
Christian Ethics and Civil Disobedience: A Graded-Absolutist Response to Unjust Law
A local law believed to be unconstitutional and unjust presents a pressing moral dilemma, especially for Christians who must balance obedience to civil authority with obedience to God; Norman L. Geisler’s treatment of civil disobedience offers a framework for assessing when principled resistance is warranted and for identifying responsible courses of action (Geisler, 2010, pp. 244–259). This essay applies Christian graded absolutism—the view that objective moral laws exist and that, in a conflict, one must follow the higher moral obligation—to clarify the issues to consider before engaging in civil disobedience and to offer practical guidelines for faithful dissent (Geisler, 2010, pp. 245–246).
First, distinguish legality from legitimacy: a law may be validly enacted yet still violate fundamental moral principles or constitutional rights, and refusal to obey can be required when obedience would amount to participating in moral evil (Geisler, 2010, pp. 246–248). Second, act from a properly formed conscience: civil disobedience must respond to genuine injustice, not personal grievance or opportunism, and should be measured by Scripture’s commitments to justice, mercy, and love (Geisler, 2010, pp. 247–249; Matthew 22:37–40, King James Version).
Third, prefer nonviolent, public, and conscientious methods that aim to persuade the community rather than to coerce or create disorder; nonviolence preserves moral witness and aligns with the New Testament emphasis on patient suffering and nonretaliation (Geisler, 2010, pp. 249–251; Matthew 5:38–48; 1 Peter 2:21–23, KJV). Fourth, be willing to accept legal consequences: voluntarily bearing lawful penalties distinguishes principled protest from lawlessness and strengthens the moral credibility of the witness (Geisler, 2010, pp. 251–253; Acts 5:29, KJV).
Fifth, minimize harm to third parties and the common good by anticipating collateral effects and protecting vulnerable populations; ethically responsible protest weighs both the injustice opposed and the community impact (Geisler, 2010, pp. 253–254). Sixth, exhaust lawful remedies first—petitioning, litigation, public education, and civic organizing—so civil disobedience remains a last, demonstrably necessary recourse (Geisler, 2010, pp. 254–256).
Finally, prepare practically and pastorally: consult legal counsel, coordinate with community and faith leaders, provide spiritual and material support for participants, and communicate motives publicly to preserve moral integrity (Geisler, 2010, pp. 256–258). When a law is clearly unjust, peaceful avenues have been exhausted, methods are nonviolent and public, and participants accept consequences while minimizing harm, civil disobedience can be a faithful and responsible means of challenging injustice consistent with Christian graded absolutism and biblical witness (Geisler, 2010, pp. 258–259; Acts 5:29; Matthew 5:38–48, KJV).
Peace and Grace,
Lesallan
October 22, 2025
References:
Geisler, N. L. (2010). Christian ethics: Contemporary issues and options (2nd ed.).
Baker Academic.