
Luke 19:1-10
Introductory Prayer:
Lord Jesus, you are the Alpha and the
Omega. You have given me life and offer me eternal life with you. You deserve my honor, gratitude
and love, and yet you never impose yourself upon me. Thank you for respecting my freedom so that I
can offer myself to you. All that I have is yours; I return it to you.
Petition:
Lord, increase my faith.
1. Zacchaeus up a Tree:
Yesterday and today's Gospel passages
speak eloquently of the need to encounter Christ at all costs. The blind man we read about yesterday
would not stop shouting until he was brought to the Lord. Today a short and very unpopular man named
Zacchaeus runs back and forth among the crowd until finally, in his determination to encounter
Christ, he breaks all protocol and scrambles up a tree. Jesus wastes no time in entering decisively
this tax collector's life and transforming it. This resembles our own encounter with Christ. At
times different obstacles stand in our way and prevent us from seeing Our Lord and his action in our
lives. Above all we lack determination. How easy it is to craft excuses: I am just too short,Maybe
Jesus is too busy,I am just a sinner. If we really want Our Lord to stay at our house, he will, but
there may be trees that we need to climb first.
2. Welcoming Jesus:
Few people ever welcomed Jesus with the joy and exuberance
as did this little man. He came down from the tree, gave half of his wealth to the poor, and
promised to restore any fraudulent transactions four times over. Zacchaeus has truly been like that
merchant in search of fine pearls (see Matthew 13:45-46). He is willing to sell all he has to buy
the pearl of great price: friendship and intimacy with the Lord. How many times has Jesus looked up
at us and asked us to remain with him? How many times have we had the immense grace of receiving the
King of kings into our hearts in the Blessed Eucharist? Do we offer merely a corner of our hearts
for him or do we reserve the presidential suite? How pure do we maintain our souls for our
Guest?
3. Of Sinners and Saints:
What makes someone a saint and someone else a sinner?
Certainly it is not the grumbling of the jealous crowd who are unwilling to climb up the tree to see
Jesus yet are quick to criticize anyone who does. In fact, everyone is a sinner. St. Paul writes,
Christ Jesus came into the world to save sinners of whom I am the foremost (1 Timothy 1:15).
Yet St. Paul, Zacchaeus, you and I all go from being sinners to saints when we encounter Christ and
are faithful to his friendship. Salvation came to Zacchaeus house when Jesus entered it, and
salvation comes to us through the graces received at baptism, renewed in the Sacrament of Penance,
and nurtured in the Eucharist.
Conversation with Christ:
Jesus, help me to be willing to do
whatever it
takes to grow in a deeper friendship with you.
Don't allow me to worry about the
murmurings
of the crowd, but only to listen to your voice
and respond to it with
generosity.
Resolution:
I will make a point to go to confession at the next
possible opportunity asking Jesus to forgive me my sins and to help me to turn from being a sinner
into being a saint. I will make it a real encounter with Jesus.
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