Zacch & Bart’s
Excellent Adventure (Part 2)
In Part 1, we considered Bartimaeus (Bart)
and how Jesus healed him despite the crowd's attempts to get the blind beggar to
shut up. However, once Jesus healed him the formerly crabby crowd began to rejoice
when the oppressed man was healed. However, Kenneth E. Bailey poses an
important question,
“By
extending special grace to the very man the crowd had just rejected, Jesus
gives the crowd a verbal slap on the wrist! Would they be able to absorb Jesus’
public criticism of them? Yes, indeed, for they join the formerly blind man in
his praises to God. As long as Jesus is offering special grace to the oppressed it would be churlish to
make a fuss. When he offers special grace to the oppressor it may be a different story, as the reader soon
discovers.” (Bailey,
Jesus Through Middle Eastern Eyes, 174)
In this post, we will consider an oppressor‘s (Zacchaeus) encounter when he sought to see Jesus.
II) Zacchaeus Seeks
Jesus (Luke 19:1-10)
The Bible is filled with passages encouraging people to
seek God. The truth is God wants to be found by his creatures. Here are a couple of
well-known “seeking” passages. In the context of sinful Israel being sent into
exile, the Lord spoke through the prophet Jeremiah of the coming day when they
would seek God again,
Then you will call upon me and come and
pray to me, and I will hear you. You will seek me and find me, when you
seek me with all your heart. I will be found by you, declares
the Lord, and I will restore your fortunes and gather you from all
the nations and all the places where I have driven you, declares
the Lord, and I will bring you back to the place from which I sent you
into exile. (Jeremiah 29:12-14)
In the New Testament, Jesus in his most famous sermon
taught that God would respond to the seeker, “Ask, and it will be given to
you; seek, and you will find; knock, and it will be opened to you. For
everyone who asks receives, and the one who seeks finds, and to the one who
knocks it will be opened. (Matthew
7:7-8)
This leads us to the story of a famous seeker preserved in
the Gospel of Luke named Zacchaeus (Zacch). Let’s read Luke 19:1-10…
He
entered Jericho and was passing through.
And behold, there was a man named Zacchaeus.
He was a chief tax collector and
was rich.
And
he was seeking to see who Jesus was,
but on account of the
crowd he could not, [Why?]
because he was small in stature.
So he ran on ahead and climbed up into a sycamore tree
to see
him, for he was about to pass that way.
And when Jesus came to the place,
he looked up and said
to him,
“Zacchaeus, hurry and come down,
for I must stay at
your house today.”
So he hurried and came down and received him
joyfully.
And when they saw it, they all grumbled,
“He has gone in to be the guest of a man who
is a sinner.”
And Zacchaeus stood and said to the Lord,
“Behold, Lord, the half of my goods I give to the poor.
And if I have defrauded anyone of anything,
I restore it fourfold.”
And Jesus said to him,
“Today salvation has come to this house,
since he also is a son of
Abraham.
For the Son of Man came to seek and to save
the lost.”
As we look at the second part of this week’s adventure we need to take into consideration a number of
Biblical allusions that may be in play and also consider the counter-cultural
surprises it contains.
I) Biblical
Allusions (Joshua 7; 2 Sam. 12:5-6; Ex. 22:1-5; Luke
3:7-14; 18:18-30):
The
Zacchaeus narrative is such a
familiar story, especially for those who have grown up in the church and can
picture a Sunday school teacher putting Zacchaeus up in the old flannel-graph
tree. Yet as I read this story I see that it is filled with allusion to Old
Testament and even other New Testament events. This may not be your parents' Zacchaeus in a tree story, delightful though it might have been.
While
these events didn’t usually make it to the flannel graph…they add great depth
to the story. Simple observation often opens the door to greater understanding
and appreciation. Too often we don’t take time to notice the
interpretive clues that are right there in the text.
- Where does this narrative take place? It takes place in Jericho which reminds me of the story of Achan in Joshua 7. In his greed, Achan took what had been devoted to God, from the conquest of Jericho, for himself. Now in the Roman town of Jericho, one of the top three tax collecting sites, Zacch is the one who perhaps has been defrauding others for his own benefit. Achan’s sin hurt others, so must have the oppressive policies of the chief tax collector. In an act of repentance, Zacchaeus pledged to give half of what he has to the poor and promises to repay any he has defrauded fourfold. This is likely a culturally appropriate exaggeration for changing the way he does business. What a change!
- This fourfold restitution evokes David’s reaction to Nathan upon hearing his story of the rich man who stole the poor man’s lamb (2 Sam. 12:5-6) when he cries out that the man who did this should die after making fourfold restitution (Ex. 22:1-5). The law called for it. Here Zacch makes this declaration without being confronted.
- To make a New Testament connection, the proximity in Luke’s account begs us to ironically compare Zacchaeus, the ruler of the tax collectors, to the rich young ruler of (18:18-30) who went away sad when Jesus asked him to give his goods to the poor. Here the despised and oppressive tax collector, after being in the presence of Jesus pledges to give the majority of his wealth to the poor and mistreated unasked! Salvation indeed had come to his house…and it was received and responded to!
