
“Are not five sparrows sold for two pennies? Yet not one of them is forgotten by God. Indeed, the very hairs of your head are all numbered. Don’t be afraid; you are worth more than many sparrows.” Luke 12:6–7 (NIV)
Mondays can mess with a pastor’s head.
You can be “on” for people all weekend—preaching, praying, greeting, listening, carrying what others drop on you—and then, on Monday morning, it’s quiet. The calendar is full, but you still feel oddly unseen. Not the pastor-title version of you. You.
Zacchaeus knew what it was like to be on the outside of the crowd. He wasn’t innocent. He’d made choices that hurt people. He knew exactly what others thought when they saw him. So when Jesus came through Jericho, he did something a respected adult man didn’t do: He ran ahead, climbed a tree, and tried to get a clear look.
Then Luke gives us this line:
“When Jesus reached the spot, he looked up” (Luke 19:5 NIV).
Jesus didn’t just glance around. He stopped. He looked up into the branches and saw the person everyone else had already decided how to label. And he said Zacchaeus’ name out loud.
Pastor, if you’re carrying something today you haven’t said to anyone—something you’re ashamed of, tired of, scared of, or just too worn out to explain—don’t turn this into an abstract truth. Hear it personally:
Jesus knows where you are.
You are not misfiled in heaven. You are not lost in the noise. You are not “fine” just because you’re functioning.
Luke 12 says God doesn’t forget sparrows. God doesn’t lose track of the smallest, most easily overlooked thing. And if that’s true, then God is not losing track of you. The hairs on your head are numbered, not because God is counting, but because God is attentive.
Before you give yourself away again today, pause long enough to let Jesus “look up” at you. Let that be real. Let it land.
And then, because you shepherd people in Jesus’ name, do what you saw him do.
Look up.