Zacchaeus: To See and To Be Seen
Every year I experience the same surprise when I realize that the coming Sunday is Zacchaeus Sunday, the first Sunday that “officially” announces the approach of Great Lent. Although there are no hymns from the Lenten Triodion for this Sunday (the sole expression of the day is the reading from St. Luke concerning Zacchaeus at the Liturgy), it is nevertheless the harbinger of the arrival of the season of the Great Fast.
Wouldn’t it be something if we greeted the Great Fast with the same enthusiasm that children greeted Christmas? If we jumped up and down and said, “It’s Zacchaeus Sunday! Only four weeks till Great Lent!” Or if we looked forward with enthusiasm to Great Lent the way we look forward to a two-week vacation?
I suppose in one sense those really aren’t fair comparisons. After all, the enthusiasm of children for Christmas is - well - childish. We “mature” adults seldom get that enthusiastic about anything (whether that is a sign of maturity or not is probably open to debate.)
And comparing Lent to a vacation, really? I mean, vacation is a break from work. And Lent is, well, work. So honestly, why would we be enthusiastic about the arrival of Great Lent? It is a fair question.
But it is also a question that betrays our vision of what Lent is all about. Or perhaps I should say, our lack of vision. For, you see, Zacchaeus wanted to see! He wanted a vision of Jesus. And being, as the children’s song says, “a wee little man” he needed a better vantage point. And so, he decided to go up a tree to get a better view. And to his surprise he not only saw but he was seen. Christ saw him!
So, brothers and sisters, it’s Zacchaeus Sunday! Lent is coming! Lent is coming! But let’s not try to wring some false enthusiasm out of our tired, old, world-weary souls. And let us utterly reject any attempt to guilt-trip ourselves into getting “pumped up” for Great Lent. We don’t need to try and yank all our emotional ropes and levers to manufacture some short-lived enthusiasm. All we need is a little desire. If we have that then Great Lent will be for us exactly what it should be: a little ascent, a short climb above the world, to see Jesus and to be seen by Him.
With love in Christ,
Fr John.