Submission to Authority
1 Peter 2:13-17
Transcript
G'day everyone. This is where you say g'day back. Good morning everyone. My name is Raz, it's good to be with you this morning. I hope everyone slept well last night because today's going to be pretty uncomfortable for most people. Today's going to be a little bit tough for us and that's because so far Peter's been talking a whole lot about who we are, why we're classified as elect exiles, what makes us misfits, why Christians are different to everyone else in society.
And it's been okay, we've been understanding a little bit more about our identity, but he's turned a corner. Last week he turned a corner and now he's going to start telling us what that means for our lives, how that changes, how we behave. And today we're going to be reading the section where he talks about submission to authority. It's one of those sections in scripture. Doesn't happen often for me, but it's one of those sections in scripture that I think everyone would be a little bit more comfortable if it just wasn't there or if it could just be ignored for some reason or if we could just delete little sections that annoy us.
It's like if I, if for some reason, and it's probably lucky that I didn't have this option, but if for some reason I was invited to the Bible writing club and I had my choice of what made it in or not and I was on the phone to God or Jesus or whoever and there was sections that was like, don't murder. I'd be totally stoked. I'd include that. Don't murder. Don't steal. Don't steal.
Got it. Don't lie. Yeah. I kind of like it sometimes, but I'll include it for now. Honor your mother and father. Yeah, I'll use a pencil for that one.
Honor your mother and father. Be subject to every human authority. Hang on. Can you repeat that one? Be subject to every... God, I...
The reception's a little... AT&T. I can't really... I think I'm in the... I'll call you back tomorrow. Be subject...
I would just skip it. And no one would ever know. But I wasn't invited. And here it is. In our Bible. Be subject to every human institution.
I think that human nature instills in us a certain distrust, a certain defense mechanism against human institutions, especially human authorities. We don't trust our boss to pay us right, so we invent pay stubs. Everyone can keep track of how much they're paid. We don't trust banks to keep our money safe, so we keep records of it. We don't trust schools to educate our children, so we do it ourselves. We invent homeschooling.
We don't trust the monarchy, so we invent America. But we don't really trust America and democracy all that much because we still feel the need to keep guns in our back pocket just in case that government gets out of line, right? Amen. Amen. Just in case. So seriously, we have this problem with authority, and we're not good with it.
And Peter's done good so far. He's talked well. He explains why we're misfits, why we are different from society. And then he turns this corner and he says, be subject to every human authority. And we're just like... And for that reason, I think today is going to be pretty tough for us.
The passage itself is actually pretty straightforward. We're going to step through it. We're going to talk about it. But it's pretty straightforward. It's not too hard to understand. What's difficult is how do we apply what he's actually saying.
So we're going to spend a bit of time talking about what the Bible actually says. Then we're going to spend most of our time talking about what it actually means, how it impacts our life. Before we open up, let's pray. Father God, we thank you for the opportunity we have to learn from your word. Help us to sit under the authority of scripture today. Fill us with the spirit.
Convict us. Just help us to digest what you have for us from 1 Peter today. Pray that in Jesus' name. Amen. If you've got a Bible, open up to 1 Peter chapter 2. If your one looks like this, it's on page 657.
And we're going to be starting at verse 13. It's got a big heading, an ugly heading it says, Submission to Authority. Like I said, Peter turned a corner last week. He was talking about a whole lot about who we are, what our identity is. And he's turned this corner and he starts giving instructions, ways that we ought to live as a result of who we are and what our identity is. So we're going to start in verse 13.
It says, Be subject for the Lord's sake to every human institution, whether it's to the emperor as supreme or to governors as sent by him to punish those who do evil and to praise those who do good. For this is the will of God, that by doing good you should put to silence the ignorance of foolish people. Live as people who are free, not using your freedom as a cover-up for evil, but living as servants of God. Honor everyone, love the brotherhood, fear God, honor the emperor. Let's go back up to the top.
Be subject for the Lord's sake to every human institution. Hmm. I don't know about you, but for me, that's tough. Let me tell you what I, what I wish that said. I wish it said, be subject for the Lord's sake to every human institution, unless that human institution is run by morons. Then you get to do whatever you want to do.
