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From Warriors to Servants: Romans 13 and a Theology of Policing

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  19 November 2025

Barbara E. Armacost*
Affiliation:
University of Virginia School of Law, USA
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Abstract

In 1963, Martin Luther King, Jr. wrote Letter from Birmingham Jail in response to white clergy members who had urged him to cease demonstrating against segregation laws, follow the standards of law and order, and pursue change through official governmental channels. These remonstrations mirror arguments invoked to delegitimize dissent and provide support for legal but immoral governmental policies such as American slavery, Nazi atrocities, and apartheid. At the heart of religious justifications for such arguments is Romans 13:1–7, which endorses human government as God ordained but can be interpreted to require unqualified obedience to law. It is also the go to passage used by Christians to describe the role and authority of police officers in their law enforcement capacity. The way Romans 13 has often been interpreted and applied, however, is exegetically and theologically problematic. Most importantly, the passage is not describing the role of individual police officers as is often argued, but rather the operation of human government as an institution. This flawed starting point has led to a cascade of other interpretive errors, which include describing police officers as agents of God’s wrath and delegitimizing dissent against unjust laws. It also promotes some of the most pernicious features of American law enforcement, including the alienating idea of police as the thin blue line, the we-they mentality that demeans those being policed, the use of warrior to describe the policing role, the militarization of law enforcement, and the systemic racism that plagues U.S. policing. In this article, the author offers a more exegetically and theologically accurate reading of Romans 13, with very different implications for role of law enforcement, and gestures toward a much-needed Christian theology of policing.

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Symposium: Law, Christianity, and Racial Justice: Shaping the Future
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In 1963, Martin Luther King, Jr. was arrested for his involvement in peaceful protests against segregation in Birmingham, Alabama. While he was in prison, eight white members of the local clergy published an open letter entitled “An Appeal for Law and Order and Common Sense,” denouncing the marches and urging all parties to “pursue their convictions in the courts, and in the meantime peacefully abide by the decisions of these same courts.”Footnote 1 Three months later, the same group published a second letter, specifically addressing King’s civil rights activity. In that letter the clergy again urged that, “When rights are consistently denied, a cause should be pressed in the courts and in negotiations among local leaders and not in the streets.” They remonstrated, “We appeal to both our white and Negro citizenry to observe the principles of law and order and common sense.”Footnote 2 While not explicit, these arguments reflect the law-and-order language of Romans 13:1b–2, which argues, “The authorities that exist have been established by God” and thus anyone who “rebels against the authority is rebelling against what God has instituted.”

King reprimanded his fellow clergy for being more concerned about law and order than with the demands of justice. He wrote:

You express a great deal of anxiety over our willingness to break laws. This is certainly a legitimate concern. … [But] there are two types of laws: There are just laws, and there are unjust laws… A just law is a man-made code that squares with the moral law, or the law of God. An unjust law is a code that is out of harmony with the moral law… Any law that degrades human personality is unjust. All segregation statutes are unjust because segregation distorts the soul and damages the personality. It gives the segregator a false sense of superiority and the segregated a false sense of inferiority … So, segregation is not only politically, economically, and sociologically unsound, but it is morally wrong and sinful.Footnote 3

King also reprimanded the letter writers for “warmly commend[ing] the Birmingham police force for keeping ‘order’ and ‘preventing violence.’” This alleged law and order, King reminded them, involved brutal law enforcement tactics, including the use of “angry violent dogs” who bit protestors; “ugly inhumane treatment” of Black arrestees; pushing, cursing, slapping, and kicking women, old men, and children; and refusing food to arrestees because they wanted to sing a grace together. He chided the clergy for “deplor[ing] the demonstrations” but not expressing “a similar concern for the conditions”—the ugly history of racial injustice, police brutality, and unsolved bombings of Black homes and churches—that had “brought the demonstrations into being.”Footnote 4

