Filtering the Ceasar Noise
Armodoxy for Today: Filtering the Noise
This week we have been examining Christ’s admonition to Give to Caesar what belongs to Caesar, what belongs to God to God. I took some time with this passage to show the absurdity of trying to attach more meaning to the words of Christ, than what he initially intended. In the case of taxes, he said, give to the government what belongs to it. He did not set a blanket policy to exclude ourselves for governance nor to hand over humanitarian pursuits to politicians.
Give to God, what is God’s. And so, give the precious life that God has given to you, back to God by committing to be compassionate and caring to those in need.
I selected this topic intentionally during this week of April because on April 24 the Armenian Genocide is remembered. One and a half million Armenians were barbarically slaughter from 1915 to 1922. An attempt was made in 1915 to, in today’s parlance, “wipe out an entire civilization.” And the plot continues today with new strikes against Armenians and Armenian historic monuments in an area called Artsakh as the same perpetrator of Genocide of 1915 is even more emboldened thanks to the politics and politicians of today.
In 1915, Armenians rendered unto Ceasar in an appeal for assistance, with only shattered dreams and broken promises in the end. And ever since, even today, the Ceasar-card attracts the masses and they play it. Check the local demonstration near you and chances are you will find, like this in my area, a stage filled with ineffective or retired politicians, dismissed military men, and for show a defrocked priests show. This time, in my area, even a priest impersonator is invited to share the podium, which makes a mockery of this horrid and evil page of human history. Of course I resent it. These are my people. My grandparents went through that reality and now they are turning into a circus with freak acts and mockery.
Giving to God is to find the humanity in helping and tending to the hurting souls of our world. Commemorating a Genocide from over 100 years ago can only properly be expressed in the actions of helping and others who are suffering the same. Today, the sound of children and people crying from under bombs, bullets and rubble are the expressions despair and further violence for the next century as reflections of their shattered life.
We will continue tomorrow with some positive directions moving forward. Let us pray, Heavenly Father, You have bestowed life in me. Help me to filter the noise of nonsense so I may hear the cries of those who call out to me. Amen.

2026 Epostle
2024 Fr. Vazken
2023 Epostle.net
2024 Fr. Vazken



2024 Fr. Vazken
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