All Christians Should be Theonomists
All
Theonomists Should be Pacifists
This domain is a companion to the domain www.Anarcho-Theonomy.com,
which argues that
All Christians Should be Theonomists If you haven't done so, I recommend reading www.Anarcho-Theonomy.com first, as it contains a defense of Theonomy. This website presupposes that defense. A pacifist opposes violence. The State is institutionalized, systematic violence. Therefore the consistent pacifist is an anarchist. Definition of TermsIn a nutshell, "Theonomy" comes from two Greek words meaning "God's Law," and stands for the proposition that the Christian should obey the entire Bible -- all the Scriptures, including "the Old Testament." Obviously, the laws concerning the Levitical priesthood, temple sacrifices, etc., can now (under the New Covenant) only be obeyed through Jesus Christ, "a priest after the order of Melchizedek." "Pacifist," derived from the Latin for peace, usually means "opposition to all war." We begin our definition with the 6th Commandment: "Thou shalt not kill." If someone comes at you with a sword, every pacifist believes you may defend yourself with a shield. If you're Capt. Kirk of the Starship Enterprise, set your phaser to "stun" and put the sword-bearer to sleep. But do not kill him. Witness to him of Christ the Savior. The English word "witness" translates the Greek word "μάρτυς" (martus), from which we get the English word "martyr." Christian ethics teaches that it is better to witness and be killed than to kill. "When a man’s ways please the Lord, He makes even his enemies to be at peace with him." Proverbs 16:7 "Anarchist" means "not an archist." An archist believes he has the right to impose his will on others by force or threats of violence. A Christian is a Theonomic Non-archist, which is to say, a Theonomic Pacifist. "Everybody knows" that Jesus taught His followers to be "pacifists."
Many people who call themselves "Theonomists" support war and lethal self-defense because of the presence of many wars and military imagery in the Old Testament. But this is as logical as a Theonomist supporting the Roman Catholic Church because there are lots of priests and sacrifices in the Old Testament. There is, in fact, a clear relationship between the ritual shedding of blood which Theonomists call "the ceremonial law" and the shedding of blood involved in the so-called "judicial law." This is explained here. But it takes more than one webpage to really understand this complex issue. That's why we have a complete program offered on this website. |
Why You Don't Understand that
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Let divines and philosophers,
statesmen and patriots, unite their endeavors to renovate the age,
by impressing the minds of men with the importance of educating
their little boys and girls, of inculcating in the minds of
youth the fear and love of the Deity . . . and, in subordination
to these great principles, the love of their country. . . . In
short, of leading them in the study and practice of the exalted
virtues of the Christian system.
1790 Letter to John
Adams, |
The "Christian system" is different from the Secular Humanist system, the Moslem system, and the Soviet system. If you'll follow my argument for Theonomic Pacifism to the very end, you can compensate for what the federal government denied you as a little boy or girl by committing to "the study and practice of the exalted virtues of the Christian system," as laid out by the Prince of Peace, Jesus the Executed Pacifist.
It's true that America's Founding Fathers believed that violent revolution was justified even though taxes in 1776 were about 1/20th what they are today, and our government is more tyrannical than theirs.
If America's Founding Fathers could travel through time, what would they say is America's Most Pressing Problem?
Not taxes or tyranny. I think they would say it is the fact that America is no longer a nation "Under God," but is an atheistic nation ("secular" sounds so much nicer than "atheistic"). The nation that once sent missionaries and Bibles around the world is now the world's greatest exporter of weapons and pornography.
And the root of this problem is a national system of compulsory atheistic education for all children 5-17 years of age. America's Founders would be horrified, outraged, apoplectic. Princeton professor Archibald Hodge saw the trend back in 1887, and sounded this alarm:
He was right. If our Godly and virtuous ancestors could see schools and culture today, they would be screaming: "What are you doing about this!?!?". . . I am as sure as I am of Christ's reign that a comprehensive and centralized system of national education, separated from religion, as is now commonly proposed, will prove the most appalling enginery for the propagation of anti-Christian and atheistic unbelief, and of anti-social nihilistic ethics, individual, social and political, which this sin-rent world has ever seen.[1]
What are you doing about this? Of course, you are paying for this propagation of atheism and immorality. Are you doing as much to stop it or counter it as the danger warrants?
Then you are part of the problem, not part of the solution.
Have you taken your own kids out of public schools? Terrific. But you yourself are still a victim of educational malpractice.
Because of their Biblical education, America's Founding Fathers realized that "the Divine Right of Kings" was not a Biblical doctrine. You have been denied this education by an imperialist regime that can only be described as "the enemy of mankind." You don't see half of what America's Founders saw. If they were here today, they would see not only that the "divine right of kings" is an unChristian concept, but the entire concept of "the nation-state" is a complete failure, having been invented by rebels and nowhere commanded or endorsed in the Bible. "The State" is institutionalized violence, and utterly contrary to Christian pacifism.
Overview: The Teachings of Christianity:
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The Meaning of "Pacifism"
The word "pacifist" does not mean "passive." It is related to the word "pacific," from the Latin pācificus literally, peacemaking, from pāx, peace
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“Vine & Fig Tree”My favorite pacifist passage is Micah 4:1-7
Pacifism is not about a few verses here and there. It is about a Biblical Worldview. An anarcho-pacifist worldview looks at the world very differently from one who supports mass murder and destruction of private property. To see how a Biblical Worldview interlaces pacifism and anarchism, see this critique of the political theory of John M. Frame. The non-pacifist American can criticize Bill Clinton, but fail to see that the United States is the most evil and most dangerous entity on the planet. Indeed, the U.S. is the enemy of Christianity and the enemy of mankind. Pacifism requires a wholesale reformation of one's worldview. |
"Love your enemy""Theonomy" (God's Law) means that every word of the Scriptures is the Word of God, and every Word of a Sovereign is Law. The whole Bible must be consulted. At one point, our Sovereign declared that the blood of a spotless lamb must be shed in order for sins to be forgiven. Later, our Sovereign declared that Jesus Christ was "the Lamb of God Who takes away the sins of the world." That means you don't need to buy anything from your neighbor's flock to sacrifice. At one point God commanded, "Thou shalt not kill." Did God subsequently or additionally say something that could lead a rational and faithful Christian to go to the Gun Show, stock up, and start killing? Jesus certainly never said anything that could lead someone to that conclusion. He commanded His followers to be "pacifists." The word "pacifist" in this context means loving one's enemies and being willing to be killed rather than to kill.
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"Thou shalt not kill"Pacifism is described in the Westminster Larger Catechism's exposition of the 6th Commandment.
