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When
Authority is Abused
by
Peter Moore
Introduction
Christians
who submit to the Word of God know the principle of Biblical
submission to God-given authorities in their various spheres,
i.e., citizens to civil rulers (Rom.13:1), wives to husbands
(Eph.5:22), children to their parents (Eph.6:1), employees
to employers (Eph.6:5), church members to the elders, etc.
It is clear from Scripture, that God Himself has graciously
instituted these authorities for our benefit and good (Rom.13:4).
However, what is seldom stressed, is that the authority
given by God is not an unconditional authority void of boundaries
and responsibilities, e.g., can a husband do what he likes
with/to his wife, because she is under an obligation to
obey him? All people who have been given authority, in whatever
form, have the responsibility of exercising that authority
under Gods ultimate sovereign rule, set out in His
sovereign Word.
The
Dilemma
Many
Christians seem incapable of even perceiving the very real
tension that exists when they are expected to submit to
a law or command that has been issued by someone occupying
a clearly Biblical position (father, civil authority, etc.),
but is obviously a violation of Gods Word. In the
modern world, this conflict happens frequently, and Christians
are often caught in a real predicament of what to do. The
Scriptures, church history and our own age, record numerous
examples of such dilemmas. What would you do in the following
situations?
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The
year is ad 150 and you live in Rome. Roman law permits
the father, as supreme ruler in the family, to throw
out an unwanted baby onto the street to die. Christians
pick up these babies and care for them. The state forbids
this practice. You walk past a house on your way home
and find one of these babies and know Christians in
your church who would willingly look after this child.
What do you do? To even touch the abandoned baby would
be to break the laws of an authority ordained by God.
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The
year is ad 298 and the Roman emperor, Diocletian, is
in full force with his persecution of the Christian
church. He comes to your house and asks you if you have
copies of parts of the Scriptures. You do have such
copies. What do you answer? |
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The
year is 1941. You are a Christian living in German-occupied
Holland. You are approached by a Jewish family to hide
them from the Nazis persecution. To hide them
would be a crime. What do you do? |
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The year is 1944. The Nazis are doing a door to
door search looking for Jews. They ask you if you are
hiding any Jews or are aware of anyone hiding Jews.
You happen to know that someone in your street is hiding
a Jewish family. What do you answer? |
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The
year is 1955. You live in Alabama, USA. You are a black
woman coming home from a hard days work and are sitting
in the front section of the bus, which is legal as long
as no white person is required (by crowding) to sit
next to you. By city law, blacks are not allowed to
sit parallel to whites. The bus fills up and the bus
driver tells you to get up and go to the back of the
bus because a white person needs the seat. What do you
do? |
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The
year is 1983. The state is using its army to suppress
opposition and is committing unprecedented human rights
abuses and genocide on the civilian population because
they do not vote for the ruling party. What do you do? |
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The
year is 2001. The civil authority fails to uphold laws,
which are supported by the Word of God and lawful rulings
by the Supreme Court. What do you do? |
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The
year is 2001. The state will not uphold law and order,
one of the prime functions of the state (Romans 13:4),
but instead sponsors and encourages violence and lawlessness.
What do you do? |
The
Response
What
is certainly needed in each of these situations is clear
thinking, faith and wisdom to respond appropriately. God
is the God of all reality and records numerous examples
in the pages of Scripture showing lawful, righteous protests
against civil, as well as other, authority. Often this resistance
is recorded in the better known Sunday school stories. However,
we seldom recognise the very real issue of civil disobedience
inherent in each account. The disobedience recorded in each
instance, is not of the same nature or intensity. There
are examples of progressive steps of Biblical resistance,
dependent on the nature of the godlessness in question.
How are we as Christians meant to respond? We are to obey
Gods Word, as the final and inerrant authority, rather
than authorities, although authorised by God per se, who
are fallible and errant.
