Home
/
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
/
4 ways Protestants approach the government (video)
4 ways Protestants approach the government (video)
Dec 11, 2025 4:42 AM

Is participating in government a duty or a sin? When Christians have asked how they should engage the public square, Protestant leaders’ responses have run the gamut plete separation (because “this world is not my home”) to the belief that government service is “the most sacred, and by far the most honorable, of all stations in mortal life.” How should Bible-believing Christians look at peting views?

Rev. Richard Turnbull, Ph.D. analyzed four historic teachings about the Christian’s role in public life. “Essentially, these approaches represent differing conceptions of the relationship of nature and grace,” said Rev. Turnbull, who is ordained in the Church of England and director of the Oxford-based Centre for Entreprise, Morality, and Ethics (CEME).

The four primary ways Protestants have said Christians should approach politics are:

1. Martin Luther: Two Kingdoms: Grace alongside nature

The father of the Protestant Reformation, Martin Luther, said the Christian belongs to “two kingdoms” which stand alongside each other, distinct but not hostile. The temporal kingdom, or earthly government, upholds order and suppresses violence. Its authority extends to all people, believers and unbelievers alike. The spiritual government, or the church, extends eternal life only to believers.

Luther taught, in a 1523 work known as “Secular Authority: To What Extent it Should be Obeyed,” that Christians should “satisfy at the same time God’s kingdom inwardly and the kingdom of the world outwardly.” If called to serve the government, a Christian should do so “by whatever means you can, with body, soul, honor or goods,” because its services are “profitable for the whole world.”

“Therefore,” Luther wrote, “should you see that there is a lack of hangmen, beadles, judges, lords, or princes, and find that you are qualified, you should offer your services and seek the place, that necessary government may by no means be despised and e inefficient or perish.” Since Christ upholds the power of government, even knotting the noose is a “divine service.”

Luther wrote in this work that the state should not punish heretics. “Belief or unbelief is a matter of every one’s conscience,” he wrote, so “the secular power … [should] attend to its own affairs and permit men to believe one thing or another.”

This model sees grace acting parallel to nature, with government being one vocation for people of true faith to serve their neighbors.

2. John Calvin: Transformational model: Grace within, or transforming, nature

John Calvin saw government as an “order established by God” and “constituted by God’s ordinance.”

The ruler should see that “the public quiet be not disturbed, that every man’s property be kept secure, that men may carry on merce with each other, that honesty and modesty be cultivated,” Calvin wrote in Book 4, chapter 20, of his Institutes of the Christian Religion.

However, the polity also has a role in preserving “a public form of religion” by preventing “public blasphemy” and assuring “that no idolatry, no blasphemy against the name of God, no calumnies against his truth, nor other offences to religion, break out and be disseminated among the people.”

A wise ruler must guard against both extremes of implementing the laws, “excessive severity” and “soft and dissolute indulgence” of lawlessness.

Calvin reacted against Pietists who disregard earthly authority (see below), writing that “no man can doubt that civil authority is, in the sight of God, not only sacred and lawful, but the most sacred, and by far the most honorable, of all stations in mortal life.”

This model sees grace acting through, and transforming, the public order. Christians should serve in order to uphold public religion.

3. Pietist Anabaptists: Separation from the world: Grace against nature

The Pietists saw earthly government as “ordained of God outside the perfection of Christ,” in the words of the Schleitheim Confession of 1527. They called for Anabaptists to “withdraw from Babylon and the earthly Egypt.”

As such, they held, “It is not appropriate for a Christian to serve as a magistrate, because … [t]he government magistracy is according to the flesh, but the Christian’s is according to the Spirit.”

Oaths of office and military defense similarly have no place in Christian life within this tradition. Christians must foreswear “the unchristian, devilish weapons of force – such as sword, armor and the like, and all their use, either for friends or against one’s enemies.”

This model sees grace as entirely outside the public square, residing only in the Christian fellowship or the soul of the believer. Engagement with government cannot take place.

4. “Christian” socialism: Transformation of the Church by the State: Grace equals, or is under, nature

Rev. Turnbull touched briefly on “Christian” socialism. (If only more Christians gave the concept less of their attention.) The vision, which gained particular credence in the munion, continues to enjoy the advocacy of the Archbishop of Canterbury, Justin Welby. “Archbishop Welby was effectively espousing a form of Christian socialism in his speech to the Trades Union Congress” this September, Rev. Turnbull said.

“I dream that governments, now and in the future, put church-run food banks out of business,” Welby said.His address followed more than a century of Anglican bishops clamoring for social welfare to displace church charity.

Socialism is not just an economic system but prehensive worldview. It teaches that private property causes conflict and wealth redistribution will change every human being’s character. Christianity says this es about only by the indwelling of the Holy Spirit.

In the Religious Left’s view, Turnbull said, “society is indeed to be transformed, but not by the Gospel, but by a governmental, socialist program.” Grace is immersed, or subsumed, by the functions of the state.

He went on to analyze the contributions of Abraham Kuyper, the Dutch Reformed theologian and prime minister of the Netherlands, who taught the Bible’s “dominating principle” is “the Sovereignty of the Triune God over the whole Cosmos.” Kuyper famously said, “There is not a square inch in the whole domain of our human existence over which Christ, who is sovereign over all, does not cry: ‘Mine!’”

