All throughout the history of Christianity civil
disobedience has been practiced by Christians.
First, let me define what I mean by civil
disobedience as it pertains to a Christian:
Purposeful, nonviolent action or refusal
to act, by a Christian who believes such action or inaction is required of him
or her to be faithful to God, and which they know will be treated by the
governing authorities as a violation of law.
Even though I believe in a strong defense and the right
to be armed, and use whatever force is needed to protect others, I also think that malicious violence is not a
means to any end. I believe as Christians we have the right to
defend ourselves, our families, our church and our community against the evil
that may come our way.
I am aware of the three passages of Scripture that are
used to bring Christians into compliance with the government. (For my friends
that have a difficulty with KJV here is the NIV)
Submit yourselves
for the Lord’s sake to every authority instituted among men: whether to the
king, as the supreme authority, or to the governors, who are sent by him to
punish those who do wrong and to commend those who do right. For it is God’s
will that by doing good you should silence the ignorant talk of foolish men (1
Peter 2:13-15 NIV).
Remind the people
to be subject to rulers and authorities, to be obedient, to be ready to do
whatever is good, to slander no one, to
be peaceable and considerate, and to show true humility toward all men (Titus
3:1-2 NIV).
Everyone must submit
himself to the governing authorities, for there is no authority except that
which God has established. The authorities
which exist have been established by God.
Consequently, he who rebels against the authority is rebelling against what God
has instituted, and those who do so will bring judgment on themselves (Romans
13:1-2 NIV)
There has been a historical record of Christians being disobedient to the
government and church leadership. In the
book of Acts chapter 4, we are given the
account of civil disobedience. When the
Sanhedrin orders Peter and John not to teach or speak in the name of Jesus,
they ask whether it is right to obey God or men? They obeyed God. Paul
was quite willing to use the Roman legal system when he was arrested in
Jerusalem rather than be flogged and was
able to witness in new ways because of it. Being a Christian was itself a
violation of law in much of the civilized world until Constantine endorsed
Christianity.
It is also important to remember that before Jesus began
to preach the Jews were indeed in tension
with their rulers. Josephus, in his Antiquities of the Jews, tells the
story of Jewish resistance to Pilate’s introduction of images of the emperor
into Jerusalem. Many Jews lay in the courtyard for five days in protest, and
when Pilate ordered his soldiers to surround them and threatened slaughter if
the Jews did not submit, they instead bared their necks and said slaughter was
preferable to the images. Pilate relented.
Historically, the points of conflict between Christians
and their governments have centered upon either the government’s demand that
all citizens subscribe to and follow the practices of a state religion or the
government’s prohibition of Christian practices which are central to the faith.
Military service has been a problem for both reasons
since in pre-Constantin times emperor worship or sacrifice to idols tended
to be required of soldiers of Rome and since the early Christians understood
that killing was contrary to Jesus’ teaching whether done in peace or war.
Marcellus the centurion, who was martyred in A.D. 298, objected for both reasons.
He is quoted as saying in part:
I cease from this
military service of your emperors, and I scorn to adore your gods of stone and
wood, which are deaf and dumb idols. If such is the position of those who
render military service that they should be compelled to sacrifice to gods and
emperors, then I cast down my vine-staff and belt, I renounce the standards,
and I refuse to serve as a soldier . . . I threw down my arms; for
it was not seemly that a Christian man, who renders military service to the
Lord Christ, should render it also by
inflicting earthly injuries.
The idea
of civil disobedience has been applied to
social issues such as slavery, child labor, women’s suffrage, and prohibition
of alcohol. When I am speaking of civil disobedience,
it is in the light of the actions of Marcellus.
Marcellus did not throw down his staff and belt to make a
statement about who he was as an individual nor to strike a blow for individual
liberty. Marcellus renounced soldiering as being unfaithful to his true Lord.
When we talk about Christian civil disobedience, we are not talking about Thoreau and his New England
Transcendentalism which focused on private conscience as against majority
expediency. We are talking about
faithfulness to God which transcends all earthly loyalties.
Nevertheless, the scripture passages quoted at the
beginning makes it clear that we are to be subject to the governing
authorities. How is it that one is subject to government, yet refuses to obey
it? That would appear to be a contradiction. John Howard Yoder offers an
explanation that I find plausible:
It is not by
accident that the imperative of [Romans] 13:1 is not literally one of
obedience. The Greek language has good
words to denote obedience, in the sense
of completely bending one’s will and one’s actions to the desires of another.
What Paul calls for, however, is subordination. This verb is based on the same
root as the ordering of the powers by God. Subordination
is significantly different from obedience. The conscientious objector who
refuses to do what his government asks him to do, but still remains under the
sovereignty of that government and
accepts the penalties which it imposes, . . .
is being subordinate even though he is not obeying.
It is clear from the New Testament that Jesus’ followers
did not blindly obey the governments under which they found themselves.
