WHAT
DOES JESUS WANT FROM RELIGIOUS LEADERS?
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In Matthew’s 23rd chapter, we find Jesus taking issue with
the church leaders of his day, the Scribes and Pharisees.
Seven times Jesus uses the phrase “Woe to you, Scribes and
Pharisees …” “Woe to you” means that the person addressed
will have to give a strict accounting for himself, for his
words and his teachings. If he failed in the duties of his
office, which is to clearly proclaim to the people God’s
plan for all important human affairs, then God will hold him
accountable for the failings of the people. “My people are
destroyed for lack of knowledge” asserts the prophet Hosea
3:6. “For the lips of a priest should guard knowledge, and
men should seek instruction from his mouth, for he is the
messenger of the Lord of hosts” says the prophet Malachi
2:7.
Today we can presume that Jesus’ words are addressed to all
bishops, priests and deacons, to Protestant ministers,
Jewish rabbis and Islamic imams. God wishes that His word
and His plan for us be given to every man, woman and child.
Thus, his warning, “Woe to you,” continues to echo down
through the centuries.
Take just one of the serious warnings: “Woe to you, blind
guides, who say, ‘If any one swears by the temple, it is
nothing; but if any one swears by the gold of the temple, he
is bound by his oath.’ You blind men! For which is greater,
the gold or the temple that has made the gold sacred?” Is
not Jesus alluding to the mistaken notion that gold and
money are more important than God’s moral law, the moral law
that is to be found in the Temple? What are we to think
about the pastor who is more concerned about a possible drop
in the weekly collection, than in proclaiming the full
richness of God’s moral law? What are we to think about the
pastor who arbitrarily decides for himself which parts of
God’s plan for marriage and spousal love are safe to preach
on, and which parts are not? Or perhaps even which parts of
that plan are still valid, and which are not? Jesus is
asserting that only God determines, and defines, the moral
order and that it is the explicit duty of the “man of God”
to proclaim His moral order.
But teaching the moral order and bringing the moral values
of the Gospel to the broader society is not just the
responsibility of the religious leaders. To engage the
culture with the values of the Gospel is largely the task of
the laity, who are the vast majority of the Church.
Archbishop Charles Chaput, of Denver, has been talking about
this extensively, and recently published a book, “Render
Unto Caesar: Serving the Nation by Living Our Catholic
Beliefs in Political Life.”
“Not only does religion have a place in the public square, a
democracy needs the input of religious morals and
convictions to remain healthy and strong,” he said. “Taking
religion out of that plan is the fastest way to destroy a
democracy.”
“In the name of being good citizens, a lot of Catholics have
bought into a very mistaken idea of the ‘separation of
Church and state.’ American Catholics have always supported
the principle of keeping religious and civil authority
distinct. Nobody wants a theocracy, and much of the media
hand-wringing about the specter of ‘Christian
fundamentalism’ is really just a particularly offensive
scare tactic. The Church doesn’t presume to run the state.
We also don’t want the state interfering with our religious
beliefs and practices – which, candidly, is a much bigger
problem today.
“Separating Church and state does not mean separating faith
and political issues. Real pluralism requires a healthy
conflict of ideas. In fact, the best way to kill a democracy
is for people to remove their religious and moral
convictions from their political decision-making. If people
really believe something, they’ll always act on it as a
matter of conscience. Otherwise they’re just lying to
themselves. So, the idea of forcing religion out of public
policy debates is not only unwise, it’s anti-democratic.”
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