If you accept that there is a lesser of two evils; you have
already lost the war. Throughout our
lives, we are from time-to-time presented with a choice, where both outcomes
are bad. We are asked to pick the one
that is the least bad, and then expected to make that choice. To refuse to choose is often an outcome by
itself that may be worse than actually doing anything. It is called a no-win situation. And so often it is presented, with us falling
into the trap of trying to decide how to do the least damage with what we
pick. This trap is not new. But it represents a lie told by Satan whose
premise is quite insidious. He tells us
through these situations, that “you” must control your fate by making a choice
where all the options are bad. The
reality is, that while every option “we” could pick is bad, “we” still have
another choice … take it to God in prayer, sit back, and watch the power of God
at work. For while humans truly are
limited in their choices, God is not, and what God can do can truly amaze.
None-the-less the Pharisees had been very angered by the 3
stories Jesus had told regarding the state of church leadership, and how they
might still be redeemed. The Pharisees
believed they were already good enough and had no need of redemption,
especially by this upstart with no formal acknowledgement by the system of
religion they managed. This message of
light from the outside was not welcome in their tightly concocted inner
sanctum. So they responded by creating
three traps of their own, one by each of the main groups or sects of their
religion. This would insure fairness
among them, as well as diversity of thought, so that even if one line of
thinking failed there would still be another to attempt to catch Jesus up in
what He said. But underlying all their
attempts would be the common premise of presenting two choices where no matter
what He picked, He could be embarrassed in front of the people. Their problem was they reasoned as men, and
forgot, or refused to admit, Jesus reasoned like our God does.
The first trap would come from the Pharisees who considered
themselves preeminent among their peers.
These masters of the Tora would seek to catch Jesus up in a popularity
dilemma. The topic was taxes, just
bringing up the very word “tax” to an Israelite at that time, was to kindle
anger of the deepest variety. They may
have picked this particular topic, because Matthew, the author of this very
gospel to his Hebrew contemporaries, was a former agent of Rome collecting
taxes from his brethren. Tax collectors
had earned a reputation lower than harlots or sodomites in this day and
age. They were in effect traitors to
their people, doing Rome’s work, and then profiting off of it besides. If Caesar demanded a single penny from a
farmer, the tax collector may very well take two, and keep one himself. This made the process even more onerous, and
the tax collector more hated, perhaps rightly so. So the Pharisees figured there would be no
way to discuss taxes with an honest Jesus and not embarrass Him immensely.
Matthew begins in chapter twenty-two picking up in verse 15
saying … “Then went the Pharisees, and took counsel how they might entangle him
in his talk. [verse 16] And they sent out unto him their disciples with the
Herodians, saying, Master, we know that thou art true, and teachest the way of
God in truth, neither carest thou for any man: for thou regardest not the
person of men. [verse 17] Tell us therefore, What thinkest thou? Is it lawful
to give tribute unto Caesar, or not?”
Nothing was left to chance in setting this trap. The Pharisees sent Herodians with their
disciples to act as witnesses for the state, in the event that an otherwise
honest Jesus decides to get hinky with an unpopular topic like this one. The Pharisees feared Jesus may just bow to
the will of the people on this, so they actually sent government spies to watch
in case He did. They also used a proxy,
that is, they sent their disciples to execute the trap so no one could ever
directly accuse them of any impropriety in trying to spring a trap like this
one. Perhaps they used disciples Jesus
had never met, so He would not see any connection back to themselves.
Then to disguise the trap, the disciples use the highest
form of false flattery upon Jesus, first calling Him Master. Then proceeding to compliment Jesus again on
how He ALWAYS teaches the truth. If they
really believed this, they would not be there trying to spring a trap on
Him. They would have joined His ranks
and become true disciples of the Most High God.
But they did not believe this, so their words were lies as they crossed
the lips of those who did not mean a word of it. I wonder, do we do the same? Do we compliment our God in our prayers,
bragging about how good He is, and how He is good all the time; yet the minute
adversity blows our way, we crumble and blame God for it. Then our true beliefs emerge as we blame God
for every horror that happens on earth, casting Him as an angry God, who is
looking to punish us for our deeds, instead of redeem our hearts from them.
Or worse, we cast Him as a God who just does not care enough
to save us from the horror that has come our way. Never once acknowledging what we do, or sin,
or a devil bent on our misfortune as the cause of what we stumble into. Cancer was not put here by God, it exists
because evil exists. No disease was ever
intended to exist. It is the very presence
of evil in our world that permits diseases to become part of our knowledge of
good and of evil. We were intended to be
ignorant of them. But instead we chose
to become familiar with them. This is
the knowledge our God thought it best we never understood let alone
encountered. Breaking trust with God
resulted in all of this. But this was
not God’s idea, and His number one job is to redeem us from evil, and
extinguish the effects of evil on a permanent basis. Not as a punishment for those who embrace it,
but as salvation for those who want no more to ever be a part of it.
