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Mission: Possible

Radical Faith for Ridiculous Times


“Reach Out Honestly”
(Luke 20:20-26)

How many of you know what this is? (show picture of toll booth on screen) You
guessed it – a toll booth! Yes, these dot the interstate landscape of I-80 through IL,
IN, MI, and PA! And it is at these kinds of places we pay a tax – an extra tax to
apparently keep the roads in better shape. Apparently!!

Perhaps you’re wondering what that picture has to do with today’s message. Well,
this is the gist behind the tax referenced in our text today. Would you turn to Luke
20:20? As we’ll see in a minute, the main question was, “Should we pay taxes to
Caesar or not?” And that word ‘taxes’ in verse 22 is literally “poll tax” – an extra
tax levied on the Jews that went directly to the Roman government. So you can
begin to see why this question was ripe with tension. Let’s investigate it a little
closer.

The passage begins in Luke 20:20 with a look inside the motives of the chief
priests and teachers of the law who asked the question.

“Keeping a close watch on him, they sent spies, who pretended to be honest. They
hoped to catch Jesus in something he said so that they might hand him over to the
power and authority of the governor. So the spies questioned him: ‘Teacher, we
know that you speak and teach what is right, and that you do not show partiality
but teach the way of God in accordance with the truth. Is it right for us to pay taxes
to Caesar or not?’”

This closer look reveals they were actually hypocritical in the intent: they really
wanted to trap Jesus. Their plan? Corner him with an unanswerable question. If he
said, “Don’t pay the tax!”, the Romans would probably move in and nab him for
blatant rebellion and disobedience. If he said, “Pay the tax!”, the Jews would
probably revolt, which would bring about the same result in another way: the end
of Jesus! Either way, this question was posed for the purpose of bringing Jesus into
trouble no matter how he answered.

Yet, what was posed as an either-or issue became a both-and issue by the master
communicator Jesus. Look what he did:

“He saw through their duplicity and said to them, ‘Show me a denarius. Whose
portrait and inscription are on it?’
‘Caesar's,’ they replied.

©First Family Church 2006


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He said to them, ‘Then give to Caesar what is Caesar's, and to God what is
God's.’"

WOW! In just a simple few sentences the Master lifted the conversation from a
political one to a spiritual one. He took what was meant to be a divisive question
and turned it into a moment of truth where they were brought face to face with a
principle about their role in man’s kingdom as well as their role in God’s kingdom.
Let me share with you this principle:

“I can live in this world while I belong to another one.”

You see, when he asked for a denarius, a dime-sized coin worth about a day’s
wage, he knew they would produce coinage with Caesar’s image and inscription. It
indicated whose earthly authority they were under, regardless of whether they
liked it or not: Tiberius Caesar. I imagine this was tense moment, for they
probably wished they had other coins in their pockets. And yes, other Jewish, even
Greek denominations, were in circulation. But the fact that this was the most
readily available coin sent a signal to them that they were under the rule of an
earthly government, whether they wanted to admit it or not. They were living in
this present world!

So about this present, earthly authority, Jesus had a simple instruction: “Give to
Caesar’s what is Caesars.” In other words, live in this world. Pay your taxes, even
the extra ones. You may not like it, and it may not seem fair. But it’s your duty as a
citizen of the earthly world in which you live.

In fact, the word “give” here is better translated “render,” meaning to give what is
due. It is really not a gift, but rather a payment. They owed it to their government
to help support its functions.

This same principle is echoed in Paul’s instruction to the Christians in Rome. Look
at Romans 13:6…

“This is also why you pay taxes, for the authorities are God's servants, who give
their full time to governing.”

The Bible teaches that government has a right to exist, and it has a right to be
supported by us. Yes, at times it appears they have gone too far in their authority.
By the same token, we, the church, have stopped too short in ours. Still, we need to
obey the laws of our land. When those laws conflict with God’s laws, we have a
higher authority (see Acts 5:17-42). But most of the time they don’t. So obey the
authorities God has allowed to exist!

© First Family Church 2006


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Can I encourage you to check out the whole of Romans 13 for more principles
and insight about this topic, as well as this Web site – www.thetruthproject.org?
This is a great site for a biblical look at how God has ordained us and our
government to work together in order to promote truth. Check it out, would you?

