“Give
to the emperor the things that are the emperor’s, and to God the things that
are God’s”… What do you think that means?
One
commentary, p 634, on Matthew I often read in my preparation for sermons says
this about this passage: “Jesus was no Zealot or revolutionary who advocated
the overthrow of the Roman government. But neither did he put priority upon
loyalty to secular government. If one rendered to the state its restricted
due, all the more was one to render to God his unrestricted due (that is),
the totality of one’s being and substance, one’s existence, was to be rendered
to God and nothing less. Loyalty to Caesar must always be set in the larger
context and be relativized by the full submission of the self to God.”
Notice he
says, “Render the state its restricted due,” and continues, “All the
more (i)s one to render to God his unrestricted due - the totality of one’s
being and substance, one’s existence and nothing less.”
I don’t know your
reaction, but this statement is a contradiction. How can one give even restricted
loyalty to secular government and at the same time, “Render to God the
totality of one’s being and substance, one’s existence?”
Perhaps this
contradiction is exactly what Jesus intended for us. Certainly, if we search
the earlier comments by Jesus in Matthew and in the other gospels, we find a
continuing thread that God demands a single-minded loyalty from us. After all, Jesus said, “No man can
serve two masters.” This passage isn’t justifying a “two-state solution.”
The evidence is
everywhere that a more absolute loyalty is expected. Satan tempted Jesus in Matthew 4: 8-10 with the
offer, “Worship me and I’ll give you all the kingdoms of the world.” Jesus
replied by quoting Deuteronomy
6:13, “Worship the Lord your God, and serve him alone.” In Matthew 12:18-21 Jesus says
that he comes to proclaim justice to the nations, implying his higher authority.
Every time Jesus is
questioned about his authority his reply points to a demand for loyalty and faith
that exceeds anything we give to worldly rulers. It culminated in the questions
posed to him before his crucifixion. First the religious leaders ask,
“Are you the Messiah, the Son of God?”, and then Pilate asked, “Are you
the King of the Jews (implying not Herod).” The answer is “Yes” (or “you say so”)
to both questions.
The Christian congregations in the
first 200-300 years took these scriptures strictly to heart. When Jesus says, “Render to God what is due
God,” to them it meant everything.
The earliest Christians thought
the question by the Herodians about paying the emperor’s tax was heresy. The Herodians were Jews who gave
primary loyalty to the Jewish puppet King Herod installed by Rome, not to God. Herodians were the heretics.
The early believers took loyalty to God so seriously that they would risk death
before wearing the uniform of a Roman soldier (Tertulian, Of The
Crown, chapter 11) because service to the state challenged absolute loyalty
to God. This is a disturbing position today, but for them, the reason was obvious.
This is what I think is
going on with our difficulty with this passage. If you are familiar with the
beginnings of the Reformation, particularly the writings of Martin Luther, one of the main objections by Martin
Luther to the pope’s authority deals with interpretation of scripture. No
person has authority to interpret scripture for another. He based this
objection on his translation of 1 Corinthians 14:30 : “If something better is revealed to anyone who is already sitting
and listening to another person explaining God’s word, then the one who is
speaking shall hold his peace and listen to the other.”
This is called personal
revelation. The problem with personal
revelation is that it is personal. (In modern times we say that the grounding
of personal revelation is based on prayer and discernment and discussion with
others and especially with biblically educated persons. The problem still remains
that the majority may well embrace something later perceived as unrighteous,
e.g., slavery. But as I will show, this is the inescapable challenge facing Reformed thought!)
Influential religious
leaders and their followers in towns and states read scripture with eyes
colored by the ideas and cultural values of their particular city or state. All
reformed denominations, Presbyterian, Lutheran, Episcopal, and so on, came into
existence in this manner. A city or
country embraced the interpretation of one or more of its religious leaders and
it became their view of the gospel. (The irony is they didn’t necessarily
decide for themselves but let a leader decide!) Each city or state took its
interpretation so seriously that if you were an adherent of one of the other
denominations and wandered into the city, you risked your life.
This kind of interpretive
bias existed also in the earliest congregations up until the Catholic Church came
into existence (before 400 CE). There were large followings that claimed only the NT
was valid and the entire OT should be rejected. Others (ebionites) argued that if Jesus was God, then he
could not really be present as a man or be killed (Greek influence). The person
who was crucified must have been a man who was a stand-in for God. There were
many other ideas we know very little about because often the ones who lost the
argument often were killed.
