Thursday, September 17, 2009

THE CHRISTIAN AND THE CONSTITUTION

Be subject for the Lord's sake to every human institution, whether it be to the emperor as supreme, or to governors as sent by him to punish those who do wrong and to praise those who do right (I Peter 2:13-14).

In the United States we take pride in being a nation ruled by law, not by whim, even if that whim is expressed by the popular vote of the people.  True law is not established by the legislature, by the president, the judiciary or even the will of the people if it is not God's will or if it is not Constitutional, the Constitution being the supreme law of the land.  Our founding fathers generally had a Christian perspective of the law of God and the nature of man.  Thus the Constitution was constructed in a way the recognizes the value and dignity of each person by guaranteeing their God-given rights (the bill of rights), and also recognizes human depravity through the separation of powers.  God has richly blessed the American people through this kind of constitutional government!

The Constitution is just a scrap of paper without the intelligent support of each citizen of the United States.  I believe that it certainly is a Christian's responsibility to support the Constitution.  But, the Constitution is like the Bible, there are a lot of people who express reverence for it but they do not know what is in it.  We cannot rely on our public officials to properly apply the Constitution to civil law because, though they take an oath to protect and defend the Constitution, they regularly undermine it in each branch of government.  The day-to-day responsibility of defending and protecting the Constitution lays on the backs of every-day citizens.  Each citizen must know what is in the Constitution so that they can hold their elected officials accountable by writing them, in town-hall meetings and, ultimately, in the voting booth. If we continue in ignorance, we will lose America.

Grace&Peace,
Tom

1 comment:

Rebecca said...

Great post!