October 17, 2020
Matthew
22.15-22
+ Last week, in our Gospel reading, I
was blunt—and honest—with you.
I told you then that I did not like
the parable we were told by Jesus.
It was a difficult story that, by
today’s standards, would’ve been torn to
pieces by critics.
But if we’re patient in our faithful
listening to these Gospels, we can almost be assured that for every one story
we might not like—like last week’s story—there will be one that we really get.
Today, is one of those Gospel
readings.
I like this Gospel reading.
In it we find Jesus being confronted
by the Herodians and the Pharisees, both of whom are enemies of each other, but
for this brief moment, they are ganging up on Jesus.
I love it when Jesus and the Pharisees
go head-to-head.
Actually, I feel kind of sorry for the
Pharisees.
They think they’re really smart and
clever, but they’re really not.
They begin their argument with a
compliment of course.
Yes, that’s the way to begin.
They know: a compliment will truly
throw off the person you are about to trap.
But Jesus is too smart for them of
course.
He turns their question back on them.
Jesus asks about the coin.
He asks about a coin he, if you
notice, does not carry.
Nor does he ever touch it.
As we know, Roman coins were ritually
unclean in the Jewish culture.
The emperor Caesar was viewed as a
god, and that made them unclean to good, pious Jews.
Using the coin as his reference, he
lets them have it.
Give to God’s what is God’s, he says.
Give to Caesar what is Caesar’s.
I can’t think of a better scripture
for us during the election season, especially this particular one.
It seems he is making a clear
distinction between the religious and the secular to some extent.
He seems to be making that distinction
between God and government.
But…not really.
The real point he is making here can
be found when we put it all in perspective.
Jesus and every good, loyal Jewish
male there on that day—including the Pharisees— was required to pray a prayer
every day.
Jesus no doubt prayed that prayer that
morning, as did every devout Jewish male (and no doubt many Jewish females)
that day.
The prayer is a simple prayer.
It’s called the Shema
“Hear, O Israel, the Lord our God is
one Lord; and you shall love the Lord your God with all your heart, and with
all your soul, and with all your might.”
The Shema is, of course, the summary
of the Law.
It is a summary of all belief for a
Jew. It essentially renders to God, what is God’s.
But if you listen closely to what the
Shema says, you realize: Jesus’ statement really isn’t an either/or statement.
He’s simply saying that once what is
God’s is rendered to God, there is nothing else.
There are no other options for those
of us who belong to God.
For those who love God with all their
heart, all their soul and all their might, there is nothing else.
Rendering anything to Caesar’s is
simply not an option.
For us, it is a matter of realizing we
don’t have the option of turning our Christianity on and off.
We are always followers of Jesus, we
are always children of a loving God, in everything we do.
Everything we do and say begins and
ends in following Jesus.
We don’t have the option of being a
Christian when it suits us and being secular when it doesn’t.
We are a follower of Jesus all the
time—in everything we do and every aspect of our lives.
And it is important to remind
ourselves of this.
So what does it mean to live a life in
which we give to God what is God’s?
It meant to do what we do best as
Christians.
It means to love fully.
It means loving God fully.
It means loving others fully.
It means loving ourselves fully.
It means living that love out in our
lives.
For this love that we have received
from God is God’s love.
And we must render that love to God
and to others.
I know.
It sounds so simple.
It sounds so basic.
We wonder why we ever thought it was
hard or why others thought it was hard.
But it is a lot harder than it sounds.
Rendering the things that are God’s to
God is not easy.
It is much, much easier to render the
things to Caesar that are Caesar’s.
It is easy to let the establishment
stay established.
It is easy to be chameleons to some
extent, to change ourselves to suit whatever situation may arise so that we can
quietly fade into the background, or so we can hold on, for a moment, to the
control we have worked to maintain.
It is easy to be a Christian on
Sundays but to be a regular person the rest of the week.
It is easy to say we’re Christians,
but it’s not always east being a Christian.
But for us, who follow Jesus, being
anything other than a follower of Jesus is a sell-out.
It truly is a turning away from Jesus
and all he stands for.
It is, essentially, a way in which we
turn our Christianity on and off like a switch to suit our own personal needs.
It is hard to be a Christian in every
aspect of our lives.
It hard to love God in all things.
It is hard to love our neighbors in
all things.
It is hard, very often to love even
ourselves in all things.
But that is what it means to render to
God the things that are God’s.
It means giving to God all that is
God’s.
And we belong to God.
We are the conduits of that
all-loving, all-accepting God.
We are the bearers of that radical,
all-powerful love of God.
So let us truly render to God what is
God’s.
Let us live out our lives in the love
we have received from God.
Let us live fully in this holy and all-consuming
love, sharing what we are nourished on here with everyone.
And with God’s love within us in this
way, let us be that radical Presence of love and acceptance to all those we
encounter.
Let us pray.
Holy and loving God, help us in what
we render to you, that it will be fruitful and will further the Kingdom you
have established here among us; we ask this in the name of Jesus your Son.
Amen.
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