In the Reformation, this
church-Roman Empire collaboration became a local government-denomination
collaboration. Each denomination relied upon the local government to protect it
from other denominations and control general unrighteousness in the community.
As an example, John Calvin in Geneva created a session-like body called a
consistory. If someone had been sleeping through a sermon, Calvin might
have the local sheriff arrest the guy and bring him to the consistory meeting
where he would be questioned, “What was the title of my sermon last Sunday?” If
the person could not answer satisfactorily, or gave the wrong answer, Calvin
had the sheriff sentence the person on bread and water for a time as
punishment.
This state-denomination
collaboration denied religious liberty to others and led to the founding of the
United States and the French Revolution that shattered this state-denomination
collaboration. The foundation of freedom and liberty in the United States originally
gave all denominations equal protection under the law from persecution, at
least in theory (those fleeing persecution found it easy to exercise religious discrimination), so most of us give little thought to this
passage in Matthew that says total loyalty to God is demanded of us.
The old idea in the early
church that it is wrong to serve in the military is mostly a relic of that
church lost in modern times, except in America we offer allowances to some such as the Quakers
who take the principle of non-violence symbolized by the life of Christ quite
seriously. We give them and others whose conscience does not allow violence
forbearance in the demand for military service.
For the
most part, we American Christians exercise our patriotism because we shine as
an example compared to most governments of the world. We are the source of so
much good for the world that we often neglect the evil our leaders do in our
name or the name of religion for political reasons. But Christians have an obligation
not to overlook the bad things that have been done, and persist, in the name of country such
as slavery, lynching, imprisoning people who opened their business on Sunday,
imprisoned people who had a different sexual orientation, sending boats arriving
in American ports carrying Jews fleeing the death camps to America back to
Germany rather than admitting them, condoning the government assassinating leaders
and supporting dictators to ensure the flow of oil or other essential
resources.
We can
argue rightfully the military of Rome was antithetical to Christianity (Caesar used identical words to Jesus claiming the role of savior) and not
comparable to military in democratic countries. But nevertheless, one uncomfortable
problem remains - It was pointed out by Reinhold
Niebuhr in the years leading up to the United States entering WWII war
against Germany.
The
problem is that government and institutions are motivated by self-preservation.
Decisions are made at a lower ethical and moral standard in order to ensure that self-preservation than expected of Christians who face eternal
life no matter what happens. Jesus says (Luke 12:4,5) “I
tell you, my friends, do not fear those who kill the body, and after that can
do nothing more. But I will warn you whom to fear: fear him who, after he has
killed, has authority to cast into hell. Yes, I tell you, fear him!”
Jesus (God) does not let us off
easy. This contradiction between what we think is moral and what we think scripture
tells us is moral is possible because we live in a world of relative plenty and
freedom seldom being required to think about the difference.
There was a great comic
in Friday’s Chattanooga Times Free Press, Non Sequitur.
It is a single frame with a caption, “The Road Much Less Traveled.” There is a
man standing on a path that forks. One fork leads up a steep hill and has a
sign beside it that points up the path on the hill. The other fork continues
forward on flat ground. Many footprints mark and follow the flat path. There are
a few footprints showing some people have stopped, turned and looked up the
hill thinking about following that path, but there are no footprints going up
the hill. The sign at the fork pointing up the hill says, “The Moral High
Ground.” A warning below the arrow says, “Practicing what you preach is required.”
The ultimate problem with
the coin holding the image of the emperor’s face is that even today we face that same
question and demand for an answer, “Exactly what does it mean to give God what
loyalty is due God so that we practice what we believe?”
As a pastor supposedly schooled
in good Reformed thought, I can’t stand and tell you what to believe or the right
thing to do as a Christian except in the most obvious situations. I can tell
you we are in a sail boat on a storm-tossed sea of moral choices, where the storm forces this
question constantly, ”What is the right thing to do?” What we can
do together is talk and pray as we explore what scripture says and what we think
it means to be a loyal Christian so we both do a good job of practicing what we
preach.
I can assure you from my own personal
experience, it is not always comfortable to take loyalty to God seriously but
it is the price we pay for believing we must understand and make good decisions
and choices in life guided by scripture. Everybody has to serve somebody. Who do you serve?
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