Category Archives: Theonomy

A Bad Meme

My confused Christian friend posted this.
My confused Christian friend posted this.

I don’t care for this meme for several reasons.

1. Being a cop isn’t that dangerous. Here is a list of the most dangerous jobs in America. Cops don’t even make the top 10.

1. Fishing
2. Logging
3. Pilots
4. Trash Collection
5. Roofing
6. Structural iron workers
7. Construction
8. Farming
9. Truck Drivers
10. Mining

2. Cops enforce the unjust, unconstitutional and unbiblical laws of a nation under God’s judgment. Unless you’re some kind of socialist/fascist (which Christians cannot be, even though it seems most Americans are socialist/fascist) that loves the direction this country is going, I don’t see why you would thank those who unflinchingly enforce unjust laws.

3. If you support police, do you support your county clerk who is almost certainly issuing same-sex marriage licenses? Cops make sure that county clerks issue those licenses. Kim Davis wasn’t hauled off to jail by the judge, but by police.

4. Police forces are funded by money taken by force. No one consults me on whether I agree to pay these taxes. I would like to unsubscribe to many government services, and investigate free-market alternatives (including security services), but that is rarely ever an option. I’m forced to pay for the monopolistic government option whether I like it or not.

5. There shouldn’t be any group of people who have special rights in this country–people who aren’t held to the same standard as everyone else. This is unbiblical and unconstitutional.

6. It has been my personal experience and abundant anecdotal evidence points to the fact that all too often police don’t know the law–even laws they ought to know. It would be one thing if they were humble about their ignorance, but they seem to become beligerant when people don’t blindly follow their orders, even when the cops are clearly in the wrong.

7. More than 1000 people per year are killed by police. It’s hard to tell how many of these killings are murder and how many are justified. I also think that a certain percentage that are technically justified could be prevented if cops weren’t so trigger happy. However, I think many of those 1000 killings per year are murder. It doesn’t matter how much the laws favor cops and their use of deadly force. The Bible defines murder and cops may be cleared by a human judge and yet stand before the perfect Judge as murderers.

Romans 13 Abuse

It seems like almost every time I discuss what Christians should be doing about the terrible state of our country, they whip out the ridiculous interpretation of Romans 13 card.  You can see a few examples here, and here (where a pastor comes out saying that Romans 13 means they must rent their parking lot to the cops) as just a couple examples.

This is another egregious example from a conversation on Facebook. I posted a reasoned response to his original post, and his comeback is to type “Romans 13”. He didn’t offer any sort of interpretation. He just expects that Romans 13 just so obviously teaches blind obedience to government that just its mere utterance is adequate to win a debate, as if I’ve never read that before. It’s kind of funny, so I thought I’d post a picture of the conversation with the names removed.

r13convo

I’ve written about the proper interpretation of Romans 13 before, but here are some more thoughts.

Colossians 3:20 says, “Children, obey your parents in everything, for this pleases the Lord.”

Ephesians 5:24 says, “But as the church is subject to Christ, so also the wives ought to be to their husbands in everything.”

As you can see, children should obey their parents, without exception. Wives should submit to their husbands without exception.  No Christians take these verses to mean that children and wives obey no matter what. If a mother tells her kids to rob a convenience store, they should disobey. If a husband tells his wife to murder someone, she should disobey.

Those verses place no qualifications on the obedience of children and wives, but we still realize they’re not absolute. Romans 13 places qualifications on obedience to government (saying magistrates are ministers of God, and telling us their role is to punish evil), but so many Christians say we should shut up and obey.

And in case you think you should obey the government unless it tells you to sin, you’re being naive.

How Corrupt Is Our Government?

I had a conversation with a Christian friend, and I said our government is corrupt. He told me he’s not willing to write off our government yet.

So the question is: how corrupt is our government, and at what point do we write it off?

I will answer the question, with a question: How bad does it have to get before you’re willing to write it off?

Maybe if they stole money from people who haven’t been shown to be guilty of anything? Maybe like civil forfeiture, where police have been known to take cash from innocent travelers?