In a 2018 speech to law enforcement officers in Fort Wayne, Indiana, then attorney general Jeff Sessions employed an argument that was strikingly similar to the clergy remonstrations in Birmingham. Speaking in support of the Trump administration’s policy of separating migrant children from their parents at the U.S. border, Sessions declared, “I would cite you the Apostle Paul and his clear and wise command in Romans 13, to submit to the laws of the government because God has ordained them for the purpose of order. Order and lawful processes are good in themselves. Consistent and fair application of the law is in itself a good and moral thing.”Footnote 5 Sessions made clear that his law-and-order message was designed to appeal to evangelical supporters, some of whom had criticized the policy of separating children that may have resulted in as many as three thousand family separations.Footnote 6

Over the course of history, arguments that pit law and order against such law-breaking dissent repeatedly have been employed to justify evil government policies, including American slavery, Nazi Germany’s oppression and murder of Jews, and apartheid in South Africa. Significantly, these kinds of arguments often call upon the machinery of law enforcement to enforce the dominance of powerful elites and majorities over oppressed people groups, sometimes defined by race. Not all such arguments are religion-based. In many contexts, individuals have defended their immoral or unethical actions by claiming that they were just following orders or just following the law.Footnote 7 But the Birmingham clergy’s criticism of King’s civil disobedience and Session’s denunciation of protests against allegedly legal immigration policies reflect a historical pattern of explicitly religious arguments enlisted to defend law enforcement actions against morally grounded law breaking.

At the heart of these religious justifications is Romans 13:1–7, the passage that was invoked by Sessions and reflected in remonstrations against Martin Luther King, Jr. by members of the clergy:

Everyone must submit himself to the governing authorities, for there is no authority except that which God has established. The authorities that exist have been established by God. (2) Consequently, he who rebels against the authority is rebelling against what God has instituted, and those who do will bring judgment on themselves. (3) For rulers hold no terror for those who do right, but for those who do wrong. Do you want to be free from fear of the one in authority? Then do what is right and he will commend you. (4) For he is God’s servant to do you good. But if you do wrong, be afraid, for he does not bear the sword for nothing. He is God’s servant, an agent of wrath to bring punishment on the wrongdoer. (5) Therefore, it is necessary to submit to the authorities, not only because of possible punishment but also because of conscience. (6) This is also why you pay taxes, for the authorities are God’s servants, who give their full time to governing. (7) Give everyone what you owe him. If you owe taxes, pay taxes, if revenue, then revenue, if respect, the respect; if honor, then honor.Footnote 8

In addition to its use in larger political movements, this text has also become one of the go-to passages for some ChristiansFootnote 9 seeking to articulate the role of police officers, define the scope of the obligation to submit, and wrestle with the legitimacy of civil disobedience.

The way Roman’s 13 is sometimes (or often) interpreted as applicable to ordinary policing, however, is exegetically and theologically problematic. Most importantly, the passage is not describing the role of individual police officers as is often argued, but the role of divinely appointed human government in which police play a limited role. Adopting this flawed application has led to a cascade of other interpretive errors, including the description of police officers as agents of God’s wrath and the use of Romans 13 to forbid dissent or criticism of laws or legal regimes. In the American context these interpretations have promoted some of the very features of law enforcement that police experts find most destructive and in need of reform: the alienating idea of police as the thin blue line that stands between order and chaos (referring to the blue color of the police uniform); the we-they mentality that demeans those being policed; the use of warrior to describe the policing role; the militarization of law enforcement; and the systemic racism that continues to plague U.S. policing.

A misguided reading and application of Romans 13 has led to these results. I offer, instead, a different, and I believe more exegetically and theologically accurate reading of Romans 13 with very different implications for the nature of law enforcement and the role of police on the ground. I do not purport to offer a full-fledged theology of policing (which is greatly needed). I do not discuss all relevant scriptural passages and theological literatures that would be germane to a comprehensive theology of law enforcement. I do, however, gesture in that direction by addressing one of the key New Testament passages on the role of human government and one of the linchpins upon which a theology of policing would rest.

