Can We Celebrate Independence without Celebrating Revolution?
Something doesn’t add up. We refer to July 4 as Independence Day. We refer to the war that followed as the Revolutionary War. But if we viewed ourselves as independent of British rule on July 4, how could we have engaged in revolution after July 4? Revolution normally precedes independence. Either the day or the war is a misnomer.
For Christians the incongruity raises deeper questions. Given the response to government that Scripture requires, shouldn’t we oppose the whole idea of revolution, regardless of the circumstances? And if we’re opposed to revolution, can we rejoice in independence?
The Bible and revolution
Genesis 9 is understood by many to represent God’s re-founding of the institution of human government. The NT emphasizes submission to that institution as our Christian duty.
And He said to them, “Whose image and inscription is this?” They said to Him, “Caesar’s.” 17 And Jesus answered and said to them, “Render to Caesar the things that are Caesar’s, and to God the things that are God’s.” And they marveled at Him. (Mark 12:16–17)
Remind them to be subject to rulers and authorities, to obey, to be ready for every good work… (Titus 3:1)
Therefore submit yourselves to every ordinance of man for the Lord’s sake, whether to the king as supreme, 14 or to governors, as to those who are sent by him for the punishment of evildoers and for the praise of those who do good. 15 For this is the will of God, that by doing good you may put to silence the ignorance of foolish men. (1 Peter 2:13–15)
In addition to these, Romans 13:1-7 represents “the governing authorities” (exousias huperechousais) as “from God” and “appointed by God,” and asserts that resisting them is resisting “the ordinance of God.”
It’s hard to imagine how prohibiting the overthrow of governments could be put in stronger terms.
Celebrating independence
Believers must be anti-revolution, just as they are anti-disobedience. But must we be anti-independence? Is there a way Americans can be opposed to revolution yet rejoice in American independence? I believe at least two ways to do this exist.
1. Deny the revolution.
The idea that what occurred in the late 1700s here was not really a revolution has been around for a while. A professor of mine at BJU (back in the 80s) was adamant that no revolution occurred. He had written a book on the subject. (Copies appear to be available still at Amazon).
Though parts of his argument were unclear to me at the time, the gist seemed to be that a British document (perhaps one of the “Intolerable Acts”?) had already effectively ousted the colonies from the empire and that the 1776 Declaration was little more than an acknowledgment of that fact. In this version of events, the war that followed was one of defense, not of revolution—and, though various acts of rebellion did occur, our independence is not the result of a war of rebellion.
More recently, I’ve encountered a different revolution-denial argument (though it is, perhaps, compatible with the previous one). This view reasons that no revolution occurred because the “governing authorities” (to use Paul’s Romans 13 term) were not actually King George and Parliament, but law itself—and the laws of England in particular.
Thomas Paine wrote that “in America the law is king” (Common Sense). Certainly this way of thinking was strong in the “revolutionary” era and echoes some of the thought of Samuel Rutherford (1644: Lex, Rex) and, later, John Locke and Charles (etc.) Montesquieu. (Some trace the idea of “rule of law” or “law as king” back to the Roman Republic, then further to Aristotle. The case could be made that the spirit of it dates to the days of Moses.)
Accordingly, some have argued that Britain violated the terms of its own agreements with the colonies, and some of its own laws in the process, and that, therefore, the contractual relationship between the crown and the colonies was nullified.
In this version of events, no revolution occurred. The colonists who fought in resistance of Britain were fighting in support of law—and the law was the real king. The wording of the Declaration of Independence would seem to support the idea that, right or wrong, the colonists were thinking in these terms.
Perhaps we’ve done them all a disservice by naming the war “revolutionary,” though it seems probable that the likes of Patrick Henry wouldn’t object to the term. (Perhaps the writings of the patriots of that era are full of calls to “revolution.” If I ever knew that, I’ve forgotten. I’m sure a historian will straighten me out.)
