Then they asked Him,
saying, "Teacher, we know that
You say and teach rightly, and You do not show personal favoritism, but teach
the way of God in truth: Is it lawful for us to pay taxes to Caesar or
not?"
Luke 20:21-22
Luke 20:21-22
When Jesus taught His creation on this earth, many rejected
him as the Christ, denied Him as LORD
and refused to accept that He was “God with us.” However, one title that even
His critics and enemies had to acknowledge was that he was a great teacher.
This sparks my interest as one who has been in the teaching
profession for over forty years. What was Jesus’ teaching style? What kind of
lesson plans did He use? And how can I teach like the grand master?
From the portion above, it’s clear that Christ had what every
educator eventually runs into, students that try to trick the teacher into
saying something that can be used against him. It’s the classic student that
comes but doesn’t really want to learn scenario. They tried to compliment Him
for being politically incorrect and then baited Him with a loaded question that
they hoped would bring Him down. Jesus not only took their bait, He took the
whole rod and reel and made their question backfire on them.
Christ responded to their question with a question, “Why do
you test me?” showing them that He saw through their ruse. Instead of side-stepping the issue and
avoiding the question, He took it head on. (In pedagogy, it’s called a
“teachable moment”). They showed interest in something, so He’d tell them
something they didn’t know.
“Show me a denarius,” He challenged. This used many teaching techniques.
1. It got
the student kinetically (physically) involved.
2. It made them put their tax money where
their mouth was
(i.e. showed that they
had the money to pay their taxes).
3. It produced a manipulative (i.e. a physical
object to focus on).
“Whose image and inscription does it have” was His next
“right there” question. It was a simple question that anyone could get right
and caused the questioner to buy into the learning process. “Caesar’s,” they
answered acknowledging the obvious.
At this point the Lord hit them with the zinger, “Render
therefore to Caesar the things that are Caesar's, and to God the things that
are God's"(Luke 20:25). The lesson came short and to the point, just like a really
good teacher does it.
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