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Section V.
The principles of obedience to civil rule.
This
topic has been incidentally noticed in commenting upon the duty itself; but it
is made the subject of a distinct statement.
“Wherefore, ye must needs be
subject, not only for wrath, but also for conscience’ sake.” v. 5.
1. Obedience
is to be rendered partly to avoid penal inflictions —“for wrath’s sake.” It
is not very material to determine whether the Apostle here refers to the “wrath
of the magistrate, or of God, or of both.” If to the first —and the connection
in which the term occurs seems to warrant this view —it still implies that the
displeasure of God, also, rests upon him who withholds due subjection from the
authorities previously described. It is more important to remark that this
phrase
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has been frequently applied to express that sort of
submission which the slave gives his master, or the oppressed to the power of
the despot —a submission altogether forced, in which there is no heartfelt
recognition. There is such a subjection to lawless authority, and such a
submission may be given on this principle. Moreover, this term is appropriate
enough as thus applied. But it has not this meaning here. As has been
frequently stated already, Paul refers, in this passage, to no usurped,
tyrannical or godless power. He speaks of but one kind of government —one sort
of rulers: a government worthy of obedience —rulers who are “ministers of God.”
This
phrase, as we find it in the passage before us, may be regarded as referring to
that class whom we have styled “bad citizens;” for they are kept under only by
fear of punishment. But this is not all. The Apostle is addressing Christians
—urges upon them a subjection of a different and contrasted character—“not for
wrath’s sake,” but for higher considerations; as much as to say, whatever
others may do: they may be prompted to conduct themselves peaceably and
according to law, only from selfish reasons —but let it not be so with you; you
should have another and a better spirit. Still this cannot be the leading
object
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in the introduction of this clause, for this
interpretation leaves out of view a very important word. Paul does not barely say “not for wrath’s sake” —but, “not only
for wrath’s sake”— intimating that this may be exhibited as a principle of
obedience even in addressing the upright citizen. And the subsequent clause
confirms this; for, he adds, “but also for conscience’ sake.” Nor does
this represent the passage as urging a principle unworthy of the Christian. Subjection
to lawful authority merely for fear is, indeed, radically defective; but
such a fear is, collaterally, a lawful principle of action. Hence, in
covenanting with Adam, the Most High appeals to this principle: The day thou
eatest thereof thou shalt surely die.” In fact, the penalty is essential to the
law in the case of all fallible creatures. It is “law” from the very fact that
it is armed with such a sanction. And, besides, it must be remembered that even
the best are here imperfect —that they are, in fact, under the influence of
corrupt emotions and appetites, and, consequently, require the restraining
influence of such considerations as those to which the inspired writer here
appeals. God deals with even the faithful as subjects of discipline. He warns
them of paternal displeasure in case they sin, and when they do sin, visits
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them with chastisements. And, finally, the Apostle here
brings to view the majesty and terror of civil government, not as belonging to
itself alone, but as a transcript, however faint, of the ineffable dignity and eminence
of Him in whose name “the sword” is borne and used. In short, there is here
presented one —though an inferior one— of the principles which move the
citizen, or the subject, to a whole-souled obedience to the lawful commands of
a lawful power. There is another; for, it is added,
2. “But
also for conscience’ sake.” All know something from their own experience of
the nature and workings of conscience. Philosophers may debate the question, whether
it is a distinct faculty, or the result of the operation of certain faculties;
but all, learned and unlearned, agree that it is through the action of
conscience that man is made to feel his accountability to the Invisible
and Supreme. It implies, if it does not essentially consist in, the possession
of a moral sense; a sense which judges of right and wrong, not by any humanly
enacted law, or with reference to the judgment of an earthly tribunal, but in
view of a law of divine obligation and the presence of an unseen Judge. “We
believe it,” says McCosh, “to be an original, a divinely appointed, a fundamental
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law. Still, though persons could succeed in analyzing it,
it would not be less a law. Suppose there is nothing else in the mind, when
contemplating moral actions, but the springing up of emotions, still there must
be a Heaven-appointed law, otherwise the emotions would not be so invariable.”
Conscience
then has ever an eye, in all its judgments and dictates, to the tribunal of
God. But to what particular duty, or aspect of duty, are its judgments directed
as it is here introduced by the apostle? An attempt has been made to connect it
with the preceding clause; as if Paul designed to enforce a bare heartless
submission, for “wrath’s sake,” to an unjust or a hard government authority,
out of conscience towards God.