Click those links above for a fuller exposition of the 6th Commandment. You do not love your enemy if you kill your enemy. The Apostle Paul says that Biblical "love" is defined by obedience to God's Law, including the commandment "Thou shalt not kill." Killing is "working ill" to your neighbor. The New King James Version adds this caption to Romans 13:8-10:
The English Standard Version's caption reads:
This is misleading. If I kill my neighbor, steal his stuff, and rape his wife, can it still be said that I fulfilled God's Law with respect to my neighbor if I had a warm fuzzy feeling of "love" in my heart? You cannot fulfill God's Law through the feeling of "love." What Paul is saying is if you want to obey the command to "love thy neighbor," obey all of God's Commandments with respect to your neighbor. "Love" is the opposite of killing and stealing.
You do not love your neighbor if you kill him.
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"Resist not evil." (Matthew 5:39)If I give your daughter a "date-rape" drug, like Rohypnol, without her consent, it is legally considered an act of violence, even if no sexual assault occurs. If I see your daughter being assaulted and I use a tranquilizer gun with Rohypnol to quickly and gently "pacify" the attacker, no pacifist would consider that an act of violence. It would not violate Jesus' command to "resist not evil." The context is the mis-use of the Old Testament guard against excessive vengeance, "one eye for one eye." If Smith does damage to one of your children, you don't get to inflict damage on four of his, or compel four times the amount needed for fair compensation. I believe "turn the other cheek" is hyperbole. Jesus did not really command anyone to pluck their eyes out (Matthew 5:29). Jesus did not say that if you are a victim of assault and battery, you should say to the evil-doer, "please commit another crime against me." And in fact, Jesus did not say this when He was slapped:
The Apostle Paul, when he was ordered to be slapped, also appealed to God's Law:
There are non-violent ways to prevent crimes, if we are creative (and
love motivates imagination), but if you can't employ a non-violent method
of protection, you should be willing to suffer rather than inflict
suffering. |
"Go the second mile."The context of this axiom is the military occupation of Israel by Italy (Rome), Roman law permitted a Roman soldier to "conscript" (enslave) any Israeli to carry the soldier's provisions for up to one mile. The "Zealots" hated this pagan occupation and were plotting a violent overthrow of the Empire. Jesus repudiated this idea. He told His followers to go an extra mile with the forces of military occupation. Romans 13 adds to this by commanding us to "be subject" to "the powers that be." If we are to be subject to an invading force, we are not allowed to kill them while they are invading us. This rules out "national defense." Who cares if our socialist government is led by Barack Obama or the Supreme Leader of China. Jesus didn't care. (That's not to say that invaders and politicians will not be judged by "the Supreme Judge of the World," it's only to say that the governed must behave as pacifists toward the governors. "But if we don't defend ourselves, foreign invaders will enslave us." |
"Follow in His steps"Jesus did not defend His life by killing those who threatened Him (John 18:36), and we are commanded to follow His example:
Some have misunderstood Jesus' words in Luke 22:36. Here's an example from a group called "The National Reform Association":
No it wouldn't have, because Christ really wasn't telling the disciples to sell their clothes and buy a sword, any more than he was telling the disciples never to take an oath (Matthew 5:34) or to pluck their eyes out (Matthew 5:29). Christ used hyperbolic language which is not easily understood by victims of educational malpractice. By saying the disciples should sell their clothes and buy a sword, Christ was vividly telling the disciples that persecution was coming. By saying, "Look, Lord, here are two swords!" the disciples exasperated the Lord, Who said, in effect, "I've had enough" (Luke 22:38). Two swords would hardly have been sufficient for twelve disciples. Jesus was not telling them to buy weapons, as Greg Bahnsen has taught. These were "disappointing disciples." John Calvin commented:
Luke 22 is not commanding us to abandon pacifism. More on Luke 22. |
PeaceR.J Rushdoony has said:
You can read some of those "peace" passages here. |
"Thou shalt not kill" and "Love your enemy" provide an air-tight case for pacifism. But most people find excuses for using violence, probably because everybody would rather make the other guy suffer than to suffer themselves. The Westminster Larger Catechism spells out the demands of the 6th Commandment, but then leaves three exceptions.
As a result of those three exceptions, we have replaced the “Vine & Fig Tree” society with Socialism, Fascism, Keynesianism, the military-industrial complex, the murders of hundreds of millions of human beings, the enslavement of billions, and the destruction of trillions of dollars of private property in the 20th century alone. Because pacifism is "unrealistic" and "impractical." Let's give those three exceptions a Theonomic analysis. |
1. "Public Justice"Does a Theonomic follower of Jesus Christ have a right to kill someone in the name of "public justice?" a. "Public"For a consistent pacifist (opponent of violence), there is no such
thing as "public justice." Many will claim that "capital punishment" can only be meted out by a "civil magistrate." But God never commanded the creation or maintenance of "civil magistrates." Many will object to a stateless society based on Romans 13, contending that Romans 13 commands the creation and continued maintenance of a "civil government" or "State," which is authorized by God to kill people and behave in a notably un-pacifist manner. In fact, Romans 13 commands pacifism, not patriotism. It does not condone the organized violence which we call "the State," it simply commands us to "be subject" to it. Romans 12:9ff is a pacifist passage. Romans 13 is a continuation of the pacifist argument which began in Romans 12. For an anarchist analysis of Romans 13, see www.Romans13.com. There is nothing in the Bible that prohibits "private justice." There is nothing in the Bible that prohibits a man from "executing" his brother if his brother commits a "capital crime" -- solely because he is the criminal's nearest relative. When a murder takes place in our day, politicians and police can often be heard saying things like, "We are working hard to bring the killer to justice." That is, to kill him. b. "Justice"The Bible, taken as a whole, is against "capital punishment."
"Capital punishment" in western civilization is historically derived from Biblical passages* which demanded that the blood of capital criminals be shed:
Smaller sins could be atoned for through the temple sacrifices: lambs, turtledoves, etc., but some crimes were so serious that atonement could not be made in any other way than by the shedding of the blood of the criminal himself:
That God does not require the shedding of blood after Christ's work on Calvary is seen in the case of an unsolved homicide; Deuteronomy 21:1-9 required the tribal elders to shed the blood of a heifer in order to atone for the shedding of innocent blood, following the directions of the priests:
Nobody advocates the literal application of Deuteronomy 21 after the Cross. Christian theologians for 2000 years have rightly concluded that in our day only the blood of Christ can provide such atonement in cases of an unsolved homicide. Yet they persist in requiring the shedding of the criminal's blood when the homicide is solved. What politicians call "capital punishment" is actually part of the "ceremonial law," overseen by the Levitical priests.
