Delivered during mass at the Basilica of the National Shrine of the Immaculate Conception, Washington, DC, July 4th 2012.
Philadelphia
is the place where both the Declaration of Independence and the United
States Constitution were written. For more than two centuries, these
documents have inspired people around the globe. So as we begin our
reflection on today’s readings, I have the privilege of greeting
everyone here today — and every person watching or listening from a
distance — in the name of the Church of my home, the Church of
Philadelphia, the cradle of our country’s liberty and the city of our
nation’s founding. May God bless and guide all of us as we settle our
hearts on the Word of God.
Paul Claudel, the French poet and diplomat of the last century, once
described the Christian as “a man who knows what he is doing and where
he is going in a world [that] no longer [knows] the difference between
good and evil, yes and no. He is like a god standing out in a crowd of
invalids . . He alone has liberty in a world of slaves.”
Like most
of the great writers of his time, Claudel was a mix of gold and clay,
flaws and genius. He had a deep and brilliant Catholic faith, and when
he wrote that a man “who no longer believes in God, no longer believes
in anything,” he was simply reporting what he saw all around him. He
spoke from a lifetime that witnessed two world wars and the rise of
atheist ideologies that murdered tens of millions of innocent people
using the vocabulary of science. He knew exactly where forgetting God
can lead.
We Americans live in a different country, on a different
continent, in a different century. And yet, in speaking of liberty,
Claudel leads us to the reason we come together in worship this
afternoon.
Most of us know today’s passage from the Gospel of
Matthew. What we should, or should not, render unto Caesar shapes much
of our daily discourse as citizens. But I want to focus on the other and
more important point Jesus makes in today’s Gospel reading: the things
we should render unto God.
When the Pharisees and Herodians try to
trap Jesus, he responds by asking for a coin. Examining it he says,
“Whose image is this and whose inscription?” When his enemies say
“Caesar’s,” he tells them to render it to Caesar. In other words, that
which bears the image of Caesar belongs to Caesar.
The key word in Christ’s answer is “image,” or in the Greek, eikon.
Our modern meaning of “image” is weaker than the original Greek
meaning. We tend to think of an image as something symbolic, like a
painting or sketch. The Greek understanding includes that sense but goes
further. In the New Testament, the “image” of something shares in the
nature of the thing itself.
This has consequences for our own
lives because we’re made in the image of God. In the Greek translation
of the Old Testament, the same word, eikon, is used in Genesis
when describing the creation. “Let us make man in our image, after our
likeness” says God (Gen 1:26). The implication is clear. To be made in
the image of God is more than a pious slogan. It’s a statement of fact.
Every one of us shares — in a limited but real way — in the nature of
God himself. When we follow Jesus Christ, we grow in conformity to that
image.
Once we understand this, the impact of Christ’s response to
his enemies becomes clear. Jesus isn’t being clever. He’s not offering a
political commentary. He’s making a claim on every human being. He’s
saying, “render unto Caesar those things that bear Caesar’s image, but more importantly, render unto God that which bears God’s image” — in other words, you and me. All of us.
And that raises some unsettling questions: What do you and I, and all of us, really render to God in our personal lives? If we claim to be disciples, then what does that actually mean in the way we speak and act?
Thinking
about the relationship of Caesar and God, religious faith and secular
authority, is important. It helps us sort through our different duties
as Christians and citizens. But on a deeper level, Caesar is a creature
of this world, and Christ’s message is uncompromising: We should give
Caesar nothing of ourselves. Obviously we’re in the world. That
means we have obligations of charity and justice to the people with
whom we share it. Patriotism is a virtue. Love of country is an
honorable thing. As Chesterton once said, if we build a wall between
ourselves and the world, it makes little difference whether we describe
ourselves as locked in or locked out.
But God made us for more than
the world. Our real home isn’t here. The point of today’s Gospel
passage is not how we might calculate a fair division of goods between
Caesar and God. In reality, it all belongs to God and nothing –
at least nothing permanent and important – belongs to Caesar. Why?
