I wrote the following three pieces in October 2016, nine
years ago. They are as true today as they were then. The question is, are we
true to Jesus?
God and Country?
“God and Country” is a term many
of us grew up hearing. It was part of the ethos of my upbringing – a
significant part. It was, if you will, “the American Way”. The ideal behind
“God and Country” is an ideal that can inspire to the point of worship – and
therein is the danger, for if our actions are our worship, if our words reveal
our worship, then there is a dilemma for the Christian – for we are to have no
other gods before (in the presence of) God, and no Lord that is coequal with
Jesus Christ.
The teaching of Jesus Christ and
His apostles is clear that we are to “render to Caesar the things that are
Caesar’s”, but we are also to “render to God the things that are God’s”.
Worship belongs solely to God, and that was the problem for the Roman state
when it came to Christians – they would not worship Caesar, they would not
worship the personification of the state. The Early Church had a sense of its
heavenly citizenship and they lived in accordance with that sense, that
identity, as a people distinct from the world around them.
Roman citizenship was something
to be valued and prized, one could be a subject of Rome, in the service of
Rome, but not be a citizen. Roman citizenship had special protections and
benefits. And yet Paul, a Roman citizen, writes to the Roman citizens of Philippi
(a Roman colony) that they are citizens of heaven – he writes this in
Philippians Chapter Three, a chapter in which he emphasizes that he counts all
things as rubbish for the sake of knowing Jesus – including his own impeccable
Jewish and religious pedigree.
The Early Church knew the
difference between Roman citizenship, as valuable as it was, and heavenly
citizenship.
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