This has foreign policy implications. "Holy
war" in the Old Testament was "capital
punishment" on a national scale. The Promised
Land was being cleansed of heinous sins committed by the pagans who
inhabited the land promised to Abraham. Anyone using Old Testament texts
to justify U.S. invasion of a non-Christian land is denying the efficacy
of Christ's blood as the only means of atonement, and abusing the Bible. |
2. Holy WarI believe the Bible should be used as a blueprint for all political policies. I don't believe it should be mis-used, however. There are many Christians who use Old Testament "holy wars" as a justification for war, capital punishment, and self-defense in our day. This is a mistake. These wars were not "military" in the modern secular sense. They were religious and priestly. They were part of the "ceremonial law." Bible scholars often divide Old Testament laws into three
categories: There really is no "judicial law." Only "moral" and "ceremonial" law. The "ceremonial law" is priestly law. It is generally about cleansing from sin, or making "atonement" for sin. And this generally involves the shedding of blood. The "ceremonial law" was fulfilled by Christ when He shed His blood on the Cross. In our day, no other blood has any power to atone for sins. In the Old Covenant, before Christ shed His blood, God required the shedding of blood of both man and beast to atone for sins. Some sins required more than the shedding of the blood of a dove or lamb. They required the shedding of the blood of the perpetrator himself. Today we call these ritual acts of bloodshed “capital punishment,” or in the case of entire nations in the Promised Land, "holy war." Old Testament wars were acts of cleansing or atonement on a national scale. Neither “capital punishment” or "holy war" are required or even permitted under the New Covenant. Christians who justify modern secular militarism and imperialism with Old Testament "holy wars" also use Romans 13 as an excuse for war in our day. This too is a mistake.
For Further Reading: What follows are excerpts from leading "Christian Reconstructionists" showing that "holy war" was priestly and religious, not secular/civil. [Skip and go to "self-defense"] Gary North, LIMITS TO EMPIRE The Whole Burnt Offering and Disinheritance The Israelites were told to show no mercy to the nations inside Canaan's boundaries (Deut. 7:16). These nations had practiced such great evil that they had become abominations in the sight of God. "For all that do these things are an abomination unto the LORD: and because of these abominations the LORD thy God doth drive them out from before thee" (Deut. 18:12). The language of Deuteronomy 20:10-18 indicates that every living thing inside the boundaries of Canaan was to be killed: "thou shalt save alive nothing that breatheth." With respect to the first city to fall, Jericho, this law applied literally (Josh. 6:15-21). But it did not apply literally to the other cities of Canaan. After the destruction of Jericho, the first city inside Canaan to be defeated, cattle became lawful spoils for the Israelites. "And thou shalt do to Ai and her king as thou didst unto Jericho and her king: only the spoil thereof, and the cattle thereof, shall ye take for a prey unto yourselves: lay thee an ambush for the city behind it" (Josh. 8:2). The word "breatheth" did not apply to Canaan's cattle; it applied only to the human population. "And all the spoil of these cities, and the cattle, the children of Israel took for a prey unto themselves; but every man they smote with the edge of the sword, until they had destroyed them, neither left they any to breathe" (Josh. 11:14). Jericho was the representative example of God's total wrath against covenant-breakers who follow their religious presuppositions to their ultimate conclusion: death.(3) Jericho came under God's total ban: hormah.(4) This was the equivalent of a whole burnt offering: almost all of it had to be consumed by fire. In the whole burnt offering, all of the beast was consumed on the altar (Lev. 1:9, 13), except for the skin, which went to the officiating priest (Lev. 7:8). Similarly, all of Jericho was burnt except for the precious metals, which went to the tabernacle as firstfruits (Josh. 6:24).(5) Nevertheless, because God wanted His people to reap the inheritance of the Canaanites, He allowed them to confiscate the cattle and precious goods of the other conquered Canaanite cities. This illustrated another important biblical principle of inheritance: "A good man leaveth an inheritance to his children's children: and the wealth of the sinner is laid up for the just" (Prov. 13:22). Canaan's capital, except in Jericho, was part of Israel's lawful inheritance. The Canaanites had accumulated wealth; the Israelites were to inherit all of it. This comprehensive inheritance was to become a model of God's total victory at the end of history. Their failure to exterminate the Canaanites, placing some of them under tribute instead (Josh. 16:10; 17:13), eventually led to the apostasy of Israel and the Assyrian and Babylonian captivities, just as Moses prophesied in this passage (vv. 17-18; cf. 7:1-5; 12:30-31). The annihilation of every living soul in Canaan was mandatory. "And thou shalt consume all the people which the LORD thy God shall deliver thee; thine eye shall have no pity upon them: neither shalt thou serve their gods; for that will be a snare unto thee" (Deut. 7:16). This was a model of God's final judgment. But it was a model in the same way that Jericho was a model: a one-time event. Jericho was to be totally destroyed, including the animals; this was not true of the other cities of Canaan. Similarly, the Canaanites were to be totally annihilated; this was not true of residents of cities outside Canaan. In this sense, Jericho was to Canaan what Canaan was to cities outside the land: a down payment ("earnest") on God's final judgment -- final disinheritance -- at the end of time. This earnest payment in history on the final disinheritance is matched by the earnest payment in history on the final inheritance. This is surely the case in spiritual affairs.(6) Debates over eschatology are debates over the extent to which these earnest payments in history are also cultural and civilizational, and whether they image the final judgment, i.e., to what extent history is an earnest on eternity.(7) James B. Jordan Hormah
This is not the only “Hormah,” for we read in Numbers 21:1-3 of a place that was also “devoted to destruction,” and as a result was called Hormah. Hormah means “placed under the ban, totally destroyed.” To be placed under the ban is to be devoted to death. Just as the Nazirite was devoted to God in life (for instance, Samson, Samuel), so the banned person or city was devoted wholly to God in death. To put under the ban means to curse and to devote to total destruction. The preeminent example of a city devoted to total destruction is Jericho, the story of which is recorded in Joshua 6:15-19. Everything living was to be killed, all the treasures brought to the house of God, and the city was to be burned with fire. No personal booty was allowed. More light is shed on this matter in Deuteronomy 13:12-18. The apostate city is to be banned, and “then you shall gather all its booty into the middle of its open square and burn the city and all its booty with fire as a whole burnt sacrifice to the LORD your God; and it shall be a ruin forever. It shall never be rebuilt” (v. 16). From this we learn that it was God’s fire, lit by Himself from heaven (Lev. 9:24; 2 Chron. 7:1), kept burning perpetually on the altar, which was used to ignite the city placed under the ban. (See also Gen. 22:6 and 1 Ki. 18:38.) The fact that God starts His fire shows that the sacrifice is His sacrifice, the sacrifice that He Himself provides to propitiate His own fiery wrath. Man has no hand in it, and only an ordained priest may handle it. Man is impotent in his salvation, so that man cannot even light the sacrificial fire. If he dares to do so, God destroys him (Lev. 10:1-2). All men stand on God’s altar. Those who accept God’s Substitute, the very Lamb of God, Jesus Christ, can step off the altar and escape the fire. Jesus takes the fire for them. He becomes the whole burnt sacrifice. Those who refuse the Substitute, however, are left on the altar, and are burnt up by the fire of God. (See Gen. 19:24; Rev. 18:8; Rev. 20:14f.; and for further study, Heb. 12:29; Ex. 3:2-5; Heb. 12:18; Num. 11:1-3; Num. 16:35; Num. 21:6; Gen. 3:25; 2 Pet. 3:9-12; Rev. 8:3-5). Thus, the destruction of Hormah was a priestly act, issuing from the flaming swords of the cherubic (priestly) guardians of the land, a revelation of God’s direct fiery judgment against the wicked. Not every city was to be destroyed in this fashion, but certain ones were, as types of the wrath of God. This horrible judgment, introduced here at the beginning of Judges, comes again in Judges 20:40, when it is an apostate Israelite city that is burnt up as a sacrifice to God. Taxation in the Bible | Gary North
(That the army was "priestly" can be seen directly from Scripture. That the army was "civil" may be reading modern categories into the text.)
