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Section II
General Considerations Enforcing the Duty of Obedience
to Civil Rule.
For there is no power but of God: the powers that be
are ordained of God. Whosoever therefore resisteth the power,
resisteth the ordinance of God: and they that resist shall receive to
themselves damnation. Verses 1, 2.
Having
stated the duty, the apostle now proceeds to show the grounds on which it
rests, insisting upon two classes of arguments, and
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1. They
derive their power from God, or in other words, government is a divine
institution, originating in, and of course, sanctioned by the will of God. For (1.) “There is no power but of God.” This is true,
whatever sense we attach to the word “power.” All physical power —all executive
energy, in every department of creation, is from God. “In Him we live, and
move, and have our being.” (Acts
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which the apostle had just enjoined. But, surely, the mere
fact that one possesses “power,” can be no reason why his claims should be
acknowledged, and his laws conscientiously obeyed. If so, the slave —ay, the
slave who has been stolen from his own land and ignominiously held as a chattel
—would be required to admit, as from God, the validity of his master’s claims.
To throw off his chains, and make his way to his native home as a freeman,
would be rebellion against God. No doctrine could be more agreeable than this
to tyrants, and to all the panders to unholy power; for, if this be Paul’s
meaning, there is no despot, no usurper, no bloody conqueror, but could plead
the divine sanction and, more than this, the devil himself could lay the
teachings of Paul under contribution to enforce his pre-eminently unholy
authority. An interpretation which leads to such monstrous conclusions —that
would bind the nations to the footstool of power with iron chains, and utterly
crush every free aspiration —that would invest with the sanctions of the divine
name the most flagrant usurpation and the most unrelenting despotism —stands
self-condemned.
But we go
further.
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which furnishes a place for governments which contemn God
and oppress mankind. And yet who claims for sin a divine sanction? Who denies
to the suffering the right to rid themselves of their trials? Carry out this
interpretation, and you furnish the bloody government of the
The truth
is, the apostle has no reference here at all to anything but the institution
of government;* and designs to assert, and does assert, that there is no
authority properly exercised over men, but that which God has established. This
is true in the largest sense: for man is God’s creature and subject, and he who
sets up claims to dominion over him must be prepared to show that he exercises
an authority of that sort and of that character which bears the stamp and
sanction of divine institution. Had Paul, indeed, said no more, it might have
been argued, with great plausibility, that he designed in this passage to give
tyrants of the earth, what they have always claimed, the sanction of the
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* “Power is to be distinguished from persons; for Paul loved polity and power; but Caligula and Nero he execrated as monsters in nature, instruments of the devil, and pests of the human race.” Lectures on Romans by Andrew Melville, Edin., 1850, p. 487.
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Most High in their course of
monstrous iniquity. Even then,
however, we would have endeavored, and we think successfully, to vindicate the
word of God against so abhorrent a conclusion. But Paul did not stop with these
general assertions. He proceeds, as will presently appear, to define, with
great distinctness and brevity, his own meaning: to designate the sort of
“power” to which he alludes: not any and every existing government, but that
which answers the end of its institution. In short, the design of this clause:
“There is no power but of God,” is merely to assert the general principle that
subjection is due to civil government, inasmuch as government is a divine
institution. This appears more distinctly from what follows.