It is worth noting that very little attention has been devoted to the subject of law enforcement by Christian thinkers and ethicists. In his recent book surveying Christian ethical and theological scholarship, Tobias Winright concludes that apart from a small literature on policing and just war theory, there is virtually no developed theology of policing.Footnote 10 This is surprising given the “wealth of theological reflection on other life-and-death issues such as war, abortion, and euthanasia.”Footnote 11 Even Catholic social teaching has focused on war and self-defense by individuals or nations, but neglected to address the use of force by police.Footnote 12 The one “noteworthy exception” is Edward A. Malloy’s work, which advocates an “analogical analysis” that applies “just war theory” to police use of force.Footnote 13

Modern Policing and Its Critics

Romans 13:1–7 is the go-to passage for Christians seeking to articulate a theological perspective on law enforcement. Unfortunately, the reigning interpretation of this passage is theologically flawed in ways that perpetuate some of the most destructive features of policing. The erroneous interpretation plays into the dark side of the powerful organizational culture that largely determines the perspectives, values, and practices of police officers and their commanders.

The Organizational Culture of Policing

To understand policing, one must understand its unique organizational culture. While other organizations may also have distinct cultures—corporately held behavioral expectations and values that guide their actions—law enforcement has a particularly strong and determinative culture.Footnote 14 Police scholars agree that appreciating this distinctive and powerful culture is an indispensable key to understanding police officers’ inclinations, aspirations, motives, and the moral codes by which they judge themselves and interact with others.Footnote 15 It follows that engaging with police culture “is the principal mechanism of organizational control … over the substantive exercise of police discretion” and thus an indispensable tool for police reform.Footnote 16

The self-definition or “defining identity” embodied in police culture begins at the police academy, where—as one police chief framed it—a new recruit “leave[s] society behind to enter a profession that does more than give him a job, it defines who he is.”Footnote 17 The training that is most important for the formation of police culture, however, occurs on the job.Footnote 18 Policing is a “twenty-four-hour-a-day identity [that] generates powerfully distinctive ways of looking at the world, cognitive and behavioral responses which, when taken together, may be said to constitute a “working personality.”Footnote 19 The cultural self-definition of policing is exemplified by such terms of solidarity as the brotherhood in blue, the thin blue line, and the warrior. These terms correspond with ways of perceiving the world and patterns of action that characterize law enforcement.

A good starting point for unpacking the organizational culture of policing is to consider the kinds of work police do and how they (and we) understand their purpose and role. According to police scholar Egon Bittner, whose pioneering work continues to be cited by more recent police scholars,Footnote 20 the “core of the police role” is the capacity and authorization to use coercive force,Footnote 21 meaning, as Carl Klockars elaborates, “the application of physical strength for coercive purposes, including on occasions when the use of that strength is multiplied by the use of a weapon.”Footnote 22 In more recent scholarship, social scientists Jerome Skolnick and James Fyfe, who have studied policing in the United States, Europe and Asia, concluded that “the fundamental culture of policing” is similar everywhere because “the same features of the police role—danger, authority, and the mandate to use coercive force”—are always present.Footnote 23 These descriptions reflect three important features of police work and the policing role: the power to use coercion, the perceived (and often real) likelihood of danger, and the assumption of uncontestable authority. Footnote 24 As I argue below, while these features capture some of the intrinsic and necessary realities of policing, they also have a dark side, with collateral consequences that are unhealthy and destructive.

Police Culture and Coercive Power: Use (and Misuse)

The use of coercive (sometimes violent) force to compel people to comply with police orders is fundamental to the work and culture of policing. Indeed, policing may be understood as “a mechanism for the distribution of situationally justified force in society.”Footnote 25 Police officers are the ones to whom society has uniquely given the right to use, or threaten to use, coercive force.Footnote 26 “Whatever the substance of the task at hand,” writes Bittner, “whether it involves protection against an undesired imposition, caring for those who cannot care for themselves, attempting to solve a crime, helping to save a life, abating a nuisance, or settling an explosive dispute, police intervention means above all making use of the capacity and authority to overpower resistance.”Footnote 27 There are many contexts, moreover, in which most people would agree that police-enforced coercion is a societal good.Footnote 28

There is, of course a dark side to police coercive power. The most unrelenting scholarly and public criticism of policing is that too often police misuse the very power that defines their role. While the best available data shows that police use of force, especially their use of deadly force, is relatively rare,Footnote 29 these statistics mask important negative consequences resulting from uses of force.

