If only the heathen are to be in authority or tax collectors wouldn't that be strange?
Perhaps, but I didn't say that they couldn't be either of those things. Just that they shouldn't be corrupt if they do, nor join if it requires them to cheat others.
However, taxes collectors and other governing authorities are God ordained and I believe God would have His people involved in both.
This may be, but it isn't necessarily so. If a governing authority asks someone to do something that is directly against something Christ taught (or that is against the law, according to man's laws) then I think we both agree that we are not to do it. Christ didn't tell anyone not to pay taxes. He seemed pretty casual that the taxes were not something that TRULY mattered.
God is not just a hippy, looking for peace and love at any price. He rules with justice and authority also!
Yes, but the same cannot always be said about OUR leaders. In fact, I think it can rarely ever be said - though intentions might have been good.
Stephen, I'm going to go out on a limb here and say that Paul was either mistaken, or we are mistaken about his context when it comes to judging. Christ said do not judge, and to forgive. I don't know how 'do not judge' gets reconciled with 'judge'. Paul says in the same book, even before this quote, to judge nothing before the appointed time, and that he did not even judge himself.
So there is a conflict there.
Actually, re-reading both verses and their context - it seems Paul was in a state of damage control in the first, when he tells them to judge trivial matters between themselves, for he also goes on to say that the fact that they have lawsuits between themselves shows that they have been completely defeated already. Better to be wronged, or to have been cheated... and applied with Christ's teachings, better to forgive those wrongs, because they also went on (as do we all) to do wrong to others.
Again, peace to you,
Tammy