4.6 • 628 Ratings
🗓️ 13 March 2020
⏱️ 22 minutes
🧾️ Download transcript
Rachael Clinton Chen and Dr. Dan Allender continue their conversation about authority, this week diving into who we’re meant to trust and submit to in a healthy, biblical way that leads to our flourishing.
To begin the episode, Dan reads from Romans 13, a passage often referenced in conjunction with the topic of authority. Both Rachael and Dan acknowledge they are in complex waters and that the words “submission” and “obedience” can be triggering for many listeners due to the misuse and violence done by those in positions of authority.
What authority, then, are we to submit to? The phrase Paul uses implies a “quality superior,” not all authority, Dan notes, but someone who bears a kind of qualitative goodness—a likeness to the goodness of God. Jesus authorizes others for the sake of addressing the brokenness in the world, extending a sense of empowerment, dignity, and call to life. People who are authorized by God typically do not have to tell others they have authority, Rachael says, as it is gained through respect, participation, service, and honor.
The series will conclude next week as Dan and Rachael will address the questions: What is submission, what does it mean to interact with those in authority?
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0:00.0 | Thank you for listening to the Allender Center podcast. |
0:06.7 | I'm Dr. Dan Allender. |
0:08.7 | And I'm Rachel Clinton-Centen. |
0:10.5 | We're fiercely committed to providing hope and healing to a fragmented world. |
0:14.7 | And restoration for the heart. |
0:17.2 | Thank you for joining us. |
0:18.5 | Let's get this conversation started. |
0:28.0 | Thank you for joining us. Let's get this conversation started. Well, thank you for joining us. |
0:29.9 | In case you missed it, we are in the midst of a series on authority. |
0:33.7 | And why do we distrust authority? |
0:37.1 | Who are we to trust some of our war and tension |
0:41.6 | with the authorities of our world? And this is such a complex topic because it's so global. |
0:47.5 | There are authorities that we are under in some ways that run empires and nations and policies and create laws that have major |
0:57.7 | impact for our world and there are religious authorities in our midst that establish theological |
1:04.2 | foundations and biblical imagination and there are more localized authorities in our world in our |
1:10.1 | communities and our churches in our jobs and even in our localized authorities in our world, in our communities, in our churches, |
1:11.6 | in our jobs, and even in our families and in our life. |
1:15.4 | And I think we have to do that courageous work of talking about these things, |
1:20.0 | knowing it's incredibly foolish because it's so complex and so dynamic and also so deeply |
1:27.1 | personal. |
1:28.3 | So in our last episode, we were in some ways discussing this hermeneutic of suspicion |
1:33.8 | that has been more familiar in our world for a variety of reasons |
... |
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