29th Sunday of Ordinary Time
Oct. 22, 2017
Matt 22: 15-21
I prepared this homily for a parish in
Washington, then was informed on Friday evening that a missionary would be
speaking at all the weekend Masses there (for Mission Sunday).
“Repay to Caesar what belongs to Caesar and
to God what belongs to God” (Matt 22: 21).
Tribute to Caesar, by Gustave Dore' |
If you’ve ever been to Canada or Great
Britain and have used their coinage, you probably noticed that all those
Canadian quarters and dollars, all those British pence and pounds, bear the
image of Queen Elizabeth. They remind
citizen and tourist alike that she is the sovereign there.
In our country, as we’ve often heard, the
people are sovereign. Our coins are
stamped with the images of American heroes—and also with national mottos like
“United States of America” and “E Pluribus Unum.”
There’s one other motto on all our
coins: “In God We Trust.” Our sovereignty as a people rests on a firmer
foundation than ourselves, as our foundational document, the Declaration of
Independence, states plainly. Our
fundamental rights come from our Creator, and on him we rely to sustain our
freedom and our nationhood. Like Jesus’
audience, we too have a kind of double allegiance, to both God and country, a
phrase we hear often, and rightly so.
In 1st-century Palestine, various Jewish,
Greek, and Roman coins were in circulation.
Apparently, tho, only Roman denarii could be used to pay the taxes
directly due to Rome, as distinguished from money paid at the Temple, or King
Herod’s taxes.
Many Jews, of course, resented the Roman
overlords and hated paying taxes to their foreign rulers, especially since
graven images—like Caesar’s on those Roman coins—violated the First
Commandment, and the Caesars did claim divine honors. So there was a trap in the question put to
Jesus by the Pharisees and their unlikely allies, the Herodians. (The Pharisees were super-devout Jews
zealously obeying all the rules of the Torah.
The Herodians were partisans of King Herod, not likely to be pious but
jealous of power and influence over the people.)
Could a patriotic and conscientious Jew pay
Roman taxes? Say “yes,” and Jesus is
compromised in the eyes of many of the people.
Say “no,” and he’s inciting resistance to the Roman authorities—who were
by no means gentle with rebels.
Our Lord is no fool, of course. In fact, he’s far more clever than his
enemies. He asks them for a coin used in
the Roman tribute, and they produce a denarius.
He asks them whose image is stamped on it. “Caesar’s,” they say. That would be Tiberius Caesar, emperor from
14 to 37 A.D. Many of his coins have
been found in Palestine and other parts of the Empire.
What are the implications of a Roman
denarius? It bears Caesar’s image. A stamp, a brand, a seal marks
ownership. It’s Caesar’s coin. It acknowledges his sovereignty, like the
Queen’s or the inscription “United States of America. For a 1st-century Jew, it would also
challenge God’s sovereignty.
But when Jesus asked for a denarius, the
Pharisees and Herodians had at least one in their pockets! They had no qualms about using Roman money,
about acknowledging Roman authority. If
they had any nationalistic or religious principles against Rome’s lordship, those
principles didn’t extend to their pockets.
Roman money was good money.
So Jesus tells them, if it’s Caesar’s money,
give it to him when he demands it of you.
After dealing with the direct question about
Caesar’s taxes and authority, Jesus deals with the indirect one about God’s
rule in Israel: “Give to God what is
God’s.”
But he’s not specific, is he? What
belongs to Caesar, besides his denarius, and what belongs to God?
Well, what bears the image of God? Where is God’s likeness stamped? You know the answer very well: “God created man in his own image, in the
image of God he created him, male and female he created them” (Gen 1:27). Human beings, male and female equally, belong
to God. He is sovereign over our lives,
our doings, our words, even our thoughts and hopes and desires and fears.
Modern men and women, especially in the
Western world, don’t like to hear that.
We prefer to be independent, to be autonomous, to be self-directed, to
be sovereign of our own wills and doings.
We’re proud sons-of-guns!
But you know what? The only limit on Caesar’s power is that
image of God: give to God—and not to
Caesar—what is God’s. That’s why
totalitarian regimes—Henry VIII, Napoleon, Hitler, Communist tyrants from Lenin
down to China and North Korea today, and the Chavistas in Venezuela, demand to
control religion or to destroy it.
That’s why the Church resists anything that infringes human dignity,
anything that doesn’t respect the image of God.
The Church has a large body of social teaching, teaching that applies
the Gospel of Jesus Christ to the lives of men and women living together in
society. How is a good and just society
ordered? What leads to authentic peace, to
balanced relationships between people?
If we don’t adhere to God’s directives, divine principles, then
Caesar—or Big Brother—will step in.
One of the biggest stories in the news in the
last 3 weeks has been about Harvey Weinstein—him in particular, and more
generally, how women are treated in society.
I hear a lot of confessions, and those confirm to me what I’ve read a
lot about and heard a lot about:
Americans, especially American men (but not only men) have a serious
pornography problem. It’s an addiction. It’s a plague. It’s one of the biggest businesses in the
Western world. It reflects and feeds the
same attitude that produces Weinsteins and Hefners and a sex trafficking
racket.
If we respected all human beings as images of
God, we wouldn’t have a pornography industry.
We wouldn’t have Harvey Weinsteins.
We wouldn’t have date rapes, a sex “industry,” high divorce rates, tens
of thousands of kids growing up without fathers, and HHS mandates for
contraception.
If we respected all human beings as images of
God, we wouldn’t need a Black Lives Matter movement, and we’d be able to repair
our immigration laws, and we’d have trustworthy politicians, and we wouldn’t dread
the next Columbine or Las Vegas, and we wouldn’t be slaughtering millions of
unborn children worldwide every year.
Caesar has no business claiming rights over
human beings as tho they belong to him.
But he does have rights and obligations for the good ordering of
society—in international relations, in business, in public safety, in
education, and so on. Making policy in
such matters isn’t the Church’s business, altho those subject matters are
religious concerns insofar as they concern human dignity, the respect due to
men and women stamped with the image of God.
And it is, emphatically, the right and duty of individual Christians to guide
Caesar’s doings thru their participation in political life, school boards,
community organizations, etc.
Jesus’ words have as much import today as
they did when Rome ruled the Mediterranean world.
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