(2.) “The
powers that be are ordained of God.” The prime fallacy of many commentaries on
this entire passage consists in taking for granted that this phrase —this
celebrated phrase —“the powers that be” —means all and any existing
governments. This cannot be. The considerations already advanced, in setting
aside a similar interpretation of the preceding clause, forbid it. Nor are
there wanting others, equally conclusive. Of
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have made princes, and I knew (approved) it not.” (Hosea
8: 4.) And the prophet Daniel, and afterwards the apostle John, expressly and
frequently denominate the
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* “So are fevers, plagues, fires, inundations, tempests, and the like. And yet Almighty God not only permits, but requires us to use all prudent methods of resisting and stopping their fury, but is far from expecting that we should lie down, and do nothing to save ourselves from perishing in such calamities. So likewise are robbers and cut-throats God’s judgments, but this doth not prove that you must submit yourselves and families to be ruined at their pleasure. So again are inferior magistrates, if they make use of their power to fall with violence upon their neighbors, and attempt their lives, or the ruin of
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others, the gospel is sent into the world. It is the “stone
cut out of the mountain without hands,” which is to “smite the great image
(Daniel 2) and break it in pieces.” One ordinance of God, smiting, and breaking
in pieces, another! The term “powers” here denote, as before, the institution
of civil rule. This, with all other kinds of power that may be lawfully
exercised among men, is “ordained of God.” In other words, the Most High has
made provision for the exercise of civil authority. He has not left mankind to
be controlled by no other government than that of parents over their children,
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their families; and yet they may be resisted, and their
illegal violence repelled by violence. And so, lastly, are foreign enemies and invaders, always reckoned amongst God’s judgments, and
amongst the most remarkable of them; and yet there is no necessity, I hope,
from hence, of tamely submitting ourselves to them: and no argument from hence,
against the lawfulness or honorableness of resisting them. Either, therefore,
let it be shown, that this objection holds good in other of God’s judgments;
or, that there is something peculiar in this to exempt it from the common rule;
or let it be acknowledged that it signifies nothing in the present case.” Hoadly’s Submission to the Powers that be.
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of masters over their servants, of church rulers over
private Christians. He has, also, provided for the setting up and administering
of another kind of power, having its own peculiar ends, its rules, its limits,
and its administrators —the power of civil government. God has willed the
existence of a national organization and polity; and, in so doing, has fixed
its ends, which it must subserve; has given it a supreme law, which it must
observe; has bound it by limits which it may not pass over. In short, God has
“ordained”* civil government as Christ has ordained the ministry of
reconciliation, not by merely willing its existence, but by prescribing its
duties, its functions, its end, and its limitations.
No other
meaning can be affixed o the language of the apostle, consistently with due
reverence for Him who is the Holy One and the Just, the rightful and beneficent
moral Governor. Can it be, for a moment, believed, that God has made man a
social being —placed him in society, and thus necessitated, by the very laws of
the human constitution, the establishment of civil rule, and that he has, after
all, set no bounds to the authority, no
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* The marginal translation, “ordered,” is rather better than that of the text.
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hedge about the claims of civil rulers? That, after all, He
has left this whole matter to be lawfully managed, not by law, even His
law, not by rule, but merely according to human caprice, or, what is far worse,
human ambition, self-seeking, pride, and violence? And, then, as the issue of
the matter, that in case a government exist, whatever the ends it aims at,
whatever the principles that guide it administration, whether it be just or
unjust, God-fearing or infidel, liberal or despotic, it exists, and He
acknowledges it as “ordained” by Him, and as entitled to the regard, homage and
obedience of its subjects? This cannot be. God is not so indifferent to His own
glory, or to the welfare of man, and particularly of the church. He never
intended, we may assert, with entire confidence, to sign, if we may so speak, a
blank, and then leave man to fill it up according to his pleasure. Every
attribute of God forbids this. Paul teaches no such doctrine.
The terms
employed by the apostle, and the connection of the clauses, accord precisely
with these views. He first asserts “power is not, except from God:”* God alone
is the source of legitimate authority. He is sovereign. Man is His. Power, not
derived from God, is ever illegitimate. It is
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mere usurpation; as, for example, the Pope’s claim to reign
in the church, and over the nations. The apostle then adds, in vindication of
civil government, “the powers that be” —governmental institutions; “are
arranged under God,”* or if this be preferred, “by God.” There is such a “power” as that
of civil rule. It is among the kinds of
authority for which the Most High has made provision, and to which he has
assigned the requisite laws and functions.
