Today,
the Gospel presents to our consideration a “famous”
assertion from Jesus Christ: «Return to Caesar what is
Caesar's, and to God what is God's» (Mt 22:21).
We
would not be able to properly grasp the meaning of this sentence
without bearing in mind the context which Jesus said it into: «The
Pharisees went out and took counsel on how they could trap Jesus with
his own words» (Mt 22:15) but «Jesus understood
their evil intent» (v. 18). Thus, Jesus reply is a calculated
one. When they heard it, the Pharisees were surprised, as they did
not expect it. If Jesus' answer would have clearly been against
Caesar, they might had been able to denounce him; if, on the
contrary, Jesus had been in favor of paying the taxes to Caesar, they
would have left very pleased with their ruse. But, while not speaking
against Caesar, Jesus has relativized his reply: we must return to
God what is God’s, and God is the Lord of even the powers of
this world.
As
every other ruler, Caesar cannot exert an arbitrary power,
because his power has been left to him in warrant; as the servants of
the parable of the talents, that had to account to their Master for
the use given to his money. In St. John's Gospel, Jesus tells
Pilatus: «You would have no power over me if it had not been
given to you from above» (Jn 19:10). Jesus does not want
to appear as a political agitator. He simply put things right.
Matthew
22:21 has, at times, been interpreted in the sense that Church should
not “mix up in political life”, but mind only its
salvific mission and faith. But this interpretation is totally false,
because dealing with God’s matters does not mean to mind only
the cult of the Church, but to be also concerned about men, who are
God's children, and about man's justice. Pretending the Church does
not move from the sacristy, while being deaf, blind and mute before
the moral and human problems and abuses of our time, amounts to
stealing from God what belongs to God. «Tolerance that only
accepts God as a private opinion, but denies Him the public knowledge
(...) is not tolerance, but hypocrisy» (Benedict XVI).