Maybe if they destroyed private property rights? Like banning smoking on private property, or eminent domain abuse?

Maybe if they set up Nazi-style checkpoints and stopped travelers on the highway impeding their free travel?

Maybe if they bomb a hospital?

Maybe if they fought never-ending unjust wars?

Maybe if they stole money from every property owner in the country to educate other people’s children in government curriculum?

Maybe if five unelected lawyers in Washington D.C. dictated to the entire country that homosexuals can get “married”?

Maybe if there was a standing army in every American city that the British would have killed for in 1776?

Maybe if they allow 55 million babies to be murdered in their mother’s womb?

We live under a wicked government. There is no doubt of that. Could it get worse? Of course, it can. It’s not the worst government in the world. But Christians are only adding to its decay when they quote Romans 13 and falsely say that passage demands obedience to even a bad government.

My solution is a peaceful solution–the solution being advocated on this website–if the government tells you to do something preposterous or immoral, don’t do it. Do the right thing. It seems so obvious to me, but Christians are just too busy twisting Romans 13 to do the right thing.

hitler2

Bitcoin: There Is No Biblical Basis for Government Currency

What is the biblical justification for the government to coin
money? There is none. The U.S. government went off any kind of
precious metal standard, and now they print paper that isn’t based
on anything. It would be a joke, except that no other country
bases their money on anything either.

When I was about 12 years old I liked collecting NBA basketball
cards. I had a book that would say what a certain card was worth,
and my dad would always say, “It’s worth what someone will pay for
it.” That was pre-internet, and the only way to sell anything would
have been by word-of-mouth, classified ad or a card shop. Card
shops would only buy wholesale. Classified ads were expensive, and
word-of-mouth was limited in scope. I couldn’t have gotten the
amount printed in the books for any of those cards, though on
paper I was doing pretty good.

U.S. dollars are valuable, because people accept them as
payment–not because it’s backed by anything. The government has
no business issuing it, and it can manipulate it (they are
manipulating it) to its advantage. Since 2008, they’ve created
trillions of dollars out of thin air and kept interest rates at
zero. This is making it very difficult for people on a fixed
income. These people worked their whole lives to save for their
retirement and their income is based on the interest they earn,
which is near zero. What they’re doing is immoral.

How Does Bitcoin Help?

I’m certainly not an expert on Bitcoin, but I’m very excited by
what I’ve learned. Bitcoin isn’t based on anything, but there will
only ever be a certain amount issued. So, just like the basketball
cards and the U.S. dollar, its value will be determined by the
free market. The price of it fluctuates. But it fluctuates based
on market forces. No one (no government) can manipulate it.

Bitcoin is also not a company owned or controlled by anyone. It is
a computer program that runs on thousands of computers around the world. Every computer keeps track of every transaction. No
government can come in and shut it down.

The Advantages of Bitcoin

What websites have done to newspapers, Bitcoin technology will do
to banks. They will eventually be obsolete. (I give banks 20 years
at most before they start going out of business en masse.)

With Bitcoin, you can send any amount to any account anywhere in
the world in an instant. No government can take any part of it or
control any part of it. That means credit cards, checks, cashier’s
checks, money orders, Western Union, wire transfers, etc. are
obsolete. You can set up a Bitcoin “wallet” for free and
anonymously, and you’re ready to send and receive Bitcoin.

The Drawbacks of Bitcoin

A lack of merchants is a problem right now. Not many people know
about it. The last time I looked, there were two businesses in
Colorado accepting payment in Bitcoin. If you can’t pay your
electric bill or buy groceries with it, the usefulness will be
severely limited.

Changing dollars into Bitcoin isn’t easy or cheap from what I’ve
seen. I bought some from a website by depositing cash into a Wells
Fargo checking account owned by some random stranger. I then took a picture of the teller receipt and emailed the picture to them.
Within a couple hours, they sent the Bitcoin to my wallet. It
wasn’t too hard, but I don’t know what kind of recourse I would
have if they chose not to perform. They took a 5% commission,
which isn’t cheap, but I thought it was reasonable as compared to
exchange rates for foreign currency I’ve paid in the past.

