Generic selectors
Exact matches only
Search in title
Search in content
Post Type Selectors
Filter by Categories
1 Peter
Away
Back
Book Excerpts
Book of Colossians
Book of James
Book of Proverbs
Books
Christmas
Courier & Press
Dealing With Our Feelings
Devotions
Easter
Encountering Christ
Good Friday
HFBC
Preaching Post Fridays
Re-Posts
Salvation
Theology Thursdays

Expository Preaching: Sermons, Thoughts, and Resources of Todd Linn

Encountering Christ

Longing For Meaning

Saul Goodman Park Bench

Image Credit: Doug Kline

Better Call Saul is a modern crime drama series that portrays the life of a shady attorney named Saul Goodman.  Created by Vince Gilligan, the series is a spin-off of Breaking Bad and recounts Goodman’s earlier years practicing law.  

Saul Goodman is the typical American pettifogger, the “ambulance chaser” type of lawyer, if you like.  His tactics are sneaky, his ethics are shaky, and he’s not liked at all by the well-to-do, more respected lawyers and professionals.

At the same time, however, there’s something about Saul Goodman that’s kind of endearing.  He’s got a great sense of humor and a dogged perseverance that keeps him moving in spite of repeated setbacks and disappointments.

There’s something about his character that’s even lovable at times and you find yourself pulling for him (Isn’t that crazy how good writers make you do that?  Suddenly you’re pulling for the con-man!).

I believe Saul Goodman is the modern-day incarnation of Zacchaeus.  We read about Zacchaeus in Luke 19:1-10.

Like Goodman, Zacchaeus was rather unscrupulous in his profession.  We’re told in the Bible that Zacchaeus was a tax collector and we have to remember what that meant in New Testament times.  Briefly, tax collectors were more like independent businessmen who gained wealth by overcharging others.  

Saul Goodman is the modern-day incarnation of Zacchaeus

Add to this the fact that Zacchaeus was a Jew working on the wrong side; working against his Jewish brethren and for the Roman Gentiles, and you’ll understand why he was no doubt despised by other Jews.

Frederick Buechner describes Zacchaeus memorably: “a sawed-off little social disaster with a big bank account and a crooked job.”

Luke tells us that Zacchaeus was not just a tax collector, but “a Chief Tax Collector,” a title used only here in the New Testament.  Whatever else being a chief tax collector may have meant, it certainly carried huge financial rewards (Luke 19:2).

Frederick Buechner describes Zacchaeus memorably: “a sawed-off little social disaster with a big bank account and a crooked job.”

Zacchaeus was rich largely because he had taken from others.  But while Zacchaeus was rich in earthly terms, there was a great void in his spiritual bank account.  

Zacchaeus is a picture of the human soul’s longing for meaning.  

This explains the tree climbing, don’t you think?  It would not be unusual for a child to climb a tree, but for a full-grown man to scurry up a sycamore tree suggests a longing that money could not buy.  

I feel sure that Zacchaeus had heard of Jesus.  How could he not have heard?  It had not been that long ago just over in Bethany (less than 15 miles away) that Jesus had raised Lazarus from the dead (John 11).  Everyone had heard of that!

Given all the other healings of people who had been sick or blind, it’s no wonder Luke tells us that Zacchaeus couldn’t see Jesus “because of the crowd.”  There’s probably a huge crowd lining the streets of Jericho, people just waiting to catch a glimpse of the miracle worker from Nazareth.

Zacchaeus “ran ahead and climbed up into a sycamore tree to see Him,” because Jesus was going to be passing through in that direction.  

Here is a picture of intense longing and desire—if not desperation—to see Jesus Christ.  

While Zacchaeus was rich in earthly terms, there was a great void in his spiritual bank account.

It’s not just that Zacchaeus was short and climbed the tree for a better view of a popular figure passing through town, but that an inner desire for meaning was driving him to capture a sight of Jesus Christ.

The text in verse 3 literally reads that Zacchaeus “was seeking to see Jesus, who he is…” 

The phrase suggests more than a casual look.  It suggests more than Zacchaeus’ merely being able later to tell others he had seen Jesus in Jericho; the way we might say we had seen a famous celebrity or politician from a distance.  

Rather, the phrase seems to suggest the idea that Zacchaeus really wanted to know more about Jesus Himself.  Zacchaeus was looking for some kind of experience.

The JB Phillips paraphrase captures this nuance.  It describes Zacchaeus as, “wanting to see what sort of person Jesus was.”  

Zacchaeus was wanting to see Jesus not for what He could do, but for who He was.

What does this say about the inability of wealth and treasures and toys to satisfy the soul’s greatest yearnings and longings? 

