The Pharisee and the Tax collector
I remember when I was working in Basildon we had a small
church on the side of the town called Langdon. They hated being associated with
Basildon. I remember once being severally told off when I said that I was happy
to be here in Basildon and someone came over to me and said. “what you have to
remember Father is that we are not like those people from Basildon we are from
Langdon: although they had a Basildon postcode.
Jesus addresses people who pride themselves on their
virtue while despising everyone else. This attitude can come through in our
prayer life. Listen to the Pharisee who comes and prays to himself and notice
the language he uses. The dominant word is “I” His self-righteousness is the
dominant theme of his prayer. Thanking God he is not like those around him or
the tax collector. The Pharisee’s thought of themselves as separated from the
rest of the Jewish people. They saw themselves as superior. Notice something
else about his prayer it has no humility. He tells God everything that he does that
makes him a good Jew.
So I wonder who are the Pharisees in the Catholic Church today.
There are some right wing factors that are not very pleasant with the way they use
a kind of aggressive Catholicism. They use their authority to burden people rather
than to live in freedom. These are the sort of people who will find fault with everything
that they do not agree with. They may even feel that they are here to correct
the wrongs in the Church. They harp back to a time when the Church of the past
looking at it through romantic eyes. They despise and are aggressive to anyone
who disagrees with them rather than listening to them in freedom and love. They
do the outward observances very well but what matters is what is in the heart.
Listen now to the prayer of the tax collector. Not daring
to look up to heaven he turns and says “be merciful to me a sinner.” He recognizes
and knows himself and realises his need for God. IT seems to me to be a prayer
from the heart. He knows his need for God. He also knows who he really is and
his need for God. He has nothing to offer apart from his brokenness and his
pain. He realises that all he can do is trust in God. His real self is no
secret.
Jesus now comments about the story. What he has to say
will be a shock for his hearers? He declares that the tax collector goes home
justified where the Pharisee does not. It, they would have thought been the
other way round. The tax collectors prayers pierced the clouds whereas the
Pharisee prayer only reached himself. Jesus is the friend of tax collectors and
sinners. He does not put their sinfulness on hold but rather calls them away to look at what it means to live in
the freedom of God’s love and mercy. For Jesus sinners were not just sinners
but beloved sinners. They deserve more than being rubbished by people who
despise what they do. If we come and pray and realise that our religion has a
heavy investment in despising other people then we will just go home again as
we came. We do not change we are not changed by our prayer. But, if we are
simple and acknowledge our sinfulness and need for God and we begin to
acknowledge the truth about ourselves then we can place it all on the love and
mercy of God.
Comments