First,
there is the case of an individual who knows that a law
is wrong, and who protests verbally. The person obeys the
command, but voices their objection to the command. Joab
did this when David insisted that the people be numbered
in a census. Joab, realising that what David had in mind
was an affront to the sovereign care of God, voiced his
objection to this command before continuing with carrying
out the task. Clearly God was displeased70 000 people
died of a plague as a result of Davids command (2
Samuel 24:25)! Joab, who recognised the sinfulness of the
command and protested, was spared. Joab was faced with a
dilemma when David gave him the command. On the one hand
he was called to obey the head of state, and on the other
hand, such obedience would be a breach of the
first and greatest commandment to love the Lord your God
with all your heart, mind, soul and strength. This form
of resistance probably describes the most frequent way in
which we object to something we believe is wrong.
Another
way of responding to an order, which contravenes the Word
of God, would be to disobey the order and voluntarily suffer
the consequences. This is what the 3 young men did when
Nebuchadnezzar ordered them to worship the image or suffer
death in the fiery furnace (Daniel chapter 3). This is what
the disciples did in the book of Acts when they were commanded
not to preach the gospel (Acts 5:29).
Another
option would be to warn the civil ruler of the evil being
ordered and then flee the geographical jurisdiction of that
civil authority. This is what Elijah did when he warned
the king about Gods coming judgement of drought, and
then hid in the city of Zarepath in the nation of Sidon
(1 Kings 17). Many Jews did this in Germany in the period
leading up to the Second World War and fled to America.
There
are other examples where the protester refuses to comply
with the law and adopts the strategy of deception rather
than flight. The best examples of this in the Bible are
the deception of Pharaoh by the Hebrew midwives (Exodus
1), the deception of Jerichos authorities by Rahab
(Joshua 2) and the wise men failing to obey Herods
command to bring him information on the birth of the Messiah,
Jesus, at the time of the nativity (Matthew 2:9-12).
Another
possible response to a command which breaches Gods
law would be for a group of people, as a corporate assembly,
to intervene and tell the ruler that he will not be allowed
to implement the judgement arising from a bad law. The Israelites
did this when Saul wanted to execute his own son, Jonathan,
for having eaten honey during a battle (1 Samuel 14:43-46).
Yet
another Biblical response, would be for a God-anointed protester
to warn the representatives of the people of the error of
the law and to challenge them to rebel against that lawfully
constituted authority. This is what Elijah did when he directed
the assembled lawful representatives of Israel to kill the
850 prophets of Baal and Asherah after they had been clearly
shown to be false (1 Kings 18:40).
My
final example of Biblical resistance, is when a God-ordained
lower official joins with other officials and revolts against
unlawful central government after a series of official protests.
This is what Jeroboam did when Rehoboam, Solomons
son, imposed harsh new taxes which may have taken the form
of forced labour. Jeroboam created a new nation by seceding
from the unified kingdom (1 Kings 12:19).
The
Conclusion
From
the above examples of differing and more serious forms of
resistance it is clear that righteous resistance, authorised
by God, is not only to happen when the preaching of the
gospel is forbidden. Resistance in some shape or form is
required whenever Gods Law, as has been revealed in
His Word, is challenged (2 Corinthians 10:3-5).
Its
important for Christians to realise that there will always
be godless laws as long as there are godless people. The
issue is the degree of godlessness and what we are going
to do about it. Doing nothing, and rather concentrating
on the congregations program for the year, is tantamount
to turning a blind eye. Sure, it often takes real courage
to resist evil. Contrary to popular belief, life does not
become easier when you become a Christian. The world (and
sadly, often fellow believers) will not cheer when you attempt
to be light and salt in this world. We need to ask God for
courage to stand for the truth contained in His Word and
wisdom to determine the most appropriate way to do so. One
thing, however, is inescapable, and that is that God expects
us to diligently stand for truth, justice and righteousness.
Liberty requires responsibility. The Irish patriot and judge,
John Philpot Curran (1750-1817), very much aware of the
relationship between ones liberty and responsibility,
warned his own nation with these words:
It
is the common fate of the indolent to see their rights become
a prey to the active. The condition upon which God hath
given liberty to man is eternal vigilance; which condition
if he break, servitude is at once the consequence of his
crime and the punishment of his guilt.
Think
about these things!
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