Faithfulness to God was first. It is also clear that the sixteenth-century
Quakers were faithful to God first and the state second. Jesus knew that his
followers would be in tension with the authorities. He instructed them:
You will be
handed over to the local councils and flogged in the synagogues. On account of me, you will stand before governors and kings
as witnesses to them. And the gospel must first be preached to all nations.
Whenever you are arrested and brought to trial, do not worry beforehand about
what to say. Just say whatever is given you at the time, for it is not you
speaking, but the Holy Spirit (Mark 13:9b-11 NIV).
These are hardly the instructions of a leader expecting
his followers to obey every authority instituted among men. For the sake of the
gospel followers of Jesus will refuse to obey men. But, for the Lord’s sake,
the followers of Jesus will submit to every authority instituted among men, and
by so doing will bear witness to those authorities.
As John Howard Yoder puts it: “We subject ourselves to government because it
was in so doing that Jesus revealed and achieved God’s victory.”
Granting our desire to submit to government, and allowing our desire
to be faithful, what do we do when we believe the state is asking us to behave
contrary to God’s will for us?
Peter’s brief
instructions [1 Peter 2:13] did not deal with the believer’s response whenever
government demands that which is contrary to the Christian faith. In Acts 4:19
and 5:29 we have the example of Peter himself concerning the Christian response
under such conditions. For the Christian the state is not the highest
authority, and whenever government demands that which conflicts with the
dictates of the conscience enlightened by the Holy Spirit and the Word, then
the Christian must obey the Word of God and suffer the results. ‘The Church
soon learned by bitter experience that there are some things which the state
has no right to do and that therefore the
counsel of submission has its limitations: But under ordinary circumstances,
believers should actively support civil government in its promotion of law and
order.
The key here would seem to be a conscience enlightened by
the Holy Spirit and the Word. I cannot speak for other Christian denominations,
but as a Quaker, I believe that the Holy
Spirit speaks through the body of believers, this would indicate another test.
The Word and the Spirit speaking in concert with the body of believers will
tell us when the state has overstepped its bounds and when a Christian must say
“no” to the state. But what shape does that holy “no” take?
Looking back at our definition of Christian civil
disobedience, we need a way of testing what we do. One commentator has
suggested five qualifications on civil disobedience (not necessarily Christian
in its motivation):
The law opposed is immoral in conflict with a higher
claim; every possible non-disobedient recourse has been exhausted, with the
definition of “possible” and “exhausted” being tempered by the situation; the
protest is not clandestine; there is a likelihood of success (drawing a
distinction between purely personal action taken for conscience sake and the
sort of social disobedience which seeks to change society and thus must have
its potential adverse effects balanced
against the good likely to emerge); there
is willingness to accept the penalty.
Looking more specifically at the church’s witness to the
state, another commentator finds three additional tests, which also apply to
individual Christian witness to the state:
The witness must be representative of
the church’s clear conviction; the
witness of the church must be consistent
with her own behavior; the church should speak only when she has something to
say, rather than feeling obligated to “cover the field.” If we follow these
suggestions, there is much more likelihood of civil disobedience being truly holy obedience.
We should also recognize that the current North American
governmental systems are set in place with civil disobedience as a valid method
of speaking to government. A quotation from the Declaration of Independence of
the United States should remind us of our freedom of choice:
. . . We
hold these truths to be self-evident: That all men are created equal; that they
are endowed by their creator with certain unalienable rights; that among these
are life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness; that, to secure these rights,
governments are instituted among men, deriving their just powers from the
consent of the governed; that whenever any form of government becomes
destructive of these ends, it is the right of the people to alter or to abolish
it and to institute a new government. . . .
When the government acts in a way which violates
Christian conscience under the tests set out above, Christians have several
ways to work with the situation. They can seek legislation which changes that
which they dislike, they can use the courts to determine whether the law
actually applies to them in the way it seems to, they can use the courts in an
effort to overturn the law as being a violation of the Constitution, or they
can submit to the government while refusing to obey the law.
However, this is what I find frustrating there are so
many people protesting a wide variety of issues for their own advantage that it
is difficult for anyone to distinguish between those who speak from firmly held
religious convictions and those who speak only from self-interest. My questions
are what is the Scriptural basis for the protest? What Christian belief does it support?
Would I go to jail for this cause?
All resistance and every attack against the gods of this world
will be unfruitful unless the church
itself is without sin. Judgment must
first begin at the House of God. If we
are to be the witness for the LORD, we must be faithful to HIS cause. Unless the Church can demonstrate the
transforming power of the Gospel of Jesus Christ,
we will not have authority over the gods
of this world.
Most of the modern Church has been an organization of
reactors rather than being proactive on the issues of sin. WE would much rather
be the “spiritual ambulance” which picks up the broken and bloody victims of a
destructive social structure than trying to change the structure. We are faced with the destruction of our
society and culture. Murder, drugs,
sexual immorality, and a loss of respect and love for our fellowman. We need to hold people responsible for their
actions. We must stop turning our heads
to the evil that is overtaking us and expose those who are destroying our
families, our communities, our churches, and our government.
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