While they were listening to this, he went on to tell them a parable, because he was near Jerusalem and the people thought that the kingdom of God was going to appear at once.
Luke 19:11 (NIV)
There is an art to storytelling.
In novels and in movies, and in the spoken word there is a structure to a well-told story that sucks listeners in, keeps them on the edge of their seats, and leaves them wanting more.
With the advent of streaming and binging entire seasons of television shows it easier than ever to see that writers structure an entire season of episodes like one giant story.
I have always said that all good stories are a reflection of the Great Story.
God is the Master Storyteller.
Luke is a careful apprentice—watching, learning, and telling the story with intention.
He sees the story of Jesus, and he is writing it capably.
One of the hallmarks of a good story is that as the narrative moves towards the climax, the pace of the story speeds up.
Things happen quickly.
Conflicts rise.
Tension builds.
Back in chapter 9 Luke informed us that Jesus resolutely set out for Jerusalem. He did so knowing that He would be arrested, tried, and executed. He predicted plainly… twice.
Over the next 9 chapters Luke slowly introduces the conflict with the prominent religious leaders. Jesus’ teachings and parables only stoke the flames of that conflict.
The religious establishment wants a king who conquers.
Jesus insists on a kingdom that transforms.
Jesus repeatedly frustrates them with His description of God’s Kingdom, and criticizes them for their inability to see it or accept it.
Today’s chapter. There’s movement here. Urgency. A heartbeat that quickens as Jesus draws closer to Jerusalem… and everything starts to come to a head.
The chapter unfolds like a series of charged moments:
- In Jericho, a wealthy, compromised man named Zacchaeus climbs a tree just to see Jesus—and ends up being seen instead.
Scandalous. Not that Zacchaeus sought Jesus—but that Jesus wanted Zacchaeus. Salvation doesn’t wait for you to clean up. It invites itself into your messy house and sits down at your table like it owns the place. - Jesus tells a parable about servants entrusted with money (the minas), exposing what we do with what we’ve been given while the King is away. The minas aren’t just about stewardship—they’re about loyalty in the waiting. What I do with what God has placed in my hands—my influence, my voice, my time—isn’t neutral. It reveals my heart.
- Then comes the triumphal entry—Jesus rides into Jerusalem as a king… but not the kind anyone expected.
Not on a war horse like the religious establishment wants, but a colt. This isn’t power, or intimidation, or conquest…peace. But don’t mistake gentleness for weakness. This King knows exactly who He is… and exactly where He’s going. - And finally, He weeps over the city and clears the temple, confronting a people who missed what was right in front of them.
A haunting moment as Jesus looks at Jerusalem… and cries. Not because He’s rejected. Because they didn’t recognize “the time of God’s coming.” They were looking for God… and missed Him when He stood right in front of them. And the temple cleansing isn’t random anger—it’s surgical. The establishment has turned God’s house into a cash cow of commerce. Religion without presence, activity without intimacy, noise without God — and Jesus won’t have it.
Today’s chapter is about recognition… and the tragedy of missing it.
Here’s where the chapter leans in close… and Holy Spirit whispers something uncomfortably personal.
“Tom? You’re in this story.”
- Sometimes I’m Zacchaeus—curious, hungry, hiding in the branches, hoping to see without being seen.
- Sometimes I’m the cautious servant—playing it safe, burying what I’ve been given because risk feels… well… risky.
- Sometimes I’m a face in the crowd—cheering Jesus when it’s exciting, missing Him when it’s inconvenient.
- And sometimes… I’m Jerusalem.
Busy.
Religious.
Close.
And still missing Him.
In the quiet this morning, I’m reminded that God’s Kingdom starts with me. Jesus always begins at the one-on-one relationship.
Not in theory.
Not in theology.
But in the quiet nudge…
The inconvenient interruption…
The invitation that feels a little too personal, a little too close for comfort…
Because Jesus still walks through every town like Jericho.
He still looks up into trees.
He still calls names.
And He still says, “I’m coming to your house today.”
When He does?
Things get rearranged.
Tables flip.
Priorities shift.
Wallets open.
Hearts soften.
And salvation doesn’t just pass by—
It moves in…
kicks off its shoes…
and stays awhile.
I am taking a couple of days off. See you on Thursday.

If you know anyone who might be encouraged by today’s post, please share.