Or, be subject to every human institution, unless that human institution makes really dumb rules. Then you can just ignore the dumb ones and keep the good ones. These seem like much nicer, much prettier Bible verses to me. But, I turn to 1 Peter, I look at it and there's just this line, be subject for the Lord's sake to every human institution. And I keep wishing it said more. I keep wishing there was some clause to get you out of doing it.
Some way of like manipulating it and thinking, oh no, it doesn't say that really. Like a, like maybe an emoticon, like a winky face or a, a lol JKS or a, something like, I even looked in the Greek and they didn't have emoticons back then. So that didn't help me out at all. There is no way about it. It's just simple. Be subject for the Lord's sake to every human institution.
Just sitting there in the Bible, being authoritative for my life, grinding my soul. That means simple things. We're supposed to listen to our boss. We're supposed to listen to our schools, listen to the police, listen to the government. Nobody really wants to do any of that, right? Maybe, maybe in an ideal world, where all of those things actually worked the way they're supposed to.
Or, if they worked exactly the way I wanted them to. Maybe we would be okay with it then. But when your boss makes you stay late, when the schools start telling you what clothes you're allowed to wear, when the police tell you you're not allowed to drive 90 miles in a school zone, who wants to listen to that junk? No one. He goes on. Whether it's to the emperor's supreme, or to governors as sent by him, to punish those who do evil, and to praise those who do good.
Now this bit's a little bit tricksy. Back in Peter's day, the emperor was like supreme leader, ultimate authority on everything, dude. We don't have anything quite like that. This is the guy who could do whatever he wanted, whenever he wanted, because he's the emperor, and you don't have a say, because you're not the emperor, he's the emperor, so you be quiet. He is not Obama. That is not a valid jump.
He's not Obama. He's Kim Jong-un. He's the guy who tells you, if you don't have the right haircut, I can kill you. So there's the emperor, who's the supreme leader dictator, and then he says there's a governor. Now the governor is a representative of the emperor.
He's also pretty powerful. He can do some pretty crazy stuff. He's got a lot of authority, but to make big changes, he needs the authorization of the emperor. Neither one of these positions of power translates well into American society. But Peter says you're supposed to submit to all of them as well.
They have more power than anything that American society has. To disagree with the emperor was to have your head chopped off, and he said submit to him. It's different for us. Obama can't just say off with his head. He disagrees with me. We have certain freedoms, certain rights as Americans.
Well, you do. I don't. They allow free speech. They allow the right to protest. They, well, they don't allow for it, but there's things like civil Acts of disobedience that exist, and they're more acceptable in our culture. We'll talk a little bit more about that later, but it's not a direct equivalent.
He goes on in verse 15. For this is the will of God, that by doing good, you should put to silence the ignorance of foolish people. Basically, when you act obediently as a law-abiding citizen, like a real law-abiding citizen, not like the movie, people around, they won't be able to give you grief. They don't have accusations. They don't have any ammunition against you saying that you don't actually care about what the Bible says. I'm pretty bad at this.
I think a lot of people are pretty bad at this, but I'll tell you about me. Stop signs. I've been continually convicted lately about stop signs because my wife harasses me when I do not stop completely at stop signs. Stop signs can be dumb, right? They put them in some weird locations. There's a street at the end of, like our apartment is here, and then you go up that street, and it's just a bend in the road.
It's not an intersection. It's just a bend in the road. There's a stop sign there. What? Seriously? I'm the worst at this, and I just think, that's a dumb stop sign.
I can just run that. No one's ever, like, no one's going to stop me. Everyone else thinks it's dumb. There's no, I'm definitely not going to get hit. There's no other roads. Dumb stop sign.
I'm just, no. No. Christina is like, Razz, there's a stop sign. Razz, you should stop me, stop me, and it's a stop sign, and then it comes back at every other stop sign, every other stop sign, and it's that stop sign, you don't stop at this stop sign. I'm the worst at this. I really am, and I'm convicted, because ever since I've been talking about this sermon with Christina, she's been dialing it up a little bit, like, you know this is real.