In their comprehensive book evaluating police uses of force, police scholars Seth Stoughton, Jeffrey Noble, and Geoffrey Alpert argue that there are both philosophical and pragmatic reasons to worry about use of force by police. As a philosophical matter, they argue, a democratic society must maintain a careful balance between “basic commitments to individual freedom, liberty, security and autonomy,” and “society’s interest in order and security.” Understanding and properly evaluating police uses of force against citizens, and “properly maintaining the dynamic tension between security and liberty” is essential to the legitimacy of democratic government.Footnote 30

On the pragmatic side, while police uses of force are relatively infrequent compared to the total number of their interactions with the public, these small percentages mask large absolute numbers: thousands of community members suffer injury or death every year as a result of police applications of force. There are on average over sixty million police-civilian encounters per year, and if police use force only 1 percent of the time, that adds up to at least 600,000 uses of force every year; “more than one every minute for every hour in the day.”Footnote 31 Significantly, in the vast majority of these occasions when police have used force against suspects, they are doing so for reasons other than self-defense.Footnote 32

Moreover, it is well documented that police uses of force fall unequally on communities of color. Empirical evidence demonstrates that force of all kinds—stops, frisks, arrests, physical coercion—is employed disproportionately against individuals from racial minority groups.Footnote 33 In addition, there is some empirical evidence, though not conclusive, that compared to their representation in the general population, persons of color are disproportionately likely to encounter police force involving the discharge of a firearm.Footnote 34 These statistics are significant, not only because they underline long-standing racial concerns embedded in our nation’s history of inequality, but because of the pernicious effect that disproportionate uses of coercive force have on individuals in Black and Brown communities.Footnote 35

Use of force often leads to negative public attitudes toward policing,Footnote 36 especially in heavily policed, minority neighborhoods.Footnote 37 When people perceive that police force is being used unnecessarily, too frequently, or disproportionately they lose confidence and are less willing to cooperate, which makes law enforcement more difficult and communities less safe. It can also ignite long-standing community hostility, leading to violence against police, and boil over into civil unrest. Fully half of the deadliest riots that have occurred in the United States were prompted by real or perceived incidents of excessive force or police abuse in Black and Brown communities.Footnote 38

Police Culture and the Danger Narrative: Warrior Police and the Risk of Normalizing Violence

A second feature of police culture is the danger narrative: Police officers are taught in the academy and by supervisors and peers—and therefore come to believe—that every aspect of policing is extremely dangerous.Footnote 39 As one police officer explained, “You never know what is going to happen. The whole world can come to an end in your last few minutes of duty, right before you leave your watch.”Footnote 40 In order to deal with these dangers, officers are taught to adopt a “Warrior mindset” to “keep them safe by reminding them to be hypervigilant, and to avoid complacency while giving them the psychological conditioning they need to survive a life-and-death struggle.”Footnote 41

The danger police officers anticipate they might face on the street and the belief that they hold a “thin blue line” between order and disorder, makes police officers uncommonly attentive to any indication that violence or crime might be close at hand.Footnote 42 They are trained to be exceedingly attentive to potential threats and to treat every civilian encounter as a potential deadly force encounter.Footnote 43 To make the message “more visceral [police recruits] are shown gruesome videos of officers being killed in the line of duty because they failed to identify a threat or hesitated to use force to encounter that threat.”Footnote 44 As police scholar (and former police officer) Seth Stoughton has argued, “In most police shootings, officers don’t shoot out of anger or frustration or hatred. They shoot because they are afraid. And they are afraid because they are constantly barraged with the message that they should be afraid, that their survival depends on it.”Footnote 45

