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[The following sermon is taken from volume V:294-306 of The Sermons
of Martin Luther, published by Baker Book House (Grand Rapids,
MI, 1983). It was originally published in 1905 in English by Lutherans
in All Lands (Minneapolis, MN), as The Precious and Sacred Writings
of Martin Luther, vol. 14. The pagination from the Baker edition
has been maintained for referencing. This e-text was scanned and
edited by Richard P. Bucher, it is in the public domain and it
may be copied and distributed without restriction.]
CAESAR
AND GOD, OR CHRIST'S ANSWER TO THE QUESTION OF THE PHARISEES,
IS IT LAWFUL TO GIVE TRIBUTE UNTO CAESAR?
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1.
In this Gospel there is pictured to us, how high reason and human
wisdom agree with the divine wisdom, and how shamelessly they
attack even when they wish to be the most prudent; as takes place
here among the Pharisees who were the best and the most intelligent
people among the Jews, as they also prove themselves to be; yet
their wisdom must become foolishness. They could not catch Christ
in his sermons nor in his works; and yet they would gladly have
had found a reason to put him to death. Therefore they thought
to seize him in the most subtle manner, and propounded to him
a pointed syllogism, so pointed that human reason could not have
devised a more pointed one; and said to him:
"Teacher,
we know that thou art true, and teachest the way of God in truth,
and carest not for any one: for thou regardest not the person
of men. Tell us therefore, What thinkest thou? Is it lawful to
give tribute unto Caesar, or not?"
2.
They imagined thus: now we will lay hold of him: for he must answer
either yes or no. Does he say yes, then we have conquered him;
does he say no, then he is also caught. In that they say: "Teacher,"
they aim to compel him to answer and rightly agree with them;
and in that they say, "We know that thou are true,"
they admonish him of his office.
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Where
should Christ flee? Every door was closed to him. But he would
not escape through the opening they made.
3.
Was not this a subtle device? Do they not sufficiently show that
they were prudent people? Whichever way their Lord had answered
he would have been taken. Yea, did they not act wisely enough
in that they brought with them the servants of Herod? and thought,
indeed, they would accomplish their end by stratagem, so that
he should not escape. They thought thus: Wait, we will now counsel
him; does he say no, then the servants of Herod are present and
will put him to death as a revolutionist and as one who sets himself
against the Roman government. Does he say yes, then he will speak
against the independence of the Jewish people, and we will excite
the people against him. For the Jews wish to be a free people,
and to have their own king, of their own blood, as was promised
to them by God through Moses when he wrote in Deuteronomy 17,15:
"Thou shalt surely set him king over thee, whom Jehovah thy
God shall choose: one from among thy brethren shalt thou set king
over thee; thou mayest not put a foreigner over thee who is not
thy brother." And they did not know differently than that
the same kingdom should stand until the time of the true king,
until the time of Christ; as the patriarch Jacob preached concerning
it and said: "The scepter shall not depart from Judah, nor
a lawgiver from between his feet, until Shiloh come," Gen.
49, 10. And to this end God also chose especially this people
and formed a kingdom from them only for the sake of Christ. They
had many other sayings to the end that they should not serve any
one, they were the head and not the tail, etc., Deut. 28, 44.
This and other like passages moved the Pharisees and scribes among
the people and they boasted of it; as is now beaten into the people
that the Church cannot err. Therefore they thought thus: Does
he say yes, then he blasphemes against God and is worthy of death
as a blasphemer of God, and the people will stone him; for God
promised and agreed to give this people liberty and they were
in all times God's people even in the midst of their captivity.
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4.
However, at that time as at the present, they had no king and
therefore there arose among the people at large a great murmur,
faction and insurrection. For this people were educated by the
law that they should have a king of their own flesh and blood,
as I said; therefore they did not cease to set themselves against
foreign kings and rulers until they were destroyed and many consequently
suffered death. And this happened frequently; for they were a
stiffnecked, rude and hardened people; therefore the Romans. who
at the time had the rule and authority over them, protected the
country well and they had to divide it into four provinces, and
in all places they thoroughly took possession by means of princes
and tetrarchs; in order that they, thus divided, might not so
soon come together and create revolution, so that they could be
better kept in subjection where they wished to rebel against the
Roman empire. Hence, Pilot was a governor appointed by Rome in
the country of the Jews; Herod a tetrarch of Galilee, and his
brother Philip tetrarch in the region of Iturea and Trachonitis,
and Lysanias tetrarch of Abilene, as Luke relates in 3, 1, and
all for the purpose to make the Jews subjects of Rome. Hence the
Jews became angry, raging and foolish, and especially at the time
of Christ when they greatly desired to have their own king.