Yes, I know. I'm sorry. I'm the worst of sinners. I'm the worst of sinners. I'm not good at this. I apologize.
I repent. But seriously, what happens is, when you break laws simply because you disagree with them, when you think, this is dumb, it doesn't apply to me, this rule is stupid, bad policy, bad law, I'm just going to ignore it, you're actually not proving anything. I don't prove anything by ignoring it. I give the world excuses to think I'm a hypocrite. When you disregard meaningless laws, when you disregard anything that you think is meaningless, you're discrediting yourself as a moral authority. And that's what he's saying to avoid.
That's what he's saying. Don't fall to the ignorance of fools. Don't be a fool in the way that you act. You cannot silence the ignorance of fools when you act like one yourself. There's a right way, which is submitting to the rules, the policies, the authorities. And there's a wrong way, which is, my way is better than that.
Now, fools make foolish arguments, like I did. This one doesn't make sense. This stop sign doesn't apply to me. That is a foolish argument. Fools make foolish arguments, and it just gives everyone else ammunition. Let me give you a silly example of foolish arguments from fools.
This is near and dear to the hearts of many Mill City folk. There's a consistent debate out there about which would be the best Mexican grill fast food restaurant. If I were to silence the ignorance of fools, I have options. I can do illegal things. I could destroy every Moe's in existence. That is an option.
There would be no more argument that Moe's is better than Chipotle because Moe's no longer exists. Now, I would be a fool to do that. I would spend the rest of my life in jail. I would have proven my point, but I would have failed to be a law-abiding citizen. There's an alternative method, and that method is called appealing to objective reality. Objectively, and you can use your superior intellect whenever you're against one of these Moe's folk.
Use your superior intellect. Chipotle is objectively better than Moe's. Period. Easy to prove. You can put them side by side and eat them both. Now, a fool, a fool will come back with foolish arguments.
Like my stop signs don't apply to me. A fool will say something like, they don't greet me on the way into Chipotle. Fool! That does not apply to anything to do with food. I do not care if they greet me or not. They don't even greet me when I go to Moe's anyway.
I think they know that I like Chipotle more. I asked if we got free stuff for them not greeting us, and apparently there used to be a rule, and it's not anymore, because they're not good at greeting you. That's not even a good excuse. That's not a rule. That's stupid. That is foolish.
But you don't let them know that you think that's foolish. I'm sorry. I'm getting really distracted. I'm passionate about this, okay? Hopefully one day, the ignorance of fools will be silenced using good methods like superior intellect. Let's move on.
That was distracting. Verse 16. Live as people who are free, not using your freedom as a cover-up for evil, but living as servants of God. Christians are free. Free from the law, free from sin, free from evil. We talk about this all the time, but what Peter's saying is that as we have freedom in Christ, as we're free as Christians, we choose to be orderly.
We choose to submit ourselves to human leaders. Peter's saying here that Christians don't use the freedom that they have to go out and ignore human authorities, to break laws, to do whatever they want, and think, I'm free in Christ, so I can just ignore that stop sign. It's the classic case of rebellion, saying, Christ loves me, so I can do whatever I want. I'm free to sin, I'm free to do whatever, because Christ's love covers all of my sins. Christ didn't die to free us so that we could sin. He died to free us from sin, to protect us from the power that sin has to control our lives, to destroy us, to control every action that we do.
It's what Chet talked about last week with the passions of the flesh. We're free of that because of Christ's sacrifice. That's what it means to be free as a Christian. Verse 17 says, Honor everyone, love the brotherhood, fear God, honor the emperor. This section is a little more important than it might seem. It's four simple instructions, but there's a little bit of a hierarchy at play.
He starts with, Honor everyone, love the brotherhood. That means that we treat, we treat everyone with respect. We treat everyone with dignity. We're all created in God's image. We're all created equal. There's no one that's better, no one that's worse.
And that means there is, there is never a reasonable time to speak bad about people publicly. That means there is never a reasonable time to rant online about other humans. Even if it's cryptic and they don't know it's actually them. There's no names, it's people, it's just someone. There's never an appropriate time if we're honoring everyone to rant about each other. Called to honor everyone.
