
Hobnobbing and Eating with
Sinners
Wisdom
11:22-12:2 II Thessalonians
1:11-2:2 Luke 19:1-10
To the church in
the diaspora[1]
& to the
church of the unchurched[2]
Alleluia,
alleluia.
A reading from
the holy Gospel according to Luke.
Glory to you,
Lord.
At that time, Jesus came to
The Gospel of
the Lord.
Praise to you, Lord Jesus
Christ.
----------------
Introduction
The
secular and liturgical calendar
On the secular calendar the
first Sunday of November directs us to put an end to saving time and to switch
back to God’s time. Though it’s November already, an honest-to-God frost hasn’t
hit us yet in
On our liturgical
calendar November 1 is always the feast of all the saints who are hobnobbing
and eating with each other at the Banquet of Eternal Life. Some scholars think the feast was originally an
old Irish observance which spread to
Jesus
hobnobbing with sinners
Last week Jesus told a
parable about a tax collector who with a Pharisee went up to the temple to
pray. Tax collectors were Jews who extracted taxes from fellow Jews for Romans
occupying their land. They were not only traitors but often also extortionists
and cheats. That’s why the New Testament always mentions tax collectors in the
same breath with sinners. They were all bunched together and considered to be
bad guys. But the tax collector in Jesus’ parable last Sunday was a nice fellow.
When he got up to pray, he bent low to the ground and beseeched God to be
merciful to him a sinner. He went home that night set right with God (Lk 18:9-14).
Last Sunday’s story about
a tax collector was a parable. Today’s story is about a tax collector whom
Jesus personally encountered. He, too, was a nice fellow. His name was
Zacchaeus. He was not just a tax collector; he was the chief tax collector (chief
sinner) in
On another occasion Jesus saw another tax collector (sinner, that is) named Matthew, not up in a sycamore tree but sitting at a tax collector’s booth. Though he was a tax collector, he, too, was a nice fellow. Jesus invited Matthew to follow Him, and Matthew in turn invited Jesus to dine at his house. There many other tax collectors and sinners joined Jesus and his disciples at table. Some of the Pharisees saw this and became indignant and grumbled. They asked the disciples how is it that their master hobnobs and eats with tax collectors and sinners. Jesus silenced them saying, “People who are healthy don’t need a doctor, but sick people do. Go and learn the meaning of the scripture which says, `It’s compassion that I want from you people, not your animal sacrifices’” (Mt 9: 9-13).
A
church hobnobbing with saints only
Many of us are old enough
to remember the days when the church declined to hobnob and eat with sinners. It’s
hard to imagine now but before Vatican II all sinners were excluded from the
Eucharistic Banquet. And that meant almost everyone was excluded. When
Communion time came, only a handful out of a packed congregation would rise to
Communicate. Only those who had gone to sacramental confession and had
themselves absolved into a state of Sanctifying Grace rose to take Communion. They
were, indeed, a mere handful. The bulk of the Sunday congregation, who considered
themselves sinners (i.e., in the state of mortal sin), were excluded from the
Communion rail.
All that suddenly changed! Now, after Vatican II, at
Communion time the whole congregation (almost none of whom has gone to
sacramental confession) rises to Communicate. Now, after Vatican II, the Eucharist is seen more as food for sinners
than a reward for saints. What has changed? A perspective has
changed. If Jesus can eat with
Zacchaeus, chief tax collector and sinner, and with Matthew, another tax
collector and sinner, then we sinners can eat with Jesus! We wonder why it took
so long to lay hold of that perspective, for it’s a thread woven into the whole
fabric of the New Testament.
A pope
hobnobbing with sinners
On
A priest
hobnobbing with sinners
Franciscan priest, Fr.
Mycal Judge, was one of four chaplains
for the New York Fire Department. The
story of his death in the line of duty was one of the first to come out of the
tragedy of September 11th. Almost immediately legend sprung up around his death.
He had taken his helmet off to give the last rites to a dying fireman when
suddenly debris came crashing down upon him.
He died there on the spot, and his body was carried off to a nearby
church, and there was laid upon the altar.
During his lifetime some people grumbled about Mychal Judge. Like Zacchaeus
and Matthew, both tax collectors and
sinners, Judge had a reputation. He was a recovering alcoholic. He was a gay
man. He was a controversial and unconventional character who held Mass in the
most unlikely places. A Monsignor in the Chancery frequently had to admonish
him for one thing or the other. He was more a friend to Bill Clinton than to
Cardinal O’Connor, and, on one occasion, he actually told
He lined up well with the characters and chaos of
But this man, tax collector and sinner, also
had a deep Irish faith that made him irreverently protest, “If I’ve ever done anything to embarrass or
hurt the church I love so much, you can burn me at the stake in front of St.
Patrick’s.” This man, tax collector and
sinner, also had an
encyclopedic memory for people’s names, birthdays and passions. He knew
everyone from the homeless to Mayor Giuliani. Though he was a true New Yorker,
born and raised in the city, he lived on an entirely different plain of
priorities than most New Yorkers. He was non-acquisitive. He was non-grabby. He
was utterly unselfish and uncomplaining.
A
city hobnobbing with a sinner
The church, which is always very politically correct and takes care not
to be seen hobnobbing with sinners, will perhaps never canonize Mychal Judge. But that’s OK, for the people of God have
already canonized him. They canonized him by means of acclamation.[3]
They televised his entire funeral from start to end. And when they held a
memorial service for him, an endless
flow of priests, nuns, lawyers, cops, firefighters, homeless people,
rock-and-rollers, recovering alcoholics, local politicians and middle-age
couples from the suburbs streamed into Good Shepherd Chapel on Ninth Ave in
Manhattan, an Anglican church,
to do a memorial for a Roman Catholic
priest.
In his lifetime Mychal Judge hobnobbed and feasted with sinners. Now a
great city hobnobbed and feasted with him in his death and burial. And Jesus,
who invited Himself to dinner in the
house of Zacchaeus, a tax collector and
notorious sinner, on 9/11 invited Mychal
to dine with Him in the Banquet of Eternal Life.
Go and hobnob
like Jesus
There
is a dismissal to every
1] Diaspora is a Greek word
meaning dispersion. Originally it referred to the settling of scattered
colonies of Jews outside
[2]] By the “the unchurched” is
especially meant not those who have left the church but those whom the church
has left!
[3] The early church canonized by acclamation -- by loud
shouts of God’s people.
There’s something in all
of us that needs tax collectors, sinners, outcasts and infidels to look down
upon. The Pharisee who went up to the temple to pray needed a tax collector and
sinner to look down upon. That made him feel good about himself. He rejoiced
and thanked God he wasn’t like the rest of men –- dishonest and adulterous.
That’s a typical reaction of one who doesn’t feel good about himself in the
first place. The late Jerry Falwell also needed his tax collectors and sinners
to look down upon. He found them in
gays, lesbians, feminists, the ACLU, the People for the
There’s something in the great religions that needs
tax collectors, sinners, outcasts and infidels to look down upon. This is true
especially of Christianity and Islam which seem to have an enduring need to
look down upon others. That need begets a strange dynamic. By having someone to
look down upon we create a mission for ourselves. It’s a mission of conversion whereby we get rid of our sinners
and outcasts and infidels by making them look and act and think just like we
do. Or, worse yet, it’s a mission of annihilation whereby we drive two
747s as weapons of mass destruction into the Twin Towers in the World Trade
Center in Lower Manhattan, and rid ourselves of three thousand infidels with
one neat blow.