Consequently
the Pharisees now devised this scheme and thought thus: Wait,
the Romans desire to have the authority and rule; if he answers
no to our question, then the tetrarch is at hand and will behead
him; does he say yes, then the people in a mass will rise up against
him and we will accomplish our end. They wish thus, as they think,
to find cause to put the Lord to death, or forever suppress his
doctrine and work among the people.
5.
As the Jews now do here so it is everywhere that the principal
things are overlooked and we worry ourselves about other unnecessary
matters. Thus the Pharisees here take in hand and concern themselves
about whether they are free or not, seeing they had in the law
and in the Word of God the promise that they should be subject
to none other
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than
to their own king and yet now they are subject to the Roman emperor.
They learned in their Scriptures how they should honor God and
love their neighbor; they let go of that and concern themselves
about other matters. They had the promise if they did according
to the Word and commandment of God they should be a free people.
About doing this they did not concern themselves and yet they
wished to be free and have their own king. We act also in the
very same way. We wish to enjoy Christian liberty and imagine
if we destroy pictures or are disobedient to the government that
we are by virtue of this Christians, and in this way we overlook
faith and love.
6.
But what does Christ do when the Pharisees so cunningly lay hold
of him? He slays them with their own words and catches them by
means of their own counsel, by which they thought to catch him,
he says neither yes nor no; as the Evangelist writes and says:
"But
Jesus perceived their wickedness, and said, Why make ye trial
of me, ye hypocrites? Show me the tribute money. And they brought
unto him a denarius. And he saith unto them, Whose is this image
and superscription? They say unto him, Caesar's.''
7.
Here you see the master stroke the Lord uses. He asks them to
hand him the tribute money and inquires whose image and superscription
it bears. Then they answer him Caesar's. He then freely concluded
that they were subject to Caesar, to whom they were obligated
to pay tax and tribute. As if he should say: Have you thus permitted
Caesar to come among you, so that he mints your money, and his
coin is in circulation and favor among you, then he has triumphed
in the game, as if he said: you are to blame that Caesar is your
ruler. What should they do now in the face of this answer? They
marveled and went away, they thought they would conquer him in
a masterly manner, but their wisdom and shrewdness deceived them.
8.
This is written for our consolation, in order that we who believe
in Christ should know that we have a wisdom that far surpasses
all other wisdom; a strength and right-
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eousness,
which are not to be compared with any human strength or righteousness;
for against the Holy Spirit no counsel can prevail. We have the
power through Christ to trample sin under our feet and to triumph
over death, also a wisdom that surpasses the wisdom of the whole
world. If Christ live in us by faith then we possess him who establishes
this in us; but it is not experienced except in times of temptation
and opposition: therefore if I make use of it then he comes and
gives me the power vigorously to press through all difficulties
to victory.
9.
In like manner we should not worry that our doctrine will fail
and be put to shame. For let even all the wise and prudent of
the world together rise up against the Word of God; they overlook
the joke that they opposed it, that it took place for their sake.
It may indeed happen that they may howl and bite and snap against
it so that the people think the Gospel will fail; but when they
set themselves against it and wish to overthrow it, then it is
certain that they are weak, and by the same trick they wished
to seize and take Christ, they themselves are finally caught.
As we see in this Gospel, and here and there in the writings of
Paul and especially in the history of St. Stephen we see how they
failed to quote the Scriptures aright, yea, that which they did
quote is used against them, for the Jews charged Stephen that
he spoke against the temple, Acts 6, 7, and also against God who
told them to build the temple, they brought forth passages of
Scripture by which they tried to suppress and conquer him; but
Stephen, full of the Holy Ghost, showed unto them by one passage
of Scripture after another how God did not live in houses made
with hands. David wished to build him a house, but he did not
desire it. What was the reason? God had lived a long time before
David's day among his people; he must indeed be a poor God who
needs a house for his dwelling place. And thus by many histories
he proves that God does not dwell in houses made by man. What
should the Jews do? They have the passage clearly before their
eyes, which they
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quoted
against Stephen, (that he witnessed against themselves).
10.
In like manner must all come to shame and be overthrown who rise
up against this divine wisdom and the Word of God. Consequently
no one should fear even if all the wisdom and power of the world
oppose the Gospel, yea, even if they plan to suppress it by the
shedding of blood; for the more blood is shed, the more Christians
there will be. The blood of Christians, as Tertullian says, is
the seed from which Christians grow. Satan must be drowned in
the blood of Christians, consequently there is no art that can
suppress the Gospel by force. It is with the Gospel as with the
palmtree, which has the nature and character that it flourishes
at the top, and one may laden it as heavy as he wishes; and especially
if it be used as a beam or support it does not weaken under any
burden, but rises in spite of the burden. Such is also the nature
of the Gospel, the more one opposes it the greater it lays hold
of us and the more one burdens it, the more it grows.
