HONOR ALL MEN. LOVE THE BROTHERHOOD. FEAR GOD.
HONOR THE KING.
-KJV
This one verse has four very strong commands. Because of this, I have created a separate
blog for each command; in an effort to keep them short, sweet, and to the
point. Here’s the final of the series.
This is actually take two at writing this blog. I have no idea where my first draft
went. And I actually wrote it a couple
weeks ago. So honestly, I don’t even
remember most of what I had written. No
biggie. Y’all just get a fresh take on
how I feel about “honor the king” now instead of how I was feeling about it
when I tried to write this.
Here’s a little back story.
When I originally started writing this series of blogs, I was going
through a very hard time with local government.
I had an outstanding speeding ticket that I had forgotten to pay (yes,
my fault completely!). Due to this, I
had my license suspended. My license
being suspended also cancelled my car insurance. Car insurance wouldn’t re-up until I had
fixed the license situation, and that proved to all be a very taxing (see what
I did there) and time-consuming process.
My original draft to this blog was written while waiting two and a half
hours at the local Department of Homeland Security office. Writing a blog about honoring and respecting
authority while wasting time in a government building was a challenge in and of
itself. How would I, while feeling full
contempt towards government, write a blog about honoring it? Could I possibly write such a thing without
being a total hypocrite? What would I
say?
Since that blog got deleted, I guess we’ll never know what I
would say. I can’t even remember what I
said. So, here’s take two.
HONOR THE KING.
I’ve talked a lot about honor in the last few blogs, but I
want to reestablish what it is, just in case you haven’t read my others (yet 😉).
- Honor: Honor can be used as a verb or a noun. Here it is used as a verb; to be applied to something (or someone). The Merriam-Webster dictionary defines honor as “to regard or treat (someone) with admiration and respect : to regard or treat with honor”.
I’m just going to jump right into it. We don’t do this today. The disrespect for our president, and other
levels of authority, is substantial. We
aren’t called to like the authority in our lives. We aren’t called to agree with the authority
in our lives. But we are obviously
called to respect and honor it. Race,
religion, political side, stance on certain issues, moral compass, or bad
toupee don’t matter. We are called and
have been challenged to honor authority.
Let me explain what was happening when Peter wrote
this. Peter had watched the rulers
crucify Jesus. Peter was watching Nero
(the Roman emperor) persecute Christians.
It is said that Nero burned some Christians alive as torches to light his
gardens at night and fed others to wild animals for public entertainment. This was a sick, twisted dude. Specifically, sick and twisted towards
Christians.
But Peter said to Honor the King.
We disagree with someone in power over us on one little
topic and slander their name publicly.
But, even in the face of sever, brutal persecution, Peter said we are to
honor our authority. Dude wasn’t dealing
with whether or not a wall should be built, or the amount of funding that
should go into schools. HE WAS WATCHING
FELLOW BELIEVERS GET BRUTALLY MURDERED.
I believe it is perfectly possible to disagree with and
honor someone at the same time. It’s
time we started doing such. As
Christians, and as a nation.
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