Quit Playing Games

Most arguments come down to one person or group asserting that they are on the good or correct side while the other person or group is wrong or evil. The problem with vilification is that it is a naturally divisive tactic. Thus, people choose to quit listening to one another and block themselves from proper points of view if they come from an opponent. This mentality plays out on our screens as we hear rhetoric and talking points coming at us from every direction. A version of a game is playing out before us where we look at opposing points of view as different teams, and we want the other team to lose so that we can win. Winning and losing language is thrust into our faces, and we naturally want to be correct.

In the quest of always being right, there is a constant temptation to try and entangle our opponent in a knot. There are rhetorical devices that many debate professionals employ to force their opponents into a corner, of which they cannot logically get themselves out. Most of the time, these games don’t show which side has the most advantages or correctness, but rather, they reveal the person or group that is better at playing the game. It is influential; just look at how public opinion sways back and forth after any debate. The opponents of Jesus used these same devices to trap Him into incriminating himself, and they hoped it would ultimately rid themselves of their Jesus problem.

15 Then the Pharisees went and plotted how to entangle him in his words. 16 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. 17 Tell us, then, what you think. Is it lawful to pay taxes to Caesar, or not?” 18 But Jesus, aware of their malice, said, “Why put me to the test, you hypocrites? 19 Show me the coin for the tax.” And they brought him a denarius. 20 And Jesus said to them, “Whose likeness and inscription is this?” 21 They said, “Caesar’s.” Then he said to them, “Therefore render to Caesar the things that are Caesar’s, and to God the things that are God’s.” 22 When they heard it, they marveled. And they left him and went away.

The Holy Bible: English Standard Version (Wheaton, IL: Crossway Bibles, 2016), Mt 22:15–22.

While examining this scene, we find the Pharisees coaxing Jesus into the game. They begin feigning flattery and ask Jesus a question that was a lose-lose situation. Either Jesus would upset the Roman Empire or frustrate the followers who thought He was bringing revolution. However, the answer walked around the game and instead pointed out to the Pharisees that they would not be able to trap Him in these word games. Rhetorical traps laid out for us by opponents could lead us into word games, which cause us to focus on the unimportant. Still, Jesus reminds us that even if those who oppose us force our hand, we don’t need to look at a response as a winning or losing response but rather to seek the wholeness of the community and clinging to the Gospel as of paramount importance.

Looking at the world around us, we often get angry at war and violence.  Inevitably, we look at war as winning and losing; unfortunately, there are no winners in war. As followers of Christ, we cannot get dragged into the mud when discussing the proper side in situations where violence pours out and affects the blameless. Civilians suffer the consequences of governments’ inability to maintain peace. However, as followers of Christ, our primary focus must be bringing peace to those hurting and proclaiming the hope of the Gospel to the helpless. If, instead, we waste our energies placating one side or the other and adding to the chaos by using God-imbued creativity to further play into the hands of the chaotic disrupters, we contribute to more games and find ourselves in the role of the Pharisees in this story hoping to trap others and win rather than acting as the peacemaker Jesus implores us to embody. 

The games we play have no winners, but Jesus opens up a portal for everyone into hope and a future through the Gospel. Gospel is the antithesis of game playing because through sin, we all lose; we all are devoid of hope until we accept the sacrifice of Jesus. Therefore, as Christians read through the passage above, they can marvel as the Pharisees did, but they should understand that Jesus was not about trying to be correct, but He was showing us all that the systems of this world belong to this world, and that is where it has to remain. Stay above the fray, and look at those around us by granting them an abundant dose of Gospel because God has written His name upon our hearts. This sentiment means we belong to God, and we have all the victory we need. We don’t need to play games to signify our victory, but instead, Jesus calls us to share this victory with our world by giving God’s hope as found in the truth of the Gospel.

Published by JRMITCH85

I am often asked what describes you, which is a hard answer because sometimes I move in a thousand different directions. Some call me an engineer, others call me pastor, a few call me captain, some call me friend, others call me dad, and one calls me sweetheart. All of these things are descriptors and are accurate, but they don't fully capture me. My favorite place is in the mountains, enjoying the beauty of nature and God's creation, running and hiking around with my family and friends, and taking photos to cement the memories. However, the people that know me the best know that my favorite thing to do is come up with crazy adventures that push the limits of what our minds and bodies can do. My faith in God is important to me and drives me to look at creation the way I do. Because of my faith, I look at these adventures and running races from Half Marathons all the way to 24 hour races, as well as several Obstacle Course Races, as an opportunity to push the body God gave me as an act of worship. Hopefully, someday soon, I look toward running longer races and bigger adventures. My hope is that humanity can understand that the wild is a gift, and we need to care for it and quit destroying it by the way we live.

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