They reward those who do good according to how they, the rulers, define the good. And they punish those who do evil according to how they define evil. This is why Paul says in 2 Timothy 2:9 that he is imprisoned as an "evil doer" (same words as in Romans 13), when the "evil" he does is the preaching of the Gospel.
So basically, Paul is saying "If you want the ruler to think well of you, do what he would like you to do.... Well... duh, I guess. This also would imply that you shouldn't always do what the rulers tell you to do.
Because God uses them to accomplish his purposes. You can see this in the one and only example of a ruler that Paul mentions anywhere else in Romans, which is Pharaoh, of whom Paul quotes God saying, "For this very purpose [of Pharaoh disobeying God] I have raised you up, that I may show My power in you, and that My name may be declared in all the earth." (Romans 9). Notice that this claim about rulers isn't an ideal of what they're supposed to be, it's a statement of fact of what all of them always are. The Beast himself will be God's servant, though not meaning to.
True enough. I suppose "Servant of God" doesn't necessariiy mean "Follower." Predestination and all of that.
I don't think it was sarcasm. But I do think he was being deliberately subtle, and expected his audience to see things there that outside eyes wouldn't notice. He wouldn't have wanted to give the authorities something to use against the Roman Christians to accuse them of sedition. But for them it hardly needed to be said that the rulers over them were no friend of the church. And if you notice how this section of Romans follows from what immediately precedes it, it implies that the rulers are their enemies who persecute them, whom they are to bless.
I'll have to parse Romans 12 again, thanks!
Absolutely, 100% agree. Paul was giving practical advice, not a prescription for government. Also, Paul made it clear that God ordains everything, even tyrants to judge sinful people (and even His people).
Yeah true, that God allows something to happen doesn't mean the actor was doing right. That's fairly obvious. Just look at Jesus' persecution.
If you have the power of the sword, yes. Jesus didn't say, "If a Roman soldiers asks you go a mile, go another mile only if he asked really nice."
I think the point there was more to be a witness to the soldier than because he actually has a right to command you to do it. Jesus says "Turn the other cheek" doesn't mean that the one who slaps you is in any way justified.
Doesn't everyone with a sword have the power of the sword?
I also think in that verse Jesus was giving advice, as well as pointing to the humiliation in life that imitation of Christ entails, not speaking to the morality of the situation. He wasn't saying, "Whatever the soldier tells you to do, treat it as though I'm the one telling you. So that if you disobey him you sin against me."
If you take this too literally, I could literally buy a sword and you'd have to obey me as long as I call myself "Government." But by this logic, always obey also literally means always. Not only when the command doesn't disobey God. Always. The parody Landover Baptist Church
http://www.bing.com/search?q=Landover+Baptist+Church&form=AGWTDF&pc=MAGW&src=IE-SearchBox uses these passages to say "We should obey EVERY ORDINANCE even if it disobeys God so we can't enforce the OT law now... or something like that....
It was of course an absurd case of cognitive dissonance but since they're really atheists picking on Evangelicals... yeah...
It's funny that the Bible was written when guys like Nero were Cesar and there is zero mention of "that guy is just too nuts, he's killing Christians, it's okay to kill that guy."
I think the Bible was practical in its advice, but the advice is timeless. People shouldn't use their religion as an excuse to go about overthrowing a government. Imagine if a bunch of nuts overthrew our government now so Rick Santorum can make us a theocracy! There are "Christians" out there that think not having prayer in public schools, legalizing gay marriage and etcetera is good reason to change the government. Let's not give them the idea to want to violently overthrow it.
IIRC the most commonly accepted date for Romans is AD57. If I recall correctly, Nero was no yet Caesar and Rome to some degree tolerated Christians although the Jews didn't. I'm not an expert though, so take with a grain of salt.
As for Santorumesque idiots.... firstly, why should we care what they think? Secondly, even if the government they created was unjust, the death of the murderers we now have would still be just. Granted, I'm not actually suggesting an immediate attempt to overthrow the government but this seems a silly reason to oppose it.
Honestly, the kind of absolutism you'd express here would let Hitler get away with killing ten million people. If you had the power to kill Hitler, would you seriously not? I would. It would be justice.
These are some verses that I have been contemplating. My conclusion at this point in time is that the Constitution is the supreme law of the land. Our "leaders"/"rulers" swear an oath to uphold it. So I would say that in Romans 13, Americans should replace ruler/leader with Constitution. Which could potentially bring up more issues since the citizenry is capable of making changes to the Constitution.
Another thing that I look at is that our "leaders" are our servants. They get their power from us. Because of that I would not call our elected officials "leaders"/"rulers". They may have authority but they get that from us. At least that appears to be what the founders thought.
The leader that Paul is speaking of seems to be a benevolent person and not a tyrant. I base that on the fact that he says the leader will treat you good if you follow the rules.
My views on the subject are not popular within the southern Baptists circle. The majority of what I hear is that we are supposed to submit to everything that the government tells us to do unless it violates God's law. The thing I don't think many think about is paying taxes that go to keep the lights on at Planned Parenthood and pay for the bombs that blow up innocent children. I have somewhat of a moral dilemma when it comes to taxes.
So in some aspects I don't think that Romans 13 would apply to the government of the United States. Anyways, that is just some random thoughts I have on Romans 13.
If you think about it though, our country was found upon rebellion.
I sympathize with some of these comments. While I'm not specifically any denomination, I attend a conservative baptist church and I agree with the Baptists on most theological issues.
I agree with a lot of what you said there. The one thing I'm not sure I agree with is "Its Ok not to pay taxes. " Granted, taxes to pay for anything not specifically to protect people and their property is theft, but not paying taxes almost seems like a selfish reason to refuse to obey the government. Other issues at least its usually not purely selfish. I don't think God would want us to break the law for purely monetary gain. Even if it is unjust. I'd think you'd at least need solid moral reasoning. I could be wrong, however.