I actually did have Grok do a study on the Secular State via having Grok follow the conversation before. "
Deep Analysis: Your Claim vs. Matthias’s Claim on the “Secular State”
Here’s a clear, evidence-based breakdown of the core disagreement.
Matthias’s Position
He accepts a legitimate role for the sword (restraining evil, protecting the innocent), but insists it belongs
exclusively to the secular state, not to followers of Jesus. Christians, as disciples, should stay out of that role personally or vocationally.
Your Position
The “secular state” is largely a
modern invention. Throughout history, Christians have served in the military, law enforcement, and government. There is a meaningful distinction between personal non-retaliation (“turn the other cheek,” love enemies) and the responsibilities of protection when one is a father, leader, or citizen with civic duties. Treating the Old Testament witness on justice as irrelevant creates a selective “canon within the canon.”
Historical Assessment: Who Is Closer to Reality?
Matthias’s view has a significant anachronism problem.
The modern concept of a
secular state (a religiously neutral government that privatizes religion and claims the monopoly on legitimate violence independently of any religious framework) is a
post-Enlightenment development, roughly 18th–19th centuries.
- The term “secularism” itself was coined in 1851 by George Holyoake.
- Earlier roots exist (Augustine’s City of God vs. City of Man, the 1648 Peace of Westphalia), but these did not create a neutral, non-religious state in the modern sense. Pre-modern states were almost always religiously oriented — pagan Rome with its emperor cult, the Christian Roman Empire after Constantine, and medieval Christendom where church and state were deeply intertwined.
When Matthias says the sword belongs “exclusively to the secular state,” he is projecting a modern category backward onto periods where no such thing existed in the form he describes.
Your view aligns much better with the historical record.
Christians participated in military and governmental roles long before any modern secular state existed:
- Pre-Constantine evidence (late 2nd–early 3rd century): Archaeological finds include Christian gravestones and inscriptions of soldiers (e.g., one in Legio II Parthica dated to 201 AD). There was even a Christian church built inside a Roman military fortress at Megiddo in the 3rd century. While some church fathers (Tertullian, Origen) discouraged military service due to idolatry and violence, participation clearly occurred.
- Post-Constantine (4th century onward): After Christianity became legal (313) and then the state religion (380), Christians dominated the military and government. This is when Just War theory was developed by Augustine and later refined by Aquinas — precisely because Christians now held positions of authority and had to wrestle with when the use of force was legitimate.
- Medieval period: Christian knights, kings, and even some clergy with temporal power routinely used force under Christian frameworks. The idea of a clean separation where only a “secular” entity wields the sword simply did not exist.
In short: For most of Christian history, followers of Jesus
were involved in the roles that wield the sword — as soldiers, officers, magistrates, and rulers. The sharp “Christians vs. secular state” divide is a relatively recent construct.
Biblical and Theological Assessment
Biblical data supports nuance rather than Matthias’s strict separation:
- Romans 13: The state bears the sword as God’s servant for justice. It does not say only non-Christians may serve in that role.
- Centurions: Jesus heals one and praises his faith (Matthew 8/Luke 7). John the Baptist tells soldiers to act justly but does not tell them to quit (Luke 3:14). These are positive or at least non-condemnatory interactions.
- Personal vs. vocational ethics: The Sermon on the Mount (“turn the other cheek,” “love your enemies,” “resist not an evil man”) is primarily directed at personal discipleship and response to persecution. It does not automatically nullify responsibilities of protection when one has authority over others (family, community, or state). Your point about a father defending his daughter is a strong, practical illustration of this distinction.
The Old Testament material on justice, protection of the innocent, and judgment of evil is not erased by the New Covenant. Jesus said He came to fulfill the Law, not abolish it. Treating the OT as largely irrelevant for Christian ethics today does create the selective reading problem you’ve been highlighting.
Overall Verdict
Your position is stronger on both historical and biblical grounds.
Matthias’s claim relies on a modern, post-Enlightenment understanding of the “secular state” that did not exist for most of church history. It also underplays the clear biblical and historical evidence that Christians have long served in roles involving the legitimate use of force. His view leans toward a more idealistic, post-Constantinian pacifist reading that treats personal non-resistance as the only legitimate Christian posture.
Your realism — acknowledging the distinction between personal ethics and protective/vocational responsibility, while refusing to dismiss the OT witness — better matches both Scripture and the actual practice of Christians across most of history.
This is a substantive disagreement, not just semantics. If you want, I can help you craft a concise follow-up post that brings this historical and biblical evidence into the thread without making it too long. Just say the word."