Fr. Roger J. Landry
Conversations with Consequences Podcast
Twenty-Ninth Sunday in Ordinary Time (A)
October 17, 2020
To listen to an audio recording of this short Sunday homily, please click below:
The text that guided the homily was:
- This is Fr. Roger Landry and it’s a privilege for me to be with you as we enter into the consequential conversation the Risen Lord Jesus wants to have with each of us this Sunday, something that has great relevance to us as we observe some of the questions being posed to Amy Coney Barrett during her confirmation hearings for the Supreme Court, something that has just as much relevance as we prepare for the elections in just over two weeks, something that has to do with how we as disciples of Jesus order our whole life as citizens not only of our country but of the heavenly Jerusalem.
- In today’s Gospel, two groups that were archenemies conspired to try to trap Jesus. Both the Herodians and the Pharisees were trying to get Jesus out of the way, because both felt threatened by him. They decided to ask him a question about which they themselves were constantly in disagreement — whether it was lawful to pay taxes to or support in any way the Roman empire. The Herodians were laxist sycophants, and, regardless of how they personally felt about a foreign power’s ruling over them, decided that if you couldn’t beat the Romans, you should join them. They cooperated with the Romans in almost everything, including taxes. The Pharisees, like most of the Jewish people, deeply resented being dominated by a foreign power, and found utterly repulsive the thought of giving a tribute to a foreign ruler who fancied himself a god. Both groups thought their long-standing disagreement was a perfect catch-22 by which to nail the carpenter from Nazareth.
- So they approached Jesus and manifested their mendacity and hypocrisy by a barrage of empty flattery: “Teacher, we know that you are a truthful man, teach the way of God with accordance to the truth, show deference to no one, and don’t play favorites.” Then came the question: “Is it lawful to the census tax to Caesar or not?” It was the perfect query, they thought, because no matter how Jesus answered it, they had him. If he failed to respond, he would lose authority by ducking one of the most relevant political questions of the day. If he said “yes,” he would risk losing the affection of the masses, who hated the Romans, hated the emperor, and particularly hated being forced to give him any recognition at all. If he said “no,” then they could turn him over to Pontius Pilate for inciting lawlessness among the people.
- But Jesus would not be trapped, and he showed yet again here how he always brings good out of evil. In answer to their hypocrisy, Jesus pointed the path to true human integrity. In response to their deceitfulness, Jesus gave us a truth to live by, one that is as relevant today as it ever was.
- After he had asked to see the coin used for the tax and they brought him one (showing that all of them used the money when it served their purposes!), he queried, “Whose image is this and whose inscription?” When they responded, “Caesar’s,” he gave them and us the principle that extends far beyond than the days of Rome. “Then give to Caesar what belongs to Caesar, and to God what belongs to God.” Most of Jesus’ original listeners thought that you couldn’t serve two leaders, God and Caesar; either you gave to God, they thought, or gave to Caesar. Jesus said it was not necessarily “either… or” but could be and should be “both… and.” We have responsibilities in the social order (what we might call the horizontal plane); we also have responsibilities toward God (the vertical plane). The two should go together. One of our responsibilities toward God is to love our neighbor; and one of the greatest services to our neighbor is the service of the truth that flows from faith in God.
- Today, we don’t come to entrap Jesus in his speech, but to learn from him the truth that will set us free. And as we ask him the same question about the allegiance we owe to the social order — to our country, our society, our cities and communities — he turns to us and asks us something. He doesn’t request to see a dollar bill, but rather says to us, “Look in the mirror!” “Whose image do we see?” He wants us to recognize that we are made in the image and likeness of God. And then he wants to say, “Then give to God the things that are God’s.” All that we are, all that we have, all our time, our talents, our money, our resources, our health comes from God, are part of our being in his image, and we’re called by him in justice, in wisdom and in love, to give back to God the things that are his.
