Isaiah 45:1-7, 1 Thessalonians 1:1-10 & Matthew 22:15-22
Did you have any coins
about your person today? A simple question to which the answer is yes or no.I
expect that many people don’t use cash much anymore, preferring to tap or use their
mobile devices to make payments.
Much of our
Gospel reading is centred around coins and questions today.When you take time
to think about it there really are ‘questions’ and then there are ‘questions’.
Simple ones like
is there a train service from Sevenoaks to London Bridge? Yes.
There’s questions
like, how does the person that drives the snow plough get to the depot in the
morning?
Then there’s
those annoying sarcastic type questions like ‘Did you mean to cut your hedge all
wonky like that’?
I heard of a
child who had to move out of their house because it was to be rented to someone
else who asked one of those questions that makes adults hearts sink ‘why don’t
we all just share’?
But, while we eat
our breakfast or drink our morning tea, radio and TV presenters ask all sorts
of difficult questions to people in the public glare, sometimes smugly,
sometimes because they think they already know the answer or that there simply
is no acceptable answer. These are not straightforward questions.
In such
situations with whom do you think the balance of power rests? Occasionally it’s
surprising to the interviewer when the person being interviewed produces
unexpected evidence or a strong argument. And so we edge closer to Jesus’
situation.
Enter the
Pharisees and Herodians, opposing groups, but united in their desire to destroy
Jesus, give them some credit, they have really thought about the question and
feel confident that whichever way Jesus answers he’s going to cause problems
for himself.
They start with a
bit of empty flattery. Beware of flattery, even though it works a treat on
egotistical people.
There are wise
words about it throughout the bible but several in the book of Proverbs. Here’s
two examples…
‘Whoever flatters a neighbour is spreading a net
for the neighbour’s feet’ and ‘Whoever rebukes a person will afterwards find
more favour than one who flatters with the tongue.’
So Jesus ain’t
falling for that one!
The Pharisees
believe that they have put Jesus in a ‘no win’ situation. If he answers that
people should pay taxes to the hated Roman occupiers to fund their brutal
regime, he will lose all credibility with those who hope he is the true
Messiah, radical and liberationist.
If he says that
the people should withhold their taxes then he’s going to be in immediate
trouble with the Roman authorities and liable to be arrested.
His first
response is ‘show me the coin used for the tax’, he probably doesn’t carry them
routinely unlike the pharisee who immediately has one to hand.
Next he asks, and
here we see the art of the balance of power being turned upside down in the
questioning process, ‘Whose head is this, and whose title’? ‘The emperor’s’
they reply.
Those who study
Roman coinage will know that all sorts of abbreviations were used to minimise
the labour required to communicate the title of the emperor as they needed to
fit this on a small coin and the work was done by hand.
Coinage was a way
of projecting power. With an Emperors head on coins throughout the region he was
hard to avoid and a constant reminder of who was in charge whether the people
liked it or not.
Forced into a
situation where they must study the coin the Pharisees would have been
observing an image likely to be that of Ceasar Augustus Tiberius, a man whose
followers regarded him to be a living god, the inscriptions are likely to have
referred to him as son of the divine Augustus, reinforcing his ‘godliness’. Jewish law prohibited any form of idolatry and
it must have suddenly dawned upon the Pharisees that they continuously carried
a symbol of their complicity with Rome and of blasphemy to their God. Just
having this coin in the temple was against their own law, oh dear, they really
were finding themselves in a muddle.
By saying ‘Give
therefore to the emperor the things that are the emperor’s and to God the
things that are God’s’ Jesus makes it clear that earthly and divine rulers are
entirely separate and these coins have no value to God.
Despite the fact
that Jesus’ message has political implications he has rejected the political
ambitions of those who would make him a king in earthly spheres. The changes he
wants to see will come from peoples’ hearts and not the change of regime which
they think they need.
it can be hard
for us to look at the subject of taxes dispassionately. It was Benjamin
Franklin who wrote in 1789 ‘in this world nothing is certain but death and
taxes’. Whilst taxation in its various forms is currently at an historic high,
thankfully, we at least are paying it to our own Government rather than a
foreign occupier.
We may not always
approve of how our taxes are spent but at least we have hospitals, emergency
services, a military, schools, refuse collectors and other valuable public
services which are funded by them.
Although there were
significant resistance movements against paying tax to Rome even in Jesus time
there will have been those who appreciated some of the benefits the occupying Romans
brought with them. What have the Romans ever done for us? You probably know
that this was a question posed by the fictional Peoples Front of Judea. Apart
from medicine, irrigation, education,
public health, baths and some other things, absolutely nothing!
Back in the
temple those asking Jesus won’t be pleased with the answer they have received
but they also know in their hearts that it wasn’t a real question and they only
wanted an answer which would cause trouble for Jesus, so their hatred and
resentment of him continues to grow and
just few days later Jesus would be arrested and crucified.
The Pharisees
make Ceasar the subject of the question whilst Jesus wants to bring these so called
religious and pious people back to the subject of God and our duty to him. No
wonder he calls them hypocrites as they conveniently fail to acknowledge that
God reigns over all in their frenzied enthusiasm to entrap him.
Of course, they
should use all their study, their alleged wisdom and their learning from Jesus
to recognize him and help others to know him as the Son of God, but this is the
one thing they are absolutely determined not to do.
Was it that the
Pharisees were scared that God has come this close to them, and they don’t like
what they are hearing? Was it that despite all the wacky religious preachers in
Jerusalem at the time this one stood out as different and couldn’t just be
dismissed.
Contrast what
Jesus tells to the Pharisees and Herodians with Paul’s letter to the
Thessalonians . When he had visited Thessalonica previously the people he is
writing to would have worshipped many cults including the ideals of the Roman
empire. The coverts to Paul’s message would have faced persecution and
rejection as they made a clear choice to follow Christ and it this message,
rooted in God, that he praises and encourages so enthusiastically.
Perhaps the
Pharisees thought If only God were like Ceasar they could just pay their taxes
and be done with it, but a relationship founded in generous love is so very
different.
By Jesus pointing
to the emperor’s head, we are encouraged to reflect of the earthly things that distract
us from God and all that competes for our obedience and loyalty.
But it’s
important that we remind ourselves the image we bear is not that of Ceasar, any
political party, nor the ruling monarch but that of God. We are created in his
image and called to be his children.
So whilst we may
accept that death and taxes are certainties of our lives, as children of God we
also have the opportunity to show that the third certainty in life is the love
of God for each and every one of us.
Amen
Kevin Bright
22nd
October 2023
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