Well, Jesus doesn’t allow the conversation to stay at an earthly level. He also says
to “give God what is God’s.” The natural question is, “What do I give God?” Let’s
ask it another way – If money has the ruler’s image stamped on it and so that
belongs to him, what has God’s image stamped on it? Your life! Yes, you and I
were made in the image of God (Genesis 1:26-28); we have the image of God
stamped all across us. And so we should give – actually pay – ourselves to God!
We owe our lives to him, so it is not just a gift, but an expectation! That’s how we
live in the “other world” – the kingdom of God – by giving our lives to him!

Personally, I believe the teachers of the law and chief priests got this point clearly
even though Jesus didn’t specifically refer to the Old Testament passage. I believe
they knew exactly what he was saying – “The government has a right to your
money, and God has a right to your life!” Jesus didn’t find the two at odds or put
one against the other; he simply said you can do both!

And so we’re brought back to this simple principle:

“I can live in this world while I belong to another one.”

By the way, Jesus taught this very same principle to his followers in John 17:15-
18:

“My prayer is not that you take them out of the world but that you protect them
from the evil one. They are not of the world, even as I am not of it. Sanctify them by
the truth; your word is truth. As you sent me into the world, I have sent them into
the world.”

And Paul taught this to the Philippian believers in Philippians 2:14-15 when he
encouraged them to “shine as lights in the middle of a crooked and perverse
generation.”

Truly, we are “in it, not of it.” That’s why I say to you one more time,

“I can live in this world while I belong to another one.”

By now you’re wondering, “What does this have to do with reaching out honestly?
Wasn’t this our theme for the week and today’s topic in our 50-Day Adventure?”

© First Family Church 2006


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In a word, everything! You see, this is what we do – we live in this world while
we belong to another one! We live out the truth of the world we really belong to
(heaven) in a world we have to put up with (earth). ☺
This is the heartbeat of outreach, the essence of the First Family posture! You see,
this simple principle has everything to do with reaching out! We are bridge
builders … ambassadors … emissaries!

So it is very important we learn how to live in this world even though we belong to
another one, wouldn’t you agree? I believe the key to learning how to do this is
wrapped up in the “stamped image” concept referred to in Luke 20. Let me
explain.

The “stamped image” concept simply says that whose I am determines what I do! I
really want you to get this: When I understood who I belong to, I begin to
understand what to do where I live. Did you get that? The ‘what’ and the ‘where’
is all answered by the ‘who.’ And until you get the ‘who’, you will never get the
‘what’ and the ‘where.’ In other words, when we live by the stamp of his image,
which is internal, and not by the stomp of others’ impression, which is external, we
finally begin to reach out honestly to those around us. Until then, we come off as
fake and pretentious. But when God starts shining through, we start reaching out!

In fact, Romans 12 lays this same principle out for us very clearly:

“Do not conform any longer to the pattern of this world, but be transformed by the
renewing of your mind. Then you will be able to test and approve what God's will
is—his good, pleasing and perfect will.”

You see, we are to be transformed by God (an internal word meaning that the
change comes from the inside out – literally, “metamorphosis”), not conformed to
the world (an external word that means to be shaped by, formed by, like with a
mold or template). There it is again – the idea of letting his stamped image come
through! That’s the work God wants to do in you. As that occurs, God’s arm can
work through you!

Listen, church – When we fully grasp that our lives have been indelibly stamped
with God’s image, it begins to affect…

…my calling.

Did you know you were made by God for God? That’s right – God made you for
himself and for his pleasure. That’s what I mean by calling – you were, at the very
beginning, designed for a relationship with God through Jesus Christ.

© First Family Church 2006


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Yes, even unbelievers – lost people – are stamped by God through their creation.
And while they may not know him yet through conversion, they do have the stamp
of God on their life, and that gives them worth and meaning. That’s why I believe
all men and women everywhere are called to a life-saving relationship with Jesus
Christ. His stamp is on them from creation, and God is calling them back home.
And guess who he uses to show the way? That’s right – we’re one of the ways God
shows people how to belong to the real world while living in this one.

Some have described this as a God-shaped hole; others as a Jesus-shaped void.