And he says, love the brotherhood. That's his way of saying, when he says love the brotherhood, it means there's a certain different way that we treat the brotherhood. And by brotherhood, he means the family. He's specifically talking about the church. There's, it's not often that when it comes to everyone or the church, that there would be some kind of opposition. But when there is, which is rarely, there would be a certain extra something that goes towards church.
You would, you would have an extra amount of love for people who are in the church. Basically what he's saying is, because we're elect exiles, because we're misfits, misfits look out for each other. In general. But at the same time, we honor everyone. And the next bit is, fear God, honor the emperor. This is a, this is a surprisingly big one.
We've talked about how the emperor has no direct equivalent in American society. But for the purposes of this verse, and because in verse 13, he says, be subject for the Lord's sake to every human institution. You can pretty much sub in any human authority. Fear God and honor your parents. Fear God and honor your boss. Fear God and honor the government.
That's how it works. They are to be honored, treated with respect. They are not to be treated like you would God, as in fear and reverence, but they are to be treated with respect. Now, when push comes to shove, Christians have this extra allegiance to God. The fear, the reverence aspect. If, if a human authority and God's moral law are diametrically opposed, we would go with God's moral law.
That's what he's saying with the hierarchy of fear God, but honor the emperor. Now, we are not always going to agree with things that our leaders say and do. Very rarely will we agree with the things our leaders say and do, but even then, he's telling us to honor them. America is proudly democratic, as it should be. I'm all about it. But every now and then in a democracy, someone that you don't like is elected.
Every now and then. Sometimes, for some people, it feels like someone you don't like is always elected. But, there will be people in power that we don't necessarily like. But just because we don't like them does not mean they're fair game for slander and hate, which is too easy to fall to. And when he says, fear God and honor the emperor, he means it. Fear God and honor the government, he means it.
Be honorable in the way you talk about them. With things like Facebook and internet anonymity, it's so easy to see a picture with a slogan that shows why someone's such an idiot and we can just like it and we can share it and it's just this public persona of us driving garbage online when we're not being honorable to everyone. We're not being honorable to a human authority. We're not being honorable to the government and we're not being honorable to the emperor, if he existed. We're to honor everyone, love the brotherhood, fear God, honor the emperor. Treat people with respect, dignity, even if you don't like them, honor them.
So that's the Bible comprehension part. It's pretty simple. Unless a human institution is diametrically opposed to God's law, to what God has said for us, then we're to follow the human institution. Now you might be tracking along pretty easily so far that that's all pretty digestible. It's a little uncomfortable. We don't love that kind of information, but it's not painful.
But when some government, boss, organization imposes something on you that you really, really don't like, you're faced with a choice. You obey or you disobey. And the question becomes, what should a Christian do when they disagree with a human authority? That's what we're going to spend pretty much the rest of our time talking about. What should a Christian do when they disagree with the human authority? Now let's start with something pretty easy.
In our society, there's a whole lot of freedom. In America, all about freedom. You get to choose things like which career path you want. That was a little different than in Peter's day. If you were born into a carpenter's family, you would be a carpenter. If you're born into a farmer's family, you'd be a farmer.
We get to choose, which means we kind of get to choose bosses in a way. We kind of get to choose which organization we work for. So what does it look like to fear God foremost and honor our boss? Fear God and honor the organization. Well, your boss is probably going to make you do things you don't want to do. The organization as a whole is probably going to have some dumb policies.
And I know from experience that that can be pretty dang annoying. I worked as an electrician in Australia for a number of years. This annoyed me more than most people, but on a construction site in Australia, it doesn't matter who you are, what your profession, anything like that, you must wear a hard hat, safety glasses, hearing protection, gloves, high visibility vest, and steel cap boots. I don't know if it's the same here, it's probably something pretty similar. If you're on a construction site, that's what you've got to wear. I did a lot of brand new apartment buildings and stuff like that.
