Christian Worldview of History and Culture
Home
Contact Us
Privacy Policy
BLOG
Shop Our Store
Need a speaker?

Posted 2/16/2010

 

Why I Believe in the Separation of Church and State

 

 

God established three basic institutions in scripture. The family, the church, and the state. For each of these institutions God gave responsibilities. In some instances he overlaps some of the responsibility, but in most cases the God-given role for the three institutions are clearly separated.

 

When these institutions operate within the parameters that God revealed in scripture you will find the greatest happiness for the most people. There will be no attempt to develop the systematic theology for these institutions, but several responsibilities for each must be cataloged to illustrate how God orders the culture.

 

The dominion mandate was given to the family. The family as a unit is to multiply, be fruitful and subdue the earth and all that is in the earth(Gen 1:27-31). The husband and wife are to leave their parents and cleave together(Gen. 2:23-25). The husband is to provide for his family (I Tim. 5:8). The family is the institution with the responsibility to teach the children (Deut. 6:6-9).

 

The church has been given responsibility to administer the sacraments, and church government, among other things in Acts 6:1-7. In Acts 15 and Revelation 2 the church is ordered to guard doctrine. The church is to maintain purity within the church (I Cor. 5:1-13). The church has responsibility to administer judgment amongst her members (I Cor. 6:1-8). Revelation 2:2 gives authority to the church to protect against false teachers, and finally the church has been given the responsibility to provide for the poor (Rev. 2:19, II Cor. 8:1-15, 9:11-15).

 

Finally, God gave authority to the state to protect the good to do good and punish evil doers (Roms. 13:4). The state has been given the power of the sword to fulfill this responsibility. Paul calls the civil magistrate the minister of God. A minister that attempts to fulfill his duties outside God's prescribed guidelines causes evil to fall upon those in his charge. Proverbs 29:2 states, “When the righteous are in authority, the people rejoice: but when the wicked beareth rule, the people sigh (1599 Geneva Bible).

 

God is sovereign; thus His three institutions must necessarily be under His authority. For the best order in a culture they must fulfill their responsibility without encroaching on the authority of either of the other institutions. The greatest good for all people, whether they be numbered among the elect or not, is for each institution to operate under the authority of God Almighty, and within the separate authority given to them by God.

 

The American system illustrates this marvelously. The more that the state encroaches on the authority of the family and the church the more the people “sigh.” Noah Webster closed his definition of sin, in his 1848 dictionary, as “whatever is contrary to God's commands or law,” listing I John 3, Matt. 15 and James 4 as references to exemplify this statement. When the state takes authority rightfully given to the family and church and when the state abrogates its God given authority it is doing what “is contrary to god's commands or law.” This is why the separation of church and state is necessary: not as understood by secularists, but as delineated by God, in scripture.

Bookmark and Share

Add your comments to "Separation of Church and State"


MONDAY, MAY. 30, 2011

Mr.

My only note is to object to the word "State." The prophetic vision of victory in Is. 2 and Mic. 4 of "every man under his vine and his fig tree with no one to make them afraid" is one of limited Civil Government. The word State lends itself to the idea of "Statism" which, from Babel to Egypt through Assyria and Babylon, on through ancient Persia and Alexander to the republic of laws and senatorial debate that was violated by Caesar - and all subsequent Beastly systems - is opposed by Kingdom principles as they are worked out in civil government (e.g., Pss. 2, 72; Dan. 2,4, etc.). I do not wish to quibble about words. I just caution us to avoid the subtle implication of the word "state" that lends itself to thinking of large central/national governments, rather than the limited jurisdictions and separate and equal powers that "every man under his vine and fig tree" rather implies.
Posted by LeRoy at 6:10 PM | 38 Comments

WEDNESDAY, FEB. 17, 2010

Separation of Church and State

Interesting view regarding what is normally stated as a constitutional issue. The Constitution has an establishment clause not a separation clause as is widely believed. The protection our forefathers wanted was to protect the individual from the state rather than vice versa. The above brings to thought of "render unto Caesar". I think the statement that God-given role for the institutions creates its own conflict with separartion. If God gave the role of the state He could hardly be separate from it. Laus Deo

Posted by Tom Whiston at 2:49 PM | 15 Comments

MCD



The T-shirt is displayed here by the artist

the suffering servantIsaiah 53:2 the suffering servant

Copyright © R & R Pope & Associates Alliance, Ohio
rfpmccormick@gmail.com