How To Fix The Problems

I think Bitcoin solves a lot of problems with the Federal Reserve,
unjust weights and crony capitalism rampant in America’s banking
industry, and I’m excited about the future of it.

I think the problems will go away as more and more people start
using it. Exchange will be easier if more people were using it. If
a lot of people were using it, you could put an ad on Craigslist
and exchange at zero cost, person-to-person. If you are a world
traveler, you could buy Bitcoin with dollars person-to-person with
zero exchange costs. Travel to another country with a different
currency, and exchange Bitcoin to the local currency at zero cost
person-to-person.

Another big obstacle would be the ability to pay bills with
Bitcoin. If Wal-Mart started accepting Bitcoin, the usefulness
would go through the roof. But I think the government would flip out if they tried that. We need more individuals to start using it and local businesses to start using it.

I’m willing to accept Bitcoin for my business, and if more small
businesses started accepting it, it will become more and more
popular.

Let’s get government out of the currency business. The free market should determine which currency is best, but I have a feeling the banks and fascist governments aren’t going down without a fight.

Stick It to the Tourists

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Fremont County voters approved the indefinite extension of a 2% lodging tax yesterday. It seems perfect, because no one who voted for it actually has to pay the tax; I doubt there are many registered voters living out of a motel.

Isn’t it great that we can “legally” steal money from people who most likely are just visiting. After all, when we go out of town, we are charged a lodging tax. Never mind the golden rule; the true golden rule of modern Christianity is, “Government can do whatever it wants.”

Ultimately all taxes are collected at gun point. But we Americans are a meek people, so it rarely ever comes to that. Nevertheless, that is what you voted for if you voted in favor of this tax–the use of force and violence to collect funds to advertise to tourists. While voters may have legalized this tax under man’s law, it remains illegal under God’s law.

Great Immigration Conversation

It’s easy to point out the problems with conservative border policy. Changing someone’s mind is not so easy.

DL Hughes
Some of each. Press both buttons. Still, it ignores the real question about why they are invading our border. If they were honorable, they would stay in Mexico and start a revolution to overthrow their own corrupt government.
Nathan Conkey
Just like the Irish, English, Germans, Dutch and others, jolly dishonourable of them to do so.
DL Hughes
So wrong, Nathan. 12 million Germans (or other nationality) did not disrespect the US by sneaking across the border at night. Mexicans and those from Central America embarrass themselves with their presumption. If 12 million Chinese sneaked across our southern border, they would have been shot.

We welcome immigrants in the USA, just as it should be. However, people who come here should rightfully bring their education, good health and financial or intellectual capital–and do the paperwork to get here legally and honorably.

Invading Mexican hordes do not offer any of that. They bring, ignorance, disease and poverty to the US. People around the world should be unhappy about that… all the illegal aliens are stealing the opportunity from qualified legal immigrants to be here.
Nathan Conkey
Because honour is defined by compliance with Federal bureaucratic edicts, I understand.
DL Hughes
Honor is best defined by self-respect. 12 million Mexicans and people from Central Americans apparently don’t have that. They are willing to lie, cheat and steal to invade a land where they are not wanted. They know they are not wanted because of the Border Patrol, the fences and the fact many pay to get help to break the law.

Some Mexicans and people from Central America immigrate to the US legally. They are welcome, of course. The others are not.
Nathan Conkey
I never realised American Conservatives were so enamoured with arbitrary legislation invented by the big government brigade and put into force by bureaucrats. I though they wanted freedom. Very interesting.
Good job the huddled masses of Europeans were independently wealthy and well qualified, not like that dishonourable mass of Mexicans and Central Americans.

Youtube Theonomy Discussion

I think this person hasn’t debated theonomy before, or thought much about these issues, but it is still an interesting discussion.

This person is a dispensationalist. I will admit I haven’t studied much about covenant theology, but the one thing I know is that dispensationalism is preposterous.

