Reading I: Isaiah 45:1, 4-6
In Second Isaiah we find a remarkable treatment of the Persian emperor Cyrus. Although
he is a pagan king, he is saluted as the anointed of YHWH, his servant raised
up to conquer Babylon and to restore God’s people to their homeland:
For the sake of my servant Jacob,
and Israel my chosen,
I call you by your name,
I surname you, though you do not know me.
This inaugurates a line of Jewish teaching about the state, including the
pagan state, that culminates in Jesus’ pronouncement about the payment of tribute
money (today’s gospel) and in Paul’s teaching about the Roman state under
the emperor Nero as the servant and minister of God. |
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Responsorial Psalm: Ps 96:1, 3, 4-5, 7-8, 9-10*
Another selection
from this psalm is used on the second Sunday of the year
in series C. It is one of the enthronement psalms,
which, according to some scholars, were sung at a (hypothetical)
annual feast in which the king was enthroned in order to
symbolize
YHWH’s kingship over his people. As the king took his seat upon
his earthly throne, the whole people would have chanted this
psalm
in celebration of the kingship of YHWH.
This psalm (which,
incidentally, tends to be overworked in Anglicanism because,
I suspect, of the Book of Common Prayer’s mistranslation
of the first line of the third stanza as “worship the
Lord in the beauty of holiness”) has close affinities
in theological outlook with Second Isaiah. It emphasizes
the sovereignty of YHWH over all nations and thus forms a
fitting response to the proclamation of God’s appointment
of Cyrus. |
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Reading II: 1 Thessalonians 1:1-5b
This letter
to the Thessalonians is the earliest written document in the
New Testament. It was written by Paul during his stay at Corinth
in 50 C.E.. Paul had founded the church at Thessalonica not very
long before. He had had to leave it hurriedly, and, in his anxiety
over his recent converts, he sent Timothy to see how things were
going.
The report Timothy
brought back was largely favorablehence the warm tone
of the opening thanksgiving that forms the main part of
today’s reading. But there were also a few problems in Thessalonica;
we will meet them on the thirty-second and thirty-third Sundays. |
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Gospel: Matthew 22:15-21
Apart from a few stylistic changes, Matthew has taken over
this pericope substantially in its Marcan form. He also retains
the Marcan context, where it precedes the
question of the Sadducees about the resurrection (Mark 12:18-27 / Matt 22:23-33),
though Matthew has inserted the parable of the great banquet between the parable
of the vineyard and the present pericope.
Also, Matthew has rewritten the introduction
so as to speak of a plot to entrap Jesus. The result of these changes is to emphasize
that the episode of the tribute money was part of Jesus’ conflict with his opponents.
It thus is part of the material with which Matthew seeks to speak directly to
the situation of the church in his day, locked as it was in mortal combat with
the Jewish leaders of Jamnia over the question of what was true orthodoxy and
who were the true people of God.
The Pharisees’ question about the tribute money is a classic example of the so-called
pronouncement story, with its threefold form of setting, action, and pronouncement.
Everything in this story is subordinated to the punchline: “Give
therefore to the emperor the things that are the emperor’s, and to God the things that
are God’s.”
This pronouncement has been interpreted in many different ways in the course of
Christian history. Often, like Rom 13, it has been construed in the interests
of a conservative throne-and-altar theology as in Lutheran orthodoxy that
reached its tragic climax in the German Christian movement during the Nazi
period. Exegesis in Germany has swung to the other extreme today: “Only
a penny for Caesar, everything else for God.”
A more reasonable interpretation would be that Caesar has his own legitimate
but limited sphere, and even that he holds it under God and is responsible to
God for its proper governance.
This does not necessarily meanthough in
certain circumstances it has meant and could mean againthat the state itself
has to profess Christianity. It means that the state must be what it is and perform
the proper functions of a state in maintaining law and order and promoting the
welfare of its citizens.
But when it oversteps the mark and puts itself in the
place of God, Christians are in the last resort absolved from obedience. We must
give to Caesar the things that are Caesar’s and not the things that are God’s.
We must obey God rather than human beings.
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Reginald H. Fuller,
Daniel Westberg |
Copyright © 1984, 2006
by The Order of St. Benedict, Inc., Collegeville, Minnesota.
All rights reserved. Used by permission from Liturgical Press, Collegeville, Minnesota 56321
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Preaching the Lectionary:
The Word of God for the Church Today
Reginald H. Fuller and Daniel Westberg. Liturgical Press. 2006 (Third Edition), pp. 194-196.
*Webmaster Note: Commentary on the Responsorial Psalm
is from the 1984 Revised Edition, p. 182. |
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Art by Martin Erspamer, O.S.B. (formerly Steve Erspamer, S.M.)
from Religious
Clip Art for the Liturgical Year (A, B, and C).
Used by permission of Liturgy Training Publications. This art may be reproduced only by parishes who purchase the collection
in book or CD-ROM form. For more information go to:
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