While particular policing contexts do pose serious threats to officer safety, empirical data shows that in most circumstances the danger narrative is greatly overblown.Footnote 46 On the one hand, danger to police officers cannot be discounted: over the past ten years, according to data collected by the FBI, an average of 51 officers per year were feloniously killed in the line of duty, and an average of 57,000 officers per year were assaulted (although 25 percent of these assaults did not result in any physical injuries.)Footnote 47 Still, on a percentage basis, according to the Bureau of Justice Statistics, out of the 63 million police interactions with civilians every year, officers were assaulted in only 0.09 percent of interactions, injured in some way in 0.02 percent of interactions, and feloniously killed in 0.00008 percent of interactions.Footnote 48

There is, moreover, a disturbingly dark side of the overblown danger narrative that inhabits police culture. It is embodied in the idea of police as warriors, which is one of the most enduring and highly venerated—but ultimately destructive concepts in modern policing.Footnote 49

As a self-definition, the warrior concept appeals to police officers because it describes a heroic figure who embodies the kinds of attributes that officers most respect and admire; qualities such as honor, duty, resolve, and the readiness to engage in “righteous violence.”Footnote 50 The warrior ideal helps police officers come to terms with the fact that they “see themselves as ‘good guys’ but their job requires they take actions that the laws and moral standards of a free society typically forbid.”Footnote 51 In line with the danger narrative police officers are told that failure to adopt the warrior mindset would be fatal.Footnote 52

Defined narrowly, as an attitude of mental tenacity, sharp-eyed attentiveness, and a commitment not to give up regardless of physical or mental difficulty, the warrior concept is hard to criticize. Unfortunately, despite its purported high ideals, this mentality has led to detrimental police conduct. Recall that the danger narrative embodied in the warrior mindset leads police to believe that they constantly inhabit an “intensely hostile world.”Footnote 53 They are taught to treat “every individual they interact with as an armed threat and every situation as a deadly force encounter.”Footnote 54 As a recent police training text puts it, “Remain humble and compassionate; be professional and courteous—and have a plan to kill everyone you meet.Footnote 55 That plan is essential, officers are told, because in every interaction the other person may have a plan to kill them. It is not surprising that the primary reaction to this training is fear, which often leads to poor tactical judgment and unnecessary, sometime lethal, uses of force.Footnote 56

In addition, the warrior concept perfectly captures and promotes the pernicious military culture that pervades modern U.S. policing. Over the past forty years, largely in connection with the so called drug war, police departments have acquired and now routinely use all manner of military equipment, including assault rifles, military Kevlar helmets, helicopters, tanks, Humvees, and other armored vehicles.Footnote 57 Today’s U.S. police departments habitually use SWAT teams in battle dress uniforms to conduct violent raids into private homes.Footnote 58 In short “police [officers] today are armed, dressed, trained and conditioned like soldiers.”Footnote 59

The negative behavioral consequences of the warrior mentality are easy to predict: The hypervigilance and elevated expectation of life-threatening danger make it much more likely that police officers will overreact to perceived risks. For example, one study of shootings in Los Angeles demonstrated that officers who shot suspects they thought were reaching for their waistbands were wrong two-thirds of the time: the suspects were unarmed.Footnote 60 As the study suggests, often officers are taught to pull the trigger even before the threat is manifesting itself, even though there may be (or there may have been) tactical options other than shooting.Footnote 61 Moreover, the military culture and the availability and use of military equipment and tactics makes police intervention that much more threatening and potentially lethal. In addition, the difficult balance between protecting police officers’ lives and protecting the lives of suspects is made more complicated by the fact that the people who police kill are disproportionately men of color.Footnote 62 The only way to address these negative consequences is to give police officers a more realistic conception of the threats they actually face, while exploring and teaching nonlethal techniques that could keep officers safe.Footnote 63

