Loving the Unlovable
By gie251977
@gie251977 (155)
Philippines
January 15, 2007 10:47pm CST
Zacchaeus was easy to dislike. As a tax collector for an oppressive occupying government, he made himself rich by overcharging his countrymen. Yet, to the consternation of the crowd, Jesus honored him by going to his house and eating with him.
A judge with a reputation for toughness tells how he learned to relate to unlovable people. In a Sunday morning homily his clergyman urged the congregation to try to look at people through the eyes of Jesus.
A few days later the judge was about to give a stiff sentence to an arrogant young man who kept getting in trouble. But then he remembered what the minister ad suggested. The judge said. "I looked this young man in the eye and told him I thought he was a bright and talented human being. And then I said to him, "let's talk together about how we can get you living in more creative and constructive ways." We had a surprisingly good conversation."
Jesus saw Zacchaeus as a sinner with an empty hole that only He could fill, and through His kindness Zacchaeus was transformed. The judge could not report any such change, but who knows the long-term outcome? He set a good example for all of us, because he saw the man through the eyes of Jesus. - Herb Vander Lugt
What do you think about this story?
1 person likes this
1 response
@ddnj2006 (652)
• Philippines
18 Jan 07
That would means people are not really bad. All people contains a seed of kindness planted in our hearts. What Jesus did is that he made that seed to grow and grow until it would come the times it is ready to give fruits.
People has always a chance to change for the better, as long as we live. (,")