So we would go in, everything would be done, landscaping's done, elevators are running, lights are all on, paint is done, everything's in except humans and furniture. And because it's still technically a construction site, you would have to wear your hard hat, glasses, hearing protection, gloves, high visibility vest, and steel cap boots in case you needed to kick someone or be seen by someone, be seen by the forklifts that weren't there anymore, all of that kind of stuff. Bump your head on something. So the thing that I would hate the most is when they're doing their final inspections and there's a light out and I would, because I'm going to a construction site that day, I'd have to wear my hard hat, my glasses, my gloves, my hearing protection, my high visibility shirt, my steel cap boots so I could change a light bulb in a finished apartment.
Now I see the point of your rules on a construction site but this should no longer be a construction site. It annoyed me like crazy and so I would just ignore some of them like I wouldn't wear a hard hat. Here's another one. This one's funnier. This one's better. This is something you can practice for yourself.
When you go to Chick-fil-A, which isn't going to be today, dang it, but you can do it any other day, you go there and you say thank you to a Chick-fil-A employee. They are obligated to say my pleasure and you can thank them again and they will say my pleasure. It is Chick-fil-A policy that if somebody thanks you, you must say my pleasure. So you thank someone and they give you their pleasure and then you thank them again and you say, no, seriously, thank you for what you do and they say my pleasure. You can try that one on repeat and it's an actual thing. Now, for the most part, that seems like a good policy until someone like me or Chet goes in and says thank you too many times and we start really frustrating some Chick-fil-A employees.
It feels like a dumb policy, but when you're a Chick-fil-A employee and that happens, is it really that hard to just submit to the rules? To submit to the wearing a hard hat? To submit to whatever it is? Maybe your company changes the rules on clocking in and it's now clunkier, it takes more time, it's frustrating, maybe it takes five minutes. Excellent. That's the first five minutes of your work day done.
It's going to frustrate you, but it's not that big of a deal. Workplace stuff is typically not that big of a deal. Now, realistically, even if your boss is unfair, even if he really is a jerk, nine times out of ten, 99 times out of 100, the right call is going to be follow the instructions of your boss. Even if they're frustrating, even if they're dumb, even if their policies are stupid, even if you disagree, the right call is going to be to follow your boss. It's a better witness, it shows them that you take them seriously, it honors them. Now, the fear God, honor your boss thing comes into play.
If your boss starts telling you, do things that are illegal, lie to clients, rip them off, steal things, then you have an obligation to fear God instead of honoring your boss. You may get fired. That might happen, but in that case, your boss is a jerk anyway. You get to move on with your life, and at least you've valued your dignity and relationship with God above your boss. Now, what happens if it's not just your boss, it's like a governmental thing? How do you fear God and honor the government?
That can be pretty difficult. The government makes you do a lot of things you don't really want to do. When you go to an airport, the TSA makes you take your shoes off, they make you take your laptop out of your bag, they make you chug your water, they make you do a full body scan, I don't want to do any of that. The Bush administration introduced the US Patriot Act, which meant that the government was essentially allowed to spy on all of its citizens. They could read text messages, record phone calls. Nobody really liked that.
The Obama administration introduced the Affordable Care Act, friendly one known as Obamacare. It forces a lot of people to pay extra things for healthcare that they wouldn't have previously purchased and they're now forced to. People don't like that. No one likes being told what they can and can't do. No one likes being told to take their shoes off when they think it's stupid. No one likes any of that stuff.
Government gets their hands into things all the time and we don't want our phone calls recorded. We don't want to take our shoes off. We don't want to pay extra charges because no one can tell me to do anything right. I have a right. I have individual rights. I have liberties.
This is unfair. The problem with that mentality of thinking is that at no point in time does the truth, at no point in time does the gospel ever emphasize individual rights. At no point in time. I know this is hard to stomach. This is hard to digest. This is very countercultural.
But at no point in time does Jesus, does Paul, does Peter, does God ever emphasize individual rights. It's just not in there. Let me be super specific, super clear, and abrasive. the only right, the only right that humans have, the only thing we can stand before, a holy God, the only thing that we can stand before him and force him to give us, the only right that we can demand from God, is his wrath and our punishment. punishment. The wages of sin is death. We all sin, we all deserve death, and the only right that we have, the only thing we can demand from God is that he punish us for it. It's the only thing.
