All the God of the Bible wants is for you to obey authority outside of yourself. Never obey your personal or inner authority. Your personal or inner authority is Satan. The Bible is written with a purpose.
I strong disagree.
Luke 12:57
So, an invitation by Jesus for his audience to "interpret" the significance of the present moment - i.e. his teaching and ministry - by determining "for themselves" what is right/the truth...that's "obeying authority outside of yourself" and disregarding interior discernment? He's essentially asking them to think for themselves, to stop looking for divine signs outside themselves, "in the sky", and to look within themselves and decide for themselves.
When we turn to St. Paul's epistles, a significant message to be taken from these texts is that the "exterior" Old Testament law, imposed from without by a national deity in the form of Yahweh, is no longer binding upon Christians, who are now "free" to obey the inner law of their conscience - which means that one can still follow the ceremonial regulations of the Torah, if one so chooses, but cannot impose that personal choice on anyone else because every individual person is free to have their own "faith" in accordance with their conscience:
Romans 14
14:1 Now receive the one who is weak in the faith, and do not have disputes over differing opinions. 2 One person believes in eating everything, but the weak person eats only vegetables. 3 The one who eats everything must not despise the one who does not, and the one who abstains must not judge the one who eats everything, for God has accepted him...
5 One person regards one day holier than other days, and another regards them all alike. Let all be fully convinced in their own minds...
13 Therefore we must not pass judgment on one another, but rather determine never to place an obstacle or a trap before a brother or sister. 14 I know and am convinced in the Lord Jesus that there is nothing unclean in itself; still, it is unclean to the one who considers it unclean...
22 The faith that you have, have as your own conviction before God.
St. Paul also argued that Christians had no right to "judge" those outside their faith: "Why indeed is it my business to judge concerning those who are outside?" [I Cor. 5:12-13]
In 866 the Bulgarian Khan Boris sent a letter to Pope St. Nicholas the Great, asking him a series of questions about Christian faith and morals (since he hadn't even, as of yet, read the Bible). He wanted to convert to Christianity. The Pope wrote in response to his questions:
Chapter XLI.
Concerning those who refuse to receive the good of Christianity and sacrifice and bend their knees to idols, we can write nothing else to you than that you move them towards the right faith by warnings, exhortations, and reason rather than by force...
Violence should by no means be inflicted upon them to make them believe. For everything which is not voluntary, cannot be good; for it is written: Willingly shall I sacrifice to you,[Ps. 53:8] and again: Make all the commands of my mouth your will,[Ps. 118:108] and again, And by my own will I shall confess to Him.[Ps. 27:7] Indeed, God commands that willing service be performed only by the willing
By the high medieval era, the basic idea of the supreme authority of conscience had entered in the canon law tradition, in the form of Pope Gregory IX's Decretals and a 1201 letter from Pope Innocent III (1198-1216) to a woman called Guleilma, where he stated:
"...No one ought to act against his own conscience and he should follow his conscience rather than the judgement of the church when he is certain...one ought to suffer any evil rather than sin against conscience..."
The Bible exists to promote government by monarchy.
Again, demonstrably untrue.
Luke 22:
24 A dispute also arose among them as to which one of them was to be regarded as the greatest.
25But Jesus said to them, ‘The kings of the Gentiles lord it over them; and those in authority over them are called benefactors. 26But not so with you; rather the greatest among you must become like the youngest, and the leader like one who serves.
27For who is greater, the one who is at the table or the one who serves? Is it not the one at the table? But I am among you as one who serves.
Ancient Israel, before the foundation of the Monarchy, functioned as a de facto tribal democracy. Moses explicitly commanded the Israelites to elect their own tribal elders in what was - essentially - an ancient national federation/confederation of tribes under different appointed rulers.
"Choose some wise, intelligent and experienced men from each of your tribes, and I will set them over you as your rulers."
- Deuteronomy 1:13
Our modern forms of government in the West are parliamentary democracies amounting to a form of "mixed government", not pure democracies in the classical Greek sense - where there were no elected officials or ministers but rather assemblies in which every man voted directly on what was going to happen in the country, without elected representatives or an executive or any separation of powers, making it very open to abuse and the dictatorship of the majority. The French Revolution tried to resurrect this aberrant classical model of democracy - which just ends up being anarchic and oddly enough also pretty totalitarian.
Our "Democracies" stem indirectly from Christian teaching and are composed of three distinct entities which share power so as to prevent absolutism: The Legislature, The Executive and the Judiciary.
This set-up is a combination of three classical forms of government into an "ideal" (as much as humanely possible) form of government which is partly a democracy (because there is an elected assembly), partly a monarchy (because there is a single sovereign or President) and partly an aristocracy because there are judges. Power is shared amongst these 3 branches of the state to prevent one organ or person from becoming tyrannical and abusing power, because rulers ultimately exist to "serve" like Our Lord Jesus washing the feet of his disciples, God Himself in the flesh.
This form of government was clearly endorsed by Saint Thomas Aquinas:
"...Accordingly, the best form of government is in a republic or kingdom, wherein one is given the power to preside over all, while under him are others having governing powers.
And yet a government of this kind is shared by all, both because all are eligible to govern, and because the rulers are chosen by all.
For this is the best form of polity, being partly kingdom, since there is one at the head of all; partly aristocracy, in so far as a number of persons are set in authority; partly democracy, i.e., government by the people, in so far as the rulers can be chosen from the people, and the people have the right to choose their rulers.
Such was the form of government established by the divine Law. For Moses and his successors governed the people in such a way that each of them was ruler over all; so that there was a kind of kingdom. Moreover, seventy-two men were chosen, who were elders in virtue, for it is written (Deut. I, 15): I took out of your tribes men wise and honorable, and appointed them rulers; so that there was an element of aristocracy.
But it was a democratic government in so far as the rulers were chosen from all the people, for it is written (Exod. XVIII, 21): Provide out of all the people wise men, etc.; and, again, in so far as they were chosen by the people. Hence it is written (Deut. I, 13): Let me have from among you wise men, etc. Consequently, it is evident that the ordering of the rulers was well provided for by the Law....All of the people should take some share in the government for this form of constitution ensures peace among the people, commends itself to all, and is most enduring..."
- Saint Thomas Aquinas (1225–1274), Doctor of the Church