The Bible teaches that we are all children of Adam and Eve, and like them, we carry a stubborn streak when it comes to authority. Their rebellion in the garden echoes in our own resistance, even if ours shows up in smaller, more creative ways. I remember discovering this truth as a seventeen-year-old seaman recruit at the Great Lakes Naval Training Center. I had joined the Navy for excitement and adventure, but the very first military haircut signaled a different agenda. The Navy was far more interested in teaching discipline and obedience than in providing thrills. I had to learn to get up early, make my bed with corners sharp enough to qualify as engineering, shave, shine my shoes, polish my brass, and show respect to a man who could project his voice with impressive intensity. I did not enjoy being pushed around, but it did not take long to see that obedience to rightful authority carried surprising benefits.
Solomon captures this principle with simple clarity in Ecclesiastes 8:5: “Whoever keeps a command will know no evil thing, and the wise heart will know the proper time and the just way.” By the time boot camp ended, most of the eighty-seven recruits in my company had learned that quiet obedience and submission lead to a peaceful life, even if it is not always an easy one. There is a calm that settles in when we stop fighting every instruction and begin to follow wisely. Larry from Georgia, however, never quite embraced this lesson. He spent more time doing pushups and cleaning heads, which is Navy language for bathrooms, than the rest of us combined. Larry proved Solomon’s point in living color. Obedience tends to keep trouble at a distance, while disobedience seems to send it an engraved invitation. In our own lives, whether at work, at home, or even while assembling furniture with leftover screws, we discover that resisting good authority rarely improves the situation.
The New Testament deepens this truth and directs it toward a greater purpose. Paul writes, “Do all you can to live a peaceful life. Take care of your own business and do your own work” (1 Thessalonians 4:11). He adds that such a life becomes a quiet witness to others. In another place he says, “Pray for kings. Pray for all who are in authority. Pray that we will live peaceful and quiet lives” (1 Timothy 2:2). Jesus Himself lived in perfect submission to the Father, even when that path led to the cross, reminding us that “He humbled himself by becoming obedient to the point of death” (Philippians 2:8). Through Him, obedience is no longer merely duty but becomes an expression of trust and love. As Augustine observed, believers are called to be the best citizens, doing from the heart what others do from obligation. In Christ, obedience finds its true meaning, and a peaceful life becomes a reflection of His grace at work within us.
