The Religious Duty of Obedience to Law - A Sermon by Ichabod S. Spencer Preached In The Second Presbyterian - Church In Brooklyn, Nov. 24, 1850 by Ichabod S. Spencer
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page 26 of 29 (89%)
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country and of all mankind. The solid sense and real religion of the
land will respect their decision. I have nothing to do with politics or party. I am only insisting upon religious obedience to Law. I am preaching the texts before me. Such obedience is a religious duty. It is the will of God. I appeal to the texts. They proclaim the Law of God. Peaceful subjection to government _is_ his law; and men are guilty of sophistry and falsehood, when, to excuse wicked evasion of Law or violent resistance, they pretend to appeal to what they call "the higher laws of God." _There are no such higher laws._ The texts before me are his law. If one man has a moral right, either cunningly to evade or openly to violate Law, under such pleading, then another man has the same right to violate _another_ Law; and thus any villainy on earth may be perpetrated under the sacred names of "conscience," and "the higher laws of God!" Nothing is _safe_ in the hands of men of such principles. These principles undermine the foundations _of all society among men_! As I told you last Wednesday evening in my lecture, the question before the country is _not_, (as the deceivers pretend,) whether God's laws are not higher than man's, or whether God's laws are to be obeyed. Nobody disputes either of these things. Nobody ever did. But the question is, whether it is the will of God that men should submit to the laws of the land, or aim to paralyze law, cheat it, cripple it, resist it, and thus overthrow the government of the country--a government at this moment more beneficial than any other that ever existed. Nor is it true, that the fugitive slave is made an "outlaw," and on _that_ ground justifiable for bloody and murderous resistance of Law. He is under the protection of Law; and if any man injures him |
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