Sunday, November 3, 2013

God overlooks our sins – Wis 11:22-12:2, Luke 19:1-10

Sunday OT, Year C, Wk 31; Holy Cross-St. Stan's parish.

I have on occasion been know to overlook things.  My brothers in community with whom I live will probably be able to tell you that I sometimes overlook turning a light off when I leave a room.  (Sorry, father!).  In school, I was terrible at team sports because I would overlook where the ball was, only finding my athletic home in swimming, as the large expanse of water and solid wall at the other end of it were pretty hard for me to overlook.  For a couple of years as a young adult, I overlooked that smoking kills.  Haven’t touched a cigarette in over ten years, praise be to God.  At times, I’ve overlooked dealing with a bill that needed to be taken care of.  Sometimes, I’ve overlooked a friend who needed reaching out to, or I’ve overlooked the humanity of a beggar who it was more convenient to ignore, or I’ve overlooked the sorrow and repentance in the person I wanted to hold a grudge against, or the good heart in the person I was sure was misguided, or the still-hurting wound that someone was acting out of when they flared up at me.  I’m guessing I’m not alone here.  I’m guessing we all overlook things.  Whether out of inattentiveness, or sloth, or fear, or stubbornness… we overlook things.

God never tires of being attentive.  God counts every hair on our heads and cares for every sparrow of the sky.  But, our first reading tells us: God overlooks sins.  And it’s not the accidental overlooking of completely missing that ball whizzing past me that I was meant to catch.  And it’s not the deluded overlooking of missing that warning on the cigarette packet.  Wisdom tells us the only thing that could move God to overlook anything: love.  God loves all that He has created.  Now, note that you can’t overlook something that doesn’t exist – for God to overlook sin, sin must be real… and it is.  Sin is all too real.  But God can overlook it, God can look over it.  God can see that the sins we accrue, that drag behind us, slowing our every step… can see that these are not all there is to us.  God can look over all the base refuge that collects on us and see what’s higher than that.  He can see His likeness.  The book of Wisdom delights in this, exclaiming: “Your imperishable spirit is in all things!”  He sees His children: beloved, o so loved, even though disobedient.  Loved so much, that He would send His only Son to die for us, to bring us back to the fullness of His embrace.  Overlooking sins isn’t cheap.  Love never is.  God, Wisdom assures us, can do all things.  He can overlook our sins and see us as we truly are, as beloved, needy, daughters and sons.

When you look at Zacchaeus, what do you see?  We know what the crowd saw.  They saw a short man, collaborating with Roman occupiers, a man they disdained and feared in equal measure.  They saw someone who they presumed was an extortioner, and I’m sure tale upon tale of how wicked this bogeyman was spread, picking up embellishments like ships collecting barnacles.  We don’t know whether this was true.  We don’t know whether his extravagant gift to the poor was a one-off, spontaneous gesture occasioned by meeting Jesus, or his habitual practice that he just now makes public.  We don’t know if he extorted anything, or if his promise to pay back four times as much was a cheap one to make because he had only ever made the costly decision to never act dishonestly.  All we know was that he wanted to see Jesus, and he would go to any lengths necessary to make that happen.  This well-to-do well-feared man, would publically humiliate himself by shimmying up a tree: All to see Jesus.

We don’t know much else about Zacchaeus, because Luke didn’t write his gospel to give us surety about Zacchaeus.  He wrote it for the sake of our faith in Christ.  We learn far more about Jesus than about Zacchaeus in this reading.  We don’t learn much at all about everything God would overlook: we don’t see Zacchaeus’ sin; we see his longing for Jesus.  We don’t see his financial ledger; we see the image of God in Him.  We see that image express itself in Zacchaeus’ willingness to be a seeker: to seek fervently to fulfill his longing for Christ, just as God seeks us, and sent His Son “to seek and to save what is lost.”  Zacchaeus seeks the seeking God, and finds the God who finds.  We see the image of God express itself when Zacchaeus overlooks.  The crowd, which rejects him, is an obstacle.  It’s what stands in the way, quite literally, of him seeing Jesus.  So Zacchaeus climbs.  He puts aside all self-serving concern for his image, his social dignity, and acts with the reckless abandon of a seeker and climbs that tree.  He overlooks the crowd, and he sees Jesus.  And Jesus overlooks the crowd, and sees Zacchaeus.  Jesus does not dwell on his sins, he doesn’t even mention them.  Jesus overlooks Zacchaeus’ sins and dwells with him, dines with him.


And here we are, about to dine with Jesus.  What’s obscuring our view?  What do we need to look over to catch a glimpse of God looking lovingly at us?  Where’s the tree we need to swallow our pride and climb?  The service of the poor of all kinds, the sacrament of reconciliation, the letting go of grudges, the recommitment to prayer… God gives us so many trees, trees of life, and invites us. We can climb!  We can be elevated above the dross of sin, and come face to face with the Love from which and for which we were made.

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