11.
Therefore we should not be afraid of powers. But we should fear
our prosperity and good days which cause us more harm than our
anguish and persecution; and we should not be afraid in the face
of the wisdom and the shrewdness of the world, for they can do
us no harm. Yes, the more the wisdom of the world opposes the
truth, the purer and clearer does the truth become, consequently
the Gospel can experience nothing better than that the world rise
up against it with all its force and wisdom; yea, the more my
conscience, sin and satan attack me, the stronger does my righteousness
become. For the sins which worry me, pain me; then I persevere
harder and harder in prayer and in my cry to God; then faith and
righteousness become stronger and stronger. This is what St. Paul
means when he says in 2 Cor. 12, 9: my power is made perfect in
weakness. Now since we possess such a treasure that becomes stronger
by virtue of trial and opposition we should not fear, but be of
good courage and rejoice in tribulation; as St. Paul says to the
Romans, Rom. 5, 3: and as the Apostles
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did
who departed from the presence of the council with great rejoicing,
and thanked God that they were counted worthy to suffer dishonor
for the Name, Acts 5, 41. If satan were only prudent enough to
keep quiet and let the Gospel be preached, he would receive less
injury from it; for if the Gospel is not attacked it completely
rusts and has no occasion or reason to make its power and influence
manifest.
12.
Thus we are here still secure, no one attacks us; as a result
we always continue just as we were, yea, we become worse. In that
certain enemies attack us with the Scriptures, they gain very
little. In that they have taken up their pen against us, they
accomplish no more than if they blew into the fire; but if they
had cast us into the fire or beat our heads, there would indeed
be more Christians for our sake.
13.
Consequently we have here a consolation, when we are attacked;
that Christ is in us and holds the field of victory through us.
Christ is so near us that we triumph at all times through him
because we abide in Christ. As long as we do not have opposition
taking us by the neck, he does nothing; but when we are attacked
and conquered, then he is at hand and puts all our enemies to
shame.
14.
Here we may also learn the lesson that those who are a little
more than other people, brighter, stronger, and endowed with special
gifts of reason, nature and fortune, who are more artistic, learned
and intelligent than others, who indeed are gifted with speech
and are talented to lead other people and are able to rule and
arrange everything in the best way, they are the most opposed
to God and to faith, and trust more in their own strength and
reason than in God. For nature, poisoned as it is, leads them
to the point that they cannot and will not use their gifts to
the best advantage, for the welfare and edification of their neighbor;
for they trust in their gifts, and think they will obtain now
this, now that, and never remember that they also need God's help
and strength to that end. As the Pharisees and scribes do here,
who are so certain, as they
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think,
if they thus lay hold of Christ, they would take him captive,
for it is not possible, they say, for him to escape, we have ensnared
him whether he says yes, or no.
15.
Behold, how cunning and perverse human nature is! Methinks this
is well pictured here. Aye, there is nought in man but evil, lying
and deceiving, cunning and all manner of mischief. Indeed, in
his very nature man is nothing else than a liar, Ps. 116, 11.
One may not entrust anything to man. Do not imagine that any one
tells you the truth; man lies in whatsoever he speaks. And why?
The fountain is evil, that is to say, the heart is not good; therefore
also the rivers flowing therefrom cannot be good. Hence does the
Lord oftimes call men a generation of vipers and a brood of serpents,
Mat. 22, 34. Is not that a beautiful title for man? Just you go
and boast of your piety, your strength, or your free will! Before
the world indeed one may be fine and pious, shining with holiness;
but at bottom nothing will be found but a generation of vipers
and a serpent's brood, and that most of all in the worthiest,
most estimable, intelligent and wise people. If you peruse the
history of the Greeks, Jews and Romans, you will find that the
best and wisest rulers, who according to the judgment of men,
governed well, have not thought of God, but confided in themselves
alone; to God's might they have attributed nothing.
16.
From this it follows that the less adroit a person is before the
world, the less will he do against God; and those who are ingenious
and honored in the world, lie and deceive more than the others,
thinking to cover up their deception and malice by deceitful and
cunning acts. True it is they may full well conceal it; the Holy
Spirit, however, has a keen eye and knows them exceeding well.
