How Far Back Are America’s Pastors Willing to Roll the Ball?

injusticeFor anyone who has followed and understands the relationship between church leadership and civil government in the US in the last 50 years, declarations of American pastors pledging civil disobedience in case the Supreme Court decides to favor sodomite “marriage” (like this one, for example, or this one), seem ridiculous at best, and quite pathetic. “We stand today to put America on notice that we will not obey an unjust law.” Yeah, right. You ain’t fooling no one, Rev. You will eventually obey that unjust law. That’s what you have been doing your whole career: obeying unjust laws, or, at the very least, refusing to challenge the civil governments in the land for their unjust laws. You’ve done it, and those before you in the same pulpit have done it. It has become a hallowed tradition for American pastors to serve the secular statist religion of Americanism. More than 50 years ago Leonard E. Read said that, “People reject socialism in name, but once any socialistic activity has been Americanized, nearly everybody believes it’s all right.” The same thing can be said about American pastors in general: They reject injustice in name, but once injustice is institutionalized in government law, nearly every single pastor thinks it’s all right, or at least it’s not worth being rebuked from the pulpit.

For the last 100 years not only have the pastors refused to challenge unjust laws, they have refused to even bring the Bible to whatever laws the different levels of civil government have passed and enforced, to check whether they were unjust or not. In fact, worse than that, for the last 100 years the pastors in this country have openly declared that the Bible doesn’t have anything to do with the political realm, that the Gospel is limited to the individual soul and the institutional church, and therefore has nothing to say about the powers of the land. “It’s not the pastors’ job to talk politics,” has been the refrain. And since politics is where the issues of justice and injustice have been discussed and resolved, this has effectively barred the church from any authoritative voice in discussing justice or injustice.

Note well: it was not the civil government that barred the church from speaking justice. It was the pastors themselves.

So when the Revs babble about “unjust laws,” keep that in mind: They have been silent on the issue of unjust laws for a century, at least.

They have been silent on the creation of the IRS and the introduction of Federal income tax: an act of the Federal government that is only unconstitutional but also strongly anti-Biblical, for it violates the Eighth Commandment.

They have been silent on the creation of the Social Security Administration, another clear violation of the Eighth Commandment.

They have been silent on the 501(c)3 clause and the control of pulpits by the IRS.

They have been silent on the creation of the Federal Reserve System and the destruction of monetary value.

They have been silent on Roe v. Wade and the holocaust of tens of millions of American children supported by government fiat and tax money.

On the immigration restriction laws – not only un-Constitutional but also openly anti-Biblical.

On the creation of the standing army of police, designed specifically to rob the population in favor of the political class and to keep political dissenters suppressed.

On the introduction of no-fault divorce laws.

On the creation and the expansion of the government school system – a clear violation of the very First of the Ten Commandments.

On the expansion of government redistribution programs, from welfare to individuals to welfare for corporations.

On foreign wars.

On government regulations which ban or restrict individuals from fulfilling their calling under God to take dominion over the earth.

On government monopolies, a clear violation of the Biblical principle of equality before the law.

On the war on drugs, a clear example of government tyranny, designed to enrich the government by giving it powers which God never has.

On eminent domain.

On gun-control laws.

On civil forfeiture.

On property taxes.

On government-controlled healthcare.

On the bank bailout. And on the automakers bailout. And on the agricultural subsidies. Etc., etc., etc.

Yesterday’s decision of the Supreme Court didn’t come out of the blue; it was a logical and expected element in a century-long invasion of society by the different levels of civil government, in violation of the principles of limited government and individual liberty established by the Law of God. For a while the pastors were left immune to that invasion; they had their 501(c)3 status which protected their donations. It was the hard-working, productive, middle-class, tithe-paying ordinary members of their churches that got hit the worst by the predatory expansion of government agencies and laws. The pastors didn’t care. They remained silent while the government was destroying the liberty and the property – and sometimes the lives, too – of their church members, while at the same time asking for tithes and donations for supporting the very churches that remained silent at this injustice. (The decline in giving and tithing in the last 50 years was only natural and expected – in fact, I’d say, it is morally mandatory to stop supporting churches who have passively or actively become accomplices in the legislative plunder of their ordinary members.)

nep_cover_largeIf the pastors in this nation were faithful to the historical example of the Black-Robed Regiment of the Revolutionary Era, the pulpits in this country would have been thundering with denunciations of all these government violations of the Ten Commandments, from the public school system, taxation, and regulations, to police, immigration restrictions, and foreign wars. Civil disobedience and rebellion against unjust laws would have started much earlier, a century ago, or, at the very least, 40 years ago.

Unjust laws must be disobeyed, as a testimony to the Gospel (Acts 5:29). Not only that, but unjust laws must be publicly denounced from the pulpits, and God’s judgment must be constantly invoked and called for on those civil government officials who pass those unjust laws or support them. Such officials must be excommunicated from the churches in the land, together with church members who work for their campaigns and publicly support them.

But American pastors remained silent, for many years, on many unjust laws, and many unjust politicians. The decision of the Supreme Court didn’t happen in a vacuum; it came in the context and through the momentum of a century of government injustice and church silence.

The vows, therefore, that they will disobey this particular unjust decision of the Supreme Court, are nonsensical. Maybe this is alright for Indian residents PAN card optyion but not for the US, It is hypocritical. In order for such disobedience to be effective, they will have to roll the ball back and start disobeying on every single unjust law passed by the different levels of civil government in the US. The power of the government to enforce that decision of the Supreme Court was built over decades through these other unjust laws. The powerful apparatus of enforcing the SCOTUS’s decision was built on the millions of cases of destruction of life, liberty, and property of these previous unjust laws. You can’t change one thing only. In this specific case, you can’t roll back one court decision only. To be able to do it, you need to roll the ball all the way back to the starting line. That is, declare opposition and civil disobedience to every single law, regulation, court decision, executive order, etc., which can’t be shown to be based on specific Biblical verse or commandment in the Law of God. Anything short of that would be inconsistent, and would be rightly viewed as hypocrisy. It’s about time for pastors to understand: piecemeal action leads to inevitable defeat, or, at the very best, to short postponement of inevitable defeat.

Will the pastors be willing to roll the ball that far back to the time when the civil government stayed within its Biblically-prescribed limits? I won’t hold my breath on this one. We can safely predict that most pastors will make some noise, and then will eventually strike some deal with the government – a deal that will simply postpone the surrender a little longer. They have been preaching cultural passivity and historical pessimism for a century; there is no way that they suddenly switch to cultural activism and optimism. Just a few more years until a new batch of seminary graduates fills the pulpits, and a new batch of public school graduates fills the pews. By that time, the SCOTUS’s decision will be taken for granted, as Roe v. Wade or Obamacare are today. Some pastors, of course, will submit; after all, Romans 13 doesn’t have any justification whatsoever for any kind of disobedience and opposition. And pastors have been interpreting Romans 13 out of its Biblical context for decades now. The ball won’t be rolled back, and the pathetic threats of civil disobedience will fail and be forgotten.

Unless. . . .

Unless the members of the thousands of American churches wake up and see the truth, that the majority of their pastors and seminary professors and preachers have been accomplices in the massive government theft of their life, liberty and property. That every single abortion, confiscatory tax, tyrannical regulation, instance of police brutality and extortion, unjust court decision, etc., has been committed or enforced with the approval – open or tacit – of their shepherds. That these same shepherds have made allies with the wolves in government and have acted as their agents . . . and then start purging the pulpits of every single pastor and preacher who has remained silent concerning injustice in the society, or has openly supported it. Until the pulpits are manned with men who would stand against tyranny and injustice and openly call for God’s judgment on and man’s disobedience to those rulers who defy God and His Law.

Without such purge, we will leave a world of judgment to our children.

It’s time to act. And start from the pulpits.

6 comments

  • Excellent article Bo and directly to the point, keep telling it like it is, as it is the truth!!!

  • I agree with you on most points. I will be publishing a column in the next day or two that will take a similar position. Just found your blog, I’ll keep visiting.

  • Excellent article Bo, please keep up the great work as I completely agree with the first comment above!

  • Excellent!!

  • Good point raised. Thank you.

    I’m wondering if some of these items on the list reflect unintentional political inclinations (ones that we ALL have!) — for instance, silence on gun control laws, government healthcare (the phrasing seems to reflect a predisposition).

    Perhaps, we should be asking for God’s opinion on healthcare, in general. On gun-inflicted violence, wealth disparity, etc…

    “… declare opposition and civil disobedience to every single law, regulation, court decision, executive order, etc., which can’t be shown to be based on specific Biblical verse or commandment in the Law of God.” I’m not so sure that proof-texting one’s way through laws works, either. Case in point, environmental laws (pro or con) can go back to Genesis, but the reality is that people have different hermeneutics — for instance, dispensational or reformed, child baptism, end times…

    I would argue that how we live and what we change in our own lives will make all the difference in the world, regardless of what laws are written/passed. It is easy to only view things from a US-Christian perspective, and define problems and solutions in that context. The early church was influential because it lived in a way that was noticeably different (see ‘epistle of Mathetes to Diognetus’ or impact of St. Patrick — ‘the celtic way of evangelism’)

  • Thank you Bojidar – This was absolutely on point. I believe like you do that the current furor over SCOTUS will soon pass and the American church will soon go back to its usual repose. We are in desperate need of Reformation in biblical thought and teaching. The pastors in most cases, are cowards who simply need to be replaced with men of courage. They have done extreme damage by their soft piety and non-confrontational living. Replace them with men of strength. But, how do we do that exactly? Pray for Reformation

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