What does it mean to render to Caesar what is Caesar's (Matthew 22:21)?
TL;DR
When Jesus said
to render to Caesar what is Caesar's, He was calling us to give the government what it is owed—but don't forget: your ultimate allegiance belongs to God. Honoring the government reveals living surrendered to the One who rules over it all.
WHAT DOES THE BIBLE SAY?
Jesus’ command to “render to Caesar what is Caesar’s” (Matthew 22:21) comes in response to a trap from the Pharisees, yet He answers with clarity and authority, exposing both the hypocrisy of His questioners and the deeper truth about allegiance (Matthew 22:15–21). Jesus affirms that earthly governments have a legitimate, God-given authority to collect taxes and govern (Matthew 22:21; Romans 13:1). Yet He also elevates the conversation—while Caesar may claim coins, God alone claims our lives, hearts, and worship (Matthew 22:21). Scripture consistently shows that all authority ultimately belongs to God, who raises up and removes rulers according to His purposes (Daniel 2:21). Because of this, submitting to governing authorities—through taxes, respect, and obedience—is not merely civic duty but an act of obedience to God Himself (Romans 13:6–7). However, this submission is not absolute; when human authority contradicts God’s commands, our ultimate allegiance must remain with Him (Acts 5:29). Knowing this, Jesus calls us to live with discernment and devotion—faithfully honoring earthly authority while fully surrendering to the One whose image we bear.
FROM THE OLD TESTAMENT
- God is the ultimate authority over all governments, and they are only in power because He has placed them there for His purposes (e.g., Daniel 2:21). While God does not condone everything governments do, if what they command and require is not sinful, then they are to be obeyed.
FROM THE NEW TESTAMENT
- Matthew 22:21 is Jesus’ wise answer to the Pharisees’ trap. The section opens with, “Then the Pharisees went and plotted how to entangle him in his words. And they sent their disciples to him, along with the Herodians, saying, ‘Teacher, we know that you are true and teach the way of God truthfully, and you do not care about anyone’s opinion, for you are not swayed by appearances’” (Matthew 22:15–16). From this, we learn that their question is not genuine. They want to get Jesus to say something that will discredit Him in front of the people.
- Specifically, the type of tax referenced in Matthew 22:17 was called the poll-tax (see NASB’s translation). In first-century Rome, there were three types of taxes: temple taxes, general taxes like sales tax, and the poll tax. The poll tax was a tax that Rome levied on all non-Roman citizens living in the nation. Because the Jews were not Roman citizens, they had to pay this tax. This seemingly unfair tax angered many, making it a controversial topic. By asking Jesus whether they should pay it, they were setting Him up to anger at least some people, regardless of how He answered.
- However, Jesus knew what they were doing. Instead of answering the question directly, He turned it back on them. He said, “Why put me to the test, you hypocrites? Show me the coin for the tax” (Matthew 22:18–19).
- When they gave Him the coin, He asked, “Whose likeness and inscription is this?” (Matthew 22:20). Jesus knew because a poll-tax had to be paid by a coin with Caesar’s likeness on it. But he wanted them to say it, which they did. He then sprung His own trap on them. He replied, “Therefore render to Caesar the things that are Caesar’s” (Matthew 22:21b).
- He was effectively saying, “Since Caesar’s face is on it, then it belongs to Caesar. Give it to him!” Jesus was showing that Caesar had authority over them and thus could command what he wished. Paying Caesar was not inherently sinful; it was his right to ask for “his” money back.
- Jesus continued, saying, “and [render] to God the things that are God’s” (Matthew 22:21c). While Caesar had authority, God’s authority was greater. While Jesus does not expand the implication there, Paul does in Romans 13.
- There he said, “Let every person be subject to the governing authorities. For there is no authority except from God, and those that exist have been instituted by God” (Romans 13:1). All governments have authority to rule and regulate a people because God has given them that authority. He added, “Therefore whoever resists the authorities resists what God has appointed, and those who resist will incur judgment” (Romans 13:2). To resist the government, as long as it is not causing one to sin (Acts 5:29), is to resist God!
- Paul thus summarized, “because of this you also pay taxes, for the authorities are ministers of God, attending to this very thing. Pay to all what is owed to them: taxes to whom taxes are owed, revenue to whom revenue is owed, respect to whom respect is owed, honor to whom honor is owed” (Romans 13:6–7).
- Rendering to Caesar meant, then, that we are to pay what is owed to the government because we are under God’s authority and He has delegated some of that authority to our government.
IMPLICATIONS FOR TODAY
Daniel is a great
book to study if you want to understand why even God-hating governments
exist. His overarching point is that all governments exist because God causes
them to exist. Even the most wicked government in history has been put into
power by God for His purposes.
Indeed, when Paul
wrote that we are to obey our governments and pay our taxes (Romans 13), he was
writing during the reign of Nero, a wicked ruler who viciously persecuted
believers, including burning them alive. So, he was not saying that we are to
obey and honor our leaders only if they are good, but rather that we submit to them because they have delegated authority from God.
God has given
governments considerable leeway in establishing rules, including setting tax rates. As long as obeying the government doesn’t mean disobeying God (He
has the greater authority!), then we are to honor and obey them.
Practically, that
means paying our taxes, following traffic laws, serving on juries, and the
like. As we seek to be good citizens of our particular nation, we are glorifying God by trusting His wisdom in allowing our government to
exist!
UNDERSTAND
- Jesus' statement to render to Caesar what is Caesar's affirms that governing authorities have a legitimate, God-given right to rule and regulate those under their jurisdiction.
- All governmental authority is ultimately given by God, meaning submission to government is not merely a civic obligation but an act of obedience to God.
- While governmental authority is real and to be respected, God's authority is ultimate; when the two conflict, obedience to God takes precedence.
REFLECT
- In what ways are you tempted to view paying taxes or submitting to governmental authority as optional, and how does Jesus' teaching challenge that attitude?
- How does knowing that God is the ultimate authority behind all governing institutions change the way you think about your responsibilities as a citizen?
- In what areas of civic life do you find it most difficult to submit to governing authority, and how does Romans 13 speak to those specific tensions?
ENGAGE
- What is the balance between rendering to Caesar what is Caesar's and rendering to God what is God's?
- What is the connection between living as good citizens of heaven and good citizens of the nation we live in?
- In what ways can rendering to Caesar what is Caesar's be a powerful testimony to a watching world?
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