Because just as the coin bears the stamp of Caesar’s image, we bear the
stamp of God’s image in baptism. We belong to God, and only to God.
In
today’s second reading, St. Paul tells us, “Indeed religion” — the RSV
version says “godliness” – “with contentment is great gain. For we
brought nothing into the world, just as we shall not be able to take
anything out of it.” True freedom knows no attachments other than Jesus
Christ. It has no love of riches or the appetites they try to satisfy.
True freedom can walk away from anything — wealth, honor, fame,
pleasure. Even power. It fears neither the state, nor death itself.
Who
is the most free person at anything? It’s the person who masters her
art. A pianist is most free who — having mastered her instrument
according to the rules that govern it and the rules of music, and having
disciplined and honed her skills — can now play anything she wants.
The
same holds true for our lives. We’re free only to the extent that we
unburden ourselves of our own willfulness and practice the art of living
according to God’s plan. When we do this, when we choose to live
according to God’s intention for us, we are then — and only then — truly
free.
This is the freedom of the sons and daughters of God. It’s
the freedom of Miguel Pro, Mother Teresa, Maximillian Kolbe, Dietrich
Bonhoeffer, and all the other holy women and men who have gone before us
to do the right thing, the heroic thing, in the face of suffering and
adversity.
This is the kind of freedom that can transform the
world. And it should animate all of our talk about liberty – religious
or otherwise.
I say this for two reasons. Here’s the first reason. Real freedom isn’t something Caesar can give or take away. He can interfere with it; but when he does, he steals from his own legitimacy.
Here’s the second reason. The purpose of religious liberty is to create the context for true freedom.
Religious liberty is a foundational right. It’s necessary for a good
society. But it can never be sufficient for human happiness. It’s not an
end in itself. In the end, we defend religious liberty in order to live
the deeper freedom that is discipleship in Jesus Christ. What good is
religious freedom, consecrated in the law, if we don’t then use that
freedom to seek God with our whole mind and soul and strength?
Today, July 4, we celebrate the birth of a novus ordo seclorum -
a “new order of the ages,” the American Era. God has blessed our nation
with resources, power, beauty and the rule of law. We have so much to
be grateful for. But these are gifts. They can be misused. They can be
lost. In coming years, we’ll face more and more serious challenges to
religious liberty in our country. This is why the Fortnight for Freedom
has been so very important.
And yet, the political and legal
effort to defend religious liberty – as vital as it is – belongs to a
much greater struggle to master and convert our own hearts, and to live
for God completely, without alibis or self-delusion. The only question
that finally matters is this one: Will we live wholeheartedly for Jesus Christ? If so, then we can be a source of freedom for the world. If not, nothing else will do.
God’s
words in today’s first reading are a caution we ignore at our own
expense. “Son of man,” God says to Ezekiel and to all of us, “I have
appointed you as a sentinel. If I say to the wicked, ‘you will surely
die’ – and you do not warn them or speak out to dissuade them . . . I will hold you responsible for their blood.”
Here’s
what that means for each of us: We live in a time that calls for
sentinels and public witness. Every Christian in every era faces the
same task. But you and I are responsible for this moment.
Today. Now. We need to “speak out,” not only for religious liberty and
the ideals of the nation we love, but for the sacredness of life and the
dignity of the human person – in other words, for the truth of what it
means to be made in the image and likeness of God.
We need to be
witnesses of that truth not only in word, but also in deed. In the end,
we’re missionaries of Jesus Christ, or we’re nothing at all. And we
can’t share with others what we don’t live faithfully and joyfully
ourselves.
When we leave this Mass today, we need to render unto
Caesar those things that bear his image. But we need to render ourselves
unto God — generously, zealously, holding nothing back. To the extent
we let God transform us into his own image, we will – by the example of
our lives – fulfill our duty as citizens of the United States, but much
more importantly, as disciples of Jesus Christ.
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