Rainy Day said:

I just sold my condo couple weeks ago. do I still have a right to that condo? No! In the beginning when God chose Abraham, the father of the Jews, he wanted a peculiar people to himself. He was their God, until they rebelled in the wilderness under Moses leadership. This is called the OT dispensation. the new dispensation is called grace. One of the scholar asked Jesus at one time, what is the greatest law among all the laws in the OT. Jesus said there are only 2, and on these two hang all the laws and prophets.

Moses laws: there were 10.

Jesus laws: Only 2.
1. you shall love the Lord your God with all your heart, soul and might.
2. you shall love your neighbor as yourself.

Hey, but check out Moses laws, and compare to Jesus laws, aren’t they the same? first 5 has to do with God, the last five has to do with men. Paul, John, James called them “royal laws”. the book of Leviticus is full of “laws”, call them civil or whatever. but the BIG TEN are called “moral laws”. these applies to every creature living in Gods universe!

If God were to run America today, we would end up just like the Jews, REBELLED!! rebelled because His laws were too restrictive, that is why God rewrote another contract and gave it to Jesus to sign it with His blood, its called GRACE(God’s Riches At Christ Expense)!

Loving God and obeying His moral laws is by choice. You have a choice to love God or reject Him. He is not holding a gun to your head!!

—————————————-

I said:

We are saved by grace through faith, and not of works. Yet, we still live under thousands of federal, state and local laws. What do these civil laws (mostly unjust) have to do with my salvation? If anything, they cause people to sin and hinder people from getting saved. Wouldn’t it be better to have perfect laws?

Concerning Jesus’ two laws, they were a summary of the law, and He was quoting Deut. 6 & Leviticus 19. To summarize something isn’t to replace the thing you’re summarizing, but to express it simply.

Also, the civil laws of Moses were case laws of the Ten Commandments–an explanation of them. If you want a thorough understanding of “You shall not murder,” read the case laws. How should murder be punished? If someone is killed accidentally, what should happen? If two men are fighting and one dies, is the guy guilty of murder? And many more questions.

We can have man’s laws, or we can have God’s laws.

—————————————-

Rainy Day said:

I was trying to say simply that we are no longer under the old covenant, but under the new covenant. It’s all there in the book of Hebrews. the ten commandments which include, thou shalt not kill are called “God’s Royal laws(the big ten) which Jesus indeed simplified them when He said, there are only two laws, love God and love your neighbor. Man’s laws are Gods laws, and we are commanded by Paul of Tarsus to follow them too because they are the law of the land put there by God!

—————————————-

I said:

Jesus said, “Do not think that I came to abolish the Law or the Prophets; I did not come to abolish but to fulfill. 18 For truly I say to you, until heaven and earth pass away, not the smallest letter or stroke shall pass from the Law until all is accomplished. 19 Whoever then annuls one of the least of these commandments, and teaches others to do the same, shall be called least in the kingdom of heaven; but whoever keeps and teaches them, he shall be called great in the kingdom of heaven” (Matthew 5:17-19).

We are under a new covenant for our salvation. But the law is an expression of God’s character. To ignore it (if that’s what you’re saying) is to miss the point. It is still valuable.

Your surface-level interpretation of Romans 13:1-7 contradicts the rest of Scripture. When Paul was executed was Rome acting as an “avenger who brings wrath on the one who practices evil”?

—————————————-

Rainy Day said:

Yes, I know. so what do you do with these verses in Hebrews?
1. Hebrews 4:9,
2. Hebrews 8, the whole chapter explains in detail what Jesus sacrifice means. When Jesus was talking in the verses you mentioned above, he was talking before His crucifixion! a sacrifice once and for all! Christians are confused because they don’t understand covenants! When He said, “it is finished”, it means its done! A peace treaty thats based on his blood which is more valuable than animals blood. The blood not only forgives sins, it also restores whatever we lost in the garden of eden because of adam choice! the grace dispensation is so much better than the law dispensation.

