New Romans 13 Book Now Available
As I told readers some weeks back, my son, Tim Baldwin,
and I have collaborated on a brand new book that deeply
analyzes the teaching of
Romans chapter 13.
This book is an in-depth study of the full teaching of
scripture relevant to the subject of submission to civil
authority from both the Old and New Testament, and from
the writings of Christian philosophers throughout
history. At no time in our nation's history was a book
of this nature more necessary! The book is entitled
Romans 13: The True Meaning of Submission.
In fact, my four-part DVD message series on Romans 13 is
but a thumbnail sketch of the exhaustive amount of
information contained in this book.
The following paragraphs are the introductory paragraphs
of a few chapters (without the citations and footnotes).
Chapter 2: 'Higher Powers' Superseded by 'Highest
Powers'
HIGHER POWERS NECESSARILY do not equate to the authority
of God–Who is the Highest power–but only serve as God's
limited agent on earth for a limited purpose. Within
that purpose, those
"powers that be are ordained of God." That all persons who wield
power are ordained of God as His ministers mocks sound
rules of construction and interpretation, as well as
common sense, and results in treachery. Even God's power
alone does not necessitate an internal obligation to
submit to His power. Rather, it is His power in
conjunction with God's wisdom, power and goodness, which
creates an obligation in humans to submit to His
authority. So it has been observed,
"if to the idea
of Creator we join . . . the idea of a being perfectly
wise and sovereignly good, who has no desire of
exercising his power but for the good and advantage of
his creatures; then we have every thing necessary to
found a legitimate authority."
Scriptures state the same,
"[the people of Israel] bowed themselves with their faces to the ground
upon the pavement, and worshipped, and praised the LORD,
saying, 'For he is good; for his mercy endureth for
ever'." God ordains government in that its function
is to serve His purpose of good; just as when God
created all there is as recorded in the book of Genesis,
He looked at His creation and declared all to be
"good." God
did not create all there is and declare it to be good,
only to subject all of mankind to the strongest tyrant
capable of enslaving them. He created
"good" for
His glory and for man's benefit. His ordinations can be
no different. In whatever form the government may be,
higher powers are always
"under" or "below" God
and never possess God's approval when it contradicts the
good purposes for which God ordains government.
Chapter 4: That God Commands Unlimited Submission to
Unjust Government Contradicts God's Nature
GOD'S WORD REFLECTS His nature:
"For I the LORD
love judgment, I hate robbery for burnt offering."
That God sanctions any persons in government to enforce
any acts as His ministers—thus demanding unlimited
submission to the same without regard to the standards
of God's established justice–contradicts God's nature,
God's laws, the prophecies concerning Jesus and His
ministry, and the plain reading of Romans 13. God is the
author of justice for all nations in every generation:
"[God's] judgments are in all the earth";
"his truth
endureth to all generations;" and
"Lord, thou hast
been our dwelling place in all generations."
In fact, Scriptures reveal that God's laws of justice
were created to last forever, saying,
"[God] laid the foundations of the earth, that it should not be removed
for ever." And in fact, when God created these laws
for mankind, these laws already existed as a part of
God's nature. The foundations of God's laws, justice and
righteousness cannot be removed by His ministers with
His ordination.
Chapter 7: Submission to the 'Higher Powers' Standard
May Require New Persons
A GENUINE RECOGNITION OF submission to a God-ordained
government may require new higher powers. Replacing bad
government with good would be necessary to comport to
God's command for submission to government in Romans 13.
One's duty to God, self, family and neighbor sometimes
requires this. It is this duty that creates obligation,
and out of obligation comes power, or ordination. Put
differently, "every action, contrary to the ends which God has proposed, is not
agreeable to the divine Majesty; and that he approves,
on the contrary, those which of themselves are proper to
promote his ends." Upon this principle, it has been
rightly noted concerning the power of people to replace
governors,
"This power [of governors] [the people] can limit,
modify or recover at pleasure; for the alienation of
such a right is incompatible with the nature of the
social body, and contrary to the end of association."
The people can limit this power because it is for their
benefit that God ordained the power in the beginning.
Where the power contradicts this benefit, God's
ordination rests with those who would resist and
replace. For this reason, God rhetorically asks,
"Shall the throne of iniquity have fellowship with thee, which frameth
mischief by a law?" Truly, tyrants and those who
seek fellowship with God do not mix.
Chapter 11: Submission Must Consider the Merit of
'Higher Powers'
GOD'S CREATION TEACHES nothing more clearly than this:
no human authority deserves or is entitled to
unconditional submission. In essence, all earthly
submission is limited and conditional. In Romans 13,
conditional submission is described as such: for this
cause do we pay tribute; render, therefore, duties,
custom, fear and honor. Our submission is based upon the
merit, or end, of the higher powers, which is described
in the verses prior to Romans chapter 13 verses 6 and 7.
Submission, and thus, rendering duties, custom, fear and
tribute, regard the benefits of government. So it has
been said,
"Civil rulers are not mere tax gatherers . . . There is
a service rendered–a work done–benefit received; and on
the common principles of equity which regulate all
matters of a pecuniary kind."
Merit is a consideration of the authority, purposes and
jurisdiction of
"higher powers," as well as what is best for that
particular society.
Chapter 13: Submission Must Consider One's Duties to
Others
THE OLD TESTAMENT and New Testament summarize the duty
man has towards God and other men. They are found in the
following Scriptures:
Old Testament:
"Let us hear the conclusion of the whole matter: Fear
God, and keep his commandments: for this is the whole
duty of man."
Ecclesiastes 12:13 (kjv).
New Testament:
"Therefore all things whatsoever ye would that men
should do to you, do ye even so to them: for this is the
law and the prophets."
Matthew 7:12 (kjv).
God imposes a duty upon all mankind relative to others
and to God, and these duties transcend all other duties
and eternally exist in principal regardless of whether
government exists in society or not. Upon this truth, it
was correctly stated:
"[t]he origin of
your duties is in God. The definition of your duties is
found in His law. The progressive discovery and the
application of His law is the task of Humanity."
A proper understanding of one's submission to the higher
powers must strongly take into consideration one's duty
to God, his fellow man and family. Scripture exhorts us
to love our neighbors even as ourselves and strongly
commands that we take care of our family. Such a command
to love our neighbors is actually described in similar
nature as our love for God and is even described as a
fulfillment of the law of Moses. Such a love takes
priority over any sort of submission to a higher power
that contradicts God-ordained limitations and attempts
to destroy or hinder those higher duties. Accordingly,
our love and duty to our neighbors requires that we
practice self-government, self-responsibility, justice
and equity; and that we ensure good government is
practiced. For out of Christ's death, we are to live
life more abundantly on earth, not to be sacrificed to
those who steal, destroy, and conquer.
ORDER NOW
I believe this book will help Christians and
non-Christians alike achieve a much greater
understanding of and appreciation for the Biblical
teaching contained in Romans 13 and elsewhere. I further
believe there is no book more needed right now than this
one! In truth, the misinterpretation of Romans 13 is
being used by the evil one to strip our God-given
freedoms and liberties from us in much the same way that
this misinterpretation was used in Nazi Germany and
other repressive regimes.
Order your copy of
Romans 13: The True Meaning of Submission
now. The cost is $21.00 USD per copy plus shipping. Our
first shipment of books is estimated to arrive in 2-3
weeks. Your copy will be shipped to you immediately upon
arrival.
Educate your mind and strengthen your convictions that
God's will for His most precious creation is not
submission to tyranny. For 1 Chronicles 28:8 (kjv) says,
"keep and seek
for all the commandments of the LORD your God: that ye
may possess this good land, and leave it for an
inheritance for your children after you for ever."
And if we are going to leave a good land of liberty for
our children to inherit, we are going to have to come to
grips with the true meaning of Romans 13. To order this
brand new, much-needed book, go
here.
Dr. Chuck Baldwin recently left the Crossroad Baptist Church in Pensacola, Florida to move to Montana. He hosts a weekly radio show. His website is here.