Green Lake Church Gazette article for January, 2015
Sometimes, it's good to climb a tree
and get a different view. Somethings that are obvious from high in a
tree are invisible from the ground.
In the words of the children's song,
Zacchaeus was a wee little man. He was also rich, having made his
money the old fashioned way, mining a government contract for
personal wealth. Along the way he had managed to earn the scorn and
hostility of large segments of the population. The famous rabbi,
Jesus, was coming to town and Zacchaeus wanted to see him. However,
the density of the crowd coupled with Zacchaeus' short stature and
low social standing made direct access to Jesus impossible.
The tax contractor scurried ahead of
the crowd, found a tree and climbed up. Sure enough, Jesus came
along, and Zacchaeus got his chance to see.
As Christians we freely use the gospel
stories of Jesus' interaction with people as windows into the
purposes and wishes of God. We understand Jesus' invitation of
himself to Zacchaeus' house for lunch as a parable of the divine
desire for communion with us. We imagine God calling out to us,
“Come, let's do lunch together at your place.”
Because of the
story of Zacchaeus, we imagine God wishing to enjoy a leisurely hour
or two sitting at our table eating soup and crackers or a sandwich
and potato chips. God wants our company. God is captivated by our
stories of triumphs and dreams as well as by our tales of tragedy and
heartbreak.
But this Gospel
story has an important complication. Yes, Jesus invited himself to
Zacchaeus' house for lunch, making explicit his wish to fraternize
with the tax collector. And yes, the pleasure was mutual. Zacchaeus
was thrilled to entertain his famous guest. Thus far the story is
sweet and uncomplicated. But as soon as the camera zooms out to take
in the reactions of the crowd, things get messy. The Gospel reports,
“All the people saw this and began to mutter, 'He has gone to be
the guest of a sinner.'”
Not a few people.
Not some people. Not most of the people. The negative reaction is so
pervasive, the Gospel reports that “everyone” began to mutter.
Nobody was happy except Zacchaeus and Jesus.
Have you ever felt
like Zacchaeus? Ever been on the outside of the divine circle of
approval? Have you ever wished for an encounter with God, but were
intimidated by a wall of people between you and divine approval?
Occasionally, I hear stories of people who grew up in church, but
never quite fit the mold. They asked too many questions. They could
not manage being conventional. Impulse control was not their strong
suite. Alcohol or marijuana or some other drug was seductive beyond
their ability to resist. They had the wrong line of work. They were
ugly. They were too pretty. They were poor. They were too successful.
Whatever it was that set them off as different, when they imagined
coming to Jesus, they always faced an intimidating wall of human
disapproval.
If you have ever
found yourself attracted to God exemplified in the stories of Jesus
but repulsed by a wall of less-than-welcoming people, try climbing a
metaphorical tree. The story of Zacchaeus gives us permission to find
an unconventional viewpoint, to bypass approved channels, to
disregard the official guardians of orthodoxy and find our own vision
of the smile of God. And you can count on it, when you climb that
metaphorical tree, when you get a glimpse of the divine face, you
will find a welcoming smile.
Some of my friends
think this is too rosy a picture. They fret that I'm putting into the
story a meaning that isn't really there. It's an understandable
concern. However, my interpretation of the Zacchaeus story is
reinforced by its context in Luke's Gospel. Immediately preceding the
story of Zacchaeus are other stories: the persistent widow who has to
force action from a reluctant judge (she pushes through a wall of
social/legal inertia), the story of the disciples (a wall of people
again) turning away mothers and children, the tax collector who
sneaks into the temple to pray (braving the wall of righteous scorn),
an attempt by the crowd (the wall, again) to shush a blind beggar's
cries for help. In every case, there are hurdles and beyond the
hurdles a divine welcome. The story of Zacchaeus is followed by the
parable of the talents. The horror in the parable is tragic
misreading of the character of the king (God).
In this series of
stories Luke presents a coherent, compelling vision of God's
character. If we are part of the crowd—the company of people
publicly associated with Jesus—these stories all raise the
question: will we applaud Jesus' extravagant grace or will we mutter
about the sinners Jesus shares lunch with? Will we seek to protect
Jesus' reputation and the purity of the church or will we act in
concert with Jesus to welcome sinners and mothers and kids and other
needy people? Will we celebrate the generosity of grace or protest
its wastefulness?
In the Zacchaeus
story Jesus does not wait for the crowd to approve before he welcomes
himself to Zacchaeus' house. If we see ourselves as Zacchaeus in the
story, if we are hungry for the face of God, then this story assures
us God's face is turned our direction with a smile. When God spots us
hiding in a tree, peering through the leaves wondering if, perhaps,
at the heart of the crowd is a personage magnetic enough to explain
the enthusiasm of the crowd, God will smile in response.
Yes, he has drawn a
crowd and is pleased they have come. And now, looking at you, alone
in the tree, God says, “Yes, you, too. Come, let's do lunch.”
1 comment:
Praise God for your insight, Pastor John. Jesus came as the Great Physician to heal the physically and spiritually sick. And the sickest patients are the ones who need Him the most. They are the ones who need us (His followers) the most also.
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