In his parables Jesus invites the listener to be
part of the story by relating explicit
scenarios that were relevant to the listener’s world. These parables also serve
as implicit invitations for them to
see something else beneath in the narrative. From time to time Jesus would
insert a clever device or provocative form of speech, i.e., an aphorism, in which a specific piece or
element would prompt the imagination and become an indelible memory. And so it
is in this week’s Gospel (Matthew 22: 15-22). Jesus uses the coin to
illustrate and memorialize in the mind’s eye of the listener his answer which typical
of Jesus, was in the form of a question and asks, “what do you think?”
Over
the centuries, many Christians have based their attitudes toward government on
this passage. Some have thought that Jesus' statement establishes two separate
realms, Caesar's and God's. This interpretation strikes many Americans as
obviously correct, given our separation of church and state. In this historical
context, Jesus’ words had little to do with taxation or political authority in
general. Jews in the first century paid several taxes: tithes to the Temple,
customs taxes, and taxes on land. Yet, the people were not questioning taxes but
rather their question specifically was
concerned with whether it was lawful to pay taxes to Caesar who as the emperor
of Rome and the son of Augustus, represented the head of an imperial domination
system, and was purported to be the “son of God.” In essence, even possessing the coin was tantamount to idolatry and a
violation of the commandments.
The President of the Lutheran
Theological Seminary, David Lose writes that three of the most powerful words
in the world besides "I love you," are "I don't know." To many of us in our culture, these
words seem like an admission of failure. It’s as if our admitting any kind of
ignorance somehow undermines the validity of our education and degrees. How
could that be? But just maybe we don’t
know and just maybe telling another person that we don't know provides them
an invitation to share what they know or, sometimes even better, to join
you in figuring something out. This becomes especially true when you pair those
three words with four others: "What do you think?" Isn’t that what we
do in our Jesus Way Bible Study?
So back to the question put to Jesus in our Gospel.
It was a trap. Either way a yes or no answer would have gotten Jesus in
trouble. "Yes" would have discredited him with those who found the
imperial domination system unacceptable. "No" would have made him
subject to arrest for sedition. So is Jesus saying that we owe nothing to a false God like
Caesar and should reserve all things for the true God? Or is he inviting us to
recognize that while we may owe the emperors of this world some things like
taxes, we owe God other things, like our whole selves? Perhaps Jesus is
inviting us to put aside our attachments and allegiance to the material and
temporal things of this world that our coins can buy and invite our ultimate
devotion to God? I don't know. What do
you think? Or is Jesus advocating a retreat from the economic and political
dimensions of our lives and helping us recognize that all of these things are
part of God's “divine economy?” As such, is Jesus inviting us to set the stage for
our transformation…by putting on the mind
of God in all of our decisions in what we do, buy, and how we spend our
time? The whole world is God's including us. What do you think?
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