Therefore Scripture often calls such fellows lions, wolves, bears,
swine, and wild beasts, namely, such as rage, eating and devouring
everything with their deceit. Hence in the Old Testament the Jews
were forbidden to eat some animals, as being unclean- those that
are enumerated and others--for no other reason than that it might
be thus indicated that
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there
are some people who are strong, mighty, rich, adroit, learned,
intelligent and wise, people that must be shunned and fled from
as though they were something unclean; such people as mislead
and deceive others by their appearance, their power and wisdom.
For people will not consider them as such, nor believe that they
are men who plan evil things and dare to carry them out. No man
whatever, therefore, is to be trusted or believed. Believe no
one: he will mislead you wherever he can. Aye, if indeed you trust
any one, you will act against God, not trusting in him. For it
is written, Jer. 17, 57: "Cursed be the man that trusteth
in man; blessed is the man that trusteth in the Lord."
17.
Now someone might object: What is to be done? Must we not have
intercourse and dealings one with the other; and how otherwise
could human life continue? Surely we must buy and sell and market
our goods among the people? If no one should believe and trust
the other, all human dealings would come to an end! I answer:
It is true one must deal with the other, and one needs the other's
help. But that I demand: Whatever you deal about among men, in
buying or selling, you are to consider it as something uncertain,
which is not to be trusted and believed in. For certain it is,
if you trust any man, you are already deceived, for human nature,
in itself, cannot but lie and deceive. Everything is uncertain
among men, their deeds and words are unstable; that you may well
believe.
18.
Therefore we are to put all our trust only in the Lord, and say:
0 Lord, thou art my life, my soul and body, my goods and possessions,
and all that is mine. Do thou direct and ordain it all according
to thy divine will. In thee do I trust, in thee do I believe.
Thou wilt surely not desert me in such a perilous undertaking
with such and such a man, whom I do not trust. If thou knowest
it to be good for me, then see to it that he be true to me; if
thou dost not see that it will help me, then do not let him keep
his word. I am content, thy will be done.
19.
As soon, however, as you think a purchaser to be an
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honest
man who will keep his word, and of whom you are certain that he
will not deceive you; so soon you have fallen away from God, have
prayed to a spectre and put your trust in a liar. Therefore, in
dealing with a man, just think in this wise: If he is true, it
is good; if not, why then, in God's name, let him be; he cannot
do otherwise than lie and deceive. I will leave it all to God;
he will make all well.
20.
Out of such false and wicked confidence placed in man there has
crept into Christianity the abuse of the worship of saints. By
this the Christian church, that is, the true assembly of the faithful,
have suffered notable decline and damage. What else has saints'
worship been but solely a devilish thing? For thus have people
reasoned: Such and such a man has been holy; such things has he
said and done; therefore we will follow after him, and teach and
do likewise. St. Jerome, St. Augustine, and Gregory have done
this; therefore it is right, and I will believe it. St. Francis,
Benedict, Dominicus, and St. Bernard have lived thus, have done
such and such a thing; therefore will I also live thus, and do
as they have done. Furthermore, St. Augustine has been saved by
such a rule. Alas, what a poor, unstable, miserable thing this
is, nought but lies and dreams of man. I should damn St. Augustine
and his rule, had he laid it down for the purpose of being saved
thereby. So blind and foolish is our reason, that it will accept
even a spectre and a fiction., whereas only God's Word is to be
accepted in matters of salvation. If, for example, Herod, Pilate,
Caiaphas and Hanes preached the Gospel, I should have to accept
it. And, on the other hand, if those who are considered saints
arose and preached lies, about regulations, hoods and gowns, tonsures,
ceremonies and other inventions of man, I ought not to accept
them. For in such cases not the persons are to be considered,
but that which they preach.
21.
Now someone might say: See here, would you be wiser than all church
fathers and saints, than all bishops and rulers of the whole world?
Far be it from me. I do not claim to be wiser than they. But this
is true. It is im-
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possible
for that which is wise, prudent, great, handsome, mighty and powerful
before the world to agree with the Word of God. For thus it is
ordained by God, that such people must always persecute the Gospel;
if they were not such the Gospel would not shine and triumph as
it does. The Roman emperors Hadrian, Trajan and Diocletian were
the wisest of rulers, and reigned so well that all the world praised
their government. Yet they persecuted the Gospel and could not
tolerate the truth. Likewise do we read of Jewish kings, Ahaz
and others, who governed well, that they despised God's Word and
acted contrary to God's will. In our times there have never been
emperors, princes, or other people to compare with those. But
then it had to come to pass that God put all wisdom of this world
to shame through the foolishness of preaching, 1 Cor. 1, 21.
