Hey Matt,
Thanks for reading and commenting.
"Either he's telling them not to obey the Romans, by encoding it with shared knowledge; or he's not talking about the Roman government."
Someone in another forum has asserted that my article exhibits two logical fallacies; "False Dilemma" and "Begging the Question." I think you may be following suit, at least with the "False Dichotomy."🤣 Having said that, and while I am still mulling over the accusation, my preliminary reaction is that neither of us bear much guilt on that count... Perhaps we've simply emphasized what in our minds are the two most probable interpretations without bothering to explicitly acknowledge there may be other options.
You and I agree on one of the possibilities; to wit, that Paul's not talking about the state. And I'm willing to concede that there are probably an infinite range of other possible interpretations rather than the one I prefer.
On my part, I've become persuaded that any positive talk about governance in the New Testament is aimed at God's ideal form of governance, which is local—at the level of cities—and is voluntary when it comes to participation. This governance structure is best embodied by the ecclesia. This is the governance I write about extensively in my Kingdom Series of articles.
"Him telling them to obey the Roman government because they only hurt bad people is ridiculous."
I could not agree more.
Blessings, Friend! And Happy New Year to you and yours.