The Diocese of East Tennessee
Sermons


Oct 17, 1999
Pentecost XXI
Delivered at
St. Luke’s, Knoxville

Is 45:1-7
Ps 96
I Thes 1:1-10
Matt 22:15-22
 

Sermon: Sing to the Lord
The Right Reverend Charles G. vonRosenberg
Third Bishop of East Tennessee

It is a joy to be with you, the people of St. Luke’s Church, as we celebrate St. Luke’s Day together, as well as this Twenty-first Sunday after Pentecost. I am grateful to you for your welcome today. And I am grateful as well to your vicar and to others of you who have not only participated in the life of this congregation but also in the life of our diocese.

As some of you know, my first visit here was an unofficial one – on my birthday, in fact, last summer. And now, it is indeed a pleasure to be with you today on this first visitation as your bishop. By the way, today marks the one-year anniversary of my election as bishop, and so, these visits to St. Luke’s mark significant times indeed for me!

The Psalmist writes of joy and pleasure, too, in our reading from the Psalms. In awareness of God’s blessings, he gives the people this direction: "Ascribe to the Lord the honor due his Name." "Ascribe to the Lord the honor due his Name." In other words, this command directs the people of God to give God the honor that He has coming to Him … the honor that God is due.

An appropriate question for us as people of God is this: How in the world can we do that? How can we give to God the honor that God deserves? The short answer, of course, is that we cannot. There is no way that we can give to God what we owe to God – for creation, for life, for all that we enjoy of this world.

Then the Psalmist continues, "Bring offerings and come into his courts." Thus, we have before us from the Book of Psalms one of our familiar offertory sentences: "Ascribe to the Lord the honor due his Name; bring offerings and come into his courts." In response to this direction, we must admit that we cannot give God his due in any complete way. However, we can bring offerings into the courts of God, to the altar of God’s house.

Certainly, our offerings of money provide one focus of the Psalmist’s attention here. But is that all? Indeed, can it be all? If we are attempting to give God his due, it is certain that money – any amount of money – will be insufficient. What other offerings may we bring before God, therefore, that will honor the name of God in a way that his Name deserves?

I believe that our Gospel reading offers us the proper perspective on this matter. There we read of a discussion about paying taxes to the emperor. Jesus was asked if it was lawful to pay such taxes – lawful, that is, according to the religious laws of that day. In response, Jesus requested that his questioners show him a coin. And then he asked them, "Whose image is this, and whose title?" When the people responded that it was the emperor’s, Jesus gave a familiar reply – "Give (or, render) therefore to the emperor (or, Caesar) the things that are the emperor’s, and to God the things that are God’s."

Now, we should note well a couple of things about that exchange. First, Jesus certainly understood that the Pharisees were trying to entrap him. They were not sincere in their question. In fact, the Pharisees believed that either Jesus would speak against the state, the civil government, and therefore expose himself to arrest … or else, he would speak against the Church and thus lose the people’s support. So, the Pharisees thought they had Jesus in an impossible situation.

However, Jesus realized that the Pharisees were trying to trap him. And he did not play their game. Rather, he stumped them with his response. "Give therefore to the emperor the things that are the emperor’s, and to God the things that are God’s."

Secondly, we should note in this exchange the great irony in Jesus’ words. On one level – the level that the Pharisees understood – Jesus avoided the trap set for him. That is, he managed to avoid speaking words of treason to the state on the one hand and of blasphemy to the Church on the other. And in so doing, he walked a straight line between two considerable dangers.

But the irony is this. The claim Jesus made on behalf of God involves far more than a monetary offering. Listen again to what Jesus said. "Give to God the things that are God’s." And in suggesting that direction, Jesus enlarges the scope of God’s requirements by many times. "Give to God the things that are God’s."

What are God’s things? What parts of creation belong to God? You see, the irony is that everything is God’s – all of creation. And so, if we give to God the things that are God’s, then we give everything – not only our money, but also our work, our families, and our lives. "Give to God the things that are God’s."

It has been said that "stewardship is the work of the Church." And I really do not have any problem with that observation. If we truly understand the scope of Christian stewardship, then we will come to terms with the extensiveness of our responsibilities as children of God, as responsible creatures in God’s creation.

You see, once again, stewardship involves much more than only money. We are considering matters far beyond our monetary possessions and responsibilities. Christian stewardship comes to terms with the faith statement that the whole creation is God’s. And if our call is to "give to God the things that are God’s", then included in the responsibility of stewardship are "our selves – our souls and bodies"; our families; our work; our neighbors; our time; and everything else in all of God’s creation, including our money.

Therefore, at the altar these are appropriate words of offering for us: "All things come of Thee, O Lord, and of Thine own, have we given Thee." "All things come of Thee." Therefore, also, we may glimpse the extensiveness of the earlier verse from Psalms: "Ascribe to the Lord the honor due his Name; bring offerings and come into his courts." Those offerings include nothing less than our lives …nothing less than our lives.

I want to conclude these remarks with other words from the Psalmist. As I read them, please remember that the entire creation is God’s. We have the responsibility of stewardship – of care – for the creation with which God has entrusted us. And this creation, in an environment of care, works together is a wonderful way that seems to sing in praise to God.

"Sing to the Lord a new song;
          sing to the Lord, all the whole earth.
 Sing to the Lord and bless his Name;
          Proclaim the good news of his salvation from
                     day to day." Amen.

Copyright ©1999 The Episcopal Diocese of East Tennessee




The Episcopal Diocese of East Tennessee
The Right Reverend Charles G. vonRosenberg, Bishop
814 Episcopal School Way · Knoxville TN 37932 · Phone:  865.966.2110 · Fax:  865.966.2535

Web Editor: editor@etdiocese.net


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