There is no such thing as "judicial law" in the Bible.
related: Swords into
Plowshares |
3. Self-DefenseThe final justification for not being a follower of the Prince of Peace is the idea of "self-defense." The Christian position is that it is better to be killed than to kill. You should not take someone else's life just to preserve your own. If someone threatens to kill you, you "witness" to him, announcing the good news of the Gospel. "Witness" here includes the demand for repentance from violations of God's Law, including, obviously, the harm being threatened. The Holy Sprit promises that God's Word will not return void. "When a man’s ways please the Lord, He makes even his enemies to be at peace with him" (Proverbs 16:7). If the Lord does not do this, then you may become a "martyr," which comes from the Greek word for "witness." There is no evidence in the New Testament than any faithful Christian chose to kill someone in "self-defense" rather than be a martyr. They followed the example of Jesus. "National Defense'This means "defense of the State." Since the State is an unlawful entity, killing someone created in the Image of God in order to protect systematic rebellion against God is not an ethical option. Christ clearly taught it was better to be occupied and put under tribute than to engage in violent revolution against "the powers that be," or "national defense" against the powers that wanna be. "Protection"Some will quote Old Testament verses on protecting the poor and oppressed, and use these verses to defend killing people. In most cases, these verses command us to protect the poor and oppressed from the State and its corrupt judges. The same State whose existence is defended by the anti-pacifists. If pacifists had their way, "the State" would be abolished and 99% of the oppression of the poor would cease. Of whatever oppression remains, most can be dealt with without killing the oppressor. God does not require killing to deal with the tiny, infinitesimal amount of oppression that remains. We are commanded to do our best to protect the weak, but there are limits to that. "Thou shalt not kill" is one of those limits.
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ConclusionA Theonomic analysis of the three most popular exceptions to the
Theonomic rule of pacifism shows they don't stand up. Jesus came to bring
"Peace on Earth," not what we have as a result of dismissing
pacifism. |
Myth: The Old Testament advocates war, slavery, genocide, and vengeful retaliation. |
Myth: The Teachings of Jesus are the impractical and pacifist platitudes of an unrealistic, utopian hippie, and should be relegated to the inner religious meditations of a Mother Theresa, but should be kept away from civil matters, public policy, and especially foreign affairs and military strategy. |
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Both sides of this
coin are wrong. |
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Jesus quoted the Old Testament. The prophets spoke of a day when we would beat our swords into plowshares and everyone would dwell securely under his own Vine & Fig Tree -- not because his property was being taken from him to fund the "military-industrial complex," which "keeps us all safe" and "protects your right to be a pacifist," but because nobody was training for war any more. | If we were to follow the teachings of Jesus in Washington D.C., we would experience security, peace, and economic prosperity. No war that the U.S. federal government has waged has ever made things better than they would have been without military intervention. | |
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Conclusion: |
We should take both the Old Testament and the New Testament seriously. |
Footnotes
(1) Cited by R.J. Rushdoony, Institutes of Biblical Law, 219 (1973). See the discussion, below, p. 7. [Back to text] (2) From the King James Version (1611): Genesis 6:11-13; Genesis 21:25; Leviticus 6:2-4; Deuteronomy 28:31; 2 Samuel 22:3; 2 Samuel 22:49; Job 20:19; Job 24:2; Psalm 7:16; Psalm 11:5; Psalm 18:48; Psalm 55:9; Psalm 58:2; Psalm 72:14; Psalm 73:6; Psalm 86:14; Psalm 140:1; Psalm 140:4; Psalm 140:11; Proverbs 4:14-17; Proverbs 10:6; Proverbs 10:11; Proverbs 13:2; Proverbs 16:29; Proverbs 28:17; Ecclesiastes 5:8; Isaiah 53:9; Isaiah 59:1-15; Jeremiah 6:7; Jeremiah 22:3; Jeremiah 22:15-17; Ezekiel 7:11; Ezekiel 7:23; Ezekiel 8:17; Ezekiel 12:19; Ezekiel 18:7-8; Ezekiel 18:12-13; Ezekiel 18:16-18; Ezekiel 28:16; Ezekiel 45:9-10; Joel 3:19; Amos 3:10; Amos 6:3; Obadiah 1:10; Jonah 3:8; Micah 2:2; Micah 6:11-12; Habakkuk 1:2-4; Habakkuk 1:9; Habakkuk 2:8; Habakkuk 2:17; Zephaniah 1:9; Zephaniah 3:4; Malachi 2:16; Luke 3:14. [Back to text] (3) Exodus 22:4-5 ("If you meet your enemy's ox or his donkey going astray, you shall surely bring it back to him again. [5] If you see the donkey of one who hates you lying under its burden, and you would refrain from helping it, you shall surely help him with it.") Luke 10:33-34 ("But a certain Samaritan, as he journeyed, came where he was: and when he saw him, he had compassion on him, {34} And went to him, and bound up his wounds, pouring in oil and wine, and set him on his own beast, and brought him to an inn, and took care of him.") [Back to text] (4) Matthew 5-7, passim. ("Blessed are the peacemakers," "Love your enemy," "Turn the other cheek," etc.) [Back to text] (5) "Peace, Ethics of," 3 Dictionary of the History of Ideas, 441 (1973). [Back to text] |
* Did the Supreme Court really "ban the Bible" from public schools?Public school students can certainly be taught that the Bible exists. But they cannot be taught that it is true, and that it is a "sacred" book because it is the Word of God. In other words, the Court banned the teaching of the Bible as the Bible would be taught by those who wrote it. The Court also banned the Bible as the Supreme Court ruled 150 years earlier it "must" be taught. An 1844 U.S. Supreme Court case involved a wealthy Frenchman who left a large sum of money in his will to the City of Philadelphia to build a school in which no clergy would teach. (Virtually all schools back then were run by churches or Christian organizations and clergy often taught the classes Mon-Fri.) There was a great controversy over whether the will of this obviously deistic Frenchman should be enforced. The U.S. Supreme Court ruled that just because clergy couldn't teach, didn't mean that lay teachers could not continue to teach the Bible as the Word of God in a school administered by the city government. In fact, the Court said -- and the City of Philadelphia enthusiastically agreed -- that teachers "must" teach Christianity and the Bible as a "divine revelation" and a "sacred volume." Here are the words of the U.S. Supreme Court in 1844:
There is nothing in the U.S. Constitution which forced the Supreme Court in the early 1960's to repudiate Christianity and remove the Bible "as a divine revelation" from public schools. |