—————————————-

I said:

If a cop pulls you over for speeding, do you tell him you don’t have to pay the ticket because you’re under grace? We’re not talking about salvation. We’re talking about the laws of the land. Do you prefer God’s law or man’s law?

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Does the Noahic Covenant Prohibit the Death Penalty for All But Murder?

Here’s a little more analysis of the discussion on theonomy from the other day.

I initially asked about their claim that the death penalty for bestiality was unjust, and in his first comment, C Jay said, “And the Bible, properly interpreted, does not give permission to anyone to execute capital punishment except in the case of murder per the Noahic Covenant.”

Here’s Genesis 9:5-6, the relevant portion of the Noahic covenant to which he is referring, “And for your lifeblood I will require a reckoning: from every beast I will require it and from man. From his fellow man I will require a reckoning for the life of man. Whoever sheds the blood of man, by man shall his blood be shed, for God made man in his own image.”

But is this passage teaching that the death penalty is only to be used for murder? It specifies the death penalty for murder, but specifies no penalty for anything else. If you’re going to take this to say that only murderers should receive the death penalty, then you have to say that the government shouldn’t punish any other crime, including rape and kidnapping.

That is certainly not what Genesis 9 is teaching, but C Jay never responds to the objection that that is where his logic leads. Here is why C Jay’s is wrong that the death penalty is prohibited by the Noahic Covenant (except for murder):

1. The doctrine of bloodguiltiness.
2. The Mosaic civil law wasn’t given to only the Israelites.
3. The Noahic covenant isn’t called law.

Bloodguiltiness

In Genesis 4, Cain murders Abel, and Abel’s innocent blood has a voice that calls out to the Lord (Genesis 4:10). God is aware of every drop of innocent blood that is shed, and He will account for it, as He says in Genesis 9. This is called the doctrine of bloodguiltiness.

And later in history, the Lord reveals that murder isn’t the only crime that causes bloodguiltiness. In Leviticus 20:10-16, several different sexual sins are listed, including bestiality and homosexuality. For each of the sexual sins listed it says, “their blood is upon them.” These sexual sins don’t involve the shedding of blood, yet there is bloodguilt in the sin, so the death penalty is pronounced for each one. Is bloodguilt something that comes and goes with covenants? Certainly not.

The Law Wasn’t Given to Only The Israelites

Saying that the law was only given to the Israelites is a point that also fizzles under more scrutiny. Leviticus 20:23 says, “And you shall not walk in the customs of the nation that I am driving out before you, for they did all these things, and therefore I detested them.” The Canaanites that lived in Israel’s land before them suffered the death penalty at the hand of the Israelites for all the sins listed in that chapter, including the sexual sins. The Lord expected them to be sexually pure. There are other examples of other nations adopting or being held accountable to Israel’s law.

The Noahic Prohibition of Murder Isn’t Called Law

Romans 5:13-14 says that there was no law until Moses. That would preclude the Noahic covenant as offering a law. The rest of Scripture never calls the laws of any other country law. It often refers to their lawlessness–even nations that prided themselves on their laws, like the Romans. Check out this excellent article on that topic.

Conclusion

It is wishful thinking to believe that the Noahic covenant prohibits the death penalty for all but murder. Genesis 9 is only nine chapters into the Bible. The Lord, starting in the next book of the Torah, reveals a perfect and just civil law. If you reject it, there is no standard of justice to call any civil law just or unjust. C Jay (and none of the others I’ve ever asked these questions of) ever answered my questions about justice, because there are no answers. C Jay refused to discuss those questions, claiming that his covenant theology dictates that theonomy is wrong.

Well, if there’s one thing I know, it’s that theonomy is true, and C Jay never provided one valid argument against it. So if your other theology dictates that theonomy is wrong, either your other theology is wrong, or you’ve misapplied it.

Another Theonomy Debate

It seems this simple question can not be answered by non-theonomists: When Muslims cut off a thief’s hand, is that unjust?

