Welcome to this week's edition of the Weekend Sermon. I am glad that you have decided to take the time to read the sermon this week, and I am thankful that the Lord has given me this opportunity. I hope that everyone is having a good day.
This has been a very busy week at work. I am getting more hours than I thought I would at my job. I am also getting a lot of writing work. I am thankful to the Lord for my job and my writing. I have been feeling pretty good as well.
In prayer this week, please remember to pray for those who are recovering from natural disasters. People in Texas are recovering from flooding, and people in Florida and the Southeast are recovering from the hurricane damage. Please remember to pray for those in Indonesia who are recovering from the earthquake and the tsunami.
Please pray for those in Yemen who are facing famine. This country needs peace so that the people will not suffer any more.
Let us pray for peace around the world. Syria is still having war. We need to pray for peace in Afghanistan, Libya and South Sudan as well.
Please be in prayer about the problem of homelessness around the world. This is a major problem in my country. We need to pray that people will get the assistance that they need.
For our prayer focus countries this week, let's pray for those in the nations of Egypt and Albania. Pray that many will hear about Jesus' love.
For the past few weeks now, we have been studying in the last few chapters of the book of Romans. We finished up chapter 12 last week, and this week will begin focusing on chapter 13.
Romans 13 is a misunderstood and misapplied teaching. This section of Scripture in verses 1 through 7 has been used by oppressive governments to try to keep people from standing up against governmental injustice. Recently in my country, this passage has been used to justify the excesses of our government.
In Romans 13:1-7, Paul tells us that God has established governments. Paul says that those who rebel against the government are rebelling against God. We are told that all of the authorities that exist are established by God for the purpose of bringing order. The governing authorities are to provide safety, and they are to punish those who are doing wrong. Paul calls on people to obey the government. Christians are to pay their taxes and give honor to the governing authorities.
First of all, let us look at what Paul is not saying in this passage. Paul is not saying that every leader has been put in power directly by God. Some in my country say that God put the current president in office. President Trump, President Obama, President Bush, President Clinton, whatever president was elected by the free will of the voters. The Lord does have the power to immediately remove any world leader if He should so desire, but people elected the leaders. Paul is not saying that God directly put each leader in place by somehow abrogating people's free will.
Paul is saying that government as an institution for order has been established by God. God has not chosen to let society be in anarchy.
Paul is not saying that Christians are to obey their governmental authorities in every aspect. We have to interpret Scripture by Scripture, and there are many instances in the Bible where people resisted the evil commandments of rulers. Let's look at a few of these.
In the book of Exodus, the Pharaoh of Egypt ordered all of the Hebrew babies to be killed. Moses' parents did not follow this order. They hid Moses and preserved him from death.
When Jezebel ordered the death of the prophets of God, Obadiah took many of the prophets and hid them in a cave so that Jezebel could not find them and kill them.
In the book of Daniel, Nebuchadnezzar ordered that every one bow down to the idol that he had made. Shadrach, Meshach and Abednego would not bow down. Even when threatened with the fiery furnace, they would not obey the edict of the king and bow down to a false god.
Daniel went ahead with his daily habit of praying to God even though ordered not to pray by the Persian emperor. Daniel was thrown into the lions den, but he would not violate his conscience.
In the New Testament, Peter and John were boldly preaching the message of Jesus. They were arrested and commanded to no longer preach in the name of Jesus. Peter told the authorities that it is better to obey God than human beings.
We know that Paul was well aware of these instances, so we know that Paul is not advocating a wholesale obedience to the government even when the government is commanding that evil be done or that Christians stop practicing their faith.
There are examples from outside of the Bible when Christians stood up for the Lord and stood up against injustice. During the time of the early church, some of the Roman emperors demanded that all people including Christians acknowledge that Caesar was Lord. Many Christians would acknowledge no Lord except Jesus Christ, and they suffered martyrdom.
During the time of the Nazi atrocities, there were people who would not turn in those who the Nazis were trying to kill. There were people who hid their Jewish friends and neighbors and helped them to escape the clutches of the Nazis.
In my country, there were Christians who stood up for justice during the Civil Rights movement. They believed that discriminatory laws were wrong. They practiced non-violent civil disobedience in order to bring about change and to bring justice.
Right now in my country, there are some local communities that have passed laws making it illegal to give food to the homeless people that are out on the streets. Some Christian groups who work with the homeless have chosen to go ahead and provide food to those who are hungry. Some have been ticketed by the local police, but they have chosen to continue to feed the hungry and clothe the naked just as Jesus wants us to do.
As Christians, we are to first and foremost obey the Word of the Lord. If the government orders us to do something that God has told us in His Word not to do, we must obey God rather than human beings.
Now, what is Paul actually saying in this passage. Paul is telling us that as Christians, we are to obey the governing authorities. Just because we know that Jesus is the true King and we are looking for a city whose builder and maker is God, we still live in this world. We are to be upstanding and law-abiding citizens. We are to pay our taxes and follow the laws. We aren't to be above the law.
There are some Christians who believe that they are not obligated to follow any law that is not expressly found in the Bible. These people refuse to pay their taxes and they will not follow laws such as the speed limit or local zoning regulations.
Paul is directly addressing this type of attitude. We are to obey the law as Christians. We are not above the law. However, if the governing authorities act in an evil manner, we as believers must stand in opposition to that. If we are told that we are to violate a direct law of God, we cannot do that. This is what Paul is trying to get across in this passage.
Unfortunately, this passage of Scripture has been abused by those who want to get Christians to go along with the injustices and wickedness that governments are trying to promote. If we look at this passage in the way that it should be rightly interpreted, we see that it in no way is calling on Christians to remain silent in the midst of injustice.
Next week, we will continue with our series in Romans. I will once again post the sermon on Saturday. On Monday, I will post the verses. I have finished posting the chapters in the book about my friend Toby. I am sad about this as posting the book made Toby feel so alive to me again. I miss him more every day. On Wednesday, I will be posting something. I may start posting the book reviews again, or I may post something else. May God bless you all. Amen.
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