Last Sunday, two of our parishioners stood at the lectern and spoke movingly about their commitment to this parish. Then they explained their process for deciding how to make a sacrificial gift of money to support ministry at Good Shepherd. They told us that when they prayed about what pledge offering God was asking them to make for next year, they asked to be challenged. They didn’t determine what they could give after prioritizing other needs. They approached things the other way around. They asked for God to challenge them so that his will might be done.
Perhaps you were as touched by those words as I was. How often do we begin prayer by asking God to challenge us? The more tempting approach is to come to prayer with the intention of changing God. We want God to make us well or help us find that new job or redirect the hurricane so that it misses our hometown, which, of course, means that it will likely hit someone else’s hometown. It also means that if someone stays sick or the new job doesn’t pan out, then God is asleep at the switch. There’s an unspoken assumption that the answer to prayer usually involves some kind of change on God’s part.
Our forebears in the faith thought this way from time to time, just as we might be prone to do. They asked for God to spare them from their enemies, which frequently translated into the slaughter of those same enemies. They begged God to change his mind about the wrath they were sure he would swiftly inflict upon them because of their sin. But how many times can you recall anyone in the Bible asking for God to change them, much less challenge them?
I can’t think of many, but one is the tax collector in today’s parable. Let’s refrain from demonizing the Pharisee, though. He’s rightly doing what the law requires of him, and of course, he certainly should be doing those good things, like tithing and fasting. We should all be doing them. The Pharisee is simply a stock character that represents the most visibly religious, those of us who sometimes think that we have no need to change or that we have our spiritual lives sewn up nicely.
But the tax collector is the pariah of ancient times, who is in cahoots with the oppressive Roman government, skimming some for himself from the top of what the people owe to Rome. And yet, he is praying to be changed and challenged. Unlike the Pharisee, who is standing by himself, the tax collector is standing far off. Physically, by his posture in prayer, with eyes downcast and beating his breast, the tax collector pleads for God to change him. Only by calling upon God’s mercy will he be brought closer to God. And in standing far off and asking for mercy, the tax collector is implicitly standing not alone but with his neighbors. Visibly, this tax collector doesn’t seem to be close to God, but that’s only because he hopes he will be changed from the inside out.
The Pharisee, on the other hand, starts in the place of self-righteousness, telling God just how dutiful he is, which is hardly a prayer at all. Does he really want to change? Does he really want to be challenged? Does he have any need or concern for the neighbors who are “other” to him? If he considers them to be sinners, does his heart break over their sins? Does he long for their restoration to communion with God? He seems to scorn the visibly sinful, whom he readily names. But whether he wants it or not, he, too, will be changed, except unlike the tax collector, he will be changed from the outside in. After all, those who exalt themselves will be humbled, but all who humble themselves will be exalted.
The truth is that all of us will be changed by God in some way or other, and it will either be from the inside out or from the outside in. If we live oriented to the things of this world, we will need to be changed from the outside in. Everything about our culture tells us that we have little need to change ourselves unless it involves climbing to the top of a social ladder. And even that usually involves changing others.
We must convince others that we are worthy of the coveted job or of entering the ranks of the elite university. We must argue our academic theses by proving that we are right and convincing others to change their minds. If others disagree with our opinions and convictions, we must get them to agree with us. Even in the Church, we can easily imagine standing by ourselves, looking down on the visible sinners, those “others.” We can laud ourselves over our tithe or faithful attendance at Mass, but meanwhile, lurking within our hearts are the poisons of pride, envy, lust, and wrath, things that might not visibly express themselves but that turn us away from our neighbors and inwards on ourselves.
It all has to do with our starting place. If we stand far off like the tax collector, we’re able to be changed and challenged and to orient our lives around the fixed point of God’s unchanging mercy and compassion. The more we understand that God never changes in his love and mercy, the less we tend to feel judgmental and resentful of others.
This is no easy task, but the Church, in her gracious wisdom, has given us the spiritual practice of confession that can help us shape our prayer so that we may be changed from the inside out, rather than the outside in. The tax collector represents one making a good confession, because he’s not asking for God’s mind to change; he’s asking for God to change him. There’s an unspoken protective mechanism in our longing to change God’s mind in that we hope we won’t have to change ourselves. Amid our cries for justice when asking God to bring condemnation on the visibly guilty, we duplicitously shield ourselves from God’s invisible demands on us. We ask not to be challenged but to be vindicated, and as such, we long for immunity from forgiving and showing compassion to our neighbors.
But in the sacrament of reconciliation, in which we confess our sins to God in the presence of a priest, the Church invites us to start in the position of the tax collector. The starting place in confession is the same, regardless of whether you tithe or don’t tithe to the church. It’s the same whether you are a CEO or a plumber. The starting place means that all of us are sinners and need to be changed and challenged.
In a good confession, we don’t make excuses for our behavior, nor do we grovel before God in recounting our sins. And we certainly shouldn’t feel a perverse pride in shocking the confessor. We simply kneel before God and the Church, which is represented by the priest. We come to confession without anyone but the priest knowing about it. It’s a private affair that protects us from pride. We objectively name our sins, without justification for why we did it and without blaming anyone else.
This regular practice keeps us humble. But for the confessor, there’s an extra temptation to pride as one who pronounces God’s forgiveness for others. And that’s why regular confession is necessary for confessors, too. Indeed, to be a confessor is to be brought low, because one realizes the astounding honesty of others in their own confessions. The truth is that in confession, both priest and penitent start in the same place, as sinners in need of God’s mercy.
Perhaps our simple and objective prayers might be the truest. God, have mercy upon me a sinner! They make space for the Spirit to pray within us. Although sacramental confession is ostensibly the most private act of the Church, it also draws us closer to our neighbors. The deepest prayer comes from our own recognition of how lost we are. We must become poor to pray well.[1] In that poverty, we find communion with our neighbors, who are fallible and broken, just like we are.
The heart of prayer is not trying to get God to change his mind; it’s in asking for God to change our minds and our hearts, to challenge us. In confession, we orient our lives around the fixed reality of God’s immovable mercy and compassion. God has no need to change nor is he capable of change. But we need all the change we can get to grow more into the likeness of God.
To be changed from the inside out, we don’t seek to be justified; rather, we start from far off, kneeling, with head bowed, to hear gentle but powerful words of forgiveness so that God can draw us closer and make us whole again. When we begin our prayer in asking to be changed, we gaze upon Jesus, giving his life willingly upon the cross and forgiving his enemies at the same time. On the cross, everything gets turned upside down and inside out.[2] The unexpected glory of the cross means that those who exalt themselves will be humbled, and those who humble themselves will be exalted. When face to face with the glory of the cross, each of us will be changed. There’s no escaping that. The only question is this: will it be from the outside in or the inside out?
Sermon by Father Kyle Babin
The Twentieth Sunday after Pentecost
October 26, 2025
[1] See Mark A. McIntosh and Frank T. Griswold, Seeds of Faith (Grand Rapids, MI: William B. Eerdmans, 2022), 140.
[2] This is inspired by an image from the Godly Play Curriculum by Jerome Berryman.
