
Bearing God's Image
By Fr. Paul Scalia
Herald Columnist
(From the issue of 10/17/02)
Render to Caesar the things that are Caesars: and to God, the things that are
Gods." We often see this passage as an instruction merely about Church/state
relations, as though Our Lord were giving a political science lesson. But Our Lord teaches
us here about something more important than politics. He teaches us about man himself.
If the coin in the Gospel belongs to Caesar because it bears Caesars image, then
whatever bears Gods image must belong to God. Man, of course, bears Gods
image. What our Lord asked about the coin may be asked of man: "Whose image is this
and whose inscription?" Man is Gods image. And God has inscribed His law in
mans heart. What belongs to God is man himself. Not a part or a piece, but
man in his entirety.
This does have implications for the political sphere. By contrasting what belongs to
Caesar and what belongs to God, Our Lord teaches that worldly government is limited.
Caesar the state has his own proper realm, beyond which he cannot go: he
cannot claim what belongs to God. The state can regulate certain affairs of mans
life property, economics, defense, etc. but it can never claim absolute
dominion over man himself.
This truth frees man from unjust domination by government. Governments that have tried
to claim more than their rights have encountered the fiercest opposition from the Catholic
Church. Fascists, Nazis and Socialists demanded an allegiance that can only be commanded
by God. For this reason the Church, the greatest teacher and defender of mans
freedom, suffered persecution at their hands. Our own government violates the limits of
state power when it legalizes the killing of the unborn. Such legislation, which gives to
the state what belongs to God, contravenes Gods law and calls own His condemnation.
Our Lords teaching, however, has greater meaning for our spiritual life.
Political freedom means nothing unless we possess the virtue of religion, the virtue that
enables us to give to God what belongs to God. The reason we desire justice in the
political realm is so that we can freely worship God. The Lord has the right to receive
our adoration, worship and praise, to receive the gift of our lives. We belong entirely to
God and must give Him what is His.
St. Therese once exclaimed, "My God, I choose all! I don't want to be a saint by
halves!" She avoided the half measures, partial commitments and divided hearts that
people give God every day. People find all kinds of things to substitute for the gift of
themselves. They give to God only part: only time or money or work; only intellectual
assent, or only slavish obedience. God does not, however, want just part of us or to
receive us piecemeal. Our entire being belongs to God that is what He desires to
possess.
"Render to Caesar the things that are Caesars: and to God, the things that
are Gods." St. Thomas More, the patron of our diocese, exemplifies both aspects
of this teaching. He labored for years in the court of Henry VIII, giving witness to the
legitimate role of government. But when the king seized powers reserved to God alone, Sir
Thomas More resigned, thus declaring Gods primacy. His silent opposition to the king
ultimately brought him to the scaffold, where he gave his entire self to the Lord. In his
own words, he died, "the kings good servant but Gods first."
Fr. Scalia is parochial vicar of St. Patrick Parish in Chancellorsville.
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