Now, it
is not denied that in case such submission is properly yielded, and we have
admitted that in certain instances it may be, it should be yielded with a good
conscience. The slave who plies his labor at the bidding of even a tyrannical
master, may do this conscientiously —in part, as he regards his condition in
the light of an affliction befalling him in the providence of God, and in part,
as he may be influenced by a respect to certain other considerations, such as
his own comfort, which every man is bound to promote, so far as he can, without
sin, in the exemplification of a meek and
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quiet spirit, even under the infliction of wrong. But to
this the apostle makes no reference here. Unless we have mistaken altogether
the drift of the passage, that it relates to good governors,
it is impossible that he could. And, moreover, Paul does not say, “Submit for
fear of punishment, out of conscience towards God:” giving, in the last clause,
a reason for the injunction of the first, or a rule to guide in fulfilling it: “but
we must needs be subject,” that is under obedience, “not only for wrath’s, but
also for conscience’ sake;” thus assigning not one reason, but two distinct
ones. And, finally, this verse is clearly a conclusion from the whole of the
preceding exhibition of the nature and functions of civil power. “Therefore,”
inasmuch as the “higher powers” are “ordained of God” —inasmuch as “rulers are
a terror to the evil, but a praise to them that do well”— inasmuch as government
is a divine and a beneficent institution, “ye must needs be subject for
conscience’ sake.”
The last
paragraph embodies the substance of the meaning of this clause. To obey for “conscience’
sake” is to obey because God requires it —because the lawful magistrate is
invested with a legitimate authority to administer an ordinance of God’s
appointment— because the judgment is
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“the Lord’s.”* And, finally,
because a good government is conducive to the peace, the morality, the
religious interests of society.
This is
the true, as it is a high principle of obedience to civil rule. And, in fact,
in the case of good citizens, it is the main reason why wholesome laws are
conformed to. Such have respect, not to any mere human arrangements, but to an
institution which bears the impress and sanction of God’s name, law, wisdom,
supremacy, and majesty. Wherever these are seen, the homage and allegiance of
the godly are sincere and genuine. They yield no mere outward and constrained
service. What they do as members of the commonwealth, they do, “as to the Lord,
and not unto men.”
REMARKS
1. It
is not left optional with men whether they support righteous civil institutions
or not. We mean as before God. That the citizen may —that he must— “prove”
civil institutions and laws, has already been inferred from the preceding
statements and reasonings of this passage. But having
————————————————
* II Chronicles 19: 8. Of course it is not meant that
the magistrate is infallible, but he acts with God’s sanction in so far as he
acts rightly.
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proved these and found them endowed with the
attributes of God’s moral ordinance of magistracy —having proved the
magistrates themselves, and the design and tendencies of their administration, and
approved them, he is not at liberty to withhold the outward tokens of his
approval. “Conscience” has to do with it. It has to do with Him who is “Lord of
the conscience.”
2. All
obedience to civil authority is limited by the higher allegiance due to God its
author. To imagine otherwise is to annihilate, by the law of God, it own
authority and sanctions. All right subjection to civil rule regards it as the
creature of God, but no more. It surely does not give it God’s place.
Indeed nothing can be more absurd than the notion that “conscience,” which
always sees God as supreme in His claims and power, should, for a moment,
substitute any “lower law” for His. This would be to deny its own nature —to
act in direct opposition to the very law of its being. And, hence,
3. Every
attempt to establish a paramount claim for any mere human enactment is really,
under the pretence of doing honor to government, to imperil the stability and
efficiency of all authority. What could any government do —unless one of
mere force— without the aid and cooperation of the
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principles of conscience? And what do they seek to accomplish,
who deride “The Higher Law,” but to sap the very foundations of the social
state? Instead of being the friends, such men are the very worst enemies of
civil government. Could they absorb the conscience of the individual, and
deprive him of the right and the disposition to judge for himself, in the light
of God’s law, and supremacy, and word, they would but make a community of the
very lowest order of slaves, and thus sow the seeds of inevitable disorders and
revolutions. They, and they alone, are the friends of
civil law and social order, who vindicate the paramount claims of the Supreme
Potentate, and maintain the rights of an enlightened conscience. Hence,
4. May
be ascertained the reason why the nations are so generally dissatisfied, and
that the more as knowledge increases, with existing governments. It is
because they find in them so little that bears the stamp of rectitude of aim;
so little that bears the impress of the divine majesty. True, there are the
lawless —the vicious— who, under any administration, would require the exercise
of a restraining hand. The discontent we refer to is not only of such. It is
that of the thoughtful, the intelligent, the benevolent, the
devout. Their dissatisfaction mat not always make
itself manifest, but it is not
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the less real. It appears in the withdrawing of many good
men from all active concern in politics, and in the longing of the pious for
the coming of a time when iniquity shall no longer find refuge under the wings
of power —when the legislators and executive officers of the nation shall be trustworthy
men —when the entire workings of the social fabric shall be eminently conducive
to the promotion of individual and national weal. It will be well for the world
when civil government shall be avowedly restored to the domain of conscience —conscience
toward God, His law, His Christ, and His gospel.
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