Monday, October 28, 2019

676 - Getting to 'No!'


Spirituality Column #676
October 29 2019
Common Christianity / Uncommon Commentary

Getting to ‘No!’
By Bob Walters

“Render therefore unto Caesar the things which are Caesar’s; and unto God the things that are God’s” – Jesus to the Pharisees, Matthew 22:21, Mark 12:17, Luke 20:25 (KJV)

Today we address the significance of human behavioral boundaries, so let’s begin with Jesus very succinctly and elegantly telling the treacherous Pharisees, “No.”

Jesus’ answer above – in the “Tribute Episode” that appears in all three synoptic Gospels – is often misrepresented as Jesus supporting taxes.  No, Jesus is cleverly telling the Pharisees that they have 1) failed to trap Him and 2) lack a proper understanding of God. The question is about taxes, the answer is about who is Lord.

Jesus keeps himself out of political trouble here by never directly answering the preceding direct question whether “one ought to pay tribute to Caesar?  Jesus instead engages in a bit of customary rabbinical rhetorical jiu-jitsu by countering with a disarming response about the coin rather than answering about the taxes.

“Whose is this image and inscription” on the coin? Jesus asks, thereby changing the subject from secular taxes to the Lordship of God.  “Image” and “inscription” are bell-ringer words the Pharisees would have immediately recognized as referring to the Second Commandment (no graven images) and the Shema (inscription of Deut. 6:4-9), Israel’s most pious prayer, “Hear O Israel, the Lord is our God – the Lord alone…” etc.

The Pharisees who amid their hatred of Jesus and fervor to trap Him as a traitor had lost both their sense of the limits of Caesar and commanding holiness of God.

Often in today’s cultural maelstrom of secular aggrandizement and self-elevation – e.g., “You do you!” – we humans, and specifically let’s focus on Christians, do a poor job of remembering the importance of restricting to the most holy that which we worship.  We mash up societal fashion, civic trendiness, worldly appetites, and ease of material acquisition.  Then – opposite of Jesus’ imprecation against the Pharisees about Caesar – we query, approximately: “Must I really render Godly things to God?  Really?”

Both Jesus and the Pharisees knew that the trick part of the Tribute question was Caesar’s false lordship.  Yet we still accept Caesar, i.e., the World, and question God.

Writer John Waters – whom editor R.R. Reno in First Things magazine (November 2019, current issue) described as “diagnosing the distempers of our time” –  opined, “A man without limits is as incapable of satisfaction as a man without hope.”  Reno added his own thought that “a man without limits is also incapable of love, for love limits. And a loveless man is incapable of happiness.”

Reno then mused, “… a culture of permission promises happiness but delivers dissatisfaction.  In such a culture (our culture), the greatest gift we can give our fellow man is the word that limits.  And that word is ‘No!’”  which love often requires us to say.

Wouldn’t we all like to possess the rhetorical polish of Jesus?  I would.  We are daily confronted with ridiculous societal, governmental, and academic propositions that force the public suspension of limits of what we know to be true and right; of how things work best, and of what decisions are most honoring to God. God is love; we are sinners.

Jesus isn’t telling the Pharisees or us about taxes; He is warning us all about false gods and keeping our priorities straight. To love properly and divinely should be our greatest aspiration; and to embrace the importance of “No!” is our greatest grace.

Walters (rlwcom@aol.com) understands the moral rectitude and practical necessity of paying taxes … but harbors not the slightest inclination to worship the IRS.

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