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Heaven Meets Earth Week 21

Apr 26, 2026    Billy Stephens

This teaching takes us into one of Jesus's most confronting parables about two men who went to pray: a Pharisee and a tax collector. What makes this story so penetrating is that Jesus isn't aiming at obviously lost people or outsiders. He's speaking directly to religious people who trusted in themselves and their own righteousness. The Pharisee stands alone, reciting his spiritual resume to God, fasting twice a week, tithing on everything, comparing himself favorably to others. Meanwhile, the tax collector stands at a distance, unable to even lift his eyes, beating his chest and crying out for mercy. The shocking twist? The tax collector goes home justified, not the religious performer. This parable holds up a mirror to our own hearts, forcing us to ask: Do we come to God with a list of accomplishments, or do we come unlisted, with empty hands and honest hearts? The Greek word for mercy that the tax collector uses is the same word for the mercy seat where sacrificial blood was sprinkled on the Day of Atonement. He wasn't asking for kindness but for atonement, for his sins to be covered by sacrifice. We discover that justification flows downward from God, not upward from our efforts. Our spiritual disciplines, service, and obedience matter deeply, but they are the fruit of justification, not the root of it. Pride is the quiet poison that kills our prayer life, generosity, and joy, while humility receives the grace that our striving never could earn.