Whose side are you on?
What a loaded question!
Especially in the fall
in the South.
I am often asked,
when people find out I am from East Tennessee,
if I rout for the UT Volunteers,
and then they seem somewhat deflated to find out
that I am not a sports fan.
I know that this question
is a genuine attempt to get to know me better,
to find out if I am friend or foe,
for you or against you.
And it doesn’t stop at sports.
Coke or Pepsi?
Vinegar or ketchup-based BBQ?
Ford or Chevy?
Apple or Android?
Or more pressingly,
Israel or Palestine?
Ukraine or Russia?
Liberal or conservative?
Am I an ally in championing your team’s glory,
or a civil enemy?
Am I an ally in safeguarding your dignity,
or an existential threat?
I think this is why
our parents taught us
that it isn’t polite to discuss
religion or politics,
because it’s easier to respect someone
if you don’t know you disagree.
If someone prefers a different brand of soda than you,
or likes to discuss Jedi instead of Klingons,
that’s one thing;
But politics and religion
tend to touch a deeper part of us
than which beverages and entertainment we consume.
Our politics and our religion
are largely the result of how we see ourselves,
how we see the world around us,
and our place in it.
So,
we tend to retreat
into our ideological enclaves,
echo chambers of our own thoughts and feelings,
until we are convinced
that the whole world
confirms our thoughts and feelings.
The church has been no different.
We spend our week locked in our echo chambers,
hearing only messages we agree with,
and then we bring this perspective to the Bible,
and the sermon,
and are pleasantly relieved
to find that even Jesus is on our side.
If Jesus is on my team,
then I win,
right?
Surely if Jesus agrees with me,
then I must be right.
In our gospel this morning,
we find a group of folks trying to commandeer Jesus,
to harangue him into agreeing with one side of an argument
or another
in order to weaponize his agreement.
The temple Pharisees
(think prosperity-gospel preachers)
and the Herodians
(think sycophantic politicians
who had cozied up to the king
who himself was actually a foreign operative)
created an unholy alliance,
of feigned religiosity and self-serving proximity to power,
putting aside their differences temporarily
to trick Jesus into making statements
they could use to prove themselves right.
They start off with a little flattery
in hopes of making their poison a little easier to swallow.
“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?"
You see what they did there?
If Jesus says they should pay taxes to Caesar,
that is,
pay homage to a foreign occupying force
with a coin that bears the image of an idol
and the inscription in worship of another god,
then he has alienated the people
and violated God’s law.
If Jesus says they should not pay taxes to Caesar,
then he has challenged the authority of Rome,
set himself up as an insurrectionist,
and is a danger to the Roman doctrine
of peace through strength.
But Jesus doesn’t take the bait.
“Why are you putting me to the test,
you hypocrites?
Show me the coin used for the tax.”
Someone pulls a denarius out
and hands it to him.
Jesus says,
“Whose head is this,
and whose title?”
They answered,
“Caesar’s,
the emperor’s.
And Jesus says to them,
“Then give to the emperor
the things that belong to the emperor,
and give to God
the things that are God’s.”
Said another way,
take the things that bear the image of Caesar
and give them back to Caesar.
Then take the things that bear the image of God
and give them back to God.
Jesus will not be pigeonholed.
He will not be co-opted
as a mascot of one side of an argument or another.
Jesus comes down
neither on the side of religion
nor politics,
because he himself
transcends both
and is the reconciliation of both.
Jesus comes down
on the side of humanity.
Jesus is God in the flesh,
transcendent, ineffable divinity
united to tangible, corporeal materiality.
If religion concerns the soul,
and politics concerns the body,
then Jesus
as the transcendence and reconciliation
of Body and Soul,
calls us to a religion that embraces the body
and a politics of the soul.
Jesus say that if this denarius belongs to Caesar
because it bears the image of Caesar,
then you belong to God,
because you bear the image of God.
In Genesis 1:27 God says,
“Let us make humankind in our image,
according to our likeness.”
All humans are created in the image of God.
All humans belong to God.
But likeness is not the same as image.
Many people who bear the image of God
are nothing like God.
After all,
the pharisees,
the Herodians,
and Caesar
were all humans
and bore the image of God.
But they were nothing like God.
Jesus bore both the image
and the likeness,
and Jesus calls us to do the same.
How,
then,
do we grow in likeness to God?
By giving back to God
the things that are God’s.
Fr. Richard Rohr said it this way,
“God loves things by becoming them.
We love God by continuing the same pattern.”
That is,
if God loves things by becoming them,
we grow in likeness to God
by practicing a radical solidarity with the things
God loves.
Who and what does God love?
Beloved,
God is love.
There is nothing
and no one
that God does not love.
We can take Jesus as our example,
transcending and reconciling both body and soul,
teaching that embodying our religion
and bringing a soul to our politics,
is what the radical solidarity of God’s love looks like.
When we give to God what is God’s
we must surrender even Caesar
to the reconciling mercy of Almighty God,
being neither enthralled by the majesty and splendor of empire,
nor losing our common humanity
in our struggle for justice.
Terrorism is wrong.
Full stop.
But so are apartheid regimes.
So is resettlement.
So is retribution
in the name of justice or security.
Jesus will not be your mascot.
God does not take the side
of governments or institutions,
corporations or armies.
God does not see national borders
or uniforms
and regalia.
God does not revere
our national myths,
our founding documents,
or our high offices.
God is on the side of humanity.
God is Love!
God is the reconciliation of Justice and Grace,
of Saints and Sinners,
of Law and Gospel,
of enemies and neighbors,
of image and likeness,
of matter and spirit,
of humanity and divinity.
We have the opportunity
to be on Jesus’ side,
by leaving our echo chambers
and practicing radical solidarity with humanity.
We can choose an embodied religion
and a politics of the soul.
We can sidestep the either/or,
for-me-or-against-me debate
and we can recognize the image of God
in every human face—
whether neighbor or enemy.
We can give back to Caesar every last cent,
until empire has no currency among us,
and we can render ourselves and each other
unto God.
So, whose side are you on?
Amen.