Let me try and hit this Q&A style:
Since Christ didn’t establish an earthly government, don’t we have to have allegiance to some government? Again, I’d point us back to the early church. They were told to be subject to the government, but that’s much different than being allied with the government. In the Roman Empire, many nations had to submit to Roman authority, but they wouldn’t see themselves as loyal to the government. Can you imagine the inhabitants of Judah pledging their loyalty to Rome? Christians would have been taught to be subject, respectful and obedient, but not allied with any human government.
But doesn’t it benefit the church to ally itself with the state? History says no. The alliance of church and state tends to strengthen the state and weaken the church. The church is the bride of Christ; can she unite herself with another partner and not have it be adultery?
Don’t Christians effectively have dual citizenship? I may have already spent too much time on this question (see “Good Citizenship” and “Alien Life”). However it often comes up in these discussions. We’re not dual citizens. When we were born again, we were born into the Kingdom of God, leaving the kingdoms of this world. The Bible speaks of it as a transfer. Paul, a Roman citizen, writing to the Philippians, Roman citizens, said, “Their mind is on earthly things. But our citizenship is in heaven.” (Philippians 3:19-20) Our citizenship is in heaven. Powerful words, given the circumstances. We’re aliens here. Better yet, we’re ambassadors here, emissaries of the heavenly kingdom, living in a foreign country to act on our home nation’s behalf.
Aha! You mentioned Paul. He made use of his Roman citizenship. Shouldn’t we follow his example? That’s a good point, one that has troubled me in the past. In Acts 16 and Acts 22, Paul made use of his Roman citizenship to obtain legal benefits. While considering those passages, don’t forget this one: “Then Paul, knowing that some of them were Sadducees and the others Pharisees, called out in the Sanhedrin, “My brothers, I am a Pharisee, the son of a Pharisee. I stand on trial because of my hope in the resurrection of the dead.”” (Acts 23:6) Do we also advocate joining Jewish sects on the same basis? No, those are all things that Paul counts as skubalon (translated as “dung,” “rubbish,” etc. in the English Bible; apparently it was a pretty strong term he used in Philippians 3:8). From what we can tell, Paul didn’t go around flaunting his Roman citizenship. He didn’t even mention it in Philippi until after he’d been flogged and imprisoned. The only citizenship he talks about in his letters is our heavenly one. I think we’re on shaky ground to try and justify as much as we do by appealing to what Paul did on those two occasions. If anything, we can justify using our citizenship if we are ever arrested in a foreign country. I might appeal to the embassy that my tax dollars support if I ever found myself in trouble in another country. (Is that hypocritical? Feel free to point out any inconsistency you see there)
So do you say the pledge? I no longer do, but I told my kids the other night that I wasn’t ready to tell them not to do so. I explained my reasons for no longer saying it. My wife explained that it was a similar clause in the application for citizenship that kept her from finishing that application (it also spoke of bearing arms, something she’s not willing to do for any country).
Do you consider yourself anti-American? Hardly. I love this country and appreciate many of the things that it provides for its people. I pray for the well-being of America just as I imagine that Paul, the Roman citizen, prayed for the well-being of Rome. Our goal is to spread the gospel. We pray for peace and well-being for all nations, in order that we might further that goal. An ill-tempered commentator asked me about Cuba the other day, saying that my visits there should make me that much more supportive of our government. The church is growing by leaps and bounds in Cuba, growing over 2000% in the last 25 years. I do pray that the government there will be more respectful of human rights; I pray the same for our government and all governments everywhere. I don’t pray for regime change; my kingdom is doing just fine in Cuba. Adverse conditions can often be good for the church. We don’t seek persecution, but we don’t flee it either. The testing of the church makes it stronger.
Let me close with a poem I wrote for an earlier post called “I Pledge Allegiance…”:
I pledge allegiance to my God,
All else falls far behind.
No land, no piece of earthly sod,
Can my obedience bind.
May my love for this world and the kingdoms thereof,
Not make me forget what I read in the Word.
My citizenship lies not here but above.
My true loyalty belongs to my Lord.
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