Beyond the lies they believe about what Jesus’ preaching
includes, the disciples also compliment Jesus on being no respecter of persons –
essentially that Jesus would talk to Caesar the same way He talks to a beggar
in the street. This further false flattery
is not something they believe, but they are taunting Him into staying true to
this course in order for Him to answer the trap badly. And so after meticulously laying the trap,
they spring it – asking Jesus if it is lawful to pay taxes. Notice they do not make reference to which
law. They could have been talking about
the law of Moses, or of Herod, or of Rome, or of God. They leave this reference unclear so they can
combat Him no matter how He answers.
This was the best minds in the country, coming up with the best test,
they could imagine. All to trap Jesus in
front of the people.
Matthew continues the story in verse 18 saying … “But Jesus
perceived their wickedness, and said, Why tempt ye me, ye hypocrites?” Yikes!
It is as if a bright light is turned on in a dirty kitchen late at
night, and the cockroaches who were all to happy to feast in the darkness are
now revealed by the brilliant light, their antennae darting back and forth as
they scream to each other “we must hide, we must hide”. They run for the corners looking to be rehidden
by the darkness, but it will not come.
Jesus perceived their wickedness.
He knows in an instant who did this, who was responsible for this, and
what they are trying to do. He calls out
their hypocrisy as He knows they do not believe a word they say to Him, about
Him at least. He knows it is false
flattery. And then in bone chilling
words He once used with Satan himself, He asks these wicked men, why they are
tempting Him.
And do our prayers that say one thing, and our lives that
witness another, earn us a similar response?
When we treat sin like gold, and freedom from sin, like a pain we want
to avoid – do we not behave the same way as our Pharisee forefathers? We have countless requests of our God, for
the millions of things we think we need.
But only routine prayers to say thank you for food, and even less so when
our other requests are granted. Our
prayer life resembles a child on Santa’s lap at the mall. Our hearts are revealed to the same God who
walked among us, as He walked among these Pharisees. They did not believe they needed to change;
how many of us believe exactly the same thing.
We count ourselves “good” enough already, just like they did.
Jesus responds picking up in verse 19 saying … “Shew me the
tribute money. And they brought unto him a penny. [verse 20] And he saith unto
them, Whose is this image and superscription? [verse 21] They say unto him,
Caesar's. Then saith he unto them, Render therefore unto Caesar the things
which are Caesar's; and unto God the things that are God's.” Hold the phone!! There is not supposed to be any “good” option
in this response. There is not supposed
to be a “good” answer. This was a trap
of bad vs worse, no good option allowed or anticipated. And this is why you lose. You, me, the Pharisees back then, all keep
looking at situations with human eyes, limited by human thinking, and ideas
about what is possible and not possible.
Instead, we could be turning over our “impossible” situations and
decisions to God and watch what He can do, instead of trying to dictate to Him
what we want Him to do. Our prayers “telling”
God what to do, are as worthless as our trying to take things into our own
hands in the first place. We are in
effect, trying to lead God. When we
should be surrendering to God and following whatever He decides – expecting what
He does, to not look like anything we would have thought of, and to be a
million times better than anything we could have imagined.
The conclusion of this story occurs in verse 22 saying … “When
they had heard these words, they marvelled, and left him, and went their way.” This response is so strikingly sad. They heard Him. They were blown away that He had figured a
way out of their trap. And then they
left Him and went their way. Notice nowhere
in that response was any sort of change on their part. They did not become disciples after
that. They did not repent of their
intentions. They scurried back like the
cockroach, to plan another attack in the darkness, for darkness is what they
craved. Make no mistake, when you walk
away from the light, you are headed for no other destination than the
darkness.
People who treat Jesus as some kind of option, or some kind
of alternative – believing that spirituality is all that counts, and doing good
all that matters – walk away from His light, into the darkness of deceit. Jesus offers you a real change in who you
are, how you think, and how you love.
You cannot fix that. You, on your
own, may not even believe that needs fixing.
But it does. It is the self-love
that cripples you, and damages others.
And because self is at the center of it, you are powerless to fix
it. But Jesus is a master at re-creating
you from who you are now, into what He knows you are capable of being. He is not looking to leave you in your misery,
making excuses for your pain. He is
looking to lift you out of your misery, freeing you from your pain
forever. That is the kind of change we
can all embrace. The free kind. The kind that comes from submission, instead
of control. Walk away from your own
ideas about bad and good, possible and impossible, and turn it over to Jesus,
who can do things, and show you things, and make you into something you could
never have imagined. And the word regret
will have meaning to you no more.
But the traps for Jesus were not to be ended just yet …
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