But we
rest our interpretation upon no mere verbal criticism. God is the only source
of power. And God has in the sense in which we have explained the term,
“ordained” civil government. He is the source of power, that power of which
Paul speaks, not as he endows with physical
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*![]()
We
here quote from the commentary of Andrew Melville. He says, “The third argument
is taken from the order divinely constituted under God —for the glory of God;
for so I interpret
, &c.
Not so much ‘from God’ which has already been said, as ‘powers are arranged
under God.’ Which with the article
he calls
—as if he had said
, &c.,
‘which are truly powers’ and deserve the name. Whence, an impious and unjust
tyranny, which is not of God, as such, nor accords with the divine order, he
excludes, as illegitimate, from this legitimate obedience.” Comment.
p. 497.
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strength, or even as He opens the way, in his
providence, for its successful employment in subjugating mankind; but as he has
authorized the exercise of that particular kind of authority; of course,
putting upon it, when measurably conformed to his institution, the impress of
his own dignity, and the sanction of his law.*
Is it
inquired, where this institution is found? The reply has been, in part,
anticipated. In the constitution of man, and in the principles of piety, of
equity, of beneficence, originally implanted in the human heart, but now, much
more clearly, in the written Scriptures, which abound with instruction,
addressed to rulers and people, and furnishing all the light mankind need for
the organization and administration of the most salutary political regimen. The
passage before us is an example. It is proper, however, to add, that
instruction is given in the word of God, not so much in regard to the
particular form which the government should assume, as in reference to the ends
it should seek, the principles that should guide the administration, and the
character of those into whose hands national affairs should be committed.
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* “And this may serve to explain yet farther in what sense these higher powers are from God; viz., as they
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This is
Paul’s first argument enforcing the duty of obedience, and to demonstrate that
it is not beneath the dignity of the Christian to be subject to civil
government. So far from offending Christ, such subjection honors him —for it is
yielded to a divine institution, and for the same reason, it cannot safely be
withheld. Hence Paul argues
2. From
the sin and danger of resisting civil authority, and
(1.) The sin. “Whosoever, therefore, resisteth the
power, resisteth the ordinance of God.” — Verse 2nd.
The
distinction is still kept up between the institution — “the ordinance” of God,
and the magistrate in whose hands the reins of government happen to be found.
“Whosoever resisteth the power.” A most important distinction. For, in truth,
there are occasions when it is not merely lawful, but a matter of high and
imperative duty, to resist
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act agreeably to his will, which is, that they should promote the happiness and good of human society, which Paul all along supposes them to do. And consequently, when they do the contrary, they cannot be said to be from God, or to act by his authority, any more than an inferior magistrate may be said to act by a prince’s authority, while he acts directly contrary to his will.” Hoadly, p. 5.
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authority. The case of the high priest, Azariah, and his
brethren, who withstood Uzziah, the king of Judah, in his attempt to pass over
the limits of his power and obtrude into the priest’s office, is well known to every
reader of the Bible: “It pertaineth not unto thee, Uzziah, to burn incense unto
the Lord; but to the priests, the sons of Aaron, that are consecrated to burn
incense: go out of the sanctuary, for thou hast trespassed.” (I Chronicles 26:
18) And still more to the purpose are the cases of Shadrach, Meshech, and
Abednego, and afterwards Daniel, who all refused compliance with laws enacted
by the then supreme authority in
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their doctrine make this manifest, “passive obedience,
non-resistance.” They acknowledge a higher law than the enactments of
human, and, of course, fallible, and often impious power. The first prominent
enunciation of the principle of unlimited and unquestioning obedience, was
reserved for an atheist —Hobbes of Malmesbury. Denying the existence of any
fixed standard of right —and, consequently, of any such things as virtue and
vice —this speculative philosopher resolved all the laws of morality into one
—the will of the legislature. But who were his disciples? None
but the godless, the dissipated, the scorners of all that is sacred. The
heart of
But we
may go further, and assert that Paul did not intend, by the language before us,
to forbid even the forcible resistance of unjust and tyrannical civil
magistrates, not even when that resistance is made with the avowed design of
displacing offending rulers, or, it may be, the change of the very form of
government itself. There are few
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in this land, or in any free country, to deny the right
of a nation to rid itself of oppressive power —whether foreign or domestic. The
right of revolution, for the purpose of throwing off usurping or tyrannical
rule, need not, now and here, be defended. That question was settled in
Does the
Spirit of God here condemn these efforts of the nations to rid themselves of
the yoke of despots? Does this passage rivet the chains of the oppressed?
