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Article_'We must obey God before we obey men'

Homilies | Sunday, October 19, 2014

'We must obey God before we obey men'

Homily by Archbishop Wenski during Mass at Schott Center

Archbishop Thomas Wenski preached this homily during a Mass celebrated Oct. 19 at the St. Jude Chapel of the Schott Communities for the Deaf and Disabled

In today's Gospel, two groups, Pharisees and Herodians, who were used mostly to fighting with each other, join forces to see if they can trip up Jesus. The question put to Jesus was really a trap — to answer the question either way would be to put Jesus in a bind: To say “don’t pay the tax” would get him in trouble with the Roman authorities; and to say “pay the tax” would cause him to lose credibility with the Jewish masses. 

Jesus’ famous response was a deft way of getting out of a tight situation and turning the tables on his opponents, and in doing so he unmasks their hypocrisy – for the Pharisees, even if they made a big show of opposing the Roman idolaters, carried the coins with the images of the “divine” emperor in their purses.  

“Give to Caesar what belongs to Caesar and to God what belongs to God.” This is Jesus’ famous answer. But since everything belongs to God, Jesus effectively relativizes the power of all the Caesars of all times. Jesus is not arguing for two independent spheres of power and obligation – that of Caesar and that of God. No earthly ruler can claim absolute sovereignty — for even Caesar is under God. As the prophet says in today’s first reading, “The Lord is God, there is no other.” 

Even so, the Church has always taught that civil authorities, in as much as they derive their power from God and exercise their authority within its proper limits, should be obeyed: We do have to pay our taxes. But, the sphere of Caesar — politics, if you will, is not a territory protected from religious evaluation and criticism. If Caesar is under God, then his laws are open to being critiqued by the Gospel. 

In our pledge of allegiance, we affirm “one nation under God.” And as long as that is so, the voices of faith have a legitimate and necessary place in the public square in our nation. The Church, when she makes her proposals about what can contribute to human flourishing in society — whether we are talking about the protection of unborn children, migration reform, the sanctity of the family or marriage as a union between one man and one woman — we are not interfering in Caesar’s business, we are not meddling into politics. We are being good citizens by making our own unique contribution to the common good. After all, we think we have something to say — we do have a Word to share. This is why even though the Church, while she should never be “partisan,” cannot help but be “political.” In other words, what we say and teach inevitably touches on “politics” with a capital “P” — though we should never go down to the level of partisanship, which could be described as politics with a small “p”.  

When political authorities set themselves up as God — or even as above God — they move out of what is properly theirs: In doing so, they lose their legitimacy and cannot bind the consciences of their citizens. Thus throughout history, when faced with conflicting demands, one from one's religious faith and one from one's civic responsibilities, the Church has responded: We must obey God before we obey men. We propose the Gospel —with its vision of man — as the solution to the world’s problems; but too often those in power, when threatened by this vision of the human person, will see the Gospel as the problem — and the result is religious persecution, a persecution that has always accompanied the Church on her earthly pilgrimage. 

Here in this country, we have been blessed with a constitutional regime that, at least until now, has respected the freedom of religion and conscience. For example, our laws have historically recognized the right of citizens to conscientious objection and thus the freedom from the state coercing them to act against their conscience or religious beliefs. 

The ascendant secularism of our society today is increasingly eroding this understanding. We see this in the refusal of the Obama administration to recognize the rights of citizens not to be coerced into paying for other people's abortions. We see this in the increasing intolerance within society itself to those who hold for the traditional understanding of traditional marriage as a union between one man and one woman. The coercive power of the state is being invoked to force people to "get with the program" so to speak — for example businesses which decline to bake a cake or rent a hall to a same sex couple are being forced to comply or be fined.

Here in the state of Florida, Step-Up scholarships, funded by corporate tax credits so that children from low income families can benefit from private education, are being challenged in court by the public school teacher unions and the state association of school boards. Such scholarships recognize the right of parents to choose what’s best for the education of their children. Thousands of children here in the archdiocese – mostly African Americans and Hispanics – benefit from these scholarships which ultimately save the taxpayer money in our state.

The right to religious freedom, the right to conscientious objection, is fundamental to all other rights. And religious freedom is more than the freedom to worship – it must also include our freedom to serve according to our beliefs, in ways that are consistent with our beliefs. If the state can force citizens to act against their consciences or their deeply held religious beliefs, then all we have left is totalitarianism.

The 20th century was marked by the struggles against the hard totalitarianism represented by communism and fascism; the 21st century is already being marked by a struggle against the soft totalitarianism of "political correctness" being imposed by elites in politics and in academia.

Whose image was on the coin? Caesar’s. So give to Caesar what is Caesar’s. But whose image is engraved on the human person? God’s. Every human being is made in the image and likeness of God. The life and dignity of the human person are not gifts or entitlements conferred by the state: they are God-given. We give God what is God’s when we honor the dignity of each and every human being in all their diversity and difference. We give God what is God’s when we promote and protect the right to life, the right to education, the right to health care, the right to fair and equal treatment of every person regardless of creed, race, abilities or disabilities or “different abilities.” 

This month is Respect Life Month – and I am happy to be here at the Schott Center today to celebrate holy Mass. This ministry is also a witness to the life and dignity of each human being.We are grateful for the good work that is done here every day. We are also grateful for the benefactors of the Schott Center. Caesar’s coin can be used to advance God’s purposes. May God continue to bless each and every one of you. 

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