- Finally, Zacchaeus’ response is one of full repentance in keeping with the message that John the Baptist had preached along the Jordan River probably not too far from Jericho. In fact, it’s possible that Zacchaeus heard it from John directly (Luke 3:7-14)!
“Tax collectors also came to be baptized and said to him, ‘Teacher, what
shall we do?’ And he said to them, ‘Collect no more than you are
authorized to do.’” (3:12-13)
In
addition to these allusions that would likely have been understood by the
original audiences, there are a number of aspects to this narrative that would
have tweaked those clinging to the dominant culture of that day. I am indebted
to Kenneth E. Bailey’s works for helping those of us immersed in Western
culture to begin to see Jesus' ministry and teaching within its native the
Middle-eastern culture, and thus better understand the teaching of Christ.
Counter-Cultural Surprises:
Zacch’s
adventure began with the desire to seek Jesus so that he might be able to see “who
he was”. We know that he couldn’t see because he was short—Or do we? Certainly, that was the case but as a wealthy man, he should have been held in honor if he
hadn’t been a traitorous and cheating tax collector. However, because he was
likely the most hated man in town, he could not enter or push through the crowd
to see Jesus. It would have been too dangerous…like the U.S. President walking
into a crowd of protesters, without
Secret Service protection.
Zacch
seems to have been willing to step outside of cultural norms to seek Jesus and
Jesus is willing to violate that same cultural sensibility to seek and save the
lost. Here is a brief sample of counter-cultural surprises in this narrative:
- Jesus, instead of stopping to enjoy the hospitality of the leaders in Jericho “was passing through”. The celebration of the welcoming crowd in the last scene (Bart’s story) perhaps grew uneasy and disappointed that he was not going to honor them by staying the night.
- Zacch ran to get ahead of the crowd. An adult man doesn’t run without bringing shame to himself. We can be sure that Zacch thought he ran unseen while everyone’s attention was diverted. Most likely he was wrong. Someone always sees those embarrassing moments.
- Zacch
climbed a tree.
This tree in the movie was not
leafy enough. He was looking
to remain hidden but failed. - Jesus called Zacch down and invited himself to his house. If Bailey is right and the crowd was taking out their hostility on the tax collector in the tree, then to borrow a line from a Captain America movie, Jesus “stepped on their moment” by inviting himself to Zacch’s house and giving him safe passage away from the crowd. Bailey suggests that Jesus deliberately redirected the hostility of the town onto himself. Pretty awesome! If Bailey is not correct, then Jesus still broke social protocol by inviting himself, and passing up the town’s hospitality for that of a turncoat tax collector!
- Zacch accepted Jesus into his home and responded to this show of costly love by repenting and announcing a new approach to business. Certainly, the hostile crowd could not have imagined such a change…one that would profoundly benefit them.
As a result of reading this narrative I have to ask
myself some soul-searching questions:
- Is there anything in me that takes advantage of others for my own benefit?
- Do I recognize Jesus' acts of love, forgiveness, and acceptance towards me?
- Do I allow Jesus, who by the Holy Spirit indwells me, to make changes in my life?
- Am I teachable and open to correction by the Holy Spirit or do I need to be smacked in the ego with the 2x4 of affliction or can I quickly catch a clue as the Holy Spirit gently brings conviction?
I
want to be sensitive to such conviction this week. I want to answer the call to
repent wholeheartedly like Zacchaeus did!
Conclusion: Jesus Saved
them both (Bart & Zacch)!
To lean on Bailey (Jesus
Through Middle Eastern Eyes, 182-183) one last time, Jesus said three
things at the end of this pericope (i.e., self-contained story, event):
- “Today salvation has come to this house” “The life-changing power that entered Zacchaeus’s house was not Jesus’ decision to stay overnight. Rather, it was Jesus’ deliberate act of shifting the town’s hostility away from Zacchaeus to himself. ‘With his stripes we are healed’ (Is 53:5).” [Bailey 182]
- “Since he also is a son of Abraham.” Jesus was publically declaring Zacchaeus’ citizenship in the community of Israel, and more importantly the community of faith. He was part of the kingdom of God because he responded to the love of the king with costly faith. Jesus was saying that “He is one of us!”
- “For the Son of Man came to seek and to save the lost.” We talk about how Bart saw Jesus and how Zacch was seeking to see Jesus, but ultimately it was Jesus who saw him and was seeking them. That is how God works. Have you stopped to consider whether He looking for you? If you are lost, then the answer is yes!
Are we seeing? Are we seeking? Jesus
is saving!
O Lord, do your work in us so that
those who watch our lives and perhaps have grumbled against us, may instead be
prompted to praise you!
May we listen to the Spirit who gently
and persistently exposes our blind spots so that you don’t need to take more
drastic measures with us (like you did with Achan and even with David). May we
not oppress or intimidate others, but deal fairly and even generously with them
because you have shown your love to us!
May we joyfully welcome you to stay at
our house anytime and may your presence with us purify us all! Amen.
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