Stewardship
Zacchaeus
Stewardship Sunday
Luke 19:1-10 (Also,
Pentecost 22)
Have you ever been
to a parade where you couldn’t see past the person in front of
you? Perhaps the person
in front of you was too tall or too wide, so you couldn’t seen the
marching bands, the prancing horses, or the fire trucks flashing
their lights. So you
were then hoisted up on the shoulders of your father or grandfather
and were able to clearly see the parade...the bands, the horses, the
fire trucks.
I personally love
the Seafaire parades here in Seattle.
We never went early enough to get front row seats on the
curbs. We always came
late, but carrying a stepladder.
We would position the stepladder behind the wall of people.
There would be three of us on that ladder, and we could see
over their heads just fine.
Today’s Gospel
story is a parade story, where short little Zacchaeus couldn’t see
past all the people in the crowds.
He wanted to see Jesus all right, but he had to climb a tree
in order to see him. You
and I can understand that because we’ve all been at parades where
we couldn’t clearly see. The
people in front of us were too tall or too many. Today’s gospel
story is easy to visualize.
I would like to
offer some further background information that will help you to
visualize this story even more.
Jericho.
The story happened near a tollbooth on the road through
Jericho. Let me explain. There
were two major highways in Israel at that time and one of them went
right through Jericho. Let’s imagine that there was a large Jewish population in
Spokane, Washington, and another large Jewish population here in
Seattle, and Jewish people from Spokane wanted to travel to Seattle
but in between the two cities were Palestinians or Samaritans who
were hostile enemies to the Jews.
So the Jews just couldn’t take the freeway from Spokane to
Seattle or they may have been mugged by their traditional enemies.
So, the Jews from Spokane went north up into Canada, safely
traveled west and came down through customs in Blaine, through the
customs station there. Jericho
was the customs station, and thousands of Jews came through there
and they had to pay poll taxes on every cow, calf, and camel that
came through customs.
Passover time.
It was Passover time which meant that tens
of thousands of Jewish pilgrims were coming down from Galilee,
going around Samaria
because it was unsafe, and coming through the toll booth at Jericho
and paying their poll taxes. Researchers
tell us that two or three
million people showed up for the Passover.
It was like Seafaire here in Seattle, with
millions showing up. Jesus,
also, was making this trip, from up north in Galilee, coming south
through Jericho to Jerusalem.
Circus time.
Jesus had become a circus star.
Jesus had raised Lazarus from the dead, healed Bartimaus of
his blindness and turned the water into wine. If you can turn water
into wine, you become a circus star, a super star.
Jesus had superstar status, and the tens of thousands of
people passing through customs at Jericho wanted to see Jesus.
So, short little
Zacchaeus couldn’t see Jesus in such a crowd; he needed to get
higher, someplace higher to see over the crowds.
He didn’t have a stepladder but he saw a sycamore tree,
right there on the side of the road that Jesus was traveling.
Zacchaeus ran ahead
and cleverly climbed that sycamore tree.
Now a sycamore tree is like a fig tree but taller; some 50 to
75 feet tall and some 50 feet wide.
It has large leaves, like a maple or an oak tree.
A sycamore tree is a shade tree, and so Zacchaeus climbed up,
took out his bag of popcorn or pomegranates, his bottle of pop and
waited.
Sure enough, here
came Jesus. Just like he planned. Zacchaeus
could see the donkey and The Man through the leaves,
coming up the road. People
were shouting, “Hosanna to the Son of David.”
Wow! What a seat. And
then the donkey stopped right beneath his branch.
What luck. My
friends will never believe it.
Ringside seat.
Jesus looked up and
said, “Zacchaeus, you come down, for I’m coming to your house
this day.” You know
the song from childhood. “Zacchaeus,
you come down, for I am coming to your house today.”
Zaccheus thought
quickly to himself: “How
does he know my name? ... How would
he know me? ... Why me? ... What does
he want with me?”
Zacchaeus quickly slid down the tree, the buttons bursting
from his shirt with pride. “Jesus,
I would be honored to have you come to my home, the loveliest villa
in Jericho, right down there overlooking the river.”
As Zacchaeus sashayed to his house, everyone was gawking at
Jesus and Zacchaeus too,
which pleased Zacchaeus immensely.
But the crowds
weren’t too pleased with Jesus’ choice of a new found friend.
Zacchaeus was the most despised man in Jericho, a crook, a
cocky little crook. Not
only was he a tax collector at the toll booth; he was the chief
tax collector. The big
boss. The richest man in
town. He worked for the
Roman government, collecting their taxes, and Zacchaeus would pad
the tax, for his own personal benefit.
If there was an immoral skunk in town, Zacchaeus was the man.
A thief, a con man, but untouchable because he was protected
by the Roman government. What
a poor choice Jesus made.
