision. They hated tax collectors for at least two good reasons: first, tax collectors, usually customs agents who set inflated values and taxed by the fixed rate, were considered dishonest plunderers of their own people; and, second, they were collaborators with the occupying government of Rome, traitors in the minds of the many who longed for Israel's independence and glory.
Zacchaeus was a "chief tax collector" and he had become rich. The crowd would believe, rightly or wrongly, that he had become so at their expense.
It's no wonder Zacchaeus ran ahead of the crowd to a sycamore tree. The tree would give him the height he needed to catch a glimpse of the Galilean, and the protection he needed from a not-so-friendly crowd. With their eyes fixed on the coming procession, they might never look up at all. They might never see him.
After all, trees are great places for hiding, for seeing without being seen. And since we cannot know what it was that drove him to venture into the crowd that day, we do wonder. In the security of his tree, he might even have been a "spectator follower" of the preacher ... a "treetop saint," if you will.
Now we all know about "treetop saints." We have been there ourselves once or twice, not quite yet ready to say "yes" to the movements and opportunities that were swirling around us. That may be where Zacchaeus was that day - curious but not yet convinced, driven but not yet converted. A few years ago the comedian Flip Wilson was asked about his religious affiliation. "I'm a Jehovah's Bystander," he answered. "They asked me to be a Jehovah's Witness, but I didn't want to get involved."
In the serenity of his tree, Zecchaeus was secure from the unfriendly crowd. They never looked up. He might have been safe from an encounter with the preacher as well. But not on this day. Jesus looked up!
"Zacchaeus!" Jesus called. "Hurry up and come down. I must stay at your house today." Not only had Jesus seen him in the tree, but he had called him by name. He knew his name! When this day had begun, Zacchaeus was up a tree in more ways than one. When it was over, his feet would be solidly on the ground, perhaps for the very first time in his life.
Instantly he was down from his perch. Surely he did not think of it then, but what had begun to unfold for Zacchaeus and the people in Jericho was something the prophet Isaiah had spoken of more than 500 years before. For Zacchaeus, this was the moment of God's fulfilling of a promise.
The spirit of the Lord God is upon me because ... He has sent me to bring good news to the oppressed, to bind up the broken hearted, to proclaim liberty to the captives, and release the prisoners ... I will greatly rejoice in the Lord, my whole being shall exult in my God, for he has clothed me with the garment of salvation, he has covered me with the robe of righteousness. (Isaiah 61:1, 10a).
To Bring Good News To the Oppressed
Suddenly the crowd seemed to be gone. Face to face, just two people mattered. Jesus was looking squarely into the eyes of Zacchaeus. In that moment God had invaded Zacchaeus' life and he would never again be the same. Two things stand out for us here. There is the movement of God and there is a clear new light on the captive and oppressed nature of the life of a man who thought he had everything. Zacchaeus was a wealthy man, but not a rich man, and he was far from free. First, there is Jesus.
Through Jesus, God walked squarely into Zacchaeus' life. We speak so often about our searching for God. The biblical truth is that God comes looking for us. Since the days of Adam and Eve it has always been so. When Moses encountered the burning bush, God became involved personally in effecting the exodus of the Hebrews from the slavery of Egypt. "I have seen the afflictions of my people ... I have seen their sufferings. I have come down to deliver them out of the hand of the Egyptians." Later, God revealed himself to Moses as "merciful and gracious, slow to anger and abounding in steadfast love for thousands, forgiving iniquity and transgressions and sin."
By the time of the Babylonian deportation and captivity, the exilic prophets Ezekiel and Isaiah were revealing God's active involvement in the salvation of his people:
Behold I, I myself will search for my sheep and will seek them out ... I will seek the lost and I will bring back the strayed and I will bind up the crippled, and I will strengthen the weak (Ezekiel 34:11, 16).
The lost, the strayed, and the outcast have always been the focus of God's redemptive and reconciling activity. Of all the gospels, Luke brings us this message with intentional clarity. T. W. Manson calls Luke's gospel the "Gospel of the Outcast," and rightly so. God comes looking for us and finds us, even in trees along the streets of Jericho.
Jesus encountered Zacchaeus as he was passing through Jericho on the way to Jerusalem. Luke begins the record of this journey at the 15th chapter, and it concludes with this special encounter. All along the way Jesus was deliberate in his outreach to those the righteous seemed always to have excluded, both then and now.
Now the tax collectors and sinners were all drawing near to him. And the Pharisees and the scribes murmured saying: "This man receives sinners and eats with them" (Luke 15:1-2).
Jesus answered the charge in the famous trilogy of parables about lost persons and things: the Lost Sheep, the Lost Coin, and the Lost Son. Each concludes with joy in heaven over the repentant sinner. In the course of Jesus' travels, his teaching and preaching speak eloquently of the inclusiveness of God's redemptive work. Parables told along the way include the parables of the Dishonest Steward, the Unjust Judge, the Rich Man and Lazarus, and the Pharisee and the Publican. Each addresses the gospel's outreach to those who would be outcasts. Ten lepers are healed, one a Samaritan. He is the only one returning to give thanks. And now as Jesus passes through Jericho, he calls out to the chief tax collector, Zacchaeus.
