commandments

The Hypocrites Shall Be Amazed

Matthew 22:15-22

Then the Pharisees went and plotted to entrap him in what he said. So they sent their disciples to him, along with the Herodians, saying, "Teacher, we know that you are sincere, and teach the way of God in accordance with truth, and show deference to no one; for you do not regard people with partiality. Tell us, then, what you think. Is it lawful to pay taxes to the emperor, or not?" But Jesus, aware of their malice, said, "Why are you putting me to the test, you hypocrites? Show me the coin used for the tax." And they brought him a denarius. Then he said to them, "Whose head is this, and whose title?" They answered, "The emperor's." Then he said to them, "Give therefore to the emperor the things that are the emperor's, and to God the things that are God's." When they heard this, they were amazed; and they left him and went away.


On the surface, this is a story of people trying to trick Jesus by asking him a question that seems to have only two answers, either of which will get Jesus in trouble. But Jesus answers in a way that sidesteps the trap. You don’t have to know anything else about scripture or theology and this story will still teach you the lesson that there is always a more gracious and true way to live--in which you break free from the false dichotomy of either/or, black/white, right/wrong. In a world that seems focused on either/or; the way of Christ is predominately both/and.

That’s an important point; but watch what happens when you bring an awareness of other scriptural and historical truths into this story. Recall the first of the Ten Commandments, as found in Exodus 20:4-6:

You shall not make for yourself an idol, whether in the form of anything that is in heaven above, or that is on the earth beneath, or that is in the water under the earth. You shall not bow down to them or worship them; for I the Lord your God am a jealous God, punishing children for the iniquity of parents, to the third and the fourth generation of those who reject me, but showing steadfast love to the thousandth generation of those who love me and keep my commandments.

For the Hebrew people, there was no god except for the Lord, and every visual depiction of the Lord was forbidden. No idols, no graven images...no exceptions. 

Also know this: a denarius was a Roman coin. Rome, of course, was the occupying and oppressive cultural, political, and military empire in the region at the time. As with American currency, the denarius included an image of an important political leader; in this case, Emperor Tiberius. And, as with American currency, there was an inscription on the coin. Each denarius was inscribed with the phrase, “Tiberius, son of the divine Augustus” (or, in other words “Tiberius, the Son of God”). 

With those two points in mind, let’s revisit the story. The Pharisees and Herodians are trying to trick Jesus by asking him a question that seems to have only two answers, either of which will get Jesus in trouble. Just when they think they have him cornered, Jesus asks them to show him the coin used to pay the tax to Caesar. The second that the coin emerges from the purse the Pharisees and Herodians are exposed as hypocrites and blasphemers. 

The effect is the same as the climactic scene of your favorite law drama where the truth finally comes out and everyone gasps in astonishment. So, let’s try it again, this time gasp in astonishment at the end of the next sentence: The second that the coin emerges from the purse the Pharisees and Herodians are exposed as hypocrites and blasphemers.

Why is that gasp-worthy? Here they are in the holy temple caught with the very definition of idolatry–a coin with a graven image of someone other than the Lord claiming to be God. Every Hebrew knew it was blasphemous to have such a coin in the holy temple (which is why there were money changers in the temple). Jesus doesn’t even have to answer their question at this point because the Pharisees’ and Herodians’ credibility has been destroyed. And yet, Jesus does answer, essentially saying, “Give that sacrilegious worthless coin to the sacrilegious worthless leader who occupies and oppresses us; and give everything else to the one and only real God--the Lord.”

The text says the Pharisees and Herodians walked away amazed; but feel free to come up with a better word to describe their emotions in the moment. I imagine it wasn’t so much that they were amazed, as it was they were embarrassed, ashamed, exposed, and humbled. 

Hypocrisy is one of the worst characteristics anyone, especially a leader, can demonstrate, and yet there is no consistent punishment for hypocrisy. You can’t be arrested for being a hypocrite. And if you find enough people who agree with you, you can all be hypocrites together and never have to deal with the consequences. Hypocrites change the rules of the game to suit their own needs and get away with it as long as, in their mind, the ends justify the means. And when power is concerned, hypocrites are confident that the ends always justify the means. 

The good news of this biblical lesson is that Jesus demonstrates that the Lord God is equipped to humble and weaken those who employ hypocrisy in order to cling to worldly power. The way of Jesus Christ cuts through hypocrisy and exposes its weakness. True power comes from God and from being a disciple of Christ. Tiberius can have his coins; but God gets everything else: everything that is true, noble, right, pure, lovely, and admirable (Phil. 4:8). 

The good news, my Christian brothers and sisters, is that we do not belong to Caesar, but rather, we belong to God. We are not created in Caesar’s image, we are created in God’s image.

The good news is that the hypocrisy of worldly leaders (as well as our own hypocrisy) is always exposed when subjected to the light of Christ. Anyone who amasses worldly power by changing the rules of the game and justifies it by claiming the ends justify the means will walk away amazed/humbled/defeated by Christ. 

Jesus invites us engage in the regular practice of prayerful introspection and evaluation in order to see if we’re carrying around any graven images--that is, anything in our purse, or bank account, or social media feed perhaps, that proves we are pledge allegiance to something or someone other than God alone. 

Once we identify these graven images (and we all absolutely have them) we can humbly and confidently come before the Lord in confession. And having identified and confessed our graven image, we receive the forgiveness, freedom, and true power to walk in the light of Christ and make a positive difference in the world. Hear the good news and be the good news.

Amen.

"The Divine Experiment" – Jeremiah 31:31-34

A friend earned her PhD in Biology from Northwestern University. It took her six years to obtain her doctorate – two years in the classroom and four years in a laboratory. As best I understood, her lab work involved growing E.Coli bacteria and replacing that bacteria’s DNA with the DNA of a hormone used to fight cancer cells. It took her over three years to complete her experiment. Three years...one experiment.

That was hard for me to imagine, given the extent of my science education where we never had to wait longer than a weekend to see what bacteria our petri dishes had produced. She said most of her time and energy over those years was spent trying to create the optimal environment for the bacteria to grow. It involved constant trial and error; repeating the process after adjusting certain variables.

I told her I found it hard to imagine dedicating years of hard work towards creating an optimal environment for something to succeed; and waiting so long to see the finished product. She quickly countered, saying, “How is that any different from being a parent, or a pastor?”

That’s an interesting and wonderful way to think about my work as a parent and a pastor. Indeed, I have and will continue to dedicate years of constant attention and care in order to create an optimal environment for my children and the church to succeed. Even if you’re not a parent or a pastor, most of the things you are involved in and passionate about likely require a long-term experimental approach.

Our faith is no different.

This idea serves as a helpful frame of reference to understand today’s scripture from Jeremiah. In this text, Jeremiah explains God’s long-range approach to the experiment of guiding the human race. Jeremiah tells us how the original experiment went wrong and how God's planning to adjust some variables of the environment so that humanity could grow and flourish.

The experiment has undergone several iterations. The original approach as told through the stories of Genesis was that God gave only one prohibition – to not eat from the tree of knowledge of good and evil. The hypothesis of that experiment was that humans would live in peace and harmony with all creation so long as they avoided indulging in things that would make them more like God.

That experiment failed rather quickly.

Later the prohibitions expanded to include the ten commandments inscribed in stone, which were given to Moses on Mt. Sinai. The hypothesis of that experiment was that by giving laws inscribed in stone, the people would live in peace with one another and remain faithful to God.

Already by the end of the book of Exodus (only the second book in the Bible), it is clear the experiment needs to restart yet again because despite having the law inscribed on stone tablets, the people cannot remain faithful to God. They repeatedly worship other gods and they put their faith in things like money and power and idols. God needs to adjust some variables in order to create the optimal environment for peace and love.

This is the message Jeremiah brought to the Israelites not long after 587 BCE – the year in which the Babylonians destroyed the Temple and God’s chosen people were in crisis. You see, the Temple was the outward sign of God’s faithfulness to the Israelites. As they watched the Temple fall, they thought God was abandoning them.

Jeremiah, a prophet of God, had spent his prophetic life weeping and throwing things (literally), trying to get the people to see that their idolatrous ways will lead to God’s judgment.

But, following the destruction of the Temple (which he predicted) Jeremiah didn’t stop to say “I told you so.” Instead, he relayed some good news from God. Jeremiah informed the people it was their infidelity, not God’s infidelity, that led to the disorder and desolation. God had not abandoned them. Better yet, God was about to reset the experiment by creating a new covenant.

The days are surely coming, says the LORD, when I will make a new covenant with the house of Israel and the house of Judah.
— Jeremiah 31:31

Covenant are different from contracts between two consenting parties. The ancient covenants are much more unilateral: one party (God) is much more powerful than the other (God’s people), and so the more powerful party sets the terms by which the two parties will relate. A covenant doesn’t require the weaker party’s consent, and there is no room for negotiation.

This new covenant is not an equal partnership. In fact, it is entirely one-sided, and that is good news for God’s people, since they have nothing to offer God.

[This new covenant] will not be like the covenant that I made with their ancestors when I took them by the hand to bring them out of the land of Egypt — a covenant that they broke, though I was their husband, says the LORD.
— Jeremiah 31:32

The reason the old covenant didn’t work was because God had an extraordinarily high estimation of the ability of humanity to comply with the law it embraced. Apparently the God who created us didn’t realize the depth to which we would be predisposed to break God’s covenant, even when it is in our best interest to keep it. Despite being spurned and betrayed, God takes the initiative to renew the covenant.

But this is the covenant that I will make with the house of Israel after those days, says the LORD: I will put my law within them, and I will write it on their hearts; and I will be their God, and they shall be my people.
— Jeremiah 31:33

Jeremiah announces that God adjusted a variable in the environment and is restarting the experiment with a new hypothesis: That by giving laws inscribed on human hearts, the people will live in peace with one another and remain faithful to God. The stone tablets are out, replaced by a call for a divinely-inspired moral consciousness to dictate human behavior.

Where sin was once written, now God's instruction, God's own will and desires, will be written not on stone, but in our flesh.

God’s new approach towards his people reminds me of parenting. After all, parenting is more than just giving a list of rules for our children to blindly follow; instead, it is about leading by example and teaching a child to embody the principles that you want to see in them. Give any child a list of rules that they are bound to break, and watch as they grow to despise you or despise themselves. Pledge your unconditional support, on the other hand, and watch they flourish.

The new covenant is not built on rules written in stone but on relationship written on the heart. The people belong to God and have God’s law guiding them.

No longer shall they teach one another, or say to each other, “Know the LORD,” for they shall all know me, from the least of them to the greatest, says the LORD; for I will forgive their iniquity, and remember their sin no more.
— Jeremiah 31:34

No longer will people simply know about God - all the right words, all the right theology. Jeremiah proclaims the days are surely coming when the people, from the least to the greatest, will know God - and will know God intimately.

Jeremiah says this will be possible because God will forgive their iniquity and remember their sins no more. This new experiment, this second chance, this new covenant between God and his people, is only possible because God is gracious.

You might think this sounds a little too utopian and optimistic. Jeremiah certainly painted a beautiful picture of belonging and forgiveness; but 2,500 years have passed since Jeremiah’s prophetic announcement about a new covenant; and you could say we are no different than the people whom God covenanted with on Mt. Sinai. We break this covenant with God. We continually pursue wealth and power and prioritize our selfish needs over our neighbors. But the difference is that here today, in the midst of the new covenant, God has pledged eternal forgiveness.

We have not arrived at the utopia that Jeremiah prophesied; but thanks to God’s work in the world we are headed in the right direction. The God of creation revealed in scripture promises abundant life for the human experiment, as well as the entirety of God’s creation.

And so, here at the end of the season of Lent, this passage begs us to explore the ways that we need the law of love to be written on our hearts. More importantly, it sets up our exploration in just two weeks of how the power of the resurrection can find a home in our hearts so that we, and those around us, can truly live a new life.

So we can thank Jeremiah. Instead of yet another word of judgment, we receive a lavish promise and unexpected good news:
God will bring newness out of destruction;
God will bring hope where there is no hope;
God will bring life out of death;
and God will make a way where there is no way.

What a beautiful promise we are allowed and expected to live into.

Amen.