Isiaah 1: 19-18
Luke 19: 1-10
Rev. Dr. Galen E. Russell III
October 30, 2022
“Zacchaeus, hurry and come down; for I must stay at your house today.” So he hurried down and was happy to welcome him.
Prayer: Transform us, O God, by your love, so that we may be brought to your new life again, and become what you want us to be. May these words be acceptable to you, O God, my Rock and my Redeemer. Amen.
As I said in the Joys and Concerns today, I was privileged to officiate and celebrate the wedding of one of the sons of our church, Grant Andrick and Kyleigh Meyers. I love doing weddings. A lot of pastors I know can’t stand doing them. A necessary annoyance in the life of a pastor, they say. But, not me. What a great time to celebrate the power of love! What a great time to speak the truth that God is love! And I often get a chance to offer a 2-3 minute shpiel on God’s love in the ceremony. So, for Kyleigh and Grant, I told them to keep first things first in their marriage. Put God and love—which are one and the same—into their marriage, and saturate it with the Holy Spirit, and their lives will be full.
But, let’s be honest. Sometimes it’s easy, I think, NOT to put God into our marriages, our lives, our work, our daily doings. It’s easy to NOT submit to God’s way of love as shown by Jesus. It’s like we get caught up in our regular stuff so much so that God and Love are taken for granted and fade away from being the top influencers in our lives. And the longer we go on like that, the more we don’t need God. The more we get distanced from God. The more we rely on our own insights. And the more we get spiritually small. Diminished.
Which is what happened to Zacchaeus, I think. Luke tells us that he was short in stature, which, in his case, mirrored his shortness of spirit. He was small spiritually. He focused primarily on prosperity and property to the exclusion of healthy relationships within his community. His small spirit allowed him to deny the pain he inflicted on others. Clearly, as a vile tax collector, the chief of tax collectors, complicit with the oppressive, corrupt Roman system, he totally got lost. He forsook his Jewish heritage. He all but abandoned the God of Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob, the God who lovingly wants to transform sinful lives into lives white as snow and hearts soft as wool.
But, Jesus was on approach. Jesus’ reputation preceded him, and the large crowd followed him. Which probably piqued Zacchaeus’ interest as well. So, being small in stature and small in spirit, Zacchaeus, trying to see who Jesus was, climbs a sycamore tree. He just wants to get a look-see, not necessarily be engaged with Jesus. He wants a view from a perch above, not to be among Jesus’ followers, or anything. To get close enough, but not too close. He just wants to see without being involved.
And I’m thinking, geez, this sounds familiar. How many of us come here into this house of worship just to see what’s going on? Because its part of our social life? Without really wanting to get involved? I see it at weddings and funerals all the time. People ask me… several did Friday night, where’s your church? I should like to come. I tell them, and I say “You are more than welcome to be with us. Would love to see you.” Rarely, if ever do they come. If they do, it’s only for a look-see. Never intending to get engaged in the mission and ministry of our church.
I also see the same thing in some of the biggest society issues we face. Climate change. Racial injustice. Voting rights. Economic disparity and marginalization. Politicians are seemingly just getting a look-see into these big issues, but not really wanting to get too deeply engaged. Paying lip-service. Going through the motions. Seemingly not influenced by God who is the Creator of Love.
Gun violence. Do you know that since last Sunday, 1 week, there were 10 mass shootings in our nation. Ten! It breaks my heart. All total, 23 people were killed and 29 were injured, according to the (Mass Shootings in 2022 | Gun Violence Archive, retrieved October 29, 2022). Yes, there was a gun bill passed in August, and it was the most politics would allow, but it is not enough. Politicians only got a look-see on this issue, with this bill, not getting serious about gun control. Not one candidate running for public office these days, that I’ve heard anyway, has said anything about gun violence or better gun control in our nation. Not one.
But even in our complicity and complacency, God never tires of calling out to us, never ceases to come to the places where we are, always inviting herself into our lives, into our societal issues, into our relationships, into our churches, and out of love says to us “learn to do good, seek justice, rescue the oppressed, defend the orphan, plead for the widow.” Don’t just go through the motions. Don’t just pay lip-service. Engage with God.
Jesus sees Zacchaeus getting his look-see from his perch and says to him, “Zacchaeus, hurry and come down; for I must stay at your house—today!” I suspect Zacchaeus never intended that he would be seen by Jesus! But Jesus does see him, and invites himself into Zacchaeus’ life. He says he “must stay in your house,” which says to me that Jesus must reside in Zacchaeus’ inner spirit. God must take up residency in his inner heart.
So, this week I wondered if Jesus could be saying ‘I must stay’ in your spiritual lives. And, not just there, but in our world’s issues, too. Because if Jesus stays only in our spiritual lives but not in our issues, then we’re still up in the sycamore tree. Jesus is close, but not too close.
But I hear Jesus saying ‘I must be a part of your life, your issues, your church, your concerns; every bit of it.’ I hear that God and God’s Love must be in residence spiritually so that we can respond to gun violence in the world. We can address racial injustice. Climate change. Economic inequalities. So that we can be about the church’s mission and ministry. So that we can be an all-inclusive church and accessible to all. So that love can overpower the powers of the world.
When we hear that Jesus must stay in our house, I think that is a ‘come to Jesus’ moment. We have to come to Jesus and decide—do we hurry down from the close, but not too close spot and are happy to welcome him, or not? Do we get out off our aloof perches, our standoffish places, and engage with Jesus in the ministry in the world? Or not?
In Zacchaeus’ ‘come to Jesus’ moment, he decided come to open himself to the transforming love of God. As soon as he did that, his world changed. He moved from the corrupt by-stander in the tree to one who wanted to welcome Jesus into his home and his spiritual life. He got transformed into one who positively exhibited God’s qualities.
That’s what happens when God and God’s Love become tops in your life. You get transformed by that love. You start to exhibit God qualities. You seek restoration. You push for reconciliation. You do a complete moral inventory, and you make amends with those you’ve wronged. You do good. You practice justice. You forgive. You love.
Here’s where the Spirit of Love shown through Jesus did an amazing thing in Zacchaeus—it revealed to him his shortcomings. His failures. Out of Love, the Spirit convicted him. Because of that, I think Zacchaeus saw his complicity. He recognized his own contribution to the corrupt revenue system and how damaging and oppressive it was for his fellow Jews. And he made reparations. He made pay back.
So finally, for the love of God, he could come out from under the burden of being a sinful tax collector. Finally he could identify the guilt he’s carried and do something about it. Finally, he could come down from his lofty, out of touch perch, make a moral inventory, do the hard work of making amends, and engage in a new life spiritually.
See, you can come out from under the burden you might be carrying. You can be transformed, again, by the powerful Love of God that lovingly convicts us. And you can trust that the Spirit will show you in your inner spiritual conscience where you might need to make amends. Where you can be enlarged spiritually. Listen to the Spirit. Trust God can transform you with love.
And God celebrates! Jesus affirmed Zacchaeus’ transformation. “Salvation has come to this house…” he said. Not salvation as in new life when his body dies, but salvation as in the power of Love that overcomes the powers of the world. That’s salvation! And that is for this moment! Today! It’s salvation as in the saving grace of Love that transforms us into new life, no matter how far away we might perceive ourselves to be from God.
What a great day—today—to put God and God’s Love into our lives. As I said to Grant and Kyleigh so I say to us, put first things first. Put God and love—which are one and the same—into our lives, and saturate it with the Holy Spirit, and our lives will be full, transformed by Love. Amen.
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