Our individual right is that we be destroyed. The gospel does not emphasize individual rights. God has rights, Jesus has rights, he sacrificed those rights, he set them aside so that he could come down to earth, be tortured, be killed on our behalf to free us from sin. We only have any rights that are given to us by the free will of God. Outside of that, we have none. None.
We're never told in scripture to fight for our individual rights, we're never told in the gospel that we deserve anything outside of death. And so far, all the way through 1 Peter, all the way through this letter so far, he's told us that we're misfits. He's told us that even with the rights that America gives us, we have to be equipped to have them violated. Christians are equipped to suffer. Christians are the ones who are equipped most to not have rights anymore, to have their rights denied to them. that's the uncomfortable truth of the gospel. Now, while I'm up here being all abrasive and stuff, hypothetically, and just in case you are armed this morning, this is a hypothetical. hypothetical.
Hypothetically, the government may eventually, might, may eventually start imposing laws that impose on the Second Amendment. They would be an unpopular government. They would not be popular around Mill City Church, they would not be popular in the South, they would not be popular in much of America, but it could happen. They might start with ammunition, box limits, caliber restrictions, they might include crazy taxes on ammo, so you've got to pay through the nose to get what you want. Then they, once they're done with ammunition, they might come after automatic weapons, semi-automatic weapons, ARs, gone, can't have them anymore.
Then maybe they come for pistols, no more concealed carry, no more any, like you can't walk on the street anymore with a gun, done, can't even own a pistol anymore, too dangerous. Then they could come for shotguns, air rifles, BB guns, airsoft guns, pea shooters, pitchforks, sharp sticks, knives, whatever you've got, they're going to come for it. They could overrule the Second Amendment, they could introduce another amendment that says there's no more Second Amendment, they could do it all in one foul swoop, and then your right to bear arms is now gone. It is now illegal to own a gun. That would be a crazy day.
Most of you are probably thinking, over my dead body, right? That's the South mentality on this, but it could happen. What would Peter say to us, what would Peter say to Christians if that was to happen? I don't think you really need me to tell you. It's written there. You can read it.
It's written on the screen. Let's get it up on the screen. It says, be subject for the Lord's sake to every human institution. Just got real, right? Not the most popular of thoughts, right? Now you feel why I thought this was going to be a hard sermon, right?
Peter tells us that unless the government is starkly opposed to God's law, unless starkly opposed to God's law, we submit to that human institution. In this case, if the Second Amendment was overruled, Peter would tell Christians, give back your guns. Unless it's opposed to God's law, we follow human laws. That is uncomfortable, right? Well, here's a reality check for us. Peter was writing in a different time.
We like to use this excuse sometimes that it doesn't apply to us because things were different for them back then. Everything was different. It's a different culture. It's a different whatever. Here's a reality check for us. Peter was writing to Christians in the time of Emperor Nero.
When he said, submit to human institutions, whether it be to emperors, supreme, or to governors, as sent by him, he was talking about Emperor Nero. When he said, fear God, honor the emperor, he was talking about Emperor Nero. Now, the history buffs in the room know that Emperor Nero has a pretty bad report. No one really liked him. Here's what Tacitus, Tacitus was a Roman historian. Here's what he wrote about Emperor Nero's treatment of Christians.
This is Nero when he was in power. This is how he treated Christians. Besides being put to death, they, that's Christians, besides being put to death, they were made to serve as objects of amusement. They were clothed in hides of beasts and torn to death by dogs. Others were crucified. Others set on fire to serve to illuminate the night when daylight failed.
Nero used Christians as candlesticks in his house. he continued, Tacitus continues, it was felt that they were being destroyed not for the public good, but to gratify the cruelty of an individual. That is the dude that Peter is saying submit to. That guy, Nero, using Christians as candlesticks in his house, Nero, submit to that guy. We hear all this stuff about submit to the government and we try to get out of it and we do whatever and he's saying submit to that guy. We fear tyrannical leadership. We fear what would happen if the government took too much power, too much control.
We fear tyrannical government. We don't even know what that means. We don't even know what that is. Peter was writing to the people with a tyrannical government, not us. Now, are there times when the government is wrong? Yes.
