The first two readings this morning from Isaiah
and from First Thessalonians spoke to me, and I hope to all of you, of the love
that God has for us. The Gospel, to my mind, speaks not about taxes,
but about our reciprocal love for the God of love. The very
remarkable passage we heard from Isaiah tells of Cyrus II the King of the Medes
and Persians who is chosen by God to rescue God's chosen people, the
Israelites, from their oppression and captivity in Babylon in the 6th century before Christ. The
passage, although describing an event of grand geopolitical consequence,
namely, the conquest of the Babylonian Empire by Cyrus II, yes, this passage
describing Cyrus is filled with the vocabulary later used to describe Jesus
Christ and all who acknowledge him as Lord. Cyrus is called in
Hebrew “Mashiah (Messiah),” in the Greek bible “Christos (Christ),”
and in our English bibles “My Anointed One,” whom God “calls by name” to his
service of the chosen people, Israel. Gods says of him, “I grasp his right
hand.” Even though the passage also says of him “though you do not
know me,” there seems to be in Cyrus a kind of knowing God implicity without
knowing Him explicity in that Cyrus is spoken of by historians as a benevolent
monarch. The Jewish scholar David Weisberg writes that “Cyrus's
policy toward the peoples of his empire was one of tolerance and
understanding.” My point is that God's choice of Cyrus would seem to
have affected this great monarch interiorly, to have left God's imprint or
image upon him whether Cyrus was aware of it or not. The most notable evidence
of this being the encouragement and help he gave to the captive Jews to return
to Judah and rebuild the Temple of Jerusalem. God works in a mysterious way his
wonders to perform.
In the 2nd reading St. Paul reminds us that
we who are brothers and sisters loved by God have been chosen. Just
as Cyrus, God's Messiah, His Christ, God's Anointed One was chosen, “called by
name” by the Shepherd of Israel to serve the chosen people, so does
our Good Shepherd Jesus call each of us “by name” to become other Christs for
the work of faith, the labor of love and the endurance in hope in our life in
the Church of God the Father and the Lord Jesus Christ through the word and in
the power of the Holy Spirit. In Ephesians it says, “... the Father
chose us in Christ before the foundation of the world to be holy and blameless
before him in love.”
In saying all this I
am touching on what Jesus means in the Gospel when he catches the Pharisees in
their hypocrisy and makes a profound statement about us and to us. The
Pharisees think they have Jesus in a trap: if he says pay the tribute tax he
will have the nationalist Zealots after him; if he says don't pay the tribute,
which had to be paid in Roman denarii, then the Roman authorities will arrest
him for tax revolt. When Jesus casually asks the Pharisees to show
him the coin, he catches them in their hypocrisy. Here they are,
these zealots for the purity of the Jewish faith, in the sacrosanct precincts
of the Holy Temple with these abominable pagan images in their purses. They
themselves, who publicly resist the tribute, must indeed have been on their way
to pay it and didn't mind sullying the purity of the Temple as they did so. On
the coins is the image of the Roman Emperor and the words: “Tiberius Caesar,
august son of the divine Augustus, high priest.” To a righteous Jew
this is pure blasphemy, and yet here are the Pharisees in the Temple itself
with these blasphemous objects. In doing so they are implicitly
acknowledging that they themselves are indeed Caesar's subjects.
The question of Jesus
about whose image this is and his instruction to give the coin to that person
then culminates in one of the greatest sayings of Jesus about who we really are
and about the image of God that we are all stamped with from the foundation of
the world: “Then repay to God what belongs to God.” If a measly
denarius stamped with Caesar's image belongs to him, so do we belong to God
stamped as we are with God's image and likeness. When he canonized
Pope Paul VI in 2014, Pope Francis remarked that “'Rendering to God the things
that belong to God'” means being docile to his will, devoting our lives to him
and working for his kingdom of mercy, love, and peace.” The
image of God that we are must express itself in love of God and
neighbor. Fr. Joseph taught us in novitiate that “love diffuses
itself.”
“How can I repay the
Lord for all the great good done for me? I will raise the cup of salvation and
call on the name of the Lord. I will pay my vows to the Lord in the
presence of all his people. I will offer a sacrifice of praise and call on the
name of the Lord.” The Lord Jesus has called each one of us by name. Let
us now call on the name of the Lord in this sacrifice of praise, our Eucharist,
and in receiving the Body and Blood of Christ, repay to God what belongs to
Him: all that we are.
This morning’s
homily by Father Luke.