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These are all the posts imported from my old blog--johannulusdesilentio.blogspot.com.  There's a lot of good stuff there, and also a lot of lame stuff, just like on the new blog, no doubt.  The formatting for expandable post summaries (so that you only saw the first couple paragraphs till you clicked on a post) was lost in the transfer, so you'll have to do a lot of scrolling.  Use the search or the archives on the sidebar to browse.

Entries in Romans 13 (3)

Saturday
Mar062010

The Power of Civil Obedience


March 6, 2010
In my recent post on law and morality, Donny had asked on what basis I claimed that modern societies are more coercive than pre-modern ones.  It turns out that O’Donovan and I had discussed that very point a bit, and I’ll share here what we came up with, before veering off down an exciting rabbit-trail that the discussion opened up in my mind.  
It is as law becomes more arbitrary that it becomes more coercive, and in modern societies, law is seen as more arbitrary.  As the complexity of modern life grows, and law-making authorities become increasingly centralized and removed from the sphere of everyday life and from our knowledge and any accountability to us, we find ourselves faced with an ever-increasing number of rules that, so far as we can tell, someone in an office somewhere just cooked up according to their own good pleasure. 
“Why,” we ask, “should I drive on the right side of the road rather than the left?”  “Why, indeed, can I only drive 55 mph here and not 65?”  “Why do the steps in my new house have to be no more than such-and-such a slant?”  Gone is the feeling that the law exists for a very good reason and with very good sense, and so we should all go along with it willingly.  And, once this faith has been lost, as it is sure to be the more alienated we are from our law-making authorities, then we begin to think of all law as oppressive and arbitrary, even laws that, if we were to stop and think about them, are eminently sensible and necessary.
And so, what happens?  Well, we stop being self-policing.  And we stop being our brother’s keeper--informal social and community structures stop enforcing obedience to society’s norms by non-coercive or less coercive means.  If there’s a problem, we let the police deal with it.  It doesn’t help, of course, that we live such individualist lives that people are no longer sufficiently embedded in communities for those communities to successfully inculcate and enforce societal norms.  And so, where once upon a time not so long ago, if someone were behaving in an inappropriate or threatening way in a public place, several grown men in the vicinity would come over and give the fellow a talking to and escort him away, now everyone just looks awkwardly at one another and calls the police.  We come to increasingly think that we’re only obeying the law because we’ll be in trouble if we don’t, and so we don’t see why we should help uphold the law--let the law take care of itself.  And so the law does take care of itself, the only way it still can--force.

Both of these factors fascinate me--the decline in the role of non-civil social bodies in enforcing societal norms, and, what I want to think a bit more about in this post, the decline in our willingness to obey the law.  Most of us do still obey the law, but often not very willingly.  And this gets me to thinking--is it not possible that, precisely by our opposition to government power, our resolute anti-government stance, our passive rebellion and grudging obedience that we pride ourselves on so much, we are actually increasing the government’s power?  If I act in a lawful manner because I freely choose to, deeming it of my own accord a good thing to do, then in this lawful behavior, I am, in a sense, not under the law, not subject to the power of the government.  If enough people are like this, the government will increasingly conclude that its enforcement role is superfluous, and it will begin to scale back.  But, if I say, “Stupid government, and stupid law” and only obey because I’m afraid there’s a policeman watching, then don’t I, paradoxically, increase the government’s power over me?  Don’t I make its coercive power a reality where it might otherwise not exist?  (This is part of what William Cavanaugh is getting at with his pregnant phrase, “the imagination of the nation-state”)  When a large portion of the citizenry begins to see things this way and act in this way, the state concludes that increased coercive and surveillance activities are necessary, and the state becomes increasingly totalitarian.  This, perhaps, is why things like the Tea Party movement and the constant angry griping and passive rebellion among Christian conservatives troubles me so much.  Is it not actually giving power and reality to the very thing it wants to get rid of?    
And when I pursue this line of thought, I find that it seems to be a very New Testament line of thought.  Indeed, conservative commentators have argued something similar, it seems to me, with respect to the New Testament’s attitude toward slavery.  Liberals look at passages that say, “Slaves, submit to your masters as to the Lord” and the like and say, “Servile!  Appalling!  Paul couldn’t have written it!  Paul was against slavery, and this is as pro-slavery as it gets!”  Well no, actually.  These commands are very consistent with being against slavery.  They recognize that the master’s coercive authority over the slave depends largely on the slave’s concession of that coercive authority, his grudging obedience that only obeys because the master has coercive authority.  If the slave starts obeying willingly, freely, because he wants to obey God, then all of a sudden, his master has lost, in a sense, his mastery.  The slave is accountable to God, not to him; the slave has rendered his coercive authority irrelevant.  And once this happens, it is not long before slavery is on its way out as an institution.  
The same thing, I became convinced in my detailed study of Romans 13 last year, is going on with the New Testament’s teaching regarding the state.  Is the Roman state a bad thing (leaving aside for now whether any state is a bad thing)?  Yes.  Is it to be overcome?  Yes.  Are Christians free of the obligation to obey it?  Well, yes.  But they should obey it, insofar as the commands of Christ allow.  Why?  Because if they disobey, they give a reality to its authority over them, that otherwise is dissolved when they obey willingly, freely, obeying the Lord.  If they must disobey it, because the commands of Christ require, they strike a fatal blow against it, because the violence of this world rebounds upon itself when it tries to overcome Christ; but if they disobey or grumble in things that the law rightly commands, or things indifferent, they actually empower the state and give substance to its shadowy claims of authority.  
“Do not be overcome with evil, but overcome evil with good.”