2. Separate the result from the process.
If you have no stomach for revolution-denial, you can still rejoice in American independence. Sometimes people do the wrong thing and God graciously overrules their conduct to produce a wonderful result (to Him be praise!). Perhaps we American Christians can proudly sing our “revolutionary” national anthem and salute our flag through teary eyes on the conviction that “God meant it for good” (Gen. 50:20), even though we’re uncertain that armed resistance was the right thing to do—or even if we strongly believe both the Declaration and the War were unchristian acts.
One thing is certain. Our duty and opportunity as believers is to give thanks for everything (1 Thess. 5:18, Eph. 5:20). Regardless of our view of revolution in general, or the “American Revolution” in particular, God has greatly blessed us, and the independence we now enjoy is a major part of that blessing.
Aaron Blumer Bio
Aaron Blumer, SharperIron’s second publisher, is a Michigan native and graduate of Bob Jones University (Greenville, SC) and Central Baptist Theological Seminary (Plymouth, MN). He and his family live in a small town in western Wisconsin, not far from where he pastored Grace Baptist Church for thirteen years. He is employed in customer service for UnitedHealth Group and teaches high school rhetoric (and sometimes logic and government) at Baldwin Christian School.
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[dcbii] How would the end of Acts 16 fit into this discussion? When the magistrates (those with authority) sent the jailer to Paul to tell him to go, Paul refused and sent word to the magistrates to come and fetch him, because they had acted against law. It would seem to me that from this passage, he considered the law king even under Rome. When magistrates went against the law, he refused obedience to the magistrates, even though they could have been considered “higher powers.”Yes, I do think we have to allow for the possibility of “illegal orders.” In this case, the locals are disobeying law of the empire and Paul cites the higher law as a reason to resist the local. This is sort of the reverse of the colonial situation where local law is being used (created) to trump the law of the empire. But the possibility that the crown itself was acting against its own laws has to be factored in.
Add to that the idea that the crown was acting against natural law and it had, in various acts, affirmed the legitimacy of that law in the past (“the rights of Englishmen” and all that. Wesley seems to have misunderstood the concept there because he understands English law as providing “the rights of Englishmen” as though these rights were afforded by the crown to its subjects, but I think a great many by that time understood the rights to be natural and that British law had mere acknowledged that these rights exist.)
From a contract law perspective, what sort of written and unwritten guarantees had the crown made?
But there is a danger here. If we view ourselves/citizens as judges of what laws are illegal (in violation of other laws or of our founding documents), there is a danger of thinking we’re authorized to pick and choose what laws we will obey. “Well I feel like being required to wear a seatbelt or buy health insurance is unconstitiutional.” This can easily become nothing more than “resisting” dressed up in righteous terms.
But there have been, and will be, laws that are truly illegal. So it’s difficult to establish a really clear boundary there.
It’s probably important to note though, that in these situations, it’s not about “obeying God rather than man,” but about “obeying man rather than man.” Law is hierarchical where you have constitutions, so lower law can be in violation of higher law. In a manner of speaking you can say that choosing to obey higher law is obeying God rather than man, but I think this tends to obscure the issue. We’re dealing mainly with problems in human law.
For example: suppose a state law passed requiring churches to pay taxes on the offerings they collect. It’s pretty hard to find Bible that says we can’t do that. So “God, rather than man” would be an issue-confusing argument for setting aside that law. Rather, my response would be that “this is an illegal law” and our obligation is to obey the constitutional law.
Views expressed are always my own and not my employer's, my church's, my family's, my neighbors', or my pets'. The house plants have authorized me to speak for them, however, and they always agree with me.
but I think a great many by that time understood the rights of an Englishman to be natural and that British law had mere acknowledged that these rights exist.)Italics=text added for clarification by me
I view the situation on a continuum starting with the Baron’s Revolt which produced the Magna Carta, though the English Civil War and the Glorious Revolution. If one has a problem with the AmRev, then one can not support the prevailing side of the three conflicts I listed above. The last two would have brought a French style monarchy and a return to Rome if the kings in question had prevailed.
Hoping to shed more light than heat..
