Jesus’ authority challenged
1 So one day while Jesus was teaching the people in the temple compound and proclaiming the good news, the high priests, scribes, and elders were standing by. 2 And they said to him, “Tell us what gives you the right to do these things! Who gave you the authority?”
3 “I’ll answer your question if you’ll answer mine,” Jesus replied. 4 “John’s immersion— was it authorized by heaven or by people?”
5 Then they huddled together and said among themselves, “If we say ‘By heaven’, he will say ‘Then why didn’t you believe him?’ 6 But if we say ‘By people’, then they will all lynch us since they are convinced that John is a prophet.” 7 So they answered, “We don’t know who authorized it.”
8 And Jesus replied, “Then I’m not telling you who authorized me to do these things!”
The parable of the tenants
9 Then Jesus told the people a parable: “There was a person who planted a vineyard, who then leased it to tenant farmers and went traveling abroad for an extended period of time. 10 After he had been gone for a while, he dispatched a slave to the tenants to collect produce from the vineyard. But the tenants beat up the slave and sent him back empty-handed. 11 So another slave was sent, but as with the first one, the tenants sent him away after beating and insulting him. 12 Then a third slave was sent, but they injured him and threw him out.
13 “So the vineyard owner said, ‘What can I do? I will send my own dear son; maybe they’ll show him some respect!’ 14 But when the tenants saw him, they huddled together and said, ‘This is the heir; let’s kill him so we will inherit the vineyard!’ 15 And they threw him outside of the vineyard and killed him. So what do you think the vineyard owner will do to them? 16 He will go there and put the tenants to death, and then lease the vineyard to others.“ And when the people heard this, they exclaimed, “May this never happen!”
17 Then Jesus looked at them and said, “What does this scripture mean? ‘The stone the builders rejected has become the cornerstone. 18 All who trip over it will be shattered, and all upon whom it falls will be pulverized!’”
19 At that moment the scribes and high priests wanted to seize him and put him under arrest because they knew that the parable was aimed at them, but they feared the people.
Paying taxes to the government
20 So they put Jesus under surveillance and sent out spies posing as honest people, so that they could arrest him over something he might say and hand him over to the authority of the governor. 21 And they asked him, “Teacher, we know that you speak and teach accurately, and that you look beneath the surface to expose the truth, teaching the ways of God. 22 So is it all right to pay taxes to Caesar or not?”
23 But Jesus saw right through their ploy and said to them, 23 24 “Show me a coin, and tell me whose image and inscription are on it.”
“Caesar’s,” they answered.
25 Then Jesus replied, “So repay Caesar with what belongs to him, and repay God with what belongs to him.” 26 They were unable to get him to say anything justifying arrest in front of everyone, and his ingenious response silenced them.
Marriage and the resurrection
27 Next the Sadducees, who say there is no resurrection, came up to Jesus with a question: 28 “Teacher, Moses wrote to us that if someone’s brother dies and leaves a widow but no children, he must marry the widow to produce children for him. 29 Now there were seven brothers, and the oldest died and left a widow but no children. 30 The same happened with the second brother, 31 then the third, and so on through all seven brothers. 32 Then finally the woman herself also died. 33 So in the resurrection, whose wife will she be, since she had been married to all seven?”
34 And Jesus replied, “In this life, people marry and are given in marriage. 35 But those deemed worthy of eternal life and the resurrection of the dead do not marry and are not given in marriage. 36 Nor can they die, since they are like the angels; they are part of the resurrection because they belong to God.
37 “As for the rising of the dead, Moses alluded to it at the burning bush incident when he described the Master as ‘the God of Abraham, the God of Isaac, and the God of Jacob’. 38 God is not the God of the dead but of the living, because everyone is alive from his perspective.”
39 “Well said, Teacher!” exclaimed some of the scribes. 40 And they dared not ask him any more questions.
Who is Christ?
41 Then he said to them, “How can they say that Christ is the descendant of David? 42 David said himself in the book of praise songs, ‘My Master said to my Master, “Sit here at my right 43 until I make your enemies your footstool.”’ 44 But how can David call him ‘Master’ if he’s his descendant?”
Warnings against hypocrisy and conceit
45 Now while all the people were listening, Jesus said to his disciples, 46 “Beware of the scribes! They want to walk around in long robes, and they love to be greeted in the marketplaces, to take the best seats in the synagogues, and to take the most prominent seats at banquets. 47 They confiscate the property of widows and make a big show of their long prayers. They will be judged severely!”
- 23 For Jesus to answer ‘yes’ would anger the people for aligning with Rome, and ‘no’ would make him guilty of sedition against Rome. A possible implication of Jesus’ answer would be, “If paying taxes to Caesar makes someone a friend of Rome, then why do you use and benefit from his money?”