That question was asked of Jesus: "Is it lawful
to pay taxes to Caesar, or not?" He said, "Show
Me the tax money." They gave Him the denarius,
on which was a picture of Caesar. Then He asked, "Whose
image and inscription is this?" They said, "Caesar's."
He answered, "Render therefore to Caesar the
things that are Caesar's, and to God the things that
are God's" (see Matthew 22:17-21). And that has
become the standard for what we owe the government.
We owe the payment of taxes for the necessary services
government renders to us. We owe a law-abiding and
honest type of personal life (see Romans 13:1-7).
Especially, we owe government informed, active citizenship.
We do not owe the government the allegiance we owe
God. To God we owe our worship and our loyalty. We
must remember that government exists only as long
as God gives it the ability and the power.
When any civil government steps outside the mandate
authorized by God Almighty, then that government does
not have any further claim over its citizens. When
the apostles came before the government of their day,
they were commanded not to speak about Jesus. They
told the authorities that they could not help speaking
of the things they had seen and heard (see Acts 4:18-20).
Even though they were threatened with jail, beatings,
and other reprisals, they continued to proclaim their
faith to the people. The apostles obviously considered
the government's power to be at an end when it began
to restrict their freedom to worship God and to proclaim
their faith in Jesus.
In the United States, we believe that our government
derives its powers from the consent of the governed.
We believe that God has given certain inalienable
rights, vested in humanity itself. The people give
their support to the government so it can do such
things as build roads, highways, and harbors; train
armies; establish courts of law and maintain currency;
establish uniform standards; and do other things that
individuals cannot do for themselves.
In our society, Caesar is all the people. When we
are told to render to Caesar what belongs to Caesar,
that means we ourselves should be responsible for
government. Therefore, we owe the obligation of serving
in public office, of being informed citizens, of voting,
and of being active in politics at all levels. That
is part of the duty we render to Caesar.
We give God the spiritual allegiance that is His.
We give Him our tithes, our offerings, our love, our
worship, and our testimony in praise. To the government
we give good citizenship, knowledge of the affairs
of the day, and taxes that are due. We also give the
government our services as political figures, as statesmen,
as public servants in every level of government.
Some might ask: "But what are rights under a
dictatorship or a Communist government?" People
have the same rights everywhere. Every man should
have the right to his own personal life, his property,
his freedom of movement, and his freedom of conscience.
But there are some governments, such as those controlled
by the Communists that do not give those rights to
the people. There is a totally different mindset in
the Communist world.
That does not change the order that God established.
Those under Communist domination must sometimes disobey
the government. They must continue to speak and testify
to their faith in God, even though this is very costly.
Many of them go to prison. Many are tortured and beaten
and deprived. When they get out of prison, they go
right back to testifying and preaching again. We in
America do not have any idea what those people have
to go through in order to practice their faith in
God.
Still, we must recognize that the apostle Paul was
living under tyrannical Roman emperors when he wrote,
in the book of Romans, that Christians are supposed
to pay taxes to whom taxes are due, and that the civil
government is not supposed to be a terror to those
who do well, but to evildoers (see Romans 13:1-7).
He also said Christians are supposed to pray for those
in authority over them, so that they might live a
quiet and godly life.
This is so that the Word of God might go forth freely
to the end that all should come to the knowledge of
the truth (see I Timothy 2:1-4). This kind of praying
even should be done for bad rulers and governments.