The Bible provides the proper punishment for stealing, homosexuality, murder, kidnapping, adultery, etc. I would guess that most Christians like the biblical punishment for stealing. The problem is if they accept that, they have no basis for rejecting the punishment for adultery and homosexuality, which they don’t like.

These guys put up a lot of barriers to discussing theonomy, but we had a fairly long discussion, until it just became apparent they have no answer for my objection, and now they won’t even post my last comment. I’m sure they’re nice guys, and we’d probably agree on a large percentage of laws, it’s just that they arrive at them for a different reason.

They claim to have a biblical basis for rejecting theonomy, but it seems more like smoke and mirrors to me.

Here’s my argument:

  1. Theonomic laws are just.
  2. Just laws ought to be the laws of the land. (He agreed to this one.)

The problem is that there is no basis for rejecting the first point if you reject theonomy. Non-theonomist Christians may be able to eliminate a lot of unjust laws, but ultimately, there’s no way of knowing what sins ought to be civilly punished, or how, without the only place in the Bible that explains it.

Their defense against theonomy is that Baptists have a different covenant. I think I cut through that when he agreed that just laws ought to be the law of the land. The only argument left is how to determine whether a law is just or not, which as you’ll see they never responded to my many questions about that.

If they have an answer for my simple question, why don’t they give it? What is their absolute standard of justice? The guy wrote 6 comments and never got around to gracing me with his explanation.

Here’s the discussion:

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I left a comment here the other day. It still hasn’t shown. I’ll try to repost it to the best of my recollection.

You said, “Thomas Granger’s hanging was unjust.” This presupposes an absolute standard of justice. What is your absolute standard of justice?

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    Sorry Bill. I had approved it but do not see it either. Don’t know what happened.

    The Bible is the absolute standard of justice. And the Bible, properly interpreted, does not give permission to anyone to execute capital punishment except in the case of murder per the Noahic Covenant. The exception to this was during the Israelite theocracy, but since the civil law was abrogated with the covenant, we cannot use it as the basis for our present situation. Thus, we must lean on the Noahic Covenant since the world is still under that one.

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    Where does the Noahic covenant specify the penalty for theft, rape, kidnapping, etc.?

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      It doesn’t. You’re obviously trying to make a bigger point, namely, that unless the Bible tells us exactly what civil law code we ought to have today, we can’t have any justification of criminal prosecution. But in any case, I can’t categorically adhere to your theonomic conclusions because, as per the above essay, I reject your formulation of Covenant Theology on which theonomy depends.

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        You’re making it too complex. The civil law is obligatory because it is perfect and just. If we’re free to choose whatever laws we want (even if you wanted to constrain it by the moral law), why can’t we choose Old Testament civil laws? If you reject theonomy, you no longer have an absolute standard for justice. You don’t know what justice is for any crime except murder.

        Avatar

        Correctly exegeting Scripture is “making it too complex” for theonomists.

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        I’m not making anything complex. I believe that the Mosaic Civil law was provided under the Covenant that was given to national Israel. This Covenant has been abrogated. Therefore, the Civil Law given to national Israel has been abrogated. Simple.

        No everything that is perfect and just is obligatory. For instance, God’s command to Abraham that he kill his son was perfectly just. But it is not obligatory for people who are not Abraham. Were God’s dietary laws just or unjust? If just, are they obligatory (of course, we’d both answer no)? If unjust, how can a just God give an unjust command? Similarly, just because God’s civil law was just does not mean it is obligatory for people to whom it has not been given.

        (I should also point out that the Covenant under which the Civil Law was given was in fact *imperfect* and thus needed to be replaced by a Covenant that was perfect. But that is a reference to the Covenant, not the Civil Law itself, so I won’t press that secondary point home.).

        “why can’t we choose Old Testament civil laws?” You can. No one is stopping you or the other theonomists from voluntarily agreeing to a covenant in which such laws are enforced. We only reject the idea that they are obligated to be forced on all of society who dissents (such as us Baptists). But yes, we libertarians certainly would let you build such a community just like we’d let a group of idealist socialists build a covenant community based on the community ownership of property as long as every member voluntarily agrees to be there (please don’t interpret me to be saying socialists and theonomists are similar!)