Zacchaeus is searching.  If the story took place today I can see him running down the busy city street, this short guy elbowing his way through the crowd of people, before grabbing hold of a low-lying branch and pulling himself upwards, scuffing up his Italian shoes, his Tommy Hilfiger necktie catching on a twig, the crystal of his fine Swiss watch, a gold encased Jaeger-LeCoultre, smudged by dirt and grime in an effort to hoist himself to a vantage point that he may see the One who, though He was rich, had become poor, that Zacchaeus through his actual poverty might become truly rich (2 Corinthians 8:9).

At the end of the day, earthly riches, earthly pleasures, the so-called “finer things of life” mean very little to us when we come to realize that apart from Christ we are lost and undone, our sins unforgiven, our spiritual life—dead.

At the end of the day, earthly riches, earthly pleasures, the so-called “finer things of life” mean very little to us when we come to realize that apart from Christ we are lost and undone, our sins unforgiven, our spiritual life—dead.  

Zacchaeus needed an encounter with Christ.  He ran ahead and climbed up into that sycamore tree to see Him, to see Jesus for who He was.  

Jesus looks up into the tree and calls Zacchaeus by name. Jesus knew him! Just like Jesus knows your name. He knows you and he knows what you are thinking. He knows what’s in your heart. He knows what are your greatest wants and desires.

And Zacchaeus received Christ joyfully (Luke 19:6).

Not everyone thought Zacchaeus should be so joyful.  After all, Zacchaeus was a swindler, a deceitfully devious and corrupt criminal.  Some religious people would say Zacchaeus had no business being anywhere near Jesus.  

That’s the way the religious scribes and Pharisees felt.  Rather than celebrating Zacchaeus’ encounter with Christ, Luke tells us “they all complained” and spoke disparagingly about Christ’s fraternizing with the tax collector saying, “He has gone to be a guest with a man who is a sinner.’”  

Well, what were they?!  Were the religious folks not sinners, too? Of course they were.  They were sick, yet unaware of their need for a doctor (Luke 5:30-32).

He was willing to give away earthly riches because he had discovered the inestimable wealth of spiritual riches.

Zacchaeus’ heart has changed.  He was willing to make restitution four times what he had taken from others.  And he was willing to give away half of his belongings.  Imagine  a rich guy giving away his wardrobe of Armani suits, his Rolex watches, so much stuff—here is a man who had truly encountered Christ.

He was willing to give away earthly riches because he had discovered the inestimable wealth of spiritual riches.

Jesus changes everything.  When we truly encounter Christ our whole world changes.  We have new desires and new ways of seeing things.

Jesus Loves The Outcasts

More than any other Gospel writer, Luke stresses the truth that Jesus came to save all people without distinction and had a special love for the outcasts, the social rejects, the hated, the “Saul Goodmans” of the world.

Jesus loves tax collectors, thieves, liars, adulterers, swindlers, murderers, and prostitutes.  So He loves you and He can save you, too.

There are no “incurable” cases.  The Good Physician can heal your soul.

The vilest offender
Who truly believes
That moment from Jesus 
A pardon receives.

We Must Love The Outcasts

May we never fall into the sinful, sanctimonious, and self-righteous ways of the “religious people” in Luke’s Gospel.  Let’s not act like the scribes and Pharisees, looking down our noses upon other “sinners.” 

Jesus said He came for those who know they need a doctor.  Churches are to be places that provide spiritual triage and care for all who know they are sick.

We Ourselves Are Outcasts

The only difference between a saved outcast and an unsaved outcast is Jesus Christ.

Even as Christians we are forever in need of Christ.  

While sin no longer reigns in our lives, it remains in our lives.  

Humility causes us to take sin seriously and to grow in our capacity to overcome sin, continually reckoning ourselves to be dead indeed to sin, but alive to God in Christ Jesus our Lord (Romans 6:11).

On the inside of my Bible, I have written something Christian author and speaker Steve Brown said sometime back.  It’s this simple statement:

“You wouldn’t be so shocked by your own sin if you didn’t have such a high opinion of yourself.”

Christians are still outcasts, but not without hope.  We are a work in progress, growing in increasing measures and degrees of holiness.

To quote the children’s hymn:

He’s still working on me
to make me what I ought to be
How loving and patient He must be
He’s still working on me.

What About You?

  • Like Zacchaeus, do you long for meaning?  How can an encounter with Christ change everything for you?
  • Who do you know who is like a modern-day Zacchaeus?  What other “outcasts” need your love today?
  • There are no incurable cases!  An encounter with Christ can lead to forgiveness in Christ.  Trust Him today.

Follow Preaching Truth on WordPress.com

Wordpress Comments: