Gospel of Matthew

Enough and We Know It

Matthew 22:15-22

Then the Pharisees went and plotted to entrap Jesus in what he said. So they sent their disciples, along with the Herodians, saying, “Teacher, we know that you are sincere, and that you teach the way of God in accordance with truth, and that you show deference to no one, because you do not regard people with partiality. Tell us, then, what you think. Is it lawful to pay taxes to the emperor, or not?”

Jesus, aware of their malice, said to them, “Why do you put me to the test, you hypocrites? Show me the coin used for the tax.” So they brought him a denarius. He said to them, “Who’s head is this? And who’s title?” They answered him, “The emperor’s.” And he said to them, “Give, therefore, to the emperor the things that are the emperor’s, and give to God, the things that are God’s.” When they heard this, they were amazed, and they left him and went away.


I get that the Pharisees and the Herodians were out to “entrap” Jesus. It happens all the time in the Gospels, you may know. Religious leaders and others were always trying to trick Jesus and get him into trouble. They asked him hard questions about marriage and divorce and about which commandment was the greatest. They present him with seemingly impossible situations, like that woman they wanted to stone to death after catching her in adultery. They watch him spend time with tax collectors, sinners, the unclean, the outcasts and outsiders of all kinds, just waiting to pounce and prove him to be the fake and the fraud and the false prophet they believed him to be.

But what he really shows along the way is that all of their questions, tricks and traps, reveal as much about them as they do about Jesus. What I mean is, they already knew what they wanted to hear – and they always thought they knew what Jesus would say or do. They didn’t expect there to actually be a “correct” answer. In fact they knew there wasn’t a single correct answer Jesus could give, which is why they asked their questions or posed their predicaments, like they did, in the first place.

For the Pharisees, for example, the right answer this morning is, “don’t pay the emperor’s tax.” Faithful Jews should be beholden to God’s higher authority, not that of any government. They weren’t really supposed to even handle graven images like the coin they brought to Jesus, let alone use them for the work of the world’s empire in Rome. That’s the answer the Pharisees wanted to hear.

On the other hand, for the Herodians – who were beholden to the politics and politicians of that same Roman empire – the right answer this morning is, “you absolutely should pay your taxes.” As subjects to the powers that be, it is right and lawful to obey and to pay, as the Emperor demands.

So, in the minds of those who confronted Jesus today – according to their plans – in keeping with their respective world views – Jesus was, to put it theologically … screwed. If his answer favored the Pharisees, then the Herodians would be upset. If his answer favored the Herodians, then the Pharisees would have a bone to pick. And they were all there for it … to catch Jesus in a pickle, get him into trouble, add one more strike to use against him when the time came.

And, of course, in this instance, it’s all about money. And, of course, both sides of the fence want more of it for themselves. And, of course, Jesus amazes them with his response because he gives them an answer neither side expected or hoped for or believed could be true. Jesus tells them to do both.

“Give to the emperor the things that are the emperor’s and give to God the things that are God’s.” And I think the lesson in that response is pretty simple – and something neither side, and too many of us, too much of the time, want to believe: that there’s enough to go around. That there’s enough to do both. That there’s plenty, and we all know it.

It reminds me of a question I’ve been asked a million times – and that I’ve wondered about myself, along the way. The question goes something like this: “When I decide about my offering … when I do the math about my tithe to the church … do I make that decision based on the “net” or the “gross” of my income?” My snarky reply is to say something like, “If your giving is an expression of gratitude – as it is intended to be – for the grace of God and for the forgiveness of your sins – are you grateful and hopeful that God forgives the “gross” of your sins, or just the “net?”

A more faithful and kind and thoughtful – less snarky – response, though, is to say something like Jesus implies … that there’s enough to be more generous than we are inclined, and we all know it, so give accordingly.

There’s an old joke about Lutherans … that the reason we don’t go down to the river to be baptized … the reason we merely sprinkle each other or cross our foreheads with water, rather than fully immerse one another as part of the sacrament … is because we don’t want to get our wallets wet. In other words, the joke is that we want all the blessing and benefits and abundance of God’s grace in our life, we just don’t want to have to respond to that with our money.

But again, Jesus would say, like he reminds us this morning, that there’s enough, and we know it.

There’s another story about the pastor who addressed his congregation during their latest financial stewardship campaign, telling them about all they were trying to accomplish with their ministry. The pastor told his people, “the good news is that, as a congregation, we have all the money – and more – that we need to do what God is calling us to do through our life together. The bad news is, that money is all still folded up in your wallets, and stuffed in your purses, and stored away in your checking and savings accounts.”

Again, as Jesus would say, and as Jesus showed, there is enough. There’s plenty if we’re faithful and honest and generous in the way God has already been so generous with us.

What Jesus is really calling us to today – and every day – is to be clear about where, in whom, and toward what we put our allegiance. And it’s about more than taxes to the powers that be, for sure. We are beholden to the IRS in more ways than some of us wish, but we are to obey the law, and we are to pray and work and vote in ways that move our government to deal with our tax dollars in God-pleasing ways – which can be a sad, frustrating, laughable proposition a lot of the time, as we know.

Which is why I happen to think it’s a gift to have somewhere else to give our money if and when our tax money doesn’t make God smile.

See, I hope you see the money you give to God through the ministry we share in this place as a blessing for the world around us that “the empire” can’t or will not muster. I’m talking about supporting organizations like Zoey’s Place – our Mission Sunday for the month, just as one example – that actually works alongside government organizations to do good work in the world…

… and, I mean building houses in Haiti, a place whose government is so broken and impoverished it can’t do the kind of work Zanmi Fondwa does with our help;

… and, I mean supporting organizations like Lutheran Immigration and Refugee Services, Lutheran World Relief, and Lutheran Disaster Response, organizations where our offerings do the work of God in ways our tax dollars just don’t;

… and, I mean feeding people who are hungry by way of our food pantry;

… and, I mean, generally creating a safe, welcoming, loving place of grace and good news and generosity and abundance for all people in a world that is full of so much to the contrary;

… and I mean doing our best as a family of faith to educate, encourage and inspire one another about what God’s kingdom can look like when we get it right in that regard.

We are called to give in ways that bless the world – even when, maybe especially when, the world doesn’t return the favor. We are called to give because we can, not because we have to. And we are called to do that through the Church – and in other ways and to other places, too – with the same kind of sacrifice and joy with which God has first given to us. And the truth, good news and holy challenge from Jesus today is that we have been blessed with enough abundance to do all of this, by God’s gracious generosity and in Jesus’ name.

Amen

Pet Blessing for the Weary

Matthew 11:25-30

At that time, Jesus began to say, “I thank you, Father, Lord of heaven and earth, because you have hidden these things from the wise and the intelligent, and revealed them to children. Yes, Father, for such was your gracious will. All things on heaven and earth have been handed over to me by my Father, for no one knows the Son, except the Father, and no one knows the Father, except the Son, and anyone to whom the Son chooses to reveal him.

“Come to me, all you who are weary and carrying heavy burdens and I will give you rest. Take my yoke upon you and learn from me, for I am gentle and humble of heart, and you will find rest for your souls. For my yoke is easy and my burden is light.”


In addition to what I’ve already told you about Anne and Janis Janelsins, I’ve had a few conversations with and about some very weary people lately. I prayed with Mike McCoy in the nursing home a week or so ago, thinking it might be the last time I’d get to do that. I’ve seen Tom and Bev Bancroft, and their daughters, off and on the last couple of weeks wondering the same about Bev each time I say goodbye. I stopped to see Dick Bowen on Friday, because he had had some weary days in the hospital last week. He was back home at Springhurst in time for his 91st birthday on Wednesday and planning to get to the New Pal football game Friday night. (“Weary” doesn’t last as long for some of us as it does for others, I guess.)

And there are a few other conversations I’ve had that I’m not at liberty to share here. But suffice it to say – as too many of us know – weary is a thing, people. Heavy burdens are being carried. God’s people are yoked … weighed down … heavy hearted.

And today’s worship is meant to be, not just a light-hearted break from the weariness of the world, but a reminder of the ways God shows up to shoulder our burdens, too. What’s funny – and what would certainly be terrifying for the animals among us, if they spoke better English – is how very literally God has used animals to bear the burdens of God’s people, over time.

In our Bethel class Thursday, we remembered how God commanded the Israelites, in the book of Leviticus, to lay hands on a goat, symbolically loading up the four-legged beast with the sins and brokenness and burdens of the community, and then sending that poor guy off into the wilderness – along with all of those sins, all of that brokenness, and all of those burdens – as a sign that God’s people need not carry any of that themselves any longer. It was a deliberate, powerful, visual, “hands-on” expression of unburdening for God’s children – meant to free them up to live differently, generously, graciously, and thereby more able to bless the world around them in a way they couldn’t until their burdens were lifted.

I hope none of us are sending our pets into the wilderness anytime soon – though one of my dogs is asking for it, if she keeps barking at the rest of us to go outside at all hours of the night. But the truth is, these pets we celebrate and that we’ll bless today, shoulder, carry and relieve our burdens in some pretty practical and holy ways.

The Center for Disease Control says there are lots of health benefits that come from owning a pet. Depending on the animal – and if we’re doing it right – they can increase opportunities to exercise, get outside, and socialize. All of that can decrease blood pressure, cholesterol levels, and triglycerides, too. And, of course, pets can help manage loneliness and depression by giving us companionship. There are, indeed, children and adults for whom a pet is their only friend, their only safe place, their only confidant and their only regular source of love, comfort, and joy.

Now, I suspect many of you have seen or heard the poem, “God Made a Dog.” It’s made its way around the internet in recent years and it’s so on-the-nose for a day like today, that I’ve resisted using it for a pet-blessing until now. You can Google it later and see the many and various video montages people have assembled to accompany its reading – which is often done by someone who sounds a lot like Paul Harvey, if you know who that is. Anyway, the poem goes like this:

And on the 9th-day, God looked down on his wide-eyed children and said, ‘They need a companion.’ So, God made a dog.

God said, ‘I need somebody willing to wake up, give kisses, pee on a tree, sleep all day, wake up again, give more kisses, then stay up until midnight, basking in the glare of a television set.’ So, God made a dog.

God said, ‘I need somebody willing to sit, then stay, then roll over. Then – with no ego or complaint – dress in hats they don’t need and costumes they don’t understand.

‘I need somebody who can break wind without a first care – without a second thought – who can chase tails, sniff crotches, fetch sticks, and lift spirits with a lick. Somebody who, no matter what you didn’t do, or couldn’t take, or didn’t win, or couldn’t make, will love you without judgment just the same.’ So, God made a dog.

God said, ‘I need somebody strong enough to pull sleds and find bombs, yet gentle enough to love babies and lead the blind. Somebody who will spend all day on a couch with a resting head and supportive eyes to lift the spirts of a broken heart.’

So, God mad a dog.

It had to be somebody who remained patient and loyal, even through loneliness. Somebody to care, cuddle, snuggle, and nuzzle, and cheer, and charm, and snore and slobber, and eat the trash and chase the squirrels.

Somebody who would bring a family together with the selflessness of an open heart. Somebody who would bark, and then pant, and then reply with the rapid wag of a tail when their best friend says, ‘Let’s go for a ride in the car.’

So, God made a dog.

So, thank God for the dogs and the cats and the birds and the goats, too. They are a gift and a blessing and the bearers of many a burden. But let’s learn from them and from Jesus, too – and let’s not leave it up to them or only to Jesus – because people are weary, people. And carrying heavy burdens. And they could use a shoulder, or a friend, or some forgiveness, and a load off, for sure.

And it is our call and blessing to rest in the arms of that kind of love when we need it, for ourselves; and to welcome others to the same – to introduce them to the God of mercy and hope we know in Jesus; and to share the gentle, humble, light and easy burden of God’s grace on his behalf.

Amen