It is as if Jesus has taken for himself the prophecy of Isaiah: "The spirit of the Lord is upon me to bring good news to the oppressed ... and to proclaim liberty to the captives." Christ came to Jericho on that day bringing the good news.
To Proclaim Liberty To The Captives
No one would have called Zacchaeus a "captive"! He was a wealthy man who had risen to the top of his profession in an important city. Jericho commanded the roadways to Jerusalem from the east and the crossings of the Jordan River to the area of Trans Jordan. The importance of the location is attested to by the three sites visible today. There is a modern Jericho, a New Testament Jericho, and the Old Testament site named Tel es-Sultan. The fresh and generous spring known as "Elisha's Spring" is the largest in Palestine. It transforms the area into an oasis in the midst of the parched no man's land of the Judean countryside. Jericho's very name comes from the beauty and bounty of its plants and fruits. Even in ancient times it was known for its rose gardens, dates, balsam groves and tropical fruits.
Zacchaeus had done well for himself in this productive and bustling community of commerce. Josephus, the first-century Jewish historian, calls Jericho "the fattest." Since his "collections" were most likely customs, and the roads for which Jericho served as the "tollhouse" were both strategic and busy, he should have done well ... even as an honest tax collector, which he may well have been. In his enthusiastic conversion, he says, "If I have defrauded anyone of anything ..." He does not suggest that he is aware that he has.
He is a wealthy and prominent man. Hardly can one call him a captive. As a chief tax collector and a wealthy man, oppressed seems less appropriate still. Nonetheless, both describe him well.
Prominent and wealthy, he is nonetheless an outcast. As a tax collector he is stereotyped and assumed to be dishonest, whether he is or not. He is captive to the image if not the behavior. Though he is a son of Abraham, he is unable to enter with other Jewish men into the inner courts of the temple for prayer. As a tax collector, a publican, he must stand afar off in the outermost Court of the Gentiles because he is considered a traitor to his country and a plunderer of his own people. To be a tax collector is to be a sinner.
Though Jericho is an important, busy and sizable city, Zacchaeus cannot roam the streets as a free man. It is not so much that he is in fear of bodily harm, but rather that he is shunned by the people. His presence is unwelcome. He is not wanted there. He is alienated from his own people. That may well be why he ran ahead of the crowd and climbed a tree. No one was likely to have cared whether he saw the Galilean preacher or not. That's just it: No one cared at all for Zacchaeus. They abhorred him! They would have taken pleasure in seeing to it that he did not see the Galilean.
No wonder he was so determined to see this preacher. Zacchaeus was not a happy man. Zacchaeus had learned that "however far you go, it is not much use if it is not in the right direction." Wealth means little when one is alone and without self-esteem. It has been wisely said that "we can never attain the self-containedness we so impiously desire. We can live in forgetfulness of him, but not with peace of mind. We can live without his blessing, but not without his judgment."2 Zacchaeus had alienated himself from God. Just as the tax collector in Jesus' parable, he is trapped by his profession and by his wealth. Even Jesus had said it would be easier for a camel to go through the eye of a needle than it would be for a rich man to enter the kingdom of God.
So here is Zacchaeus ... up a tree in more ways than one:
... the rich man who doesn't have a camel's chance of getting into the kingdom of God,... the rich man who has everything except public respect, self-esteem, and quiet in his soul,... the tax collector whose employers are the very ones who will carry out Jesus' crucifixion ...3
Jesus calls this man by name. "The Spirit of the Lord is upon me to bring the good news to the oppressed ... to proclaim liberty to the captives." Zacchaeus! Hurry up and come down. Come out of your hiding. I must stay at your house today."
Clothed Me With Salvation -- Set Free
The ancient prophet had said this day would come. Jesus announces it in Zacchaeus' house. "Today salvation has come to this house ... for the Son of Man came to seek and save the lost." Jesus' announcement is the answer to the grumbling crowd that would wish the gospel to reward the righteous and punish those who are beyond the usual pale of social respectability.
Clearly, "salvation" is the goal of God's plan for his Son, Jesus Christ, and this salvation is an important part of the Christ event. Among the synoptic gospels, Luke is the only one to assign to Jesus the title "Savior." Paul writes of awaiting and working out our salvation. For Luke, salvation is something already achieved. "Today salvation has come to this house."
The ancient Hebrew root word most often associated with salvation can be translated "to become spacious, or to enlarge." It is the opposite of being confined, constrained, or oppressed. To "be delivered," therefore, means to enlarge the space in our lives. For Zacchaeus it meant no longer having to hide from God nor fear to walk the streets. Just as alienation creates tensions in relationships and closes doors to people, places and opportunities for us, so salvation enlarges the space of our freedom. It opens all the doors that alienation has closed. Jesus said, "I came that they may have life, and have it abundantly."