Certainly not. God denounces the oppressor. “Woe to him that
buildeth his house by unrighteousness and his chambers by wrong,” (Jeremiah
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awful —against the ungodly and oppressing powers,
symbolized by the “beast” of Daniel and of the Revelation, we have the striking
inquiry of Psalm 94: 20: “Shall the throne of iniquity have fellowship with
the, which frameth iniquity by a law?”
Now is it
credible that notwithstanding these denunciations, the Most High does still
forbid, under penalty of his high displeasure, all conflicts for liberty? That
he so far takes under his patronage ungodly governments which despise his law
and his Son —as to regard any opposition to their authority as opposition made
to his own holy “ordinance” of magistracy? To persuade us of this, we may first
demand the clearest evidence.
It is
evident that the proper interpretation of this passage depends upon the meaning
of the phrase, “ordinance of God.” What then is its import? Does it mean any
and every government? Does it mean Phocas, who “waded to the throne of the
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Clearly not; for, then, the powers just mentioned must
be also embraced in it —a conclusion equally repulsive to the Christian and to
the friend of human liberty. And, besides, if this be its meaning, the very
worst government has the very same right to demand unresisting subjection,
as the very best, for both alike exist —exist in the same over-ruling and
all-controlling providence; and both would be armed with the same high
sanction: to “resist” either, would be to make the same assault upon the
“ordinance of God!”
What,
then, is its import? The reply has been already anticipated.* It denotes God’s moral
ordinance of civil government —it refers to such a government as Paul
afterwards describes —a government which is “a terror to evil-doers, and a
praise to them that do well” —a government that in due measure answers the ends
of the institution of civil rule, a government of law, of equity, possessed of
moral attributes, and ruling “under God,” by whom it has been “ordered,” for
the execution of high and useful functions.
Who,
then, resists? The reply is at hand, and conclusive. He who opposes the rightful
exercise of civil rule; he who would attempt the overthrow of just and
wholesome authority; he who
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* See page 23.
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endeavors to weaken the hands of the “higher powers” in their
performance of the trust committed to them: he who rises against the restraints
imposed upon the lawless, the profane: he who willfully disturbs the peace, and
interferes with the regular administration of justice: for such, and such
alone, assail “the ordinance of God.” Indeed, we may well ask how this can
possibly apply to any but those who invade the good order of the commonwealth
by opposing wholesome rule? The end for which
governments were established is, surely, more important than government itself,
and much more important than the particular form, or the mere fact of the
possession of power by this individual or that. How, then, can anyone be
regarded as chargeable with the sin and crime of resisting God’s “ordinance,”
who refuses to obey an unjust enactment, or who even goes so far as to attempt
the overthrow of or remodeling of a government that is, by tyranny, or
injustice, or ungodliness, working harm to society, and dishonor to God, and so
tends to defeat the very ends for which the “ordinance” of civil rule was
established? The commands of a maniac or drunken father may be disregarded —the
wife or even the children taking the government into their own hands — much
more may institutions and laws be disregarded
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when these run counter, either in their constitution or administration,
to the divine law, and thus tend to the manifest injury of the commonwealth. *
But does
not this tend to the enfeebling of the claims of even legitimate authority? By no means. True, all institutions administered by human
hands will, necessarily, bear the marks of human imperfection, and it may be
difficult, in theory, to draw the line, and say, this much is requisite to
constitute a government on which we may inscribe the title “the ordinance of
God;” but, in practice, the difficulty will not be often very great —no greater
than in many other departments of duty. Surely, we may go so far as to affirm,
with confidence, that every “ordinance of God” will acknowledge his claims —the
claims of His Son (we speak of governments in enlightened lands,) and the
supremacy of His law, and will seek to promote the welfare of all
the subjects or citizens.