Why do I say the U.S. Empire is "Anti-Pacifist?"Because I studied law, passed the California Bar Exam, and was denied a license to practice law because I'm a pacifist. If the government took a blood test of my parents, and concluded that my parents were a high-risk to burden the Medicare and Social Security systems, and the government ordered me to put my parents to "sleep" in order to help ensure the solvency of the entitlement system, I would defiantly (but respectfully) disobey the order. The Bible says "Thou shalt not kill," so I'm a pacifist. The Bible says "Honor your father and mother," and "We must obey God rather than man." I normally obey all government laws and pay all taxes, but if there's a conflict between God's Law and man's laws, I know in advance that I'm going to disobey the government. Based on this case, a Federal District Court in Los Angeles ruled that my predisposition to disobey the government's mandatory violence disqualified me from being permitted to take the oath to "support the Constitution" which all attorneys must take. The Ninth Circuit Court upheld the District Court. My Pro Bono Legal Dream Team before the 9th Circuit included the current Dean of the Law School at the University of California, Irvine, two of the authors of the Religious Freedom Restoration Act (passed by Congress during the Clinton Administration), and a former California State Supreme Court Justice. They lost. The United States Supreme Court would not hear my appeal. So I am not a lawyer, I am a pacifist. A fair trade, if you ask me. Other than that, the United States Empire is the enemy of mankind because it rejects pacifism. |
A Christian Defense of
Anarcho-Capitalism
and
Biblical Critique of
“National Defense”
Pacifists are often told that pacifism is "unrealistic" and "impractical," because if it were even implemented across an entire society, that society would immediately be invaded and enslaved. We now set about to prove that "national defense" is sinful, by proving that:
PacifismLet's review. The word "pacifism" comes from the Latin
word for "peace." It is not related to the word
"passive." Christians actively oppose violence and evil,
and are willing to give their own lives to save another, but Christians
are commanded to
"Just War Theory" is one such accommodation to "social realities." It is an attempt to escape the clear teaching of Christ and the Scripture. AnarchismJesus Christ commanded His followers to be "anarchists." The word "anarchist" literally means "not an archist." But what's an archist? An "archist"
is someone Jesus told His disciples not to be "archists." Christians are not to impose Christianity on the world by government force ("the sword") In the Gospel of Mark, chapter 10, Jesus discovers His disciples arguing about who is going to be the "greatest" in the Kingdom of God. They didn't understand that Jesus' Kingdom was quite unlike the kingdoms of the world.
The Greek word translated "rulers" is the Greek word from which we derive our English word "anarchist." "Lords," "rulers" and "great ones" are "archists." Jesus clearly says His followers are not to be "archists." They are to be "servants" instead. The same Greek word for "servant" in Mark 10 occurs in these passages:
As "servants," Christians are to do whatever the boss says to do (unless the boss orders the servant to disobey God [Acts 5:29]). It is often objected that if Christian pacifists had enough votes to
abolish "national defense," that America would be invaded and
taken over by the Communists, the Jihadists, or the enemy-du-jour,
and we would all be enslaved. |
There are three problems with this objection: |
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According to Wikipedia, going "the extra mile"
But then Wikipedia accurately notes that: The verse is a reference to the practice of "impressment" which, among other things, allowed a Roman soldier to conscript a Jewish native to carry his equipment for one Roman mile (milion = 1,000 paces, about 1,611 yards or 1,473 metres) -- no easy task considering a Roman soldier's backpack could weigh upwards of 100 pounds (45.4 kg). "Going the extra mile" is thus not a feel-good Hallmark Card. As Wikipedia used to note: Jesus' point was that his followers must relinquish their individual "rights" in order to advance God's kingdom through self-sacrifice. We as Americans don't want to hear that last point. We don't want to "relinquish our rights." We don't like to hear anything about "self-sacrifice." Perhaps that's why the most recent edition of Wikipedia removed that last line and substituted this: The editors of the New Oxford Annotated Study Bible have suggested that going the second mile would perhaps spare another from such compulsion. In other words, "Don't ask ME to go the extra mile -- make my oppressors go the extra mile for me." Self-centered Americans. Wikipedia (and the New Oxford Annotated Study Bible) thereby completely negates what Jesus was saying. Turns it upside down and backwards. If you want an example of "oppression," imagine Jews in first-century Israel being subjected to military occupation by unclean pagans from Rome. Then imagine Americans having their one-party government of Democrats and Republicans replaced by members of ISIS. |
Nothing in the Sermon on the Mount allows for "Second
Amendment remedies." Jesus said if an invading foreign soldier
putting your community under military occupation compels you to go one
mile, go with him two.
Are you ready for that? Do you think the government will protect you from ISIS? Mitch McConnell
is not going to grab a gun and personally protect your neighborhood from
ISIS. He might conscript
you to grab a gun and go protect someone else's neighborhood
from ISIS. Will you obey the government and go fight ISIS? Will you be
like the "zealots"
and attempt to overthrow the military occupation of your
"homeland?" |
Matthew 5:41 |
Romans 13:1-7
13 Let every person be subject to the governing authorities, for there is no authority except by God, and those that exist are put in place by God. 2 So then, the one who resists authority resists the ordinance which is from God, and those who resist will receive condemnation on themselves. 3 For rulers are not a cause of terror for a good deed, but for bad conduct. So do you want not to be afraid of authority? Do what is good, and you will have praise from it, 4 for it is God’s servant to you for what is good. But if you do what is bad, be afraid, because it does not bear the sword to no purpose. For it is God’s servant, the one who avenges for punishment on the one who does what is bad. 5 Therefore it is necessary to be in subjection, not only because of wrath but also because of conscience. 6 For because of this you also pay taxes, for they are servants of God, busily engaged in this very thing. 7 Pay to everyone what is owed: pay taxes to whom taxes are due; pay customs duties to whom customs duties are due; pay respect to whom respect is due; pay honor to whom honor is due.