You can watch Rev. Turnbull’s full explanation in the video below. His historical overview begins 16 minutes into the lecture and lasts just 10 minutes. His full address repays careful viewing, as does the full conference:

domain.)

Comments
Welcome to mreligion comments! Please keep conversations courteous and on-topic. To fosterproductive and respectful conversations, you may see comments from our Community Managers.
Sign up to post
Sort by
Show More Comments
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
Rev. Sirico: Contemplating Christmas
Acton President and Co-Founder Rev. Robert A. Sirico asks us to take a breather from the frenzied preparations that lead up to Christmas and reflect on the true meaning of the Feast of the Incarnation. Thanks. to ThePulp.it for linking. Contemplating Christmas By Rev. Robert A. Sirico In a Christmas season filled with noble sentiments such as “peace on earth and goodwill to men,” the remembrance of the joys and sanctity of the family, and the deep human desire for...
Religion & Liberty: An Interview with Dolphus Weary
Dolphus Weary has a remarkable story to tell and certainly very few can add as much insight on the issue of poverty as he does. When you read the interview, now available online in the Fall 2011 R&L, or especially his book I Ain’t Comin’ Back, you realize leaving Mississippi was his one ambition, but God called him back in order to give his life and training for the “least of these.” One of the things Weary likes to ask...
Vladimir Solovyov in the History of Liberty
Painting by Ivan Kramskoi Reflecting on the state of Russian philosophy among the intelligentsia of his day (the sectarian, Russian intellectuals “artificially isolated from national life”), Nikolai Berdiaev wrote in 1909, There seemed every reason to acknowledge Vladimir Solov’ev as our national philosopher and to create a national philosophical tradition around him…. The philosophy of any European country could take pride in a Solov’ev. That, however, was not the case. Why not? Berdiaev continues, But the Russian intelligentsia neither read...
The Legend of Zelda video games from a Christian perspective
Author and editor Jonny Walls has announced his latest work published by Gray Matter Books entitled The Legend of Zelda and Theology. Zelda is a series of video games celebrating its 25th anniversary this year, originating in 1986 with The Legend of the Zelda for the Nintendo Entertainment System. It revolutionized video games with its adventure elements and exploration. Each new installment of the series has advanced plexity and story line. The Zelda world maintains its own unique mythology consisting...
The Little Drummer Boy’s Gift
Earlier this year Michael Kruse put out a request for suggestions for inclusion in a Commissioning Service for Human Vocation. This Advent season it struck me that the Christmas song, “The Little Drummer Boy,” or, “The Carol of the Drum,” is rich in vocational theology. The little drummer boy has no gold, frankincense, or myrrh, no gift “fit to give a King,” so instead he plays his “best for him” on his drum. The little drummer boy drumming his best...
‘Occupy’ and Institutional Change
The Detroit News ran my piece on Christians, churches, and the Occupy movement today, “Protests, pews not always linked.” One of the reactions to the piece rightly noted that I did not fill out in detail what “the moral and spiritual formation necessary to be faithful followers of Christ every day in their productive service to others” looks like. ment at Patheos worries that my advice might leave Christians plicit with structural injustice.” One of the important implications of the...
The Social Muddle at Sojourners
My recent piece in The American Spectator took the left to task for its misuse of the terms justice and social justice. The piece was more than a debate over semantics. In it I noted that Sojourners and its CEO, Jim Wallis, continue to promote well-intended but failed strategies that actually hurt the social and economic well-being of munities. I also called on everyone with a heart for the poor to set aside a top-down model of charity that “has...
Food Trucks and First Steps
Customers standing beside the food truck operated by Fojol Brothers of Merlindia, a theatrical, mobile Indian restaurant, serving food at various locations throughout Washington, D.CIn this week’s Acton Commentary, “Food Fights and Free Enterprise,” I take a look at the increasing popularity of food trucks in urban settings within the context of Milton Friedman’s observation that “it’s always been true that business is not a friend of a free market.” As you might imagine, the food truck phenomenon has found...
Leery of Federal Disaster Relief Help?
In the Spring 2011 issue of Religion & Liberty, I wrote about the Christian response to disaster relief, focusing on Hurricane Katrina and the April 2011 tornadoes that munities in the deep South and Joplin, Mo. in May. Included in the story is a contrast of church relief with the federal government response. From the R&L piece: In Shoal Creek, Ala., a frustrated Carl Brownfield called the federal response “all red tape.” The Birmingham News ran a story on May...
Margaret Thatcher on Business as Mission
Mats Tunehag has written a blog highlighting the increased popularity and momentum of business as mission throughout the world. He cites an example that probably would not be the first e to your mind, but is someone we are very familiar with here at Acton. Lady Margaret Thatcher was the recipient of this year’s Faith and Freedom Award. Mr. John O’Sullivan, who accepted the award on her behalf, described it as one that befits Lady Thatcher’s plishments in office and...
Related Classification
Copyright 2023-2025 - www.mreligion.com All Rights Reserved