Floyd Queen
About
-
Posted Answers
Answer
Illinois' campus has become swept up by the belted kingfisher. The Chicago Tribune reported Saturday about a groundswell movement for the bird to officially replace Chief Illiniwek .
Answer is posted for the following question.
Answer
The more famous phrase used today comes from the King James Version: “Then saith he unto them, Render therefore unto Caesar the things which are Caesar's; and unto God the things that are God's.”
I’ve heard various, challenging ways of interpreting a teaching like this. Some are primarily about a historical dispute—an interpretation about the political authority of Caesar in the region, an interpretation over whether paying tribute to Caesar freed them from contributing tribute at the temple, and so on.
But another, and greater, challenge is to consider what the “render unto God” component means—ultimately, our fealty as followers of Christ is to God, in all faith and love and obedience due Him. There are deep and abiding challenges for many Christians throughout the centuries about the scope of obedience to earthly authority when that authority runs up against one’s commitments to Christ, the martyrs first and foremost among them. A clever interpretation I once heard is that just as the face of Caesar is stamped upon the coin, the face of God is stamped upon man imago Dei, and it is why we belong to Him.
Finally, the more nuanced interpretation, and I think the best answer, recognizes the clarity of Jesus’s answer—one’s obligation is not an either/or, but a harmonious and seamless obligation to obey both at once. This is the brilliance of Jesus’s answer, and it is recognition that the Pharisees’ either/or is a false choice. Jesus’s response is not a clever way to parcel out the either/or; it is instead a clever turning of the question into a both/and. While there is a distinction He identifies, it is not an impossible-to-reconcile distinction. (It’s worth emphasizing not everyone agrees with this interpretation—after all, this is a hard teaching!)
Now, at times, matters of conscience in good-faith obedience to Christ will often define the scope of obligation to earthly authorities where the two cannot be reconciled with one another—but that is assuredly not the point of this passage, in which Jesus explains that the paying of taxes to Caesar would not run afoul of the dictates of either earthly or heavenly kingdoms.
That’s a long wind-up for this blog. But it’s the wind-up for a recent per curiam Sixth Circuit opinion from a panel consisting of Judges Jeff Sutton, John Nalbandian, and David McKeague. Professor Josh Blackman has an excerpt about restrictions on religious assemblies due to the coronavirus pandemic:
Professor Blackman emphasizes the last sentence, with his gloss, “The last sentence had a subtle, but effective reference to religion.”
Maybe subtle and effective, but, I think, assuredly wrong—at least, from a biblical perspective.
First, the opinion turns what is a Christian mandate into a judicial line-drawing exercise. The Christian has obligations to both God and man. I doubt this kind of exercise would be appropriate in, say, any other case of non-Christians—could you imagine a case of a judge trying to ascertain what things are God’s to those who don’t believe in Him? Are judges supposed to make these distinctions?
Second, the opinion turns a question about harmonizing heavenly and earthly authority into a question of distinctive domains between the two of them. Again, at a superficial level, Jesus is offering a distinction between the two in His answer; but His answer only makes sense, I think, in that he converts the either/or into a both/and.
Third, the opinion uses the phrase by defaulting to, as Professor Marc DeGirolami says, “plenipotentiary powers” of the state, then asking whether Christians are exempt from those powers. That’s certainly not the context of that inquiry for Jesus, as noted above.
I have little to say about the merits of the decision—of balancing existing restrictions on assembly (including religious assembly) during a pandemic, of the appropriate scope of executive authority, and the like. Others may have much more to say.
People can use a phrase from Jesus, from Shakespeare, or from Thomas Jefferson to advance a particular line of reasoning, even if it’s not what the author or speaker intended in its context. But, I think, for the Christian, phrases like this, pulled from Scripture, should be reviewed skeptically. They are not necessarily appropriate interpretations of the Gospel, in my view—whether one even necessarily agrees with my interpretations above or not. Indeed, here, the court inverts many of the principles of the Gospel that Christ places upon His followers. And, in my view, it’s a disappointing decision to use a phrase like this for such a purpose, when it tends to confuse rather than illuminate the scope of of Christian obligation.
Answer is posted for the following question.
What is due to caesar?
Answer
Freedom Wheels BMX Pro Shop
Address: 5/7 Coolibah Way, Bibra Lake WA 6063, Australia
Answer is posted for the following question.
Are you aware of best bmx shop in Perth, Australia?
Answer
Adina Apartment Hotel Darwin Waterfront
Address: 7 Kitchener Dr, Darwin City NT 0800, Australia
Answer is posted for the following question.
Could you suggest best accommodation for families in Darwin, Australia?
Answer
Canberra Centenary Trail
Address: Parliament Dr, Capital Hill ACT 2600, Australia
Answer is posted for the following question.
Do you know best riding spots in Canberra, Australia?
Answer
Within Russia there are six main environmental belts (some with subdivisions): Arctic desert, tundra, taiga, mixed and deciduous forest, wooded steppe, and
Answer is posted for the following question.
What is russia environment like?