Titus 3
3 Put them in mind to be subject to principalities and powers, to obey magistrates, to be ready to every good work,
1 Peter 2:13-17
13 Submit yourselves to every ordinance of man for the Lord's sake: whether it be to the king, as supreme; 14 Or unto governors, as unto them that are sent by him for the punishment of evildoers, and for the praise of them that do well.
15 For so is the will of God, that with well doing ye may put to silence the ignorance of foolish men: 16 As free, and not using your liberty for a cloke of maliciousness, but as the servants of God.
17 Honour all men. Love the brotherhood. Fear God. Honour the king.
- Anarcho-Pacifist Apologetics in Peter's First Epistle
Social Apologetics A Theonomic Critique of Logic Apologetics Without Aristotle Benjamin Rush Quote On Building the Kingdom- Listen to Audio
Being "subject" is not something Americans are very good at.
Matthew 26:52
King James Version (KJV)52 Then said Jesus unto him, Put up again thy sword into his place: for all they that take the sword shall perish with the sword.
Matthew 22:15-22
New King James Version (NKJV)15 Then the Pharisees went and plotted how they might entangle Him in His talk. 16 And they sent to Him their disciples with the Herodians, saying, “Teacher, we know that You are true, and teach the way of God in truth; nor do You care about anyone, for You do not regard the person of men. 17 Tell us, therefore, what do You think? Is it lawful to pay taxes to Caesar, or not?”
18 But Jesus perceived their wickedness, and said, “Why do you test Me, you hypocrites? 19 Show Me the tax money.”
So they brought Him a denarius.
20 And He said to them, “Whose image and inscription is this?”
21 They said to Him, “Caesar’s.”
And He said to them, “Render therefore to Caesar the things that are Caesar’s, and to God the things that are God’s.” 22 When they had heard these words, they marveled, and left Him and went their way.
Render Unto Caesar - R.J. Rushdoony
Jesus on Paying Taxes to Caesar
During this time many Jews were locked in conflict with Roman authorities. Many wanted to establish a theocracy as an ideal Jewish state and for them any Gentile ruler over Israel was an abomination before God. Paying taxes to such a ruler effectively denied God’s sovereignty over the nation. Jesus couldn’t afford to reject this position.
On the other hand, the Roman leaders were very touchy about anything that looked like resistance to their rule. They could be very tolerant of various religions and cultures, but only so long as they accepted Roman authority. If Jesus denied the validity of paying taxes, then he could be turned over to the Romans as someone encouraging rebellion (the Herodians were servants of Rome).
The Bible prohibits violent revolution against "the powers that be." (The prohibition is not based on the goodness of the powers, but the ordination of God.) "National Defense" is violent revolution against "the powers that wanna be."
Update September, 2013
Syria is in the news.
Suppose I am the "anarchist" you learned about in government school. Suppose I am outraged that the Syrian government used chemical weapons against "its own" people. I want to overthrow the government of Syria by detonating a bomb in the Syrian capitol, killing off members of the government, so they can be replaced by my friends.
The traditional interpretation of Romans 13 prohibits the violent overthrow of the government, such as I've described.
Suppose, then, that I renounce my Syrian citizenship and become an American citizen and vote for Barack Obama and the United States Congress to drop lots of bombs on Syria in retaliation for the Syrian government crossing "the red line." Is this prohibited by Romans 13? Why not?
Why is it that if I'm a Syrian citizen I am not allowed to overthrow my government by force and violence, but if I'm an American citizen I can overthrow the government of Syria, Iraq, Guatemala, Iran, or any government I want? Isn't it the case that in a "Representative Republic" such as the United States, that the actions of Congress and President Obama reflect the will of "the People?" If "We the People" are Christian, doesn't Romans 13 prohibit the United States government from representing "the will of the People" and therefore from overthrowing governments, fomenting civil wars, prosecuting military invasions or "police actions" around the world?
Obviously very few people in Washington D.C. have read Romans 13 in the last 50 years.
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All governments -- even the most lawless and tyrannical -- are "ordained" by God.
Rome invaded and conquered Israel a few years before Christ was born.
Matthew 5:41
Holman Christian Standard Bible (HCSB)41 And if anyone forces[a] you to go one mile, go with him two.
Footnotes:
a. Matthew 5:41 Roman soldiers could require people to carry loads for them.
Reformation Study Bible
5:41 if anyone forces you. The possibility of a Roman soldier coercing a person to serve as a guide or burden carrier was real. Even if compelled by force to do something for someone, one can demonstrate freedom by volunteering more than was demanded rather than begrudging the service.
Generously provided by Ligonier Ministries
Matthew Henry:
Some give this sense of it: The Jews taught that the disciples of the wise, and the students of the law, were not to be pressed, as others might, by the king’s officers, to travel upon the public service; but Christ will not have his disciples to insist upon this privilege, but to comply rather than offend the government.
The IVP New Testament Commentary Series
Love Even Your Oppressors (5:41)
Here Matthew probably means submission to a Roman soldier's demands. Because tax revenues did not cover all the Roman army's needs, soldiers could requisition what they required (N. Lewis 1983:172-73; Rapske 1994:14). Romans could legally demand local inhabitants to provide forced labor if they wanted (as in Mt 27:32) and were known to abuse this privilege (for example, Apul. Metam.9.39). Yet "going the extra mile" represents not only submitting to unjust demands but actually exceeding them—showing our oppressors that we love them and take no offense, although our associates may wrongly view this love as collaboration with an enemy occupation. The truth of this passage is a life-and-death matter for many believers.
Such courageous love is not easy to come by and is easily stifled by patriotism. To take but one example that challenges my own culture, many white U.S. citizens may wish to rethink the patriotic lens through which they view the American colonies' revolt against Britain in the 1770s-did they really have grounds for secession of which Jesus would have approved if they had been his disciples? Past oppression is also easily recalled. British Christians might consider their feelings for Germans; Korean and Chinese Christians, for the Japanese. In some form the principle can apply to most national, racial and cultural groups. While early Christians responded to their persecutors with defiant love (a humility the persecutors often viewed as arrogance), many politically zealous Christians in the United States guard their rights so fiercely that they are easily given to anger (which opponents also view as arrogance).
Rather, Jesus' teaching does mean that we depend on God rather than on human weapons, although God may sovereignly raise up human weapons to fight the oppressors. If we value justice and compassion for persons rather than merely utopian idealism, we must also calculate the human cost of opposing various degrees of injustice. In first-century Palestine, few "safe" vehicles existed for nonviolent social protest against the Romans; Romans viewed most public protest as linked with revolution, and punished it accordingly. In a society like ours where Christian egalitarianism has helped shape conceptions of justice, nonviolent protest stands a much better chance of working. Neither violent revolutionaries (whose cause may be more just than their methods) nor the well-fed who complacently ignore the rest of the world's pain (and whose cause is merely personal advancement) may embrace Jesus without either distorting him or transforming themselves in the process.