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* “Now this being the argument of the apostle, all that we can possibly collect from his injunctions in this place is this: That it is the indispensable duty of subjects to submit themselves to such governors as answer the good end of their institution; to such rulers as he here describes; such as are not a terror to good works, but to the evil; such as promote the public good, and are continually attending upon this very thing.” Hoadly, p. 7.
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That this
doctrine, moreover, is liable to be abused by the lawless, we admit. The
opponents of the principle of “passive obedience” encountered the same
objection. Says Bishop Hoadly, “The great objection against this, though it be
all founded upon the will of God, who sincerely desires the happiness of public
societies, is this, that it may give occasion to subjects to disturb and oppose
their superiors. But, certainly, a rule is not therefore bad, because men may
mistake in the application of it to particular instances; or because evil men
may, under the umbrage of it, satisfy their own passions and unreasonable
humors; though these latter, as they are disposed to public disturbance, would
certainly find out some other pretence for their behavior, if they wanted this.
The contrary doctrine to what I have been delivering, we know, by an almost
fatal experience, may be very much abused; and yet that is not the reason why
it ought to be rejected, but because it is not true. Every man is to give an
account for his sins; and the guilt of those who, under any pretence
whatsoever, disturb the government of such as act the part of good rulers, is
so great, that there cannot be a stronger motive than this against resistance
and opposition to such.”* It may be
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* Hoadly, pp. 10, 11.
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added that every argument on behalf of civil liberty may
also be abused, and equally, the doctrines of grace. And yet, after all, we
need not much fear any liability to abuse in the application of this principle,
provided it be rightly understood; for its very basis and groundwork is that
God has ordained civil society and organization, and that existing institutions
are only to be resisted when they fail to answer the ends for which government
has been established among divine ordinances, while —and this is the apostle’s
argument— to “resist” a government which is really an “ordinance of God” is a
sin of heinous character. This is plainly taught when Paul proceeds to enforce
subjection,
(2.) From
the danger of resistance. And they that resist shall receive to themselves
damnation, (
-
condemnation,) v.2. From what quarter? from the government, or from God? That the apostle designed
no more than to assert the fact that such as impugn the authority of
government, or resist its commands, or oppose themselves to its authority, will
meet with civil punishment, does not appear probable. This would be to assert a
fact too well known to require so emphatic and solemn an enunciation. Of
course, no government will tamely allow its injunctions to be set at naught, so
long as it bears the sword. And, moreover, it
seems hardly consistent with the high and religious tone of
the entire passage, to understand this clause as having no higher reference
than to the infliction of civil punishment upon the disorderly and rebellious.
What immediately precedes contains a pretty distinct
intimation, as has already been remarked, of the fact that “resistance” to
legitimate authority is not only a sin, but a sin of a heinous character. Nor
are more express declarations to the same effect wanting elsewhere in the Word
of God. We may refer to the case of Korah and the princes of Judah, whom God
visited with a most signal token of his wrath for this very sin. “They went
down alive into the pit.” (Numbers 16) And all remember the sad story of
Absalom, who also died in the same sin in an attempt to overturn a lawful
power.*
Still, we
are not to infer that the sin of resisting civil rule involves necessarily
eternal ruin. It deserves “condemnation.” God sees it. It highly offends Him.
He will vindicate His own “ordinance.” And why not? If
it be, as it certainly is, a most beneficial one —if it promote directly
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*Hodge says, “Paul does not refer to the punishment which the civil magistrate may inflict, for he is speaking of disobedience to those in authority as a sin against God, which he will punish.”
