By Pastor Chuck Jones
I believe that the only weapon we have is the Word of God. There is
power there. The word is the Gospel. But it’s not meant to beat people into submission.
I advocate what Paul said in Romans 14:4-5: “Who are you who judge the servant
of another? To his own lord he stands or falls. Yes, he will be made to stand,
for God has power to make him stand. One man esteems one day above another. Another
esteems every day alike. Let each man be fully assured in his own mind.” We are
all answerable in the end to Jesus as head of the Church. Yet unity is
something to be sought and treasured.
So with that said, here’s my point of view. Jesus said, “My kingdom is
not of this world; if it were, my subjects would fight.” Fighting as the world
fights, boycotts, petitions, lobbying and so on, isn’t in Jesus’ arsenal of
weapons. Nor Christians killing Christians in war. If we learn to fight with
the world’s tactics, then who are we learning from (or disciples of)? That’s
one of the dangers I see.
It’s been said by some, “The early church, rather than being on the
outside, did all they could to get into it, effect change and improve the
system.” This brings up some questions. One is this: when the Apostle James was
killed by Herod, where do we read about “improving the system”? Were there
protests or riots? God’s justice was that “Herod was eaten by worms.” Acts 12
gives a good example of prayer rather than protest. Protest would not have been
tolerated at all, but prayer can’t be stopped. Indeed the disciples were driven
out of Jerusalem because of persecution. Peter wrote about how to handle this
in his first epistle. He didn’t talk about getting involved with the
government. Can your child not pray silently in school?
I hold the view that the weapons we are to use are not according to the
world’s way. That is to say we don’t need to pick up this world’s weapons in
order to bring about change. “For though we walk in the flesh, we don’t wage
war according to the flesh; for the weapons of our warfare are not of the
flesh, but mighty before God to the throwing down of strongholds, throwing down
imaginations and every high thing that is exalted against the knowledge of God,
and bringing every thought into captivity to the obedience of Christ” (2 Cor.
10:3-5). I don’t think that political action is preaching the Gospel. Did Jesus
overthrow Rome or try to?
I will admit that I could be wrong, but I’m convinced of this: This nation
isn’t the Kingdom of God. Preaching the Gospel is our only tool to make any change,
and it is one person (of 6 billion) at a time. This is the only way people are
brought to repentance and born again to a living hope (Mark 1:14-15).
I am gaining an aversion to “pressuring people” to do anything I think
they should. Part of it is in the first paragraph; another point is in 1
Corinthians 6:10. I’ll only highlight one group, the extortioners. These are those
who use undue force or legal power or ingenuity to force people to do what they
don’t want to. Those who practice extortion will not inherit the Kingdom of God.
There was an incident in Grand Rapids, Michigan a couple of decades ago
concerning an adult XXX theater. Some believers decided to picket the place
with the desire to shut it down. I learned something from the owner. In an
interview he said he was glad for the publicity. If he had no customers he
couldn’t stay open.
The lesson is: it’s the individual heart that needs to be changed. That
change turns this man’s customers into non-customers, and he’s out of business.
This is what Paul the Apostle ran into in Acts 16. I do not read about protests,
letters, lobbying or any pressure put on the government to “change.” But I do
read about deliverance through Yahweh’s intervention. I would also assert that
in Acts 17 Paul again ran into trouble because he was preaching the Gospel
against man’s idea of what is right. It is silly to conclude that the Gospel
won’t have any effect but man’s methods will!
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