The aggressive policing associated with the warrior mentality has two other negative consequences. First, it undermines police-community relations and increases community conflict, which ultimately makes the community less safe. A police officer who has been told repeatedly that everyone with whom he potentially interacts is capable, and perhaps willing, to kill him is unlikely to exit his vehicle and interact with community members, at least not without using self-protective, likely aggressive actions.Footnote 64 Moreover, when an officer sets the tone of an encounter with an aggressive command presence, or a SWAT team arrives in battle dress,Footnote 65 it “set[s] the stage for a negative response or a violent interaction” that may have been avoidable.Footnote 66

In addition, the warrior mentality can promote rationalization of misconduct and illegal behavior. Police officers who identify as warriors are more likely to argue that the ends—catching bad people—justify the means, even if illegal, unprofessional, harmful, or unethical. They may perceive legal rules that constrain their conduct as illegitimate, and violations of such rules as a “morally appropriate, and sometimes necessary component of policing.”Footnote 67 This may contribute to a culture in which officers tend to tolerate, implicitly sanction, or explicitly defend law breaking by fellow officers and discount the mistreatment of criminal suspects.Footnote 68 Relatedly, this way of thinking enables officers to reject external criticism by delegitimizing any rules they have broken as frustrating the law enforcement mission.Footnote 69

Police Culture and Authority: Demonizing the “Bad Guys”

A third feature of police culture is that police officers view themselves as having incontestable authority to apply coercive power and to brook no opposition. Officers are taught that for their own safety they must take control of every situation—to display an authoritative command presence—and respond with immediate force if a civilian does not comply with an officer’s order.Footnote 70 From the officer’s perspective, he is an authority figure who deserves to be respected and obeyed. Indeed, disrespect is viewed as equivalent to resistance and thus must be countered and rectified:Footnote 71 In this way of thinking, police view themselves as a thin blue line, a “moral force, protecting innocent and productive members of the public against those who would brutalize and victimize ordinary decent citizens”Footnote 72 As a result, police officers tend to distance themselves from the community, thinking of themselves as members of “an elite crime-fighting profession.”Footnote 73

The dark side of the “thin blue line” way of thinking is that it may lead police officers too readily to view those being policed as dangerous criminals or as the “enemy.”Footnote 74 One police manual instructs police to look for the unusual, providing a list of the kinds of persons and conditions to be particularly wary of.Footnote 75 Although such stereotypes serve as cognitive shortcuts that enable police officers to make rapid decisions in ambiguous and uncertain circumstances,Footnote 76 unfortunately, these stereotypes often reflect officers’ own social and cultural biases rather than actual evidence of criminal conduct.Footnote 77 For example, police recruits arrive at the academy with knowledge of the pervasive stereotypes that conflate race with criminality, and they are socialized to employ these stereotypes on the street.Footnote 78 Studies show that certain racial groups, in particular Black men, are assumed to be more dangerous or more likely to be involved in criminal conductFootnote 79 This assumption has serious consequences for policing. Because police officers use more force when they perceive a greater threat, this (sometimes unconscious) bias can lead them to react more aggressively when encountering a Black man than they would if encountering a white man under similar circumstances.Footnote 80 They may also employ stereotypes based on misunderstandings of unfamiliar but ordinary conduct in a community that is not their own.Footnote 81

Moreover, stereotypes of criminality are not limited to one racialized category. Mexican-origin populations may be associated with biological inferiority and criminally violent conduct,Footnote 82 undocumented immigrants are automatically deemed likely to be dangerous, and “[p]opular images of black and brown women—welfare queen, ghetto mama, drug user or gang banger—highlight [their] presumed criminal propensity.”Footnote 83

Police officers’ heightened belief in the importance of authority also leads to an elevated view of their own obligations and constraints as persons under authority: “A police officer is both an autonomous official who responds to the needs of a community as he deems necessary … and a bureaucrat subject to the coercive inclinations of administrators.”Footnote 84 As a result, police officers tend to explain and justify any harms they cause in interactions with subjects in role based terms, as not their fault but as simply “part of the job.”Footnote 85 They are also less likely to criticize or intervene if they see their colleagues engaging in conduct they find personally objectionable.Footnote 86 Moreover, in situations involving conflict between law enforcement and the community police officers will tend to err on the side of law and order over law-breaking protest or civil disobedience.

