This coming
week, thousands of Halloween costumes will be bought and made across the United
States in anticipation of the big night a week from Tuesday. There will be ghosts and witches and
pirates. An enormous amount of time,
talent and treasure will be expended to pretend for a few hours to be something
on the outside that we are not in the inside.
In contrast to Halloween, Jesus is trying to show us how important it is
to witness on the outside the mystery of the love of Christ that is within us.
In today’s Gospel, the Pharisees
went off and plotted how they might entrap Jesus in speech. Their strategy was to get Jesus to talk about
taxes. That usually is a no-win
situation. Taxes are a timeless human issue.
So they said to Jesus: “Tell us,
then, what is your opinion: Is it lawful to pay tax to Caesar or not?”
In replying to those who were trying
to trap him, Jesus said: “Show me the
coin that pays the census tax.” Looking
at the coin, Jesus then asks: “whose
image is this and whose inscription?’
They replied, “Caesar’s.” It is
lawful to give to Caesar what belongs to Caesar. By answering, “Repay to Caesar what belongs
to Caesar.” Jesus narrows his response to the need to pay the census tax. The payment of taxes helps fulfills the
government’s responsibility to provide for the common good. We need to be the servants not only of our
personal interests but also of the societal needs.
The point of
the story is to see how Jesus responds to this attempt to entrap him….Jesus
turned the question about taxes into a much more important question: How are we to relate to God?
The second half of Jesus
response: “Give to God what belongs to
God.” This is comprehensive statement and
includes all areas of life. There is one
crucial question for us to reflect upon that is not asked in the Gospel
conversation. If Caesar’s image is on
the coin, where do we find God’s image?
For we are to give to God that which bears the image of God.
We
will find God’s image imprinted on all of creation, on each human being and
each human work. We are made in the
image and likeness of God.
It is people, ourselves, who are in
the image and likeness of God. We belong
to God. When God is truly the center of
our lives, there is no problem with giving others their due. Conversely, giving others their due doesn’t
necessarily compromise God as the center of our lives.
When we forget that we are made in
God’s image, we can easily attach ourselves to Caesars of our lives – the stock
market, your career, or the New York Yankees. We may want to grasp Caesar’s
false coins as our security and our destiny.
But we need to ask ourselves, can anything but God be our security and
our destiny? The old adage holds true
that nobody laments on their deathbeds that they didn’t make more money or
spend more time at work. Submitting only
to Caesar and the pursuit of wealth will not satisfy us.
Ultimately we belong to God and the
service and love of God’s people is the source of meaning and happiness in our
lives. Moreover, all of God’s creation bears the image of God. Our care for our environment, our
stewardship of the earth is giving back to God what belongs to God.
Even though
none of us enjoy paying taxes, in the big picture, giving to Caesar what is
Caesar’s is not the demanding component of today’s Gospel. Where we are challenged is: Giving to God what is God’s.
We give back
to God out of gratitude. Our best
response to the abundance of God’s is gratitude – to live with an attitude of
gratitude.
We give back
to God because we recognize that everything we have belongs to God in the first
place.
As we
celebrate our stewardship commitment Sunday this weekend, may we embrace a
spirituality of stewardship. A
spirituality of stewardship is as all-embracing as the words of Jesus: We are to give back to God what belongs to
God. We are the stewards of the abundance of God’s love in our lives.
Stewardship
is recognizing that we are made in God’s image.
We belong to God. All is a gift
of God. We are to always grateful for
the blessings of our life, and we are to share our giftedness with one
another. In other words, give to God
what belongs to God.
This Sunday
we are asking you to reflect on our stewardship of time and talent. In our stewardship of time, we invite Christ
into our life. We live a Christ-centered
life. We make time for prayer in the
course of the day. In the stewardship of
time, we reflect on what form of prayer helps you to encounter the Lord in your
life. The action plan, what we write on
our stewardship commitment card is our commitment to make time for prayer each
day. It doesn’t matter how long your
commitment to prayer is each day; what does matter is that you live your life
with an awareness of God’s unending love for you in prayer.
The
stewardship of talents is your willingness to share your God-given talents and
abilities. The gifts we have been given,
we are given to share.
We simply
ask you to place your stewardship commitment card in the collection basket
today. If you did not bring your card
today, not to worry. There are extras in the pew for you to fill
out. Even if not fully completed,
filling out this signed commitment card and placing it in the collection basket
is a beautiful first step in our journey of discipleship of the Lord Jesus.
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