

An edition of On Civil Government (1889)
Its Origin, Mission and Destiny, and the Christian's Relation to It
By David Lipscomb
Publish Date
1913
Publisher
McQuiddy Printing
Language
eng
Pages
159
Description:
This volume is a reprint of the most thorough treatise on pacifism and the separation of church and state from the early era (1866-7) of the Stone-Campbell movement. Drawing on the Old and New Testaments as well as the witness of the early church, Lipscomb makes a strong case for the church's non-involvement in civil government (in contrast with the divine government, which is being demonstrated through the church community). This is the third book in the Library of Radical Christian Discipleship, a collection of works by/about movements in church history that were deeply rooted (the English word radical comes from the Latin radix, meaning root) in their commitment to following the self-denying example of Jesus and the early church in embodying the Gospel as contrast communities in the midst of a world held hostage by sin and death.
subjects: Christian anarchism