Caesar and God
A sermon on Exodus 33:12-13, Psalm 99, Matthew 22:15-22, 1 Thess
1:1-10 by Rowland Croucher, John
Mark Ministries, 16 October 2005
© LaughingBird.net
Unless you live alone on a desert island, every moment of your life is somehow
related to human authorities and institutions of various kinds…
Theologian Walter Wink in his books on the ‘principalities and powers’
writes about the ‘spirit’ which inhabits corporate bodies (governments,
businesses, churches etc.). A group is more than the sum of its individuals.
Our Australian Department of Immigration, for example, was described in the
latest edition of the Harvard Business Review as a ‘passive-aggressive
organization’ (with complicated procedures allowing more places for an
individual to hide, and vaguely defined roles to ensure ‘plausible deniability’).
Radical sociologist Robert Merton used to say that the evil in institutions
is greater than the sum of the evil of individuals within them.
How are we as Christians supposed to relate to ‘the powers-that-be?’
Our four Scriptures today provide some clues.
First, there’s Moses and God. A few weeks ago churches like this one which
follow the lectionary heard about God speaking from a burning bush telling Moses
to confront the Pharaoh and release a whole ethnic group, who happened to be
his slaves. For some reason Moses was hesitant! You’ve got to remember
that the King of Egypt exercised the same kind of brutal and despotic power
Saddam Hussein used to have…
Later, in the desert, the Israelites wanted a tangible god, so they made a golden
calf and worshipped it. Yahweh was very angry, and we now have this mysterious
conversation between Moses and God. Was their ‘talking’ in this
theophany audible? (When I was a theological student - knowing more than I know
now- I asked a visiting ‘Bible teacher’ whether a tape recorder
might have picked up anything when Jesus spoke with the Devil in the desert?
He got quite agitated – and angry, which meant he probably hadn’t
thought about it!). Well, I don’t know, but Moses here is interceding
with an ‘awesome God’ who won’t be meddled with (twice in
this chapter we have God threatening to ‘consume’ this ‘stiff-necked
people’).
The Psalmist’s God (Psalm 99) is a king before whom the ‘peoples
tremble’ and the ‘earth shakes’. But Yahweh is also a forgiving
God and a lover of justice. This psalm was probably recited at the beginning
of the New Year as Israel remembered all the ways in which God delivered them
in the past.
And now the Gospel story. We have a unique alliance between Pharisees, Jewish
nationalists who hated everything Roman, and Herodians, who collaborated with
the occupying forces, colluding to trap Jesus. Is paying taxes to Caesar lawful?
If Jesus had said ‘No’ he’d be in serious trouble with the
Romans. If ‘Yes’ his own people would reject him. A very clever
question – like ‘Have you stopped beating your wife?’
Jesus called them hypocrites – both groups. They weren’t interested
in learning God’s truth from this prophet, but were stuck with their false
presuppositions about the powers-that-be.
Herodians are ‘our government right or wrong’ people. Karl Barth
noted that the same governing authorities which have been instituted by God,
and are to be obeyed (Romans 13) can also be ‘the beast from the abyss’
(Revelation 13) when they abuse their power. (If you had to summarize the message
of the Book of Revelation in one sentence it would be ‘Caesar is not ultimately
‘lord’).
Pharisees – ancient and modern – have another problem. They need
formulas – theological or legal – to explain everything. Every thought,
every action, has to be covered by dogma or laws.
I once preached in a rural ‘Bible church’. They had big black Bibles
and severe expressions. (Their aim was probably less to hear a convicting word
from the Lord than to test the preacher’s orthodoxy). I decided to engage
them in dialogue. What were the Pharisees’ good qualities? Their list:
the Pharisees were Bible people (most knew their Bibles off by heart); they
were disciplined pray-ers; they tithed up to a third of their income; fasted
twice a week; attended ‘church’ regularly; were highly moral people;
many had been martyred for their commitment to Yahweh and the Torah; they were
‘evangelical’ theologically, and evangelistic – even crossing
the ocean to proselytize.
I wrote their list on a blackboard. There was a deep silence. ‘Is anything
wrong?’ I asked the extravert in the front row. ’Yes,’ he
said, ‘that’s us!’ ‘Is it?’ I responded. ‘But
Jesus said these sorts of people were children of the devil!’ The silence
became more profound.
Everything described by Jesus as ‘the most important of all’ is
absent from the Pharisees’ list - justice/love, mercy, faith (Matthew
23:23; Luke 11:42). Justice/love never appears in Pharisees’ creeds or
doctrinal statements.
Love, for Jesus, is the relationship between subject and object that acknowledges
intrinsic worth in the object rather than responding to ‘favorable worth’
in the object. For Pharisees, repentance precedes acceptance; with Jesus it
was the other way around… (Pharisees are quick with ‘Go and sin
no more’ but cannot understand ‘I do not condemn you’.)
And social justice is ‘fairness’, the right use of power.
The challenge for us, as it has always been for the people of God is found in
two important clues in possibly the earliest book in the New Testament corpus
– Paul’s first letter to the Thessalonians.
First, we too must never worship idols (1:9,10) – any entity, organization,
government, anything at all which is less than the ‘living and true God’.
These idols in Thessalonika undoubtedly included images of Caesar.
And we are given gifts from God (1:3) to help us cope with all that is less
than God – especially when ‘principalities and powers’ overwhelm
us: faith, that God is in charge of the universe, and that nothing happens to
us that is outside God’s control; second - love, the greatest force in
the universe (the power of love to overcome evil is ultimately greater than
the power of evil to overcome love); and finally hope – the strong conviction
that God is with us, whatever happens…
In our congregation tonight is a friend of Jan’s and mine – Dawn
Rowan. She was vindicated in a court case she instigated against the South Australian
and Commonwealth governments, and TV Network 10 and the Australian Broadcasting
Corporation, when a women’s refuge she managed was closed down illegally.
But her ‘payout’ nowhere near compensated her for the costs of the
trial, and an appeal by the other parties to the Supreme Court of South Australia
has resulted in her having to pay the costs of three of them – even though
she was essentially vindicated again. The Australian government is spending
millions of our tax dollars (perhaps as much as they’ve promised to the
Pakistanis for earthquake relief) to recoup a small proportion of their costs
and bankrupt her. She will lose everything. You can read part of her story here.
Question: what in the light of our Scripture readings tonight would you find
yourself saying to encourage Dawn?
Amen.