George H. Morrison - Devotional Sermons
Devotional For
July 10
Zacchaeus
And, behold, there was a man named
Zacchaeus, which was the chief among the publicans, and he was rich. And he
sought to see Jesus who he was...And he ran before, and climbed up into a
sycomore tree to see him--Luk. 19:2-4
Jesus and Modern Man
The eighteenth chapter of Luke closed with
Jesus giving sight to a blind man; Luk. 19:1-48 opens with the priceless story
of Zacchaeus. And that swift passage from the blind beggar to this high
official well illustrates the rapid changes that meet us in the life of Jesus
Christ. We are prone sometimes to think of the lot of Jesus as a very limited
and circumscribed one. We think there was little in it of that movement and
variety that characterize our life in modern times. And so (almost
unconsciously) many have grown to feel that Jesus is standing far away from
them. As a matter of fact, I question if there ever was a life so rich in its
variety as Christ's. It is amazing how swiftly the scenes change; how
constantly the environment is shifting. This rapid transition from the roadside
pauper to the home of one of the richest men in Jericho is typical of the
experience of Jesus.
There Is an Interest in Christ in Most
Unlikely Quarters
If there was one man who might have seemed
deadened to religion, it was this receiver-general of Jericho. He had had such
treatment from the priests of Jericho (and Jericho was a very priestly city),
as might have thoroughly disgusted him with religion. He had grown rich, too,
in very questionable ways--and had not this Jesus spoken tremendous words about
the perils even of clean riches? And yet Zacchaeus was aflame with eagerness to
get into close touch with Jesus Christ. Why he was so, maybe we cannot tell. We
do not know what he had heard from his collectors. We cannot tell what his home
was in his childhood. We have no hint of the ministries of God in keeping his
conscience alive through all the years. All we can say is that this was the
most unlikely of all quarters, yet here was a hidden interest in Christ. Now I
wish all parents and teachers to remember that. It will give them new heart and
hope for certain children. Who knows what little boy may not be interested,
when we recall the interest of this little man?
Where There's a Will There's a Way
Jesus was at the height of His popularity.
Wherever He moved the narrow streets were crowded. It would have taken a Saul
to have seen Him well; there seemed no hope for a small man like Zacchaeus; and
had Zacchaeus had a small heart in his bosom, he would have gone home and said
it was impossible. But Zacchaeus had had a great will to grow rich, and he had
found there was a way to that. And now he had a great will to see Jesus, and he
was not the sort of person to be stopped. He quite forgot himself, says Matthew
Henry. He climbed the sycamore like a schoolboy. Perhaps he had heard that
except we become as children we cannot see the kingdom of heaven--or the King.
At any rate he was earnestly bent on seeing Jesus, and as a result he saw Him
and was seen. All of which has been written down to teach us that the
whole-hearted search for God is always crowned. What texts lay stress on that?
"Ask, and it shall be given you; seek, and ye shall find; knock, and it
shall be opened unto you." "Those that seek me early shall find
me."
It Often Calls for Courage to Be Kind
Did you ever think how brave it was of
Jesus to speak in this frank and friendly way to Zacchaeus? Had Jesus been
intent on being popular, He would never have cast His eyes upon the sycamore.
No class was more hated in Jewry than these tax-gatherers, and the richer they
were the more they were detested. Yet Jesus, in the strength of His great
purpose, deliberately set that hatred at defiance; He made no effort to conceal
from the crowd that the man they loathed was going to be His friend.
Immediately they began to murmur at Him (Luk. 19:7)--it was the hoarse cry of a
deep-seated anger. It was the breaking of the waves upon Him, which were soon,
in floods, to go over His head. But calmly and very sweetly Jesus prosecuted
the friendship; it called for wonderful courage to be kind. Would you have
dared to act so, do you think? Have you ever tried it in your own small way?
Zacchaeus forgot himself, says Matthew Henry. But that was nothing to the
self-forgetfulness of Jesus.
The Moral Influence of Gospel Joy
We are told that Zacchaeus received Jesus
joyfully; you can picture the tides of gladness in his heart. He had only hoped
to get a glimpse of Jesus, and now he was going to be His host. And it was just
the joy of it all, I take it, filling his poor soul, and sweeping up into the
empty creeks, that inspired him to the noble sacrifices of verse eight. I dare
say the priests had often preached at him to go and give half his fortune to
the poor. But somehow that had only closed his heart; they had never touched
the spring of sacrifice. Now comes Jesus and fills him with great joy, and he
cannot do enough for such a Lord--the joy of the Lord had indeed become his
strength. Do you see the moral power of Gospel joy? Do you recognize the
ethical worth of it? Even Jesus for the joy that was set before Him, endured
the cross, despising the shame.
How Various are the Tokens of the New
Life
How did it show itself in the Philippian
jailer? It showed itself first by his faith. And how in the woman who anointed
Christ's feet. First, by her much love. And what were its clearest tokens in
Zacchaeus? Repentance and earnest effort to amend. One life, yet showing itself
in diverse fruits. One spirit, yet working outward in various ways. In which
way is the hidden life of Christ revealing itself in those who read this page?
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