Should we stand up to them? Yes, I think so. But, it comes under this idea of fear God, honor the emperor. Fear God, honor the government. There must be an aspect of this is opposed to God's law, and that's why I'm standing up to it. You all know Martin Luther King Jr.
You know what he fought for. At the point in time when he was around, when he was a big name, the government was wrong. Racism was wrong. Segregation was wrong. The systematic oppression of black people was wrong. You all know that he pushed for civil disobedience.
He told his followers, to go out and deliberately break the law. He told them to do that. That would not be honoring the government. He told them to do that and to accept peacefully any of the consequences. But listen to what he says about it.
This is from his letter from a Birmingham jail in 1963. He writes, one who breaks an unjust law must do so openly, lovingly, and with a willingness to accept the penalty. I submit that an individual who breaks a law that conscience tells him is unjust and who willingly accepts the penalty of imprisonment in order to arouse the conscience of the community over its injustice is in reality expressing the highest respect for law. If you peacefully break a law that is a government law and that law is opposed to God's law, do it openly, do it peacefully, accept the consequences, and hope that the community sees that the law is unjust.
That's what Martin Luther King said. His movement is one of very few examples, very few examples of a time when this concept of fear God, honor the government, was actually done well. It looked for him a whole lot more like a letter from prison than it did revolution. It looked a whole lot more like weakness than power. It looked a whole lot more like Jesus than Mel Gibson in the Patriot. God.
Now we're focusing pretty hard today on what it looks like to submit to every human institution while we're fearing God and we're honoring everyone. And I know that that's not easy. I know it's uncomfortable. I'm not telling you to ignore politics and not be politically active. Be politically active. Be involved.
Vote. Want good things for this country. That is a good and honorable thing. Use your voting power to influence the direction the country takes. We get to exercise these kinds of personal freedoms as the human institution that we submit to allows us to. The American government says you've got the freedom to vote.
Vote. But we have something so much better than control of the government. We have something so much better than control of the government. Being in control of the government, being in control of the government is not what Peter says is the goal. It's the exact opposite of that. He's telling us to be misfits, be outsiders.
The goal is to be who Christ has made us to be, in his image, living our lives to propagate the gospel. We weren't told to overthrow evil governments. We weren't told that. We were told to fear God and honor them. keep in mind that when he said that, he was talking about Nero. You want to talk about an evil leader, Nero's the guy. Fear God and honor Nero.
Fear God and honor the government. Like I said at the beginning, this is, for me, one of the toughest sections of scripture. And I know that as Americans, it rubs like sandpaper against you as well, your flag-waving, hot dog-eating, baseball-loving, NASCAR-attending souls. I know it's hard. This is the truth of what Peter's telling us this morning. As the band comes back up, I want us to know this from what Peter says.
The gospel is better. The gospel is more fulfilling and more powerful than individual rights. The gospel is better than your individual rights. There will be things that you have to submit to that you don't want to, but the gospel is better. Your hope, your hope is not in the USA. Your hope is not in some old, crusty documents signed in ink by old white men.
That is not where we put our hope. Our hope is in the cross signed with blood by the Son of God who sacrificed his rights on our behalf to free us from sin. When you have to take your shoes off at the airport, when you have to pay health care you don't want, when the government spies on your text messages, even if the government starts taking guns away, the gospel is bigger, better, and more powerful. Your identity in Christ supersedes your identity as an American. Your identity in Christ supersedes your individual rights. Your hope isn't in America.
Your hope is in Christ. Christ. That is what it means to be a misfit. That is what it means to be an elect exile. And that is what equips us, even when it's hard, to be subject to every human institution. Let's pray.
Father God, we humbly submit to you and know that it's your will that we submit to human institutions. I pray that as we leave today we can be convicted of the ways, the insignificant ways where we just set aside the law, set aside policies, set aside our bosses, set aside our parents, pray that we can repent of that. God, we want you to be the focus of everything in our lives. When you say submit to human authorities, Lord, I pray that we can take that seriously. God, we know that we have so much more in the gospel than we're offered by the government. We have so much more in the gospel than we're offered as Americans.
I pray that we can submit to you, submit to Christ, and know that all of our hope is found in him. It's in his name we pray. Amen. Amen.