        “If you reject theonomy, you no longer have an absolute standard for justice.” Translation: if you do not interpret the Civil Law as I do, you must obviously not be using the Bible to build a case for justice. In which case, I don’t really have a response except, okay.

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        You said, “No one is stopping you or the other theonomists from voluntarily agreeing to a covenant in which such laws are enforced.”

        I would contend that is what the early colonists did. Those who executed Thomas Granger were carrying out theonomy. Yet you have called his execution unjust. Do you believe Christians are free to enforce unjust laws?

        1. If I have to choose between a just law, and an unjust law, which should I (as a Baptist) choose?

        2. You said, “Translation: if you do not interpret the Civil Law as I do, you must obviously not be using the Bible to build a case for justice. In which case, I don’t really have a response except, okay.”

        You keep saying you have an absolute standard for justice. I’ve yet to hear any specifics except that you think those who shed blood ought to be executed. What is the just penalty for rape? When Muslims cut off a thief’s hand, is that just? Do you differentiate between accidental homicide and murder, and on what basis?

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        “I would contend that is what the early colonists did.” No, Granger did not voluntarily agree to these rules. If he did, I will change my opinion about the justness of the situation.

        “Do you believe Christians are free to enforce unjust laws?” No.

        1. You should choose a just law.
        2. You are missing the entire point, which is what I previously stated. I am denying your presumption “that unless the Bible tells us exactly what civil law code we ought to have today, we can’t have any justification of criminal prosecution.” If you want specifics, we can look into that, but first you have to understand my approach. Especially, you have to understand that someone’s inability to come up with a just system does in no way make a positive proof of theonomy. Since the present context is about theonomy I would encourage you to stick with that. My view that the abrogation of the Mosaic Covenant renders the Civil Law abrogated and thus, there is no specific law code that God demands of nations today. Like Calvin said, each nation is free to initiate laws that are appropriate for its specific context (I agree with the general approach of this, though I have my own modifications and clarities to add) precisely because there is no modern national Israel. National Israel pointed to the church in a type/antitype way. Your disapproval of this does not prove theonomy. Which is what the present post should be about. The specifics of laws is a different conversation.

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          “Granger did not voluntarily agree to these rules.”

          I don’t see how someone agreeing to certain laws makes an unjust law enforceable. At best, it would mean that he committed suicide, and the people who helped/forced him to commit suicide are guilty of murder.

          You said, “Like Calvin said, each nation is free to initiate laws that are appropriate for its specific context (I agree with the general approach of this, though I have my own modifications and clarities to add) precisely because there is no modern national Israel.”

          I’ve kept asking for your absolute standard of justice, and this appears to be it. Justice is whatever is “appropriate for its specific context.” Maybe you can see why I’m not impressed with the absoluteness of your absolute standard of justice.

          You have no basis for saying that the death penalty for bestiality is unjust. The Noahic covenant is silent on that. You have no basis for saying Muslims cutting off a thief’s hand is unjust, or that the death penalty for adultery, rape or homosexuality is unjust.

          You have no basis for saying whether theonomy is good or bad– just that it doesn’t line up with your personal opinion. You need to repent of you false personal opinions.

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            Im having a hard time Bill because you are not following my arguments at all. The reason I pointed out that Granger did not voluntarily agree to these rules is because you asked me what was wrong with building a community in which theonomy was *chosen* to be the rule of the land. I said if such rules were voluntarily agreed to, i’d have no problem (because my only argument is that theonomy is not obligatory). You said that the Puritan societies were indeed voluntarily. I disagreed by expressing my understanding that Granger did not voluntarily agree.

