| Before approaching Jerusalem in His
last trip to it, Jesus entered and passed through Jericho, where
He was surrounded by "an innumerable multitude of people"
(Luke 12:1). Now behold, there was a man named Zacchaeus who was
a chief tax collector, and he was rich. And he sought to see who
Jesus was, but could not because of the crowd, for he was of short
stature [Luke 19:2-3]. Publicans were tax collectors, who
worked for the Roman administration. In every region, tax collectors
were grouped in gangs, and every gang had a chief who pledged to
pay Rome the fixed tax of the entire region, and who distributed
the responsibilities upon his assistants. The fixed sum [tax],
was then collected from individuals, in a way that, many (or all)
the citizens were defrauded. The difference between, what the publican
collected and between what he was due to pay to the government,
went to his private pocket. This 'acumen' of theft, was a common
matter in Palestine, in a sense that the word publican
was always associated to the extortion of the collectors. It was
not accepted from an appointed collector, to prove incapable of
paying.
Why did Zacchaeus sought to see the Prophet from Galilee?
Maybe, at first, this was out of his curiosity. Maybe, he was attracted
to Him, for another reason. The Book does not mention if he wanted
to have a conversation with the Lord. But, being of short stature,
he ran ahead and climbed up into a sycamore tree to see Him, for
Jesus was going to pass that way [Luke 19:4]. Zacchaeus wanted
to lift the 'barrier', which was preventing him from seeing the
Master. He must have heard that Jesus was socialising with publicans
and sinners, which meant that He was breaking the instructions of
the fanatic religious party, known as the 'Pharisees'. The same
Pharisees who use to mock the disciples that their Master was eating
with the tax collectors [Mark 2:16], because He did not follow
the 'line of righteousness', which they drew themselves, and considered
it to be the 'Divine Righteousness'. Their personal diligence was
set equivalent to the Divine Word, but Jesus was setting a great
difference between the Divine Word and the human tradition [custom].
Possibly the evangelist, in including this incident in the context
of the Passions of the Lord, wanted to give emphasis to the aggravation
of the confrontation between Jesus and the leaders of the religious
conviction.
And when Jesus came to the place, He looked up and saw him,
and said to him, "Zacchaeus, make haste and come down, for
today I must stay at your house." [Luke 19:5]. This
is the only time, in which Jesus goes beyond the casual socialising
in the streets with the tax collectors, to set up with specifically
this publican a closer relation, going far beyond the 'rules
of purity', which were set by the Pharisees. "I must
stay at your house " in this statement, there
is a determination for salvation, an initiative plan of salvation.
For Luke, this is an echo of Paul's teaching: "by grace
you have been saved" [Eph 2:5], and later in
John: "God first loved us." [1John 4:19].
Saint Luke is building a theological foundation, upon what seems
to appear simple.
The Lord says: "make haste and come down",
and the evangelist adds, "so he made haste and came down,
and received Him joyfully." Why did he accept Him without
hesitating? Is it the Middle Eastern hospitality? Did he feel that
something is much greater than the speech of a regular man, who
is inviting himself if such, could be said to a stranger's
house? The Pharisees complained because Jesus "has gone
to be a guest with a man who is a sinner." [Luke
19:7]. Jesus refuses to appreciate righteousness, as a result
of severance, discrimination, or boasting. He knows a reason for
a contact, and establishes a relationship. God as Jesus the
Nazarene understands is in a perpetual state of relationship,
hugging and adjoining. In His undergoing the baptism of John, which
was set for the sinners, Jesus equates Himself with the sinners,
because He undertakes what He did not need. The Saviour amalgamates
Himself, with those who are called to salvation. This is the density
of fusion.
The two men met at the sycamore tree, Zacchaeus said to the
Lord: "Look, Lord, I give half of my goods to the poor; and
if I have taken anything from anyone by false accusation, I restore
fourfold." [Luke 19:8]. A miraculous encounter, which can never
be understood through basic psychology, for the first instance.
