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

FROM THE NEW TESTAMENT

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

REFLECT

ENGAGE