            As for Calvin, again you are not following my point. My point there is not that kings can do whatever they want. My point is clearly that, like Calvin, I believe that Israel Civil laws are not obligatory and binding on nations today. They may borrow from these laws, adopt them, or learn from their principles, but God does not treat the modern nation like he did national Israel. That is the extent to my citing Calvin. I don’t even agree with Calvin’s views of an ideal civil order, preferring instead the much more “libertarian” approach of the later English dissenters and especially the New England Reformed Baptists

            I haven’t even mentioned or argued yet my “absoluteness of your absolute standard of justice.” I keep trying to help you realize that I am merely, in the present context, explaining why I cannot adhere to the theonomic system. So you can come back at me all day about how I haven’t impressed you with my case yet, and my response will always be: “I know. That’s because I haven’t explained it yet. The context of our conversation is why I am not a theonomist.” I am making a negative case *against *theonomy,* not a positive case *for* libertarianism.

            “You have no basis for saying whether theonomy is good or bad– just that it doesn’t line up with your personal opinion.” Actually, and contrarily (perhaps you didn’t read the above essay and the links posted at the end), I have explained time and again that my basis for rejecting theonomy is exegetical. Your blaming it on “my opinion” indicates to me that you have no willingness to engage in a meaningful dialogue.

            “You need to repent of you false personal opinions.” I will repent when I am convinced A) that my understanding of Covenant Theology and the nature of the Kingdom of Heaven is wrong; and B) that someone else’s understanding of these things is correct. Until then, I see no need to repent, because I believe that I have understood the Bible correctly (that’s why I believe it.). You and I have our differences of understanding of the nature of certain exegetical conclusions, but it is unhelpful to demand my repentance until I first see where I err. And to be clear, since there are a variety of differing views on Covenant Theology in the Reformed tradition, your command that I repent could just as well be applied to anyone else in the Reformed world with whom you disagree.

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            Yes. I’m having a difficult time following you. It seems you have contradicted yourself repeatedly. Clearly I’m missing something.

            If I moved into a HOA where the covenants said the death penalty was required for someone who painted their house the wrong color, would it be acceptable as a Christian for me to submit to the death penalty, or for one of my neighbors to carry out the death penalty? If it’s not acceptable, why would it be acceptable for someone to submit to the death penalty for bestiality in a theonomic society?

            As far as all the links and the pages of documents you’ve written, it seems like obfuscation. I’ve tried to converse with you about several specific, concrete examples, and I can’t get you to commit to anything.

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            Time to move on. Bill, you have not addressed a single argument in this post. You, like most theonomists, insist that theonomy must be true a priori, regardless of what Scripture says. You presuppose theonomy, not Scripture.

            Not having a standard of justice for modern nations today does not thereby make theonomy true. That’s a logical fallacy that Van Tillians are fond of.

            Of course I do believe Scripture provides us with a standard of justice (lex talionis, of which Gen 9:6 is an example), but the present issue is whether the civil laws of Israel continue to bind all nations, not whether Scripture provides us with a standard of justice.

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            “I’ve tried to converse with you about several specific, concrete examples, and I can’t get you to commit to anything.” —Do you understand that there are two different issues here (1: whether theonomy is biblically justified and 2: what “my standard of justice is”)? You seem to be pressing me to answer 2, but I am trying to explain why I disagree with you on 1.

            Hence the talking past each other. I cannot be a theonomist, regardless of my own political theory. My understanding of covenants and kingdoms don’t let me. If you want to ask me about why I am a libertarian, I suggest you do so via email or in another comment section where the context calls for it.

            As for Granger, did or did not Granger agree that he should be executed before he committed his action? You said it was a voluntary set of laws. Can you prove this?

Implications for Non-Theonomists

lntheonomy

I see three possible positions you can take regarding theonomy.

1. Theonomy is false. God doesn’t care about justice. Governments
can do whatever they want.
2. Theonomy is false. God doesn’t care about justice. Governments
can do what they want as long as they follow the moral law.
3. Theonomy is true. God cares about justice.

If theonomy is false, then it’s not just that God doesn’t care
about justice. It’s that there’s no longer a standard for justice.
We can no longer say whether a law is just or not.

To say the Old Testament civil law is unjust presupposes an absolute standard of justice. To claim the civil law is unjust is a self-refuting, self-contradictory sentence. There is no other standard for justice.