Wednesday
Apr152009

Protesting the Tax Protests

I just saw something that disturbed me...hundreds of people, including many Christians, friends of mine, out in the city square protesting taxes and deficit spending and the like. Now, it was odd to me that this was so disturbing, given that, until recently, I would've been among the most eager; heck, a few years ago, if there were a secession movement, I would've jumped on the bandwagon. I think our country's economic policies and deficit spending and all that are on the whole stupid; I think our taxation is ridiculous. I think the government has no right to do 90% of what it does, and I'm not sure about the other 10%. In other words, I agree with all those people who are out there protesting, in terms of all that there is to protest about. But it seems rather wrong to me that they are out there protesting, and it seems to me a bad witness that a lot of them are Christians and from my Church. Now, why? I must figure out why I feel this way. Here are a few ideas.

First of all, it seems to be to be paradoxically exalting that which we want to bring down. As Christians, we know that we are citizens of another kingdom, serving the true King, Christ, and thus unjust governments have no true power over us. If we obey them, it is because loyalty to our King Christ requires it; if we disobey them, it is because loyalty to our King Christ requires it. Either way, we should be above the petty sentiments of fear and anger when we think they are behaving unjustly. Christ is righteous, and Christ will judge them, and our rebellions, passive and active, will never be effectual in fixing the problem. This is not a gospel of quietism--I am not saying that Christ's Kingdom has nothing to do with this world, nothing to say to the kingdoms of this world. It has everything to say to them. But what it says, it says in the language of the gospel, not in the language of secular political activism. If we want to call upon our rulers to end our injustice, we must proclaim the justice of Christ from the pulpit, we must proclaim it by our actions in the world, and we must say to our rulers, "Christ is King, not you, so stop oppressing his people!" When we dress up in the costume of right-wing tax protesters, and say "Keep your hands off our money! Stop deficit spending! Get rid of the Fed!" then we are abandoning the specific, powerful message that we have to offer to our government, and, by adopting the language and methods of modern political activism, we are actually endorsing the political system; we are agreeing to play by our opponent's rules and thus, ironically, investing with power the very power that we wish to protest!

Second, this is not the kind of submission and subjection that Paul asks for in Romans 13. Paul calls upon Christians to subordinate themselves and pay their taxes--again, not because they are subjects of the rulers, but because they are subjects of Christ, and his way of ruling is not violent and self-seeking, but shows love to oppressors. Paul knew that the Roman authorities were oppressive--much more so than ours! That's the whole point--he has just said, "Love your enemies! Do good to those that persecute you!" Why? Because this is how you triumph over them--this is how Christ triumphs over them. Therefore, be subject! Therefore, pay your taxes! If what Paul was saying is, "Yeah...you owe them obedience, so go ahead and give them what you owe, but you can grumble all you want about it," then that would be one thing. But that's not what he's saying!! He's saying, "Overcome them in love! Give them what love requires, even though they don't deserve it, even though they are greedy, even though they are unjust! Heap burning coals on their head! Pay your taxes, and do it with a smile on your face!" Any self-centered pagan can throw a fit about paying taxes--how do these kind of protests proclaim Christ? How do they identify us as Christian? The Christian protester says, "No, I'm protesting because I believe that this is Biblically unjust." But who sees that? Just because that's what you mean by the protest doesn't mean that that's the message you send! Such protest is indistinguishable from the ways of the world. If you really want to proclaim Christ's answer to unjust taxes, then shock everyone and smile and pay and pray and preach!

Finally, as I've posted before (on my Facebook), I think, neither Jesus nor Paul shows much concern at all about paying taxes. It seems like a big deal to us, and it did to the Jews, but Jesus was like..."Eh, sure, you're sons, and you're free, but don't be obnoxious, pay your taxes." The indifference that Jesus showed, and that Paul exhorted the Romans to show, would've shocked the Jews. But Jesus and Paul understood that money is the least of our worries; to make a big stink over money is to lose sight of the important things of the Gospel. If Caesar asks for your children or your worship, then you defy him to his face. If he asks for your money, well, heck, is that really worth fighting over? Do you really want to endanger your Christian witness by throwing a fit about money?

So, going out there and protesting taxes is paradoxically proclaiming that the political powers we are opposing really do have power, it is proclaiming that the ways of politics and violence really do have power, and that money really is as important as the world wants to make it. Rather than proclaiming Christ's stand against the powers of this world, it changes into the uniform of the world and enlists under its banners, simply in order to carry on an argument with other worldlings in the ranks.

Thursday
Mar052009

Romans 13 Decoded (or, The Chiasm That Will Blow Your Socks Off

Last night, working off a helpful tip from Ryan Handermann, I discovered this beauty, which finally nails the lid on the coffin of traditional readings that refuse to see 13:1-7 as an application of the principles of 12:14-21.

I'm afraid I can't figure out how to get Blogger to indent the lines for the cool chiasm-shape.

A. Live in harmony with one another (allelous) (12:16)
B. Do not pay back (apodidontes) evil for evil (12:17)
C. Live at peace with all men as much as depends on you (12:18)
D. Do not avenge (ekdikountes), but give place to wrath (orge)
(12:19)
E. Specific commands about doing good to your enemy (12:20)
F. Do not be overcome by evil (kakos), but overcome evil
with good (agathos) (12:21)
G. Be subject to the governing authorities, for
there is none but from God (13:1)
F.’ Those who resist incur judgment, for the rulers are
a terror to the doer of evil (kakon), not the doer of
good (agathon) (13:2-3)
E.’ Do what is good, if you wish to escape fear. (13:3)
D.’ The magistrate is the avenger (ekdikos) for wrath (orge) (13:4)
C.’ Be in subjection and pay taxes for conscience’ sake (13:5-6)
B.’ Pay back (apodote) to each what is owed him (13:7)
A.’ Owe no one anything, except to love each other (allelous) (13:8)