22.
All this is shown to us in this Gospel, which, though apparently
simple and ordinary, is exceedingly rich and comprises many things.
How then does the Lord finally deal with the Pharisees after they
had shown him the tribute money, and answered that the image and
superscription was Caesar's? The Evangelist tells us that he answered
thus:
"Render
therefore unto Caesar the things that are Caesars; and unto God
the things that are Gods."
23.
Although they did not deserve it of the Lord, yet he teaches them
the right way. And with these words he also confirms the worldly
sword or government. They had hoped he would condemn it and speak
against it; he does not do it, however, but praises earthly government
and commands to render unto it what is due to it. It is therefore
his desire that there should be magistrates, princes and masters,
whom we are to obey, be they what they may and what they list;
neither should we ask whether they possess and exercise government
and authority justly or unjustly. We should only pay heed to that
power and authority which is good, for it is ordered and instituted
by God, Rom. 13, 1: You are not allowed to upbraid the government,
when at
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times
you are oppressed by princes and tyrants, who abuse the power
they have from God: some day they will surely have to answer for
it. The abuse of a thing does not make it bad, if it was good
in itself. A golden chain is good, and it is not made worse by
being worn around a whore's neck; or if someone were to destroy
one of my eyes with it, should I therefore blame the chain? Truly
nay.
24.
Thus one must also bear the authority of the ruler. If he abuses
it, I am not therefore to bear him a grudge, nor take revenge
of and punish him with my hands. One must obey him solely for
God's sake, for he stands in God's stead. Let them impose taxes
as intolerable as they may: one must obey them and, suffer everything
patiently, for God's sake. Whether they do right or not, that
will be taken care of in due time. If therefore your possessions,
aye, your life and whatsoever you have, be taken from you by those
in power, then you are to say: I give it to you willingly, I acknowledge
you as my masters, gladly will I be obedient to you. Whether you
use the power given to you by God well or ill, that is your affair.
25.
But what if they would take the Gospel from us or forbid us to
preach it? Then you are to say: The Gospel and Word of God. I
will not give up to you. This is not within your power, for your
rule is a temporal rule, over worldly matters; but the Gospel
is a spiritual, heavenly treasure, and therefore your authority
does not extend over the Gospel and God's Word. We recognize the
emperor as a master of temporal affairs, not of God's Word; this
we shall not suffer to be torn from us, for it is the power of
God, Rom. 1, 16, against which not even the gates of hell shall
prevail.
26.
Therefore, the Lord beautifully summarizes these two things, and
in one saying distinguishes them from each other: "Render
unto Caesar the things that are Caesar's, and unto God the things
that are God's." This honor is due to God, that we are to
hold him as a true, almighty and wise God, and attribute to him
all the good things that can be named. And even if I do not render
him this honor, he still keeps it; nothing is added to or subtracted
from it. But in
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me
he is true, almighty and wise, if I consider him as such, and
believe him to be such as he proclaims himself. To the emperor,
however, and to all in power, are due reverence, taxes, revenue
and obedience. God will have the heart; body and possessions are
the government's, which is to rule over them in God's stead. This
St. Paul says to the Romans in round and clear words, Rom. 13,
1-7: "Let every soul be in subjection to the higher powers:
for there is no power but of God; and the powers that be are ordained
of God. Therefore he that resisteth the power, withstandeth the
ordinance of God: and they that withstand shall receive to themselves
judgment. For rulers are not a terror to the good work, but to
the evil. And wouldest thou have no fear of the power? do that
which is good, and thou shalt have praise from the same: for he
is a minister of God to thee for good. But if thou do that which
is evil, be afraid; for he beareth not the sword in vain: for
he is a minister of God, an avenger for wrath to him that doeth
evil. Wherefore ye must needs be in subjection, not only because
of the wrath, but also for conscience' sake. Hence for this cause
ye pay tribute also, for they are ministers of God's service,
attending continually upon this very thing. Render to all their
dues: tribute to whom tribute is due; custom to whom custom; fear
to whom fear; honor to whom honor."
27.
And for this reason also has government been ordained by God,
that it may uphold general peace, which thing alone cannot be
paid for by all the money in the world. We just noticed a few
things in the uprising of the peasant, what damage, misery and
woe are caused by rebellion and the breaking of peace. God grant
that things do not go further and that we experience no more.
Enough is said on this Gospel. Of temporal government we have
written a special booklet. Whoever desires to read it may do so.
There he will find more on this subject.
This article was made available on the
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