… and they do not seem to understand how unconservative the idea of violent or illegal revolution is. Radical is the opposite of conservative.
Views expressed are always my own and not my employer's, my church's, my family's, my neighbors', or my pets'. The house plants have authorized me to speak for them, however, and they always agree with me.
[Aaron Blumer] Sometimes I hear talk from “conservatives” that scares me more than a little.Aaron,
… and they do not seem to understand how unconservative the idea of violent or illegal revolution is. Radical is the opposite of conservative.
If I were a pastor in the American Revolution, I’m not positive what I would do. However we’re not at all in the same context as that time today. Those “conservatives” who talk about armed rebellion as if it’s a welcome thing indeed are dangerous. Perhaps we need to do some clear thinking about the differences between this time and that time would help these radicals not be so radical. Those who talk in Revolutionary War jargon often make a straight line to the “tyranny” of today. When in fact, we elected these people.
I’ve lived in the DC area for 6 years. It has changed my perspective on government (for better and worse). One thing I’ve been struck with is that there are Christians in almost every aspect of government, politics, lobbying, military, intelligence, ect. And they all have different points of view. This has frequently encouraged me.
Thankfully, I just moved outside “The Beltway,” but I can still see the wall that separates the beltway from me out my back window. ;-)
I do agree that the situations of American revolution vs. today are dissimilar on multiple levels. I’m not sure that these distinctions can penetrate the thinking of those who are of a revolutionary turn of mind. But the case of the American Rev. really only interests me as test case for understanding how Rom.13/1Peter2 relate to revolution in general.
I’m not sure why Christians in government all having different points of view would be encouraging. I mean, you have a whole lot of public policy that is functional and has to do with managing the machinery, and there is seldom a clear biblical principle involved in that part of things. Then you have the ideological level where our convictions about right and wrong are informing the rest of our political efforts. It’s disturbing to me that Christians are not more united on moral (and some practical) questions Scripture speaks to fairly clearly.
Then again… we have thousands of Christian denominations because Christians are similarly unable to discern basic theology from Scripture.
It’s just human nature I guess.
Views expressed are always my own and not my employer's, my church's, my family's, my neighbors', or my pets'. The house plants have authorized me to speak for them, however, and they always agree with me.
And to defend the MOST freedom and liberty the world has EVER known, the blood shed FOR those freedoms that are being hurriedly carried away by a despotic, lying and arbitrary regime who by a stroke of pen spends egregious amounts of YOUR money for political purposes, has started and escalated SIX “kinetic” WAR actions with more, more, more bloodshed and NO apparent benefit for (y)our home defense…a call to action by a new Black Robe Regiment is imperative, nay, desperately needed.. at this time to calm the populous, to call your neighborhoods back to a Christ who WILL rule at some future day with a rod of steel. How many fiats will you let this regime dictator sign? How many regulations will be LAW without even a vote by congress? How many legit churches will be taxed and over run by the irs before there is a call to more action than raising your scripture meekly and bowing your head and allowing handcuffs to be placed on your wrists and be led away before you find it is too late to do anything to protect your families and…this greatest nation?.
[url] http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?file=/c/a/2011/07/15/MNL61KAH…
It’s now the law to teach LGBT history.
Will you submit, or will you revolt?
If you submit, are you being disobedient to Scripture?
Acts 5:29
“Then Peter and the other apostles answered and said, We ought to obey God rather than men.”
But to briefly restate: nobody is suggesting here that we should obey man when man is commanding contrary to Scripture. The case of the holocaust and the case of teaching LGBT propaganda are clearly not in the same category as “George is taking too much money in taxes.”
Further more, resisting a particular law (or several) is not the same thing as overthrowing your legally established authority.
So, the essay raises the question. I’m not really trying to answer it firmly here. But cases of genocide and teaching corrupt morality do not prove revolution is a good idea.
Views expressed are always my own and not my employer's, my church's, my family's, my neighbors', or my pets'. The house plants have authorized me to speak for them, however, and they always agree with me.
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