Regardless, your calling from creation is to a relationship with God and God’s Son,
Jesus. Have you answered that calling and filled that hole/void in your life?

In a few minutes we’re going to have a time of response to God’s call upon our
lives, and I invite anyone who is unsure of their eternal destiny – of their soul’s
relationship with Jesus, to take full advantage of this upcoming time and do
business with God.

It also begins to affect…


…my character.

As we grow in our walk with God, things start changing. Our desires and motives
change; our appetites and attitudes change. Why? Because God is stamping his
character on us – he is conforming us to his Son’s image.

By the way, this is the hardest part of our life to change. It is the part below the
waterline; the part nobody sees. And it’s usually the part we don’t like to see. But
it is this deep down change that has to occur, for it is this internal change that
brings about lifelong, external change.

And it also begins to affect…


…my conduct.

As attitudes and appetites change, then actions change. We simply start acting
differently.

Let me illustrate by telling you a simple story that happened a few weeks ago to
my wife and me. We were picking up one of our daughters from a party at a
friend’s house, and as we waited, I simply approached my wife from behind and
put my arms around her. We stood there in that embrace, watching and laughing
with the group. Well, the next weekend when the girls were playing soccer, that
simple “romantic move” generated lots of questions and much talk between my
wife and one those women. And it all boiled down to, “Why do you guys act the
way you do?” I’ll tell you what makes us act that way – the stamp of Jesus on our
© First Family Church 2006
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lives! Not a church program, a couples seminar, or a motivational speaker with
three points and a poem. Instead, the impression of Jesus on our lives causes us to
act in certain ways, which in turn provides us with an honest lifestyle of outreach.

And many of you are living the same way. For instance…
…you give. And since you know God takes care of you, you don’t have to be
selfish or greedy. Instead, you can give sacrificially. That’s how you live in this
world while belonging to another one.

…you stay pure. By showing Spirit-filled discipline in a world of excess (alcohol,


drugs), you display the wholeness God can bring in a world full of people trying to
fill their holes. That’s how you live in this world while belonging to another one.

…you love. By exhibiting God-like love to your spouse, you exhibit God’s idea of
marriage and romance. You stay together in a world where commitment means
very little. That’s how you live in this world while belonging to another one.

…you serve. When most people take at Christmas time, you give and help. Which
is why Project 318 is an annual endeavor at First Family. This year, we’re targeting
our schools and parks. And while I know that many of you and your Lighthouses
have already selected a project, I encourage everyone to “Pick-a-Park” or “Select-a
-School” (refer to LH challenge). It’s one of the ways you live in this world while
belonging to another one.

You see, that’s an honest life of outreach!

It is the kind of outreach Paul described in 2 Corinthians 4:1-2:

“Therefore, since through God's mercy we have this ministry, we do not lose heart.
That’s his stamp on my CALLING!

“Rather, we have renounced secret and shameful ways; we do not use deception,
nor do we distort the word of God.
That’s his stamp on my CHARACTER

“On the contrary, by setting forth the truth plainly we commend ourselves to every
man's conscience in the sight of God.”
That’s his stamp on my CONDUCT

God’s stamp is what all of us need. This morning, come to the altar and lay
yourself out for God’s stamp…for his impression. That’s when you are in the best
position for a life of honest outreach.

© First Family Church 2006


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EXTRA:
Mark Driscoll, in his book The Radical Reformission, explains that it’s not just
about others coming to church because of your invitation to them; it’s about others
being convinced of Christ by your imitation of him. God is simply asking us to
reach out honestly with our lives, not just preach out verbally with our lips.

This “two kingdom” dilemma is what all of us are dealing with. And the best way
to embrace this dual role we have is to see ourselves as ambassadors – honest
messengers in a hostile environment!

Let me show how Paul put it in 2 Corinthians 5:20:

“We are therefore Christ's ambassadors, as though God were making his appeal
through us. We implore you on Christ's behalf: Be reconciled to God.”

The word “ambassadors” refers to a messenger from another country who is in a


foreign, hostile land. In fact, there are actually two words used for ambassador, and
this one is the one used for describing messengers in a hostile environment –
emissaries in an occupied situation. That’s what we are – Christ’s ambassadors!

That’s how we live in this world while we belong to another one.

© First Family Church 2006

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