Technology is amazing. You can Google almost any question and find out the answer immediately.
For example, “Can dogs eat bananas?”
“Why do cats purr?”
Or, “How many gallons of water are in the Atlantic Ocean?”
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I Googled that one.
There’s an approximate 82 billion billion gallons of water in the Atlantic Ocean!
Pretty impressive.
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But there are other questions – deeper questions – that Google can’t answer. They’re questions, which even the people in Jesus’ time had to answer.
For example, what’s the meaning of my life? Why am I here? Who’s Jesus? Is he who he says he is – God? Or is he out of his mind?
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Even the ancients knew how to interpret simple things like weather patterns. But not everyone made the effort to discern life’s deeper questions.
This is why Jesus’ calls them hypocrites.
God gives each of us a mind to think, a heart to feel, and a conscience to discern his will. But some in the crowds following Jesus were shallow; they ignored life’s bigger questions, and so missed the meaning of it all.
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I’m sure our minds will be filled with dozens – if not hundreds – of questions today, like why cats purr.
But take the time to contemplate the deeper questions, too.
Perhaps some of the most important being: “Who is Jesus? How has he changed my life? What will it take to follow him today?”
During Jesus’ time, the night was divided into three parts – the first, the second, and the third watch.
The third watch concluded at sunrise.
Soldiers often took turns staying awake during these different watches of the night to protect their land from invading armies.
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Normally, soldiers only covered a single shift – the first, second, or third.
But Jesus tells us in today’s Gospel to act like we’re covering all three; to prepare for his coming by staying alert all night, meaning throughout our lives.
His words are meant to change the way we think; the way we speak; the way we pray; the way we live our lives.
We should live in a state of preparedness.
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It’s not something we may consider often, but if Christ returned today, would I be ready?
Or are there some changes I need to make in my life?
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“Blessed are those servants,” Jesus says, “whom the master finds vigilant on his arrival,” even into the second or third watch of the night.
One of the hot button issues in the upcoming election is taxes.
How much should the government withhold from our paychecks? Should corporations and the wealthy pay more? Should we pay less? Should anyone be exempt?
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These types of questions are as old as cities themselves. And they were just as controversial then as they are now.
In today’s Gospel, Jesus is pulled right into the center of the debate. The Pharisees ask him, “Should the Jews pay their taxes to Caesar? Or not?”
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There seems to be no right answer.
Most Jews hated paying their taxes to Rome. Giving what little money they had to a foreign government dominating them was frustrating at best. They wanted their own government and their own land.
God was their king, not Caesar.
So, if Jesus tells the Pharisees to pay their taxes, then he’ll be accused of disloyalty to the Jewish nation; no one sympathetic to Rome could possibly deserve their support.
But if Jesus tells the Jews not to pay their taxes, then he’ll be labeled as an enemy of the State, leading to his arrest, and possibly his death.
It’s a catch-22.
Should Jesus risk his life and support his own nation? Or comply with the powers that be?
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Never to be outdone, Jesus turns the Pharisees’ clever question into a greater challenge of discipleship.
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Not having any coins himself, he turns to the Pharisees, and says, “Bring me a denarius to look at.” A denarius was the Roman coin bearing the face of Caesar.
And where else do the Pharisees draw a coin from but their very own pockets? A reminder to them that they were complicit and paid their taxes, too.
Caesar provided his citizens – including the Jews – with water, roads, commerce, and the protection of an army. As emperor, he held power over earthly things, so it was just to give Caesar their coin.
“Repay to Caesar what belongs to Caesar,” Jesus says, “but to God what belongs to God.”
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What belongs to God?
We do.
While a denarius bore the image of Caesar, human beings bear the image and likeness of God. So Caesar gets our coin, but God deserves our lives.
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How, then, do we give God our lives?
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By infusing every decision we make with faith.
Faith isn’t just one big decision we make at some point in our lives; it’s a thousand little decisions throughout our day.
As someone once said, “Faith is lived minute by minute.”
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Take, for example, the two fundamental commandments of Jesus: love your God and love your neighbor.
In this heated political climate, it’s become increasingly difficult to love all of those whom we should consider our neighbor.
But those who disagree with us – even our sworn enemies – bear the image of God. We should love them, too.
Day by day, minute by minute.
Think about the way we’ve treated one another over the past few months. Do we slander others with our speech or post divisive things online?
Have our hearts become so hardened that we cannot bear to listen to another opinion? Do we find ourselves increasingly angry, judgmental, and filled with negativity, as opposed to love?
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Faith is a series of small decisions that humbles our ego and expands our heart. It influences our speech; our behavior; our beliefs; our morals; our entire lives, minute by minute, day by day.
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So, how might my faith influence – or change – my words and actions this week? How can I give the Lord – and my neighbor – a little more of my heart?