For the Lord: The Foundation and Limit of Christian Submission (1 Peter 2:13-17)

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Peter's command to submit to civil authority sounds straightforward—until you consider who he was writing to. His first readers lived under Emperor Nero, one of the most brutal, murderous, and self-proclaimed divine rulers in history. And Peter told them to submit. That tension is exactly where this sermon begins.
In this message from 1 Peter 2:13–17, Dave Rich works carefully through what Peter actually commands—and what he doesn't. The Greek word behind "institution" carries more weight than most translations reveal, pointing to the humanity and created nature of civil rulers rather than any divine right to absolute obedience. That one word reframes everything: we submit not for rulers' sake, but for the Lord's sake.
Dave also shares how his own position on the limits of submission has shifted after deeper study. Scripture calls Christians to more than compliance with everything short of outright sin. When any human authority comes between a believer and full, uncompromised obedience to God, the Christian is free—and called—to respectfully refuse.
The sermon closes with four commands from verse 17: honor all people, love the brethren, fear God, honor the king. That order is not accidental. Fear of God is both the foundation and the limit of every duty owed to any human ruler.
This episode is essential listening for Christians thinking carefully about their relationship to government, authority, and conscience.
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Creators and Guests

Dave Rich
Host
Dave Rich
Pastor-Teacher, Kootenai Community Church
For the Lord: The Foundation and Limit of Christian Submission (1 Peter 2:13-17)
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