This is a very strange view. Does this mean that the government has a right to take my property or to kill me for no good reason? What right do men have to give or take away rights?
Hi TOL,
Whatever right they give themselves to do that. The Scriptures do not give us any rights except the right to be called a child of God if we have been born again.
When Paul appealed to the Roman government for a hearing before being put to death, the right of such an appeal was not given to him by God. That right was given to him by the Roman government. Yes, the Roman government could have also made a new law to take away that right if they desired to do so. Just as our government can take away any right that they have given us, if they choose to do so.
This may actually be tested one day in our courts concerning the ownership of firearms. The U.S. government has given its people, through the constitution, the right to bear arms. However, at the rate firearms deaths are growing in this country, we may well have a battle in the courts to strip that right away. If the government decides to do that, then they have the authority to do that because they are the government. God didn't give mankind any right to bear arms. As far as I can tell, God didn't give any right to mankind to life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness. Some of us may enjoy life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness, but God didn't give us any right to such pursuits.
Yes, if the government makes a law, such as eminent domain, the government has the right to take your property. Of course our law of eminent domain does require that the property receive a fair value in return for its taking, but there isn't any 'right' that the government has to do that, unless the law, as written by the men who make such laws, afford that right to the people.
While the the U.S. government likely won't kill you for no good reason, yes the U.S. government has killed people for no good reason. We went to war in Vietnam because the French were asking us to help them assert their colonial rule over Vietnam. We killed thousands of people merely so the French could hold onto Vietnam as one of its colonies. Now, as that war drug on we came up with much better reasons to be involved in it, but the truth of the beginning of that war was nothing more than the sustaining of colonialism for France. France convinced us that if we didn't join in the fight that Vietnam was going to go over to communism, but why wouldn't that be the choice of the people living in Vietnam.
In fact, Vietnam is still considered a communist country and look, we all get along pretty fine. There was a time in the government of the United States that communism carried with it this bugaboo that it was evil and its goal was to overtake the world. To date, that doesn't seem to have ever been the effort of communism. It is merely another form of governance, for which Americans think people don't get the kinds of freedoms that we enjoy. While that may well be true, its also true of many other forms of government operating around the globe. Islamic countries don't generally give their citizenry that kind of freedoms that we enjoy. But that there was some goal of communist countries to take over the world doesn't seem to have ever really been a thing. Most of them just wanted their little piece of the pie to be governed under communist ideology and that's fine.
At the present time, there are five countries on the globe that are considered communist nations. Vietnam, China, Laos, Cuba and N. Korea. While these countries all seem to have failed governing systems, they aren't really much of a threat to take over the world. For all the thousands upon thousands of men and women who died in Vietnam, the country was turned over to a communist government after it was all over and still to this day is a communist nation. The world seems to be getting along pretty fine with that. So yes, a government, specifically the U.S. government, can kill people for no good reason.
But the bottom line is that any government has the authority to make whatever laws they deem right and proper. In the U.S., our government is established as a representative government and so such things aren't likely to happen here. But it's worth considering that in the days of Joseph's being second in command over all of Egypt, he used the famine to take all the land ownership from the people. Joseph was supposedly a godly man. So, the question must be asked, does God think that people ought to have some right to hold on to their land in the face of some government conscription of it?
God bless,
In Christ, ted