Thursday, November 5, 2020

Servants of God

 

[Photo of Congress in session]


This is also why you pay taxes, for
the authorities are God’s servants,
who give their full time to governing.
Give everyone what you owe him:
If you owe taxes, pay taxes; if
revenue, then revenue; if respect,
then respect; if honor, then honor.
—Romans 13:6

I confess to you that when this verse came up on my list of “Verses for Each Day” I wanted to skip this one and find a substitute. I have never met anyone who really wants to pay taxes.

I can remember the chagrin I felt when I looked at my first real pay stub and took note of the taxes that had been withheld from my pay. My paycheck was quite meager and it was made all the more so by the deduction taken out to pay my taxes. At the very moment that I studied that pay stub, a political advertisement began to play on the radio. Immediately, my thoughts turned to what the politician was saying. “Hey!” I thought to myself. “You had better do the right thing, Mr. Politician. I pay your salary!”

Later, as I rode my bicycle home from where I worked, I noted the potholes in the road. I remember thinking that the road crew should fix those potholes pronto. After all, I pay their salaries! And, in that moment, I began to develop an attitude that has fueled my Conservative point of view for all these many years of my life.

As I stated in my blog post of two days ago, it is sometimes hard to think of governmental authorities as God’s servants—particularly when they do things or say things with which we do not agree. Nevertheless, Scripture seems quite clear. After all, the Apostle Paul is writing during a time when he lived under a government that was far more oppressive than the government most of us have lived under. If Paul can write these words in his circumstance, surely we can learn to accept these words in our circumstance.

Today, I invite you to join me in praising God that He is the One who ordains authorities and places them over us. Let’s pray for our governmental leaders—even the ones we do not particularly like, or with whom we do not agree. We do well to remember that our prayers have a way of blessing even those who might never bless us.

 

Copyright © 2020 by Dean K. Wilson. All Rights Reserved.