Zacchaeus was delivered from his slavery to the "things" he had accumulated. He was free to live creatively, using the things accumulated rather than allowing himself to be used by them. The late Dag Hammerskjold wrote: "You are liberated from things, but you encounter in them an experience which has the purity and clarity of revelation. In the faith which is 'God's marriage to the soul,' everything, therefore, has a meaning. So live, then, that you may use what has been put into your hand ..."
In a few brief hours, Zacchaeus' life has changed dramatically. He will never be the same man again. Moments ago he was an outcast from God and his own townspeople, running ahead of a crowd that may well have been hostile, climbing a tree to catch a glimpse of a man who might have for him the answers. Salvation had come that day to his house!
Covered With The Robe Of Righteousness -- A Life Changed
Abundantly free, the effect and evidence of salvation is immediate for Zacchaeus. Confronted by Christ, called down from his tree, and with his feet firmly on the ground, Zacchaeus responds with a new excitement and freedom. No longer either oppressed or constrained, even by the law of God, he goes in his new and abundant freedom beyond the mandate of the law:
Behold, Lord, the half of my goods I give to the poor;and if I have defrauded anyone of anything, I restore it fourfold.
The ancient law required a repayment of double the value if the goods were taken in robbery, but only the value of the goods plus a penalty of 20 percent if the confession was voluntary. In either case, Zacchaeus went far beyond the law. In his gifts to the poor, his vision and caring were extended. In the offer of restitution, his sense of justice was affirmed. Clearly, salvation had come to that house that day!
Though Isaiah's reference to the "robe of righteousness" is properly applied to the servant about whom Isaiah speaks, it is correct to say that Zacchaeus, too, was clothed with the robe of righteousness. Always the word has two dimensions: the vindication that comes from God's grace and the quality of life the "redeemed of God" celebrate in their freedom.
Martin Luther writes, "Let everybody regard baptism as the daily garment which he is to wear all the time. Every day he should be found in faith and amid its fruits ... If we wish to be Christians, we must practice the work that makes us Christians."5
Righteousness is the robe God gives, but wearing it is an intentional act of the redeemed. "One's testimony is utterly useless," writes Barclay, "unless it is backed by deeds that guarantee its sincerity. It's not a mere change of words that Jesus demands, but a change of life." Just so, Zacchaeus is determined to bear testimony to his salvation, going far beyond the law.
Solidly On The Ground
Would that we knew what Zacchaeus was thinking - or expecting - as he hurried along ahead of the crowd, climbed a tree and watched for the one about whom he had heard so much. Was he an unhappy man who hoped against all hope that the preacher had an answer for meaning in his life? Was he curious, like so many others? Is it possible that he was a secret follower of the Christ? Had he climbed the tree to avoid the crowds or the Christ? Is it possible that all along he was a "spectator follower" of the preacher ... a "treetop saint?"
Were that so, he would not have been alone either then or now. There are those who enjoy the security of the perch, either cowering in self-guilt or celebrating the scene and shouting a cheer now and again. But they never march in the parade. They are "treetop" followers ... "grandstand Christians" who talk a splendid game but always watch from afar. They lift no banners, march in no bands, sing in no choirs, chant no prayers and pledge no gifts, albeit they still enjoy seeing the parade and even fashion themselves to be "soul brothers" to the cause. They enjoy seeing, but not being seen. They gather by the hundreds on most congregations' rolls, and no matter how loudly Christ would seem to call, they are not going to come down from the protection of their trees. They celebrate the scene, but not the sharing.
It was not so with Zacchaeus! Jesus called, and he came down joyfully. Jesus the Master had called him by name. Suddenly his life was changed. Nothing could ever be the same again, not ever again. Life and the goods he had accumulated changed their meanings. "Lord," he said, "half of my possessions I give to the poor, and if I have defrauded anyone of anything, I will restore it fourfold." He was converted in his thinking and enlightened in his understandings so that yesterday's defrauded became today's winners. One converted and newly-enlightened steward of God's blessings can cause a ripple of joy throughout the world. For the first time in a long time, and maybe for the first time ever in his life, Zacchaeus had planted his feet solidly on the ground.
Over and again Christ comes to our hiding places and our living spaces to offer us the same gift of salvation. He calls the "treetop followers," the "grandstand Christians," and the cowering outcasts alike to accept his visit into their places. Life has its ways of driving us all up trees. Christ offers us a way to come down.
Amen.
1. William Barclay, Testament of Faith, (London, A. R. Mowbray and Co., Ltd., 1975), p. 4.
2. John Baillie, Our Knowledge of God, (New York, Charles Scribner's Sons, 1939), p. 1.
3. Paul J. Achtemeier, Proclamation 3, Pentecost 3, Series C, (Philadelphia, Fortress Press, 1986), p. 42.
4. Dag Hammerskjold, Markings, Translated from the Swedish by Leif Sjoberg and W. H. Auden, (New York, Alfred A. Knopf, 1988), p. 165.
5. Martin Luther, "The Large Catechism," The Book of Concord, Translated and edited by Theodore G. Tappert, (Philadelphia, Fortress Press, 1959), p. 448.