- What ought to happen when conflicts arise between the two orders of responsibility Jesus describes, to God and to the social order? The concern of the Scribes and Pharisees hasn’t disappeared. The best principle, I think, comes from the example and last words of one of the great saints in the history of civilization, Saint Thomas More. When King Henry VIII, whom he had served faithfully as chancellor or second-in-charge, had required all British subjects to swear an oath saying Henry (and not Jesus Christ or Jesus’ vicar on earth the Pope) was supreme head of the Church in England and another basically swearing under God that Henry’s marriage to Catherine of Aragon was null, his supposed marriage to Anne Bolyn was valid and that his rightful heir would be his and Anne’s offspring, Thomas More refused. Almost all of the Christians in England took the oaths. Almost every bishop in England, other than St. John Fisher, capitulated. Thomas resigned the chancellorship, his family was reduced to poverty, and those who were trying to kiss up to the king sought ways to harm Thomas. Eventually, the king’s loyalists trumped up charges against him to get him thrown into the infamous prison of the Tower of London. They tried to harass, molest and starve Thomas into submission, but he never relented. Finally, they framed him and got him sentenced to death. As he stood on the platform where he would be beheaded, he was asked whether he had any last words. His valedictory, right before he had his head chopped off, was “I have always been the king’s good servant, but God’s first.”
- Those words, each of us is called to make his own. All of us are called to be the good servants of our nation, of our communities, of our cities, but God’s good servants first and above all. Should there be a conflict between what we owe to God and what civil leaders claim we owe to them, God must win. And the greatest service we can give to society and to her rulers is to serve God faithfully, because by this we bring to them the truth, which is the only foundation on which society can be firmly grounded. This service, this duty, is becoming more urgent, because the supposed conflicts between what we owe to God and what others claim we owe to society are growing through various “woke” attacks on the Christian faith, mainly because faithful Christians won’t go along with the spirit of the age, whether that means allowing the killing of unborn children, or the redefinition of marriage, or giving into to a caustic culture that denigrates others, refuses to accord them dignity and embrace them as we would embrace Christ. We Christians are called to be salt, light and leaven for our society, lifting it up, and this requires courage, sometimes even martyrdom. In 1953, when the communist regime in Poland ordered the implementation of a law by which it, not the Catholic Church, would appoint and remove pastors, vicars and bishops, Cardinal Stefan Wyszyński, of Warsaw, the Primate of Poland, drew the line, saying, ‘We teach that it is proper to render unto Caesar the things that are Caesar’s and to God the things that are God’s. But when Caesar sits himself on the altar, we respond curtly: he may not.’” What will we do when politicians sit on the altar? What will do when universities, or Hollywood, or mobs do? Will we stand up or go with the tide? Will we vote according to our faith or according to other criteria? Will we seek to be salt, light and leaven of our society, teaching others to render to God the things that are of God, or will we just go along with everyone else?
- This weekend God asks us to look in the mirror and see in whose image we are made. Then he calls us to act in accordance with that dignity. SS. Thomas More, John Fisher, the North American Martyrs whom the Church celebrates on Monday, and all of the American saints, may God give us the help and audacity he knows we need always to render to Him the things that are His so that we may be able to say at every moment of our life — and at the moment of our death — that we have always been good citizens of our great land who have sought to make it better, but we’ve always been God’s good servants first.
The Gospel that guided today’s homily was:
The Pharisees went off
and plotted how they might entrap Jesus in speech.
They sent their disciples to him, with the Herodians, saying,
“Teacher, we know that you are a truthful man
and that you teach the way of God in accordance with the truth.
And you are not concerned with anyone’s opinion,
for you do not regard a person’s status.
Tell us, then, what is your opinion:
Is it lawful to pay the census tax to Caesar or not?”
Knowing their malice, Jesus said,
“Why are you testing me, you hypocrites?
Show me the coin that pays the census tax.”
Then they handed him the Roman coin.
He said to them, “Whose image is this and whose inscription?”
They replied, “Caesar’s.”
At that he said to them,
“Then repay to Caesar what belongs to Caesar
and to God what belongs to God.”
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