So the two of them
went into Zacchaeus’ home. Now,
it isn’t very often that I am disappointed in the Bible, but I
must confess that I am at this point.
Because we don’t hear one word of what Jesus said to Zacchaeus while in the house
together. In a few
moments, Zacchaeus was going to come out of that house a changed
man, and we don’t know what Jesus said to him. If we knew what
Jesus said, then maybe we could say the same things and people could
be changed on Stewardship Sunday.
About that time,
Zacchaeus came out of the front door by himself and addressed the
large crowd who finally quiet down.
He said, “I apologize to you folks. I have been cheating
you for years now at the tollbooth. You know it and so do I.
I have been a cad, taking advantage of my position.
I’ve gotten richer at your expense.
I apologize. To make it right, I will pay back each one of you from whom I
have stolen. I will
repay you back four times the amount I cheated you.
Yes, each and every one of you.
Also, I am giving half of my goods to the poor of our
city.”
The crowd was
shell-shocked. Their cynical selves couldn’t believe it.
One man piped up: “Sure Zacchaeus, we’ll believe it when we see it.
The Old Testament law is clear; you need to repay us what you
stole from us plus 20%; but you say you are going to repay 400%?
What’s the gimmick, Zacchaeus?
What’s the trick?”
Another suspicious
person chimed in: “Half
your goods to the poor? You
never cared a rip for the poor.
You never dropped a dollar into the alms plate.
When they rang bells for the poor at Hanukkah, you walked
right on by the bucket. You
often said: ‘let the poor go to work and not live off handouts.’
We’ll believe it when we see it, Zacchaeus.”
About that time,
Jesus walked out, stood beside the white picket fence, put his arm
around Zacchaeus, and quieted the crowds.
“Today, salvation has come to Zacchaeus’s house.
He has become a true son of Abraham.
I have come to seek and save the lost.
Zacchaeus has been found.”
Thus ends one of
the most beautiful stories in the Bible, about a short little man
who climbed a sycamore tree in order to see Jesus, a story about a
man who was transformed from greedy to generous, from selfish to
selfless, from a thieving heart to a thanksgiving heart.
We ask ourselves: “What did Jesus say to him there in that house?”
If only we knew what Jesus said, then perhaps we could say
similar things to each other, and we too would be changed and become
equally generous.
What shall we talk
about? How shall we
apply this story to our own lives?
Perhaps we could talk about the fact that three stories
earlier in the Gospel of Luke, we heard about the rich young ruler
who wanted to be saved. Jesus
invited him to sell all he had and give it to the poor.
The young man couldn’t do it.
Jesus said, “It is harder for a rich man to enter the
Kingdom of God than for
a camel to go through the eye of a needle.
But with God, all things are possible.”
And now, three stories later, we discover a rich man who goes
through the eye of a needle and is saved.
We could focus on that, but we won’t.
Or perhaps we could
talk about the fact that Zacchaeus was the biggest immoral scoundrel
in town, a skunk, a reprobate, the worst of all possible sinners and
Jesus ate a meal with him. We could talk about the fact that Jesus will eat with anyone,
no matter how bad of a person he or she is said to be.
And so it is with Jesus’ meal, Holy Communion. If you are the biggest sinner in town, Jesus wants you at his
table. The worst of the
worst, Jesus wants to share his meal of forgiveness with you. Personally, this is important to me because my father never
felt worthy enough to receive Holy Communion; he wasn’t one of the
good church people and never good enough.
So I have this vow within myself to make sure that all people
who feel like my father know they are welcome at the Lord’s table.
We could focus on this, but we won’t.
Rather, I simply
remind you that Jesus loved Zacchaeus, the biggest sinner in town.
Jesus loved him, and in that love, Zacchaeus was transformed.
Let me explain. We
have this temptation within ourselves to withhold love from people,
when we don’t like the shape of the sinfulness in their lives. For
example, a husband and wife may have some qualities that really
grate each other, and over time, there is the temptation to withhold
love from my husband or wife because the nature of their sinfulness
irritates so much. ...
Or your teenager, going through that teenager rebellion which is so
hard for everyone, and there is a temptation to withhold one’s
love when the rebellion is at the worst.
... Or when your boss is so autocratically and blindly
demanding....or the person who works for you is so inept and
incompetent in doing trivial tasks, over time there is a temptation
to withhold one’s love because one doesn’t like the shape of
sinfulness in the other person.
... Or your neighbor with the incessantly barking dog or tall
trees that block your view. ...
Or for those of us who have adult children, our adult children may
make choices that disappoint us enormously and we can get so
frustrated by seeing the consequences of their poor choices, that we
begin to slowly withhold our love from them. ... Or towards ourselves, the person living underneath our
own skin, we may not like the sinfulness in ourselves that we begin
to withhold our love for ourselves because we see ourselves as being
so inept and incompetent. So
let me say is clearly, so you all can hear: Jesus
loved Zacchaeus, even though he was the worst of sinners.
