Tuesday in the 33rd Week of Ordinary Time, November 18, 2025
Luke 19, 1-10
At that time Jesus came to Jericho and intended to pass through the town. Now a man there named Zacchaeus, who was a chief tax collector and also a wealthy man, was seeking to see who Jesus was; but he could not see him because of the crowd, for he was short in stature. So he ran ahead and climbed a sycamore tree in order to see Jesus, who was about to pass that way. When he reached the place, Jesus looked up and said, “Zacchaeus, come down quickly, for today I must stay at your house.” And he came down quickly and received him with joy. When they saw this, they began to grumble, saying, “He has gone to stay at the house of a sinner.” But Zacchaeus stood there and said to the Lord, “Behold, half of my possessions, Lord, I shall give to the poor, and if I have extorted anything from anyone I shall repay it four times over.” And Jesus said to him, “Today salvation has come to this house because this man too is a descendant of Abraham. For the Son of Man has come to seek and to save what was lost.”
The context for the Gospel reading for today’s Mass is the final pilgrimage of Jesus to Jerusalem. He is already mere weeks from his betrayal and Death. However, the mood of the crowd traveling with him is triumphant and very righteous “because they thought that the kingdom of God should immediately be manifested” (Luke 19, 11) when he stepped into the city. These people saw themselves as the Lord’s royal escort. They had not grasped the Lord’s repeated teachings on his kingdom, which was not of this world. Instead, they clung to what the Pharisees had told them to expect when the Messiah came: the overthrow of Israel’s foes and the restoration of the monarchy according to the line of David. All along the road, though, Jesus had shown just what sort of king he was: he does not rail against the Roman occupation or against Herod; he gives new life to lame and to the blind, and forgiveness to sinners.
“Zacchaeus, who was a chief tax collector and also a wealthy man, was seeking to see who Jesus was.” It seems strange to us that after three years of continual preaching throughout Israel that there should be someone who had not seen Jesus. But there were at least two: the tax collector Zacchaeus and the tetrarch Herod Antipas. It is possible that Zacchaeus had previously been so tied up in his business that he ignored the Prophet from Nazareth. Or that he had felt too unworthy to hear him. But it is possible that had he, the chief tax collector, gone to join the crowd hearing Jesus that he would have been ridiculed. Climbing the sycamore tree solved two problems, then: short of stature, he could climb up the trees low hanging branches to a height that allowed him to look down on Jesus when he passed by, and because the branches of the tree were thick with leaves, his presence among them could go unnoticed.
“Zacchaeus, come down quickly, for today I must stay at your house.” The Lord Jesus who sees all his children and knows them through and through, is the only one who sees Zacchaeus and he calls him down. Reading this verse, it appears as though Jesus had come this way specifically to eat with the tax collector. He addresses him by name and then announces that he will sup at his house. And the Lord does this with us as well. He comes to each one of us as though each was the only person in the world, and he makes his home with us. That is, he finds us welcoming him into the home of our hearts through our faith in him. We show this faith in different ways. Zacchaeus did this through his abasing himself by climbing a tree to see him and then by his repentance, which he does for the Lord’s sake.
There are those who grumble, “He is going to stay at the house of a sinner.” Nothing in the Jewish Law forbade eating with those deemed sinners. The grumbling comes from the very people who hail Jesus as the king, but who do not act as though he were a king, for a king can do as he wishes. But Jesus is more than a king, he is the Savior of the world, and he does more than show his favor by eating with chosen subjects, he brings salvation to their houses. But Zacchaeus not only acknowledges Jesus as king, but he acts in accordance with his belief: “Behold, half of my possessions, Lord, I shall give to the poor, and if I have extorted anything from anyone I shall repay it four times over.” In a few days the crowd will lay down palm branches before the Lord as he enters Jerusalem. Zacchaeus lays down his entire fortune before him and counts it as nothing.
We who love God should continuously be asking him to come into the shelter of our hearts. There is no heart so poor or so rich that he will not enter it at our invitation, and when he does, he makes it a magnificent palace.