an anarchist
Your local loco.
When I say anarchist, I mean the philosophy that there should be no state.
I believe the Bible has overarching anarchist themes. I believe this is most obvious in the books Judges-2 kings.
Starting in Judges, the Israelites had no king. All the other nations did. They weren’t necessarily an anarchist state, perhaps a theocracy. They were ruled by Judges. These Judges were selected directly by God, and raised up only when Israel was in military trouble / under oppression. After the judge Samuel, Israel told him that they wanted a king instead of another Judge. The Bible explicitly states that this is sin, wanting a king, rather than being under the rule of God. Samuel and God talk about this. Then Samuel explicitly tells Israel that they are sinning. Can wanting a king be applied to wanting a human government in general?
So Israel got their king, and eventually David was King. At the end of David’s life, he ordered a census. The Bible explicitly paints this as a sin, and Israel is punished by a mighty plague because David completes the census. The census was used for taxation and conscription purposes, so can taxation and conscription be viewed negatively?
I think government is inherently sinful, and I think that I can use Biblical arguments to state that.
If you think the Bible supports the notion of government, why? Do you have anything more than “Give to Caesar what is Caesar’s”?
I believe the Bible has overarching anarchist themes. I believe this is most obvious in the books Judges-2 kings.
Starting in Judges, the Israelites had no king. All the other nations did. They weren’t necessarily an anarchist state, perhaps a theocracy. They were ruled by Judges. These Judges were selected directly by God, and raised up only when Israel was in military trouble / under oppression. After the judge Samuel, Israel told him that they wanted a king instead of another Judge. The Bible explicitly states that this is sin, wanting a king, rather than being under the rule of God. Samuel and God talk about this. Then Samuel explicitly tells Israel that they are sinning. Can wanting a king be applied to wanting a human government in general?
So Israel got their king, and eventually David was King. At the end of David’s life, he ordered a census. The Bible explicitly paints this as a sin, and Israel is punished by a mighty plague because David completes the census. The census was used for taxation and conscription purposes, so can taxation and conscription be viewed negatively?
I think government is inherently sinful, and I think that I can use Biblical arguments to state that.
If you think the Bible supports the notion of government, why? Do you have anything more than “Give to Caesar what is Caesar’s”?