It
is a clear from the very first verse of this passage what is going on. “The Pharisees went and plotted to entrap
Jesus in what he said.” Over the last
few weeks, we have heard several parables that Jesus shared. In most of these parables, the Pharisees were
not portrayed well. They came across as
hypocritical, narrow minded and just plain wrong. The Pharisees could not let these teachings
continue, so they came up with a plan.
They devised the perfect question to entrap Jesus and then recruited
Herodians to be with them when they asked the question.
While we do not know a
lot about the Herodians, we know that they were associated with King Herod. They were Jewish, but were perceived to be
closely allied with the Romans who had appointed Herod to be the king of the
Jews. This was especially offensive to most
Jews because only God could appoint a king of the Jewish people. The Pharisees and the Herodians did not
usually get along. Thus to have these two groups working together implied that
Jesus had upset not just the Pharisees and Chief Priests, but the Roman
leadership as well.
In
this nation, we are divided on taxes.
How much should they be? Where should the income from the taxes go? In
Jesus time, the Jewish people were extremely burdened by taxes. Scholars estimate that there were 3-4
different taxes and most of the income from those taxes went to the
Romans. The Jewish tax money was helping
pay for their imprisonment. I think we can all agree that would not be
something we would support in this country.
The question was, “Is it lawful to pay taxes to the emperor, or not?” If
Jesus answered the question by saying that it was lawful to pay taxes to the
Romans, he would have upset the Jews. He
would have lost many of his followers.
If he said that it was not lawful, he would have most likely been
arrested by the Romans. There was
absolutely no good way to answer this question. Jesus took another tactic.
He
told them, “Show me the coin used for the tax.”
In asking for a coin, he was first of all admitting that he did not have
any coins. Someone from the group who was
trying to trap him with this tricky question handed him a denarius. A denarius is a Roman coin. It would have had a picture of Caesar with
the words, “Tiberius Caesar, Son of the Divine Augustus Pontifex Maximus.” This coin had an engraved image of a Roman god, an
idol. Just having this coin would have
technically meant that any Jew holding it would be breaking the first two
commandments.
In
some ways, the question about whether it was ok for Jews to pay taxes to the
Roman was a fair question. Yet the fact
that the Jews asking the questions were the ones holding the coin indicates
their hypocrisy. They were asking if it
was ok for them to participate in a system that they were already participating
in. That is why Jesus called them
hypocrites. Jesus really did not like
hypocrites. Remember, Jesus did not have
the coin. He had to ask for it.
When
he had it, he asked them whose image was on the coin. It was the Emperor’s image. Jesus then provided his now famous answer,
“Give therefore to the emperor the things that are the emperor’s, and to God
the things that are God’s.” In other words, if it has the emperor’s face on it,
give it back to him. A lot of people
have used this response to help explain the divide between church and state or
sacred and secular; as if Jesus was drawing a line between what was God’s and
what was Caesar’s. That was not the
case.
Jesus
asked whose image is on the coin. Whose
image. Think about the first chapter of
Genesis. Genesis takes us through all of God’s creation. After creating earth, water, plants, animals,
God created male and female in his image.
We are made in the image of God.
Therefore when Jesus tells them to give the coin to Caesar because that
is whose image is on the coin…well that is a very small thing compared to what
and who bears the image to God. We give
coins to the leaders of this earth, but we give ourselves to God. There is no divide between the sacred and the
secular because every part of creation is sacred.
The
reason talking about stewardship and pledges is difficult is not just because
clergy don’t like to talk about money; it’s that talking about what stewardship
really means is far too daunting.
Everything belongs to God. We
earn nothing because all we have is a gift from God. That is a difficult thing to wrap your mind
around especially when you have worked very hard for what you have. But it also explains why giving of ourselves
is part of what we do in church.
In my last church, we
had a very outgoing stewardship chair.
He had a deep southern accent and was a little pushy at times, but always charming.
He loved the church. Once I saw
him sidle up to someone in the hall before the service. It was not someone I saw regularly, not
someone I would have expected to pledge.
He put his hand on the man’s shoulder and said, “Dan, do we have your
commitment.” Dan looked a little confused.
The stewardship chair stopped so Dan would have to look at him. “Your commitment. Are you committed to this church?” He was so
earnest. It even made me
uncomfortable. Yet it made me think of
what it would be like to be cornered by Jesus.
What would it be like to have Jesus pull you aside, look into your eyes
and say, “Do I have your commitment?” That is what he asks each one of us every
minute of every day. Are we committed to
him? Only you know that answer.
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