Often, what
we read Holy Scripture goes against the norms of society and against what we
might expect, since the ways of God’s kingdom can be very different from the
ways of our world. As we
listen to today’s Gospel, we might ask ourselves: Would the people of ancient Israel
expect Zacchaeus, a wealthy man with an important job in the Roman government,
to scamper around like a crazy man and to climb up a tree in order to get a
better look at Jesus? Zacchaeus
was a chief tax collector who was considered to be a sinner and an outcast for
the way he betrayed his own people in collecting taxes from them for the enemy
government, for the way he interacted on a daily basis with non-Jews. It would
be unexpected for a holy man like Jesus to eat at the tax collector’s house. It would
have been socking to see a man like Zacchaeus to repent with a complete change
of heart and to give half of his possessions to the poor. We might
ask: How can we explain this unexpected behavior in the encounter between these
two men?
In the
beginning of his great work, The Confessions, St. Augustine
states - “Great are you, O Lord, and
exceedingly worthy of praise; your power is immense, and your wisdom beyond
reckoning. We who are a part of your creation, long to praise you…You arouse us
so that praising you may bring us joy, because you have made us and have drawn
us to yourself. Our hearts are restless until they rest in you.”
Zacchaeus
reached out to Jesus by climbing up that tree. Jesus
reached back to him. Although
Zacchaeus lived a restless and sinful life, the kind of life that Augustine
describes, God didn’t withhold his grace from him. God
called him and waited patiently for him to get down from the tree. Many in
our modern society have restless hearts, but they often turn to things other
than to God to satisfy these longings: alcohol, drugs, work, worldly pleasures,
even things like the internet and video games. Yet,
there’s an empty feeling in our hearts that the things of the world cannot fill
– our hearts are only fulfilled in our relationship with God.
God meets
us in our reality, he enters into our lives just as He entered the life of
Zacchaeus. Where is
God calling us today in the midst of our reality? Are
there any trees we need to climb in order to seek out God? May the
restlessness of our hearts keep tugging at us until we find what we’re really
looking for.
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