I think some rebellions are permitted by Doctrine as Just though I will have to look to provide a reference.
Please do. The doctrine explicitly says only duly constituted public authorities may declare war, which eliminates any claim to moral legitimacy made by any political rebel.
If the Iraqis rose up and overthrew Saddam before we did…is that Just, or rebellion?
Saddam would be getting what he deserved, just as the Romans would have been getting what they deserved if the Early Church had risen up and overthrown them. But it would still be rebellion. Consequently the Church felt it had no moral right to rebel, and hence did not.
A point further, are you suggesting the foundation of America is an unjust endeavor and is illegitimate? Our Constitution is borne from its experience. I’m shocked again if that is so.
Yes, I’m not only suggesting it, I’m saying it outright. It was very hard for me to come to that conclusion, but I have, and I think logic necessitates it.
The Constitution that resulted also is very damaging to society in many ways. Its moral principles depend, under law, on the interpretations of men, “the will of the people.” “The will of God” is not the dominant factor. That is very different from how historical Christian kingdoms managed things- they established laws according to moral principles declared by the Vatican, the expression of God’s will on Earth. Thus the moral principles they declared would be the bases for their laws were godly, whereas ours are human. Which is why we have Supreme Court cases like Plessy vs. Fergusson or Roe vs. Wade. Our laws are the “will of the people,” which is not necessarily “the will of God.”
That is a very, very damaging change democratic government has created, and is one of the big reasons behind much of the immorality of our times.
Such damaging changes were able to come about because democracy had its origins in a largely non-Christian movement, called the Enlightenment, the same place that our supposed “right to rebel” came from. The Catholic Church was not the origin of those views. In fact, only the demise of Catholic power in the West could make them possible.
One of the reasons why you have 0 major rebellions (only some minor ones) occurring historically throughout the Early and Middle Medieval Ages was that the Catholic Church unequivocally condemned rebellion, and they were pursuing the same practice as the Early Church had.
I don’t think you can compare them because The Way was never intended to be a political philosophy or political power, but an ethic of life which is embodied by the Church. One set of rules we are free to vote on in exercise our Free Will, another set that cannot to include and not limited to the Ten Commandments. These things are embodied in our Constitution as their origin in God. We just need to follow it.
One cannot separate our political and our religious lives. Our political beliefs are the result of our moral beliefs, which are the result of the Church’s teaching. We cannot behave politically in one way and morally in an opposed way. That would be wicked. Our morality and our political ideologies must agree. The Early Church’s refusal to go to war was both a moral decision and a political example to us.
So we are not “free to vote on” one set of rules. We are only free to vote what is moral according to God. Everything comes from our moral lives. The requirement that we not rebel, which was taught by Peter, Paul and Jesus, as well as the Early Church Fathers, was also made to us as a moral teaching, not a political option.
I would not rebel against my government in the name of Jesus but for my human rights;
Everything we do should be in the Name of Jesus. Everything must be holy and done for him. We are ambassadors for Christ socially, economically, politically, on every level of existence intended to be the expression of his will in the world, doing his will and acting in his authority. Which is incredibly glorious, if you think about it

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and maybe rising up to end the cheapening of my humanity to end abortion by force of arms is my duty, not just my legal right if deemed necessary. Maybe we are at an impass in our society to rely on compromised legislation.
That is how I would feel if God and his Church had not condemned rebellion on moral grounds. Rebellion is not acceptable. It first came to be seen as acceptable in the West at the end of Christendom, with the writings of John Locke and other such philosophers. From its origins it was not a Catholic idea. It’s an Enlightenment idea that has crept
into many Catholic communities in modern times because of where and when we live. It must be resisted, along with all the other moral perversions of our era.
I would not rebel against my government in the name of the Church’s moral code but my own which is formed by everything I am to include my faith. I would not use God as my reason to rebel against my government that refuses to secure our own borders while doing so around the world but my common sense. I would expect the Military to stay out of it because I would be defending the Constitution to which they to are sworn to protect.
Your interpretation of the Constitution, not the Supreme Court or America’s. You are not a “duly constituted public authority.” You don’t have any legal right to enforce your interpretation. The writing of a belief of Jefferson’s does not translate into hard law. The South was pulverized in the mid-19th century for exercising its “right to seceed.”
Also, according to the Just War doctrine, you’d have no right. Peter, Paul and Jesus all spoke in the Scripture about rebellion on moral grounds, and the Church has taught the same all the way up to the present day. Only the Enlightenment brought a change in people’s thinking, and it opposed the Church in its ideologies, was a fountain of heresy and secularism, coming up with its thought independently of the Church’s wisdom. The belief in the validity of rebellion has no place in the Church. It is one more of the grievous moral confusions that have crept into society, along with sexual permissiveness, the legitimizing of murder through abortion and infanaticide, the legalizing of witchcraft and many other such evils, and they all came through the teachings of the Enlightenment, a non-Christian source of thought. It is a moral perversion and we must all resist it.
But it is extremely hard for people to look back at what the Church has practiced throughout its existence, what the Scripture and Sacred Tradition teach, and what the Church continues to teach in the modern times through the Just War Doctrine, when those values clash with some of the basic assumptions of the country we live in.
I grew up surrounded by people who believe in the validity of the Revolution. That is origin of American life. It surrounds us. We were raised with it, believing it, learning the arguments in support of it, never giving serious thought to the contrary ideas that exist, and which have been supported by the Church throughout history. Our culture and society and upbringing bombards us with the belief that armed rebellion can be valid, so that validity is an automatic assumption we all share, unless God shakes us up.
He shook me out of it, I believe, at the same time as he shook me out of Protestantism and into Catholicism. It was a monumental change of ideology for me on multiple levels, political, religious and other. God has blessed me through it.
Rebellion is truly wrong. We can also see why, if we think about it in the terms the Early Church thought about it.
They taught that the emperor was the representative of God, that God had put him in power, so they were to obey him in everything he commanded them to do, unless he ordered them to break the laws of God. At that point, they were still not to rebel, because he was God’s representative and to rebel against him would be rebelling against God, but they were to hide or allow themselves to be killed. That, to them, was a moral issue about obedience to God.
On the other hand, if everyone was allowed to rebel against the government when they felt it was unjust, anarchy and a big increase in violence would be the natural result. That is something modern times have seen, because of their breach from Christianity: an increasing trend in political rebellion (Communistic, Fascist, Democratic and most recently Islamist), as well as a steep decline in the morality of governments established through rebellion- a movement toward moral anarchy.
All of which was predicted back in the Enlightenment days by monarchists who opposed rebellion. Dryden was an excellent example of this, predicting that Locke’s ideas would lead to a slide toward anarchy.
We grow up enveloped in modern history, though, so it is very hard for us to look at any of this and look with critical judgment toward beliefs ingrained in us from childhood.