Pastor Erik's Sometimes Dangerous Blog
Erik DiVietro
Teaching Pastor,
Bedford Road Baptist Church, 2004
Master of Divinity,
Liberty University, 2016
PhD in Bible Exposition,
Liberty University, 2022
Oddball Contrarian,
Since Birth (according to his parents)
“when Jesus came to the place” (5) We share space with Jesus and a whole bunch of other people. Sometimes we forget that faith is meant to be public. It is shared with those who share it, but it is also supposed to be a publicly shared thing. Faith is not supposed to be hidden
“He was seeking to see who Jesus was…but he was small…” (v 2) What obstacles get in your way? What keeps you from seeing Jesus? For Zacchaeus, it was his own body’s limitations; but his desire to see Jesus gave him the ingenuity to get to him somehow. But it would have been an easier
I use an iPhone, an iPad, and two Macs (an old Macbook I just got and a Mac Mini in my office). You would think that I use Apple’s integrated apps for pretty much everything, wouldn’t you? In fact, I don’t use their apps except when I have to. I use the Agenda iOS app
“Zacchaeus stood and said to the Lord…” (v 8) It takes incredible bravery to stand up and confess your sins – especially when your sins have gotten you everything you have ever wanted. Zacchaeus chose righteousness over appearances, honoring Christ over seeking honor. And the fascinating thing is that Jesus never said anything to Zacchaeus
“the guest of a man who is a sinner” (v 7) You cannot control who your family is. You have no control over the personalities of your relatives. You do, however, control who your guests are. Zacchaeus chose whom he would keep company with, and he chose well. The funny thing is that the complaining
“They all grumbled…” (v 7) Those outside of the house Jesus enters will always complain about those inside the house. We sometimes worry more about how we will be perceived by those outside than what really matters – what the Savior who has entered will think. You cannot think of criticism as a negative, as
“So he hurried and came down and received him joyfully.” (v 6) Once Jesus entered Zacchaeus’ world, Zacchaeus recognized how his journey to wealth and gain contrasted with Jesus’ journey of simplicity. Zacchaeus does not put it into so many words, but the rush of activity indicates a radical change. It was, however, a change
“a guest of a man who is a sinner…” (v 7) There is no way to purchase a guest room for Jesus. Despite Zacchaeus’ wealth, the only way Jesus came to stay at Zacchaeus’ house was that Jesus invited himself. That does not, however, mean that Zacchaeus’ willingness to receive the Savior was diminished. He
“So he hurried and came down…” (v 6) When Jesus invites himself to stay with Zacchaeus, he is definitive: I must stay at your house. Zacchaeus therefore has an opportunity to either accept the Savior’s call or not, but to reject Jesus’ request would be to directly deny the Savior’s will. Thankfully, he immediately responds
“Jesus entered Jericho and was passing through.” (v 1) Jericho was a very profitable place. The aristocracy had winter homes there, and it was a major crossroad for agriculture and trade. Zacchaeus lived right on the main road in town, probably close to the gates so he could collect taxes as the merchants came to