Yet Jesus' own life explains the meekness he prescribes. When the time appointed by his Father arrived, Jesus allowed people to crucify him, trusting his Father's coming vindication to raise him from the dead (Mt 17:11; 20:18-19). He was too meek to cry out or bruise a reed until the time would come to bring "justice to victory" (12:19-20). Yet he proclaimed justice (12:18), openly denounced the unjust (23:13-36) and actively, even somewhat "violently," protested unrighteousness although he knew what it would cost him (21:12-13). Jesus was meek (11:29), but he was not a wimp. He called his disciples to be both harmless as doves and wise as serpents (10:16)-in short, to be ruled by the law of love (22:39). Love of neighbor not only does no harm to a neighbor but bids us place ourselves in harm's way to protect our neighbor.
IVP New Testament Commentaries are made available by the generosity of InterVarsity Press.
Zealots and Sicarii - The "Second Amendment" crowd of first century Israel.
- I Repudiate the Second Amendment
- The 2nd Amendment vs. Family Values
- Why I Would Give Obama My Guns If He Asks
- Pink Pistols Survey
- Immigration and Gun Control
- Guns in Churches
- A New Civil War?
- What Does the Bible Say About Gun Control
If the Bible prohibits violence against those who are in authority over you, how can you justify using violence against these very same people when they are in the process of putting themselves in authority over you -- by invading your nation and conquering it?
If Christian ethics prohibits you from "standing up for your rights" against "the powers that be" (using violence), why do you think you would be permitted to "stand up for your rights" against "the powers that wanna be?" Against those same powers when they are becoming "the powers that be?"
Answer: you are not permitted to use violence against invading powers.
God sent the invaders.
God "Ordains" Evil: A collection of dozens of Biblical references to God sending "the sword" as a judgment against evil nations. This is the Old Testament background of Romans 13.
Governments are evil (sinful; violations of God's Commandments against theft, murder, enslavement, vengeance).
God "ordains" evil, sinful governments, commissioning them to violate His Commandments as a judgment against evil doers, stealing from those evil doers, depriving them of life and liberty, "serving" God as an instrument of God's vengeance.
It's not your business who the "powers" are. God puts them in place, and changes them whenever He wants.
Of course, if "the powers that be" invite your opinion of them ("voting," "referendum," "town hall," etc.) take advantage of the opportunity to speak the truth, and invite them to repent of their confiscation of property, murder, deprivation of liberty, and vengeance.
And of course, if "the powers that be" order you to sin against God, "We must obey God rather than man." (Acts 5:29). In other words, it's a sin to disobey a direct command from God, but it's not a sin to be a victim of governments that disobey direct commands of God (by stealing, murdering, kidnapping, taking vengeance, and everything else the State does routinely). Most Christian teachers fail to make this elementary distinction.
Hebrews 10:32-34
English Standard Version (ESV)32 But recall the former days when, after you were enlightened, you endured a hard struggle with sufferings, 33 sometimes being publicly exposed to reproach and affliction, and sometimes being partners with those so treated. 34 For you had compassion on those in prison, and you joyfully accepted the plundering of your property, since you knew that you yourselves had a better possession and an abiding one.
Matthew Henry
They were afflicted in their estates, by the spoiling of their goods, by fines and forfeitures.
Jeremiah 29:7
7 And seek the peace of the city whither I have caused you to be carried away captives, and pray unto the Lord for it: for in the peace thereof shall ye have peace.
1 Timothy 2:1-2
1 I exhort therefore, that, first of all, supplications, prayers, intercessions, and giving of thanks, be made for all men;
2 For kings, and for all that are in authority; that we may lead a quiet and peaceable life in all godliness and honesty.
Jeremiah 27
27 In the beginning of the reign of Jehoiakim the son of Josiah king of Judah came this word unto Jeremiah from the Lord, saying,
2 Thus saith the Lord to me; Make thee bonds and yokes, and put them upon thy neck,
8 And it shall come to pass, that the nation and kingdom which will not serve the same Nebuchadnezzar the king of Babylon, and that will not put their neck under the yoke of the king of Babylon, that nation will I punish, saith the Lord, with the sword, and with the famine, and with the pestilence, until I have consumed them by his hand.
9 Therefore hearken not ye to your prophets, nor to your diviners, nor to your dreamers, nor to your enchanters, nor to your sorcerers, which speak unto you, saying, Ye shall not serve the king of Babylon:
10 For they prophesy a lie unto you, to remove you far from your land; and that I should drive you out, and ye should perish.
11 But the nations that bring their neck under the yoke of the king of Babylon, and serve him, those will I let remain still in their own land, saith the Lord; and they shall till it, and dwell therein.
"National Defense" is the attempt to avoid "bringing your neck under the yoke of the king of Babylon." Or China.
"National Defense" is a very expensive lie.
"National Defense" is not Biblical. It is Humanist. It is socialist. It is fascist.
Matthew Henry
Nebuchadnezzar was very unjust and barbarous in invading the rights and liberties of his neighbours thus, and forcing them into a subjection to him; yet God had just and holy ends in permitting him to do so, to punish these nations for their idolatry and gross immoralities. Those that would not serve the God that made them were justly made to serve their enemies that sought to ruin them. [Jeremiah] shows them the vanity of all the hopes they fed themselves with, that they should preserve their liberties,
Those that will bend shall not break. Perhaps the dominion of the king of Babylon may bear no harder upon them than that of their own kings had done. It is often more a point of honour than true wisdom to prefer liberty before life
"Better Dead than Red!"
Old Testament "Holy Wars" are not a valid basis for "National Defense" in New Testament times. They were offensive, not defensive, and ceremonial, fulfilled in Christ.
- No "Holy Wars" in Our Day
- Holy War: Ceremonial Atonement by Destruction
- Humanist Holy War
- Holy War: National Capital Punishment
- Capital Punishment: A Ceremonial Shedding of Blood
"National Defense" really means "Government Defense," that is, not the defense and protection of the American People, but the perpetuation of the power of Washington D.C. insiders. Google "Continuity of Government"
Pure "Patriotism" is un-Christian
The United States is not the Christian's Nation.
Our real citizenship is not in this nation-state.
Our allegiance is not to this government.
The State recognizes the conflict, even if most "Christians" do not:
- A Christian cannot hold public office under the Bush-Obama regime.
- A Christian cannot even become a naturalized citizen of the United States.
Why should any Christian kill or die for an atheistic tyranny like that in Washington D.C.? Why would any educated Christian participate in "National Defense?"
National Security, Swiss-Style by Nick Bradley
For years I opposed pacifism as "unrealistic" and "impractical."
I claimed that God imposed a moral requirement on me to "defend my family" in the event of a home invasion, and that pacifism in the face of such an attack was immoral, not just cowardly.