The (Racist) History of U.S. Policing: Why It Matters

A final, and vital, determinant of police organizational culture is the unique history of policing in the United States, including the historical circumstances that policing was designed to address. Law enforcement in the United States has largely been shaped in reaction to various crises: slavery and Reconstruction, the increased crime and disorder accompanying urbanization in the nineteenth century, the social unrest resulting from an influx of immigrants into population centers in the late nineteenth and early twentieth century, civil rights protests in the 1960s, the terrorist attack on New York City on 9/11, and enforcement of COVID restrictions in 2020–2022. In addition, while the formal origin of modern U.S. policing is often traced back to the formation of the New York Police Department (1844), which was modeled after London’s Metropolitan Police, the earliest version of modern policing was the slave patrols of the late 1600s. This neglected slave history, and the formative historical events described below, are essential to understanding police culture today.

The History of U.S. Policing and Its Slave Patrol Legacy

By the 1640s, most American settlements had adopted a British-style, semi-structured system of law enforcement involving a sheriff, a constable, and a citizen-based watch group that patrolled the town.Footnote 87 In the mid-1800s in the North, when this informal system proved inadequate to address the forces of increased population, urbanization, immigration, and racial conflict in large cities such as New York, Boston, and Philadelphia, American leaders turned to London’s Metropolitan Police as a model.Footnote 88 In 1844, New York City created the first “unified prevention-oriented” police department fashioned after London’s department. Other cities followed, including New Orleans and Cincinnati in 1852, Boston and Philadelphia in 1854, and Chicago and Milwaukee in 1855. By the end of last quarter of the nineteenth century, all major cities in the United States had police departments.Footnote 89

While many histories of modern policing point to this Northern history, in the South organized policing arose as early as the 1690s in the form of slave patrols. Unlike the earliest police agencies in the North, which were tasked primarily with addressing public disorder, the Southern slave patrols were engaged in targeted law enforcement.Footnote 90 A significant part of their work was to enforce the “black codes,” a list of criminal violations directly supporting slavery.Footnote 91 Slave patrols were launched in South Carolina in the 1690s, followed soon after by patrols in Tennessee, Kentucky, North Carolina, Georgia, and Mississippi.Footnote 92 Their tactics were brutal and violent, designed to “unleash[] terror” and deter potential slave revolts.Footnote 93

Significantly, “[s]ome of these slave patrols functioned much like modern-day departments, wearing uniforms, carrying guns, and walking a beat.”Footnote 94 This has led historian Marvin Dulaney to label them as “the first distinctly American police system.”Footnote 95 Indeed, by 1837—before the rise of modern policing in the North—the largest law enforcement organization in America was the hundred-person slave patrol in Charleston, South Carolina.Footnote 96 In Richmond, Raleigh, Charleston, and New Orleans, slave patrols eventually evolved into permanent police forces.Footnote 97

After the Civil War, the leadership of these reorganized police departments was repopulated by former members of the Confederate army, who brought with them their prewar values of white superiority and racism.Footnote 98 The Reconstruction Era saw unparalleled lynchings and other violence against Black people by mobs, in which police colluded, sometimes participating in the killings.

In the late nineteenth and early twentieth century South, black codes were replaced by Jim Crow laws; laws (and policies) that enforced racial segregation by dictating everything from where newly freed Black Americans could work, what occupations they could take up, where they could live and travel, and under what conditions they could vote.Footnote 99 In addition to enforcing Jim Crow laws, the new police departments also “funneled Black people into chain gangs and the convict lease system, which, after slavery, became newly important forms of white control.”Footnote 100 During the Reconstruction and Jim Crow eras, police departments were tasked to maintain racial order and officers became the de facto upholders of white supremacy in their communities.Footnote 101

The Southern origins of policing left an indelible mark on police culture.Footnote 102 As one police historian framed it, “the brