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A Useful Exploration of Truth about Christian Nationalism (Part Three)

Part One      Part Two

Teach All Nations

Matthew 28:19-20 say:

19 Go ye therefore, and teach all nations, baptizing them in the name of the Father, and of the Son, and of the Holy Ghost: 20 Teaching them to observe all things whatsoever I have commanded you: and, lo, I am with you alway, even unto the end of the world. Amen.

I ask you to notice above, “teach all nations.”  The Great Commission requires teaching all nations.  We want entire nations to follow Christ.  Will that always occur?  No, but it is a goal.  It is a holy ambition for true churches and believers in those churches following Christ.  How does this relate to Christian nationalism?

In verse 20, part of teaching all nations is “teaching them to observe all things whatsoever I have commanded you.”  Christians should wish the nations in which they live would observe all things Christ commanded.  God’s Word is still the standard for all of mankind.  God will judge everyone based on His rules or laws.

True Christians and their true churches should repudiate all the ways that a nation does not follow the Lord.  They should strive for a nation that follows the Lord.  What Christian would not want a “Christian nation”?  Would that not be a nation that follows Christ in all things?  When Christians go to judge their nation, they should judge it based upon scripture.  They should vote for representatives with the greatest opportunity or possibility of their nation following the standards of God.

Imagining a Christian Nation

What I’m writing so far in this essay is not a form of amillennialism or postmillennialism.  I’m not talking about someone other than Jesus bringing in His kingdom.  Romans 13 says there is “no power but of God” (verse one).  It goes on to say that “rulers are not a terror to good works, but to evil” (verse three).  Good works are not arbitrary.  They are only biblical good works.  Evil is as God defines it.  People have liberty only in the context of scriptural regulation or accurate interpretation and application of the Bible.

Rulers in a Christian United States would terrorize evil and elsewise “minister . . . for good” (verse four) only in a biblical or Christian fashion.  Making disciples of the nation requires observing everything Christ wants observed.  Right before His commission in Matthew 28, Jesus said that He possessed all authority for all of heaven and all of earth.  Jesus will judge the world like He owns it and always has owned it.  If we want His judgment to go well for everyone, we must let them know in no uncertain terms.

For sure, Christians of a nation start with the gospel.  No one observes whatsoever Christ says without surrendering first to the gospel.  A nation won’t be Christian without Christians, but when they are Christians, that means what some people have said, “All of Christ for all of life.”  This means Christ rules in the home, at work, and in government.  The words of Christ apply to every earthly institution if Christ will rule.

Jesus and the Christian Nation

Will Christ rule over this world?  Yes, He will.  He will begin a rule with a rod of iron (Psalm 2) when He returns to set up that kingdom on the earth for a thousand years.  So is that it?  Is that all anyone could hope for?  Mainly, yes.  Jesus said in Matthew 18:36, “My kingdom is not of this world: if my kingdom were of this world, then would my servants fight.”

When Jesus said what He did in Matthew 18:36, one could take it as the following:

Look around.  Does this look like my kingdom?  Of course, not.  This is not anything like my kingdom.  My kingdom is not of this world.

Jesus’ plan was not to force everyone into His kingdom.  He does not coerce people into His kingdom.  His subjects would subject themselves to Him voluntarily.  That’s His plan for His kingdom.

Internal Rule First

External rule of Jesus proceeds from internal rule of Jesus.  The spiritual precedes the physical.  It isn’t mere conformity.  It is transformation.  If a nation skips this transformation step, it’ll probably get something like the seven demons possessing the swept out house (Luke 11).

Kingdoms of this present world, the one Jesus talked about in Matthew 18, as a whole would not come to Him.  That’s why in Matthew 7:13-14, He said the broad road leads to destruction and the vast majority go down that road.  Jesus did not since rescind that statement.  He has not said:  “At some point the broad road would be full of true believers on their way to heaven.”  If Jesus said that, then it is true, no matter what your desires.

Yet, anyone following Christ will follow Him in every arena of life.  A Christian nation can come, but it will come through faith in Christ.  The way to a Christian nation is faith in Christ.  Before nations behave in their governments as if He rules, they will receive Him to rule their own personal lives.  One should expect that true Christians in a government would function like Christians.

Christians don’t want a pagan government.  They don’t want an idolatrous government.  True Christians as much as possible want a Christian government.  To the degree that it is one, it can be a Christian nation.

How a Christian Nation Might Occur

If churches are barely Christian, and if all of Christ is not even all of the church, no one should expect that of the whole nation.  This is a simple less than and greater than — not about what is most important, but sheer population size of the institution.  Jesus should rule each Christian — one.  Then He should rule each family — two to fifteen (let’s estimate), then each church — ten to five thousand, and then each government or nation — several thousands to a billion.  The order matters.  The latter won’t occur without the former.  You can’t get to a Christian nation without getting to quite a few single Christians, who received a true gospel.

No Christian should hope to see a Christian nation without making one disciple.  Yet, Jesus commanded, “Teach (make disciples) all nations.”  In other words, “Make all nations disciples.”  He didn’t command, “Make disciples of, as in part of, all nations.”  The goal is whole nations.  BDAG says concerning the Greek term translated “nations”: “a body of persons united by kinship, culture, and common traditions.”

What Christ Would Have It

The goal, all of Christ for all of life for all of the world, must envision whole nations.  Scripture must get to every institution God instituted.  Scott Aniol, who has written a book on this subject (that I have not yet read), it seems, would call this position, “Christian Faithfulness.”  Scripture does envision a kingdom of Christ on earth to come and tells us what it will be.  Anything that might call itself a Christian nation should not be something less than what Christ would have it.

Christians can’t skip steps to get to Christian nationalism.  It starts with internal rule, spiritual transformation.  Anything else would essentially say, “Christians fight.”  Get armed and loaded and ready for when the pagans who saturate our government take our power away.  Without true Christians, what would that nation or government look like on the other side of that fight?  Christ has us here now as pilgrims and strangers.  Anything beyond that, that might come before the kingdom Christ sets up, will come in an organic way.  It will be obvious, which right now, it’s not even close to obvious.

More to Come

 

Paul Stands Against Peter and the Subject of Authority (Part Four)

Part One     Part Two     Part Three

God Uses Human Intervention

Take a moment with me to participate in a thought experiment.  Paul stood against Peter to the face.  Why would Paul stand against Peter if God predetermined or just determined everything in life?  As a free agent, Peter chose not to eat with Gentiles, with whom before he had eaten.  He chose wrong because he could.  Paul wanted him to change course on that action.  The Apostle Paul expressed limitation, temperance of Peter’s actions.  God uses men to do this.

Scripture shows direct human-to-human interaction necessary for particular God-ordained change.  God intervenes using human intervention.  According to the plan of God, He uses men to change men.  Galatians 2 is a tale of God’s authority to intervene.  Someone goes his own sweet way and someone else stands against him to stop that path of harm.  It’s not a violent interchange.  It is peaceful.  Paul uses truth in arguments to persuade.  Peter changes.  Happy ending.

Grace Dominated Obedience

God Gets the Credit

God doesn’t force anyone to do everything just like He wants.  Pastors can try, but it won’t work that way.  If they imitate God, they don’t force it.  Grace dominates the believer’s life.  This allows for effective pastoral authority.  Regenerate men can obey because of God’s grace and true pastors function within that grace for those men to conform to Christ’s image.  God of course then gets the credit for it, like the Apostle Paul mentions at the end of 1 Corinthians 1.

Christ the Master

Go back to Romans 14.  Paul makes this point in Romans 14:4:

Who art thou that judgest another man’s servant? to his own master he standeth or falleth.

Paul uses an illustration.  Another man has a servant or slave in that day.  Would you get away with holding his slave accountable to you?  You expect him to obey you, when his Master is his judge.  John Gill writes concerning these words:

[O]ne man has nothing to do with another man’s servant; he has no power over him, nor any right to call him to an account for his actions; nor has he any business to censure or condemn him for them, or concern himself about them. . . . [H]e is another’s servant, he is the servant of God: he is chosen by God the Father for his service, as well as unto salvation; he is bought with the price of Christ’s blood, and therefore not his own, nor another’s, but Christ’s.

About the second part of the above quote from Romans 14:4, Gill writes:

[T]he meaning of which is, either if he “stands”, that is, if he serves his Lord and master, of which “standing” is expressive; and continues in the service of him, whose servant he professes to be; this is to his master’s advantage and profit, and not to another’s: and if he “falls”, that is, from his obedience to him, as such who profess to be the servants of God may.

We Live Unto the Lord

Paul expands on this truth in verse 8:

For whether we live, we live unto the Lord; and whether we die, we die unto the Lord: whether we live therefore, or die, we are the Lord’s.

We live unto the Lord, not unto any man.  Whether we live, a positive outcome, or we die, a negative one, either way, we are the Lord’s, not someone else’s.  This also relates to judgment and even the judgment seat, which is after this lifetime.

The Judgment Seat of Christ

Paul writes in verse 10:

But why dost thou judge thy brother? or why dost thou set at nought thy brother? for we shall all stand before the judgment seat of Christ.

The slave or servant will stand before His Master, Christ, for judgment by Him.  A pastor should want not to impede or prevent a direct rapport of the Lord Jesus Christ with His servants.  He can do this though by inserting himself in life matters in a judgmental manner.  By judgmental, I mean in condemnatory treatment, which is manipulative.

Servants of Christ Serving Christ

Of course, pastors must step in.  They must feed and protect.  However, a pastor can make it more difficult for servants of Christ to serve Christ, because they inject themselves into judgment so extensively and vehemently.  They don’t stand behind scripture as much as they stand behind force of personality and methodology.  I’m not saying they won’t use the Bible, but their authority becomes the indispensable force of change.

I’ve been under a leader (in this case not a pastor) so severe that it seemed impossible to serve the Lord, because he made it so palpable that I was serving him.  Someone doesn’t have to act in an identical way as him to operate in his manner.  He blew his top.  He threatened.  It also meant hearing that he talked to others in a form of divide and conquer.  I wasn’t his enemy — I supported him — but my popularity seemed a threat to him, so he tried to undermine it.  In doing so, he really was hurting himself.  I knew I could never stay under him as a leader because I wanted to serve Jesus Christ, not him.

Be assured, a church member might use some scheming tactic on a pastor too, to rule him from the below or under side.  I fully acknowledge that.  I’ve had that happen too.  Scripture, including from the Apostle Paul, addresses both good and bad treatment of a pastor.  Hebrews 13:17 says these members might cause a pastor to fulfill his office with grief, not with joy.

Treating Men with Respect

Especially Men of Good Will

I’ve read others use the terminology “good will” to describe a trait of a man who overall wants to do right.  This man showed a long-time pattern of pursuing a right direction.  He followed and continues in a favorable trajectory.  He maintained good behavior toward God and others with some exceptions.

A basic human need God created in men is respect.  Treating a man like a man means respecting him.  One man in authority should approach another man with respect if he wants respect in return.  This especially acknowledges past good will, not starting without good will in the exercise of authority.  For a man of good will in need of course correction, a pastor should demonstrate respect of him while doing so.

Honor Due to All Men

If you are in authority, and you don’t think a man deserves your respect, you can still give it.  You have a much better opportunity to restore someone if you go ahead and exhibit it.  You can argue for showing respect.  The Apostle Paul in Romans 13:7 says, “honour to whom honour.”  Gill says about this:

[T]here is an honour due to all men, according to their respective rank and station, and the relation they stand in to each other.

Here is a common scenario.  A pastor starts a confrontation of a man in a disrespectful manner.  He renders dishonor to him.  How do you think that’s going to turn out?  The man responds poorly, maybe with some obvious irritation or worse. The reaction yields more disrespect from the leader.  Everything goes down from there, because now both men feel disrespected.  From there, interactions turn acerbic.  It didn’t have to be that way.

Such a sequence of events one might call a cycle.  These types of cycles do occur between people all the time.  For the cycle to stop, both parties must admit at least the cycle occurred.  It can’t be one or both sides assigning all the blame to the other.  The cycle includes alternating wrongdoing that increases in intensity, until it comes to an abrupt ending.

When one retraces the steps, where did the decline begin?  Someone may say, “When a man did something wrong, that necessitated confrontation from a pastor.  If he never did anything wrong, it would have stopped right there.”  Maybe.  Everyone does things wrong.  However, a genuine trial of wrongdoing follows due process.  Without it, genuine God-ordained authority did not occur.

Why We’re Here

As a pastor, many times people didn’t and don’t do what I want.  These people are not there to facilitate a successful career for me.  The things they didn’t do might relate to their submission to Jesus Christ.  What do I do?  Do I blow a gasket at them, do I insult them, condemn them, say harsh things to them, or do I threaten them?  I hope not.  I should try to help them.  That’s why I’m there.  It’s not about me.  They are servants of Christ for which He died.

AUTHORS OF THE BLOG

  • Kent Brandenburg
  • Thomas Ross

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