An 'earthquake' trampled the collector's inner soul. Zacchaeus'
soul was deeply shaken, as a result of this trampling meeting between
the Perfect Righteousness and the long-nesting sin. Instantly, the
time of falling froze, and the fall was wiped away. Zacchaeus becomes
a 'new breed', initiated through God's light. The 'coming back home',
is always a coming back to the very Face of God, through the grace
of the Master.
What we have here, is the ultimate acknowledgement of a sinful
past, and a courageous and sincere confession. The man, after living
in the riches of life, gives half of his money away. A decision
completely uninfluenced by the future, independent from maintaining
a standard of life and expenditure (on which he was accustomed).
A proclamation, openly confessing his false accusations and unfairness:
He restores fourfold to anyone, who he has taken from by false accusation.
What will remain for him, from his fortune, at the end? What will
guaranty the future, for Zacchaeus and his family, a future that
may be many years long?
This man was assumed into another existence, into a new life
that does not make any calculations from our world, into a life
ingrained in the madness of love. It is then, that Jesus said to
him: "Today salvation has come to this house ",
for Salvation does not know stages, and does not always need instruction.
Salvation falls upon the repentant like the lightning, because it
is a new process of creation. Days after this incident, when the
Lord was hung on the tree, He will say to the thief: "today
you will be with Me in Paradise." [Luke 23:43].
Love erases all your wickedness and elevates you to the higher steps
of vision and co-habitation.
After all this has been said to the man, the Saviour adds,
"because he also is a son of Abraham" in
a way that Zacchaeus has became, through renewed faith, a son to
the 'father of all believers'. Again, this also recalls St. Paul's
theology: "Abraham believed God, and it was accounted
to him for righteousness."[Rom.4: 3]. In the
Gospel according to St. John, Jesus rejects the Jews of being the
sons of Abraham: They have rejected the orthodox faith by denouncing
Christ. "Son of Abraham" this announcement enabled
Zacchaeus to become one of His favourites because "those
who had not obtained mercy will have mercy", as Hosea said
[Hos.2: 23]. And those, who were under the curse of the law,
were blessed for they have become brethren of Him, of whom it was
written: "Cursed is everyone who hangs on a tree"
[Gal. 3:13]. All those rejected of this world, through love,
become brethren of Jesus, "for the Son of Man has come
to seek and to save that which was lost." [Luke
19:10].
Again and again, we are in front of the Divine initiative
in saving humankind. Jesus orders the ear to open that the deaf
may listen, and the eye to see, in order that the 'inner being'
may be consequently formed. "To seek that which was lost"...
The word 'lost', in the context of the Greek origin, means the one
who was terminally and finally lost. As to say, despite our conscious
insistence on sinning, nothing can stop the mercy from changing
our human heart.
Maybe, the best of what the Gospel has is that all
those who were neglected by this world, handicapped, possessed,
impoverished, torn apart by sin, corrupted until the total loss
of sense and discernment, oppressed, and exploited by a tyrant
all those are the friends of Jesus the Nazarene, healing their bodies
and healing their hearts. Him, who Neitche mocked in his search
for the superior-human, His glory was in the history of humankind
according to what the poet said: "Mercifulness was born
the day Isa was born."
The vulnerable who were touched by the tenderness of Christ,
and those who learned patience from His cross, are much greater,
than those who were glorified, by the beauty of their bodies and
the intelligence of their minds and despised the lowly and sick
of the earth.
Probably, the most dangerous part, is when the pure ones
may start boast and judge those who trespassed. God will bring low
all who boast.
Blessed are those, who were able to become humble, after
they sinned; and blessed are those who were able to repent, in the
pursuit of the Joy, which springs forth from the purity.
"Blessed are those whose lawless deeds are forgiven,
And whose sins are covered"[Rom.4: 7], because
of the tenderness of the forgivers.
Published January
30, 1999 in the © An-Nahar, Lebanese news paper (http://www.annahar.com.lb/htd/pdfed2.html)Translated from Arabic. |