Ok, here we go. Jesus is about to get as pointed and clear with the religious as he perhaps ever does. But before he does that, he prefaces it with some rationale. He begins by pointing out that the Scribes and Pharisees sit in “Moses’ seat”. Whatever we know about the historical veracity of this literal “seat”, suffice it to say here that what it represents is having authority in teaching. Jesus names that the scribes and Pharisees can and do teach the way of Moses. This does two things: One, it shows us that Jesus is not completely dismissing the religious leaders. And, two, it shows us that Jewish faith, commitment to the Torah, and identifying as Jewish matters deeply to Jesus. He is not dismissing any of that.
But then he moves into the old adage of how they don’t “practice what they preach” (do any of us?!? I’m trying!). He points out the heavy burdens they place on people that they are not willing to carry themselves. He points out how their piety is merely delivered as a display and lacks the authenticity of true spiritual practice. And then comes the verse that haunts me the most: “They love to have the place of honor at banquets and the best seats in the synagogues, and to be greeted with respect in the marketplaces, and to have people call them rabbi.”
I never thought much of this verse until I went to my first ordination service at our Annual Conference. And in fact just a year or two ago, our bishop preached from this passage in that service to point out exactly what I’ve felt. You see, at our ordination services at our annual meeting as the best seats are reserved for the clergy who parade in donning our robes, stoles, and scapulars. We then go through an elaborate service, which I do find beautiful, but which also clearly marks who is clergy and who is not and which clergy are at which levels and deserving of certain titles. It runs juxtaposed to this passage if you ask me. I cannot help but imagine that if Jesus were there, he wouldn’t be there. He would be somewhere else, loving a hurting person down the block.
At the same time, many of those same clergy people will go back to their churches and humbly, authentically, and holistically engage with their congregations and communities. They will set up food shelves in their church basements, work towards racial reconciliation in their neighborhoods, and help all who cross their path to discover their belovedness of God. It is, to be sure, a mixed bag.
What it comes down to (and which Jesus is about to boldly call out- stay tuned!) is authenticity. I can live with all the pomp and circumstance, but it must be matched with authentic spiritual leadership and humility. It must be paired with a sense of digging in the dirt to create communities which authentically seek to love God, self, and neighbor. If we are in this for the purpose of furthering our careers, gaining power, having news articles written about us, and building our brand, well then, stay tuned, because Jesus has some words for us in tomorrow’s passage.
If the end game of work and is so that one day we will be lifted up, we miss the mark. Terribly. But if we simply seek to do what is right and good for the sake of the betterment of humanity and our world, well then I think Jesus is right along with us.

“Why do pastors so often treat congregations with the impatience and violence of developers building a shopping mall instead of the patient devotion of a farmer cultivating a field? The shopping mall will be abandoned in disrepair in fifty years; the field will be healthy and productive for another thousand if its mysteries are respected by a skilled farmer. Pastors are assigned by the church to care for congregations, not exploit them, to gently cultivate parishes that are plantings of the Lord, not brashly develop religious shopping malls.” -Eugene Peterson
“Whose head is this, and whose title?” Another translation says “whose image is this, and whose inscription?” The Greek word for image/head here is εικον (icon), and is defined as, “an object shaped to resemble the form or appearance of something”. The coin has been shaped to resemble the form of Caesar, the emperor. His image is on it, therefore the coin belongs to him. Give to Caesar what is Caesar’s. But Jesus doesn’t stop there. He follows it up with “…[give] to God the things that are God’s”. What Jesus doesn’t clarify is exactly what belongs to God. So the natural question is “what does belong to God?” The answer to that question lie in the question, “what bears the image of God?” Answer: Humanity. We are created in the image of God.
This is a difficult parable. It was quite interesting hearing it read from the innocent voices of 5th and 6th graders on Sunday. A couple of things to keep hammering home about parables: One, remember they are not told to teach us theological lessons as much as to get each of us to reflect on our lives. Two, context! These parables are not morality fables that stand all by themselves as timeless tales. They come in a context. Jesus has a specific audience, here and it’s the religious leaders of the day. So perhaps I, more than most of you, should be doing some deep inner reflection on this parable.
Jesus has entered Jerusalem to proclamations of Messiahship, he has turned the tables over in the temple, he has cursed a fig tree as a metaphorical condemnation of Jerusalem, and now the religious established is furious. They come to him and ask him “by what authority” he does these things. Jesus responds in such a way that they’re not going to get that answer.
“Hosanna in the highest!”, “Save us!”, kids waving palm branches, donkeys, yay, it’s Palm Sunday, everybody’s happy… except Jesus. The very next verse in the story has Jesus going into the temple and driving out “all who were selling and buying” there, and he turned over the money changers’ tables. I promised you civil disobedience and here it is. But I also promised you non-violent civil disobedience, and, well, there’s a degree to which Jesus is violent here.
Here we go. Palm Sunday. Now it’s all happening, right? But you might be asking, “is not Easter for another month? So how are we at Palm Sunday already?” Well, one of the things about Matthew, in particular, is there is a
Jesus was “Moved with compassion” (Matthew 20:29-34). The Greek word for compassion here (and in most places) is among my favorite Greek words (because of both its meaning and it’s just fun to say). It’s σπλαγχνίζομαι, and it’s pronounced “splagnizomai”. Try saying it out loud. It’s fun. But this word is rooted in the same word for the “inward parts of the body, the viscera, the entrails.” Or, I think one could say, the bowels. The compassion that Jesus feels is one he feels in his body, it stirs something in him physically.
Once again the disciples are concerned about being the greatest, although the “sons of Zebedee” (James and John) stoop to a new level here. They send mom. To be fair, maybe mom up and went of her own accord, but they did not stop her. When Jesus says, “are you able to drink the cup I am about to drink” (a “cup” which he has just described in verses 18 and 19), their response is a quick, “we are able”, which indicates that they certainly endorsed their mother’s question. So whether it was of her own accord or their prompting, James and John are glad she asked. Yes, there were helicopter parents even in first century Israel.
“Not fair.” That’s a common response to this parable. As Americans we have this idea of fairness pounded into us, particularly when it comes to things like incomes, wealth, and economics. And in defending our free market economy, we too often land in the place of defending whatever the status quo is: “The market always works,” we say. “Trust the free market,” we say. This parable really isn’t about economics, but it also kind of is. It’s about what the Kingdom of Heaven is like, but economics is in the mix here, because the Kingdom of Heaven is about the breaking down of oppressive systems, and economies are most certainly often oppressive systems.