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every temporal interest, and, at least, indirectly
bears upon the moral and religious welfare of the community —if successful
resistance to good government opens the flood gates to violence, irreligion,
vice, and misery —if no interest can flourish when good laws are not well
administered —can it be regarded as unworthy of the Divine Spirit to attach
this emphatic sanction to the institution of civil rule —to assert, in this
explicit form, that God will mark with his evident disapprobation every act of
resistance to the righteous exercise of magistratical power?
On these
high grounds, then, does Paul enforce subjection to the “higher powers.” Government is from God —to resist, is to resist his
“ordinance,” and “he that resists receives a righteous ‘condemnation.’” *
Inferences
1. That
civil government is, as an institution, from God. —National organization is
not the mere creature of the voluntary action of the inhabitants of a particular
country or district. It is their province, indeed, to establish the particular
institutions by which they are to be guided and governed; and in this sense,
political arrangements are “the
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* See Appendix C.
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ordinance of man,” (I Peter
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* The fact, and what these ends are, will be the subject of our next section.
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so far is he from being necessarily restricted in his
rights in the social state, that it is as a member of society alone, that he
can enjoy all the privileges and perform all the duties of manhood.
In short,
while the people of a country have in their own hands the setting up of their
government, and the choice of rulers —when this is once done, and rightly
done— the authority by which the government is administered is to be
regarded as derived from the divine institution of the ordinance of magistracy.
Hence,
2. The
principle standard by which this institution is to be measured is the Word of
God. — This may be inferred directly from the fact that the scriptures
treat so fully on the subject. It appears in each Testament, and in every form
of instruction. There are didactic passages —such as that before us. Of this
character are the teachings and the precepts of the moral law, which contains a
complete exhibition of all that relates to the ends, the principles, the
methods of civil rule —and much of the detail respecting magistratical duties,
and their correlates, the duties of subjects and citizens. The narratives of
the Bible largely illustrate its didactic rules and precepts. It abounds with
exemplifications both of good and bad governments, and the issues of the one
and of the other. Much
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of prophecy, both of the Old Testament and of the New,
is designed to shed light upon the subject of civil polity, and the divine
administrations respecting it.
Where else
can this be learned? Not from the light of nature merely. True, the essential
principles of social organization, and even of political regimen, are contained
in the moral law, and that law is the same that was inscribed upon the heart of
man at his creation. But the “law of nature” —the law as a complete rule of
human duty is man’s primitive condition —the light that is now in man is too
feeble to discern it in anything like its holiness and perfection. To reject
the Word of God in this, as in any other department of duty, is, to use the
words of John Brown of Haddington, “an obstinate drawing back to heathenism.”
There is
still another reason why we must refer to the scriptures, and make them the
supreme standard. There, and there alone, do we ascertain the now
essential principle of right civil rule, the Headship of Jesus Christ: for “He
is made head over all things to the church,” (Ephesians
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ascertained it, we are led at once to the conclusion that to His
own Word must we now address ourselves, if we would become acquainted with that
institution itself of which He so plainly claims the supremacy.
3. Disorderly
and seditious behavior is here most signally rebuked. —The ordinance of magistracy, rightly set up and administered, ranks among the
most important: in some respects, it is first of the institutions with which
men have to do. And social order is of itself “of great price.” How wrong to
disturb it by disorderly and lawless conduct. It is sometimes, indeed, a matter
of no little moment to determine were the guilt lies! We would not style any
either disorderly or seditious, who are contending in a right spirit against
the corruptions of the State, or of the public administration of affairs.
Sometimes the rulers themselves are the disturbers of the peace, and upon them
falls the threatening of this passage. However, we now speak of the seditious
and disorderly, of those who are such in a community where a scriptural
magistracy and wholesome rule are in operation. These are to be regarded as
chargeable with an offense of no inferior turpitude; as deserving of the most
severe reprobation, and as fit subjects for punitive inflictions. And, it may
be added, that the spirit of peace and
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order should, as far as possible, characterize the conduct
of those who dissent from unholy and oppressive governments, and attempt their
reformation.
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