Sermon Outline
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Introduction
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Government should not be resisted (Rom 13:1, 2, 5)
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Be subject/in subjection is a word derived from Gk: tassw.
- Business have employers and employees, (Tit 2:9)
- Families have parents and children (Eph 6:1)
- Church, there are leaders – (1Cor 16:15-16, Heb 13:17)
- Same is true in political life – there are always rulers and those ruled.
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To submit/be subject to means
- To resist is related to same Gk word, tassw.
- Can we resist laws and corruption? Yes, but within limits
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We are a people of peace
- Violence doesn’t befit the people of God (Lk 22:51, Heb 2:14)
- Even the city who is our home, the new Jerusalem, is a city of peace by name (Isa 60:18)
- We come under the rules in order to avoid judgment and divine wrath and to benefit them (Mt 5:44, Lk 6:28, 1Tim 2:1-3)
- We submit to government because of conscience (Rom 13:5)
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We should pay our taxes & fees (Rom 13:6)
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We give of the money that we earn, back to the government for 2 reasons:
- First, Authorities are ministers of God (Rom 13:6)
- Second, Government created money (Luke 20:21-25)
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We should honor and respect those bearing office (Rom 13:7)
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What about when our conscience is violated?
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Some may argue that Shadrach, Meshach and Abednego didn’t submit to government. (Dan 3:16-18)
- Yes, they did.
- They esteemed the king, they were willing to be thrown in the furnace.
- There is no recorded evidence they struggled against those binding them.
- They neither cursed the king, Babylon or any others.
- They fell under the authority of government and let it have its way with them, though they refused to obey its dictates when they violated the Law of God.
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Maybe Daniel and the Lion’s den comes to your mind (Dan 6)
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Another might appeal to Peter and John’s refusal to obey the Sanhedrin (Acts 4:19-20)
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Still, another might appeal to Esther (Esth 7:4)
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Civil Disobedience
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Conclusion (1Peter 2:17-23)
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