To discharge my moral responsibility, I voted for a system of self-defense called "The State." This was the only "realistic" view. I was "practical." Not like those crazy pacifists.
Now, as I begin my second half-century of life, I look back on a bad decision. Since I was born, the machinery of self-defense called "The United States Federal Government" has murdered, crippled, or made homeless tens of millions of innocent non-combatant civilians. Children, grandmothers, and breadwinners.
It started with my fear of an attack on my family by a random, anonymous home invader.
- Statistically, this event is wildly improbable. Millions of American homes have never been invaded.
- "The State" doesn't even promise to prevent such an event. Some police departments have the slogan "To Protect and to Serve." They have been sued in court for failing to protect after victims called 911. Courts have always thrown these cases out. The State has no duty to protect, and citizens have no legal expectation to be protected. So much for "defense."
- The State only claims to "deter" such an event to some extent by taking vengeance on the attacker -- after the invasion has taken place and my family is dead.
- But my family was never really in danger. Most attackers attack their own families or friends.
- All such violent criminals are then warehoused by the State in atheistic penitentiaries (where no one is helped to become "penitent") so that their dysfunctional character and bad morals can spread and multiply among the prison population.
- If my home was ever actually invaded, I would probably not be in the same room as my gun, and I would have no idea how to respond to the invader. I would never have imagined myself preaching the gospel to him, engaging him in a way that psychologically disarmed his anger or fear, and praying at the same time. I have been trained by media and academia to be a "tough guy" and blow the attacker's brains out, and this leaves me silent and dependent.
- Every year hundreds of unarmed Christians pray and preach their way out of violent attacks.
- I have never been systematically trained by church or state to know the commands and example of Christ and to "follow in His steps" (1 Peter 2:21) in case of a violent confrontation. I just keep voting for "the State."
From this crippled, unrealistic, skewed vision of "self-defense" comes the global disaster known as "national defense."
- There is no danger of America being invaded. No totalitarian foreign government would ever let a million of its soldiers step foot on American soil, and witness our high standard of living. The entire army would immediately defect.
- We spend a trillion dollars a year, but have no realistic defense against incoming nuclear-armed missiles.
- What "the State" defends is not the "homeland," but the assets of multinational corporations abroad and the jobs they create for foreigners.
- "The State" also uses the armed services to advance the agenda of atheistic Communism and Secular Humanism.
- Churches are often ground-zero for military attacks by the U.S. armed services. A prominent church steeple was the target in Nagasaki, which had the largest Christian population in Japan. Iraq also had the largest Christian population of any Arab nation.
- Christians in America have trillions of dollars of disposable income. "Obamacare" is God's judgment on Christians, who have failed to carry out the "works of mercy" which are supposed to characterize Christians. Christians have given liberals an excuse to step in and give glory to the State. Christians alone could eliminate all health and welfare problems -- not only for other Americans, but for the world's poor. Prof. Ronald J. Sider notes;
“If American Christians simply gave a tithe rather than the current one-quarter of a tithe, there would be enough private Christian dollars to provide basic health care and education to all the poor of the earth. And we would still have an extra $60-70 billion left over for evangelism around the world.”
Book Review: The Scandal Of The Evangelical Conscience - Acton Institute PowerBlogWe could bribe half the world into abandoning Jihadism and becoming Christian. But American Christians prefer the delusion of "national defense" and comfortable entertainment in their mega-churches.
American Christians have the economic muscle to bring in "the millennium." But we waste it on "defense."
- The tentacles of "the State" -- the institution of "defense" -- now choke Christianity around the world.
- Home invasions occur ten thousand times a year. Governments kill ten thousand people every single DAY, on average.
- In order to protect myself from a statistically improbable act of violence, which could probably be defused by a courageous and prayerful Christian witness, and vainly gambling on the State to give me an extra 20 years of life, I'm willing to create an institution of "defense" to protect me from an equally improbable foreign invasion, and this institution is responsible for killing tens of millions of human beings around the world since I was born. [body count] This is so radically self-centered and barbaric that it staggers the imagination of a Christian worldview.
Conclusion: "Self-defense" is irresponsible and unChristlike. "National Defense" is unmitigated evil.
Obama and Romney spent over a BILLION dollars on their 2012 campaign. America moved not one iota closer to the peaceful ideal of Micah 4.
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Micah's
Prophecy (Micah 4:1-7) click for audio |
Archetypes | Controversy | Comfort | |
1 | And it will come about in the last
days [For the LORD of hosts has spoken.] That the mountain of the House of the LORD Will be established as the chief of the mountains And it will be raised above the hills |
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"Last
Days"
V&FT "impossible even for God." |
Predestinated tribulation? No. Vine & Fig Tree |
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2 | And the peoples will stream to it. And many nations will come and say, "Come, let us go up to the mountain of the LORD And to the House of the God of Jacob, |
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Conversion
of the Gentiles
One religion is superior to the others One has caught our attention: Jihadism blow-up vs. convert |
Peace is possible Peace is inevitable |
3 | That He may teach us about His ways And that we may walk in His paths." For from Zion will go forth the Law Even the Word of the LORD from Jerusalem. And He will judge between many peoples And render decisions for mighty, distant nations. |
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• The God who gave you life deserves
your respect • Every Word this God speaks deserves your attention/ obedience • Bible is not just for "private" religion, "down in your heart" • Also for public policy • Textbook for every area |
When Americans learned the Bible in
public schools, America was the most prosperous, admired nation on earth Now U.S. exports weapons/pornography Laws of Nature and of Nature's God. "judgmental" vs. Hitler |
4 | [And each of them will sit under his Vine and under his fig tree,] |
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Male
+ Female Father + mother Family = "undemocratic" |
When families are functional, the State
is unnecessary; Archism is suppressed Adams: mothers: |
5 | Then they will hammer their swords into plowshares And their spears into pruning hooks; Nation will not lift up sword against nation And never again will they train for war.
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Myth:
Fact:
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6 | And each of them will sit under his Vine and under his Fig Tree, With no one to make them afraid. For the LORD of hosts has spoken. |
Agrarianism vs. technology | Garden of Eden / City of God
Wilderness vs. Garden |
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7 | Though all the peoples walk Each in the name of his god, As for us, we will walk In the Name of the LORD our God forever and ever. In that day, saith the LORD, will I assemble her that halteth, and I will gather her that is driven out, and her that I have afflicted; And I will make her that halted a remnant, and her that was cast far off a strong nation: and the LORD shall reign over them in mount Zion from henceforth, even for ever. |
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social darwinism
immigration vs. "enumerated powers." |
works of mercy vs. focus on "winners," celebrities, power-brokers |
Bereans, search scriptures "I'll have to think about this" "This is what I've always been looking for" |