When you and I are at
our sinful worst, Jesus
continues to love us also.
Yes, that truth is at the heart of this story. And it is within that quality of love that a person is
changed.
It is human nature
to try to cover up our own sinfulness, to hide the fact or diminish
the fact of our sinfulness. Let me give you an illustration.
This is an old story, so old it involves Ella Gran as our
church secretary, so old that it involves a tape recorder when I
used to tape record my letters for Ella to type, so old that it
involves my son Joel, age 28, when he was five or six years old.
This is an old story. As
I remember it, my wife and I were having a little disagreement, some
of you may label it an argument, and still others of you would call
it a fight. That is;
tempers were hot and things were said in the heat of the moment.
What I didn’t realize at the time was that my little son
had accidentally turned on the tape recorder and recorded our whole
fight. Thank heavens, I
happened to listen to the tape before I gave it to Ella to type it
up. I would have been
mortified if she would have discovered and heard what was said on
that tape. So... like
Richard Nixon, I erased the crucial minutes and she never knew.
And so it is with
all of us. We cover it up; we pretend our sinful side is not that bad;
we minimize the nature of our sinfulness.
But the important point is this:
Jesus loves us in our sinfulness at its worst, even when we
cover it up and pretend otherwise.
So, that is the
first thing I wanted to talk about today.
But the second is equally important, that Zacchaeus was
changed. Zacchaeus was changed, from being greedy to generous, from
selfish to selfless, from a thieving heart to thankful heart.
How did this happen? What
did Jesus say to him when they were alone?
I mean, Zaccheus only had to pay back what he stole plus 20%;
but he wanted to pay them back
400%. He didn’t
have to do that, according to Old Testament law.
He wanted to. 400%!!! And
then he volunteered to give 50% of his goods away to the poor!!!
50%!!! He didn’t have to; he wanted to.
There is a huge change in the level of financial generosity within
his heart, and that is what we want to focus on today as well.
Last week, in
Pastor O’Neal’s and my dialogue sermon, we talked about how
Jesus wanted us to move from little faith to great faith,
that little faith had little
power for daily living where as great
faith has great power for daily life. You
don’t want little faith;
you want great faith.
Likewise, you don’t want little generosity; you want great generosity. As Betty Lou said in her testimony earlier in the service,
she and her husband had been active church members for years, but
were still giving only little ... a percent a year.
But God got inside of them and they made that decision, to
give one percent a year, then two, then three, and now they are at
twelve percent after thirteen years.
Al and Betty Lou have moved from
little generosity to great
generosity, with no guilt and no pressures.
What she said from her heart was so wonderful today.
God wants to move you from
the little generosity of
one percent to a much greater
financial generosity in your life.
In the Epistle
lesson today from II Corinthians 8 and 9, the Apostle Paul
encourages the church in Macedonia to excel in the gift of financial generosity, and not only to excel
in the gifts of faith, and hope and love. God wants the same for our
church here in Des Moines; God
wants you to also excel in the gift of financial generosity, like
Zacchaeus, and not only in the gifts of faith, hope and love.
God wants you to excel in this gift also.
Today, in the
bulletin, you will notice that I have included a chart that compares
denominational giving. The
Catholics are the worst in the country, giving 1.2%.
The Lutheran are second from the bottom, giving 1.5%, the
same as any average American who may or may not belong to a church.
The Baptists give about twice as much as Lutherans, about 3%.
The Mormons top the list at 7%.
My point is: we
should never compare our giving to other Lutherans who are some of
the worst financial givers in the nation.
No, this doesn’t make any sense at all.
Rather, Jesus
Christ wants us to be people of great faith, whose great faith makes
a difference in the way we live our lives, great faith which makes a
difference in the way we give offerings to God.
Great faith is to result in great generosity, great financial
generosity.
By the way, I
finally did figure it out. You
know, what was said in the house, the words between Jesus and
Zacchaeus, when they were alone together.
That is, Jesus didn’t simply come into Zacchaeus’ house
that day. Rather, Jesus
got into Zaccheus’ ... heart ... that day. That’s what changed him.
No one is ever changed to be a generous person unless Jesus
gets into your heart; and when Jesus gets into your heart, your life
will be changed. The exact words do not matter; but
Jesus in your heart does
matter. It is his
presence, not any special words, that changes us.
When the Spirit is
right, any words will do.
I love the story.
I can see it so clearly.
Short little Zacchaeus wanting to see Jesus of Nazareth, the
religious superstar, but all those people were in his way. Cleverly,
Zacchaeus looked down the Jericho road and climbed a sycamore tree
and waited, and sure enough, here came Jesus.
The donkey stopped right underneath where Zacchaeus was
perched on a limb. Jesus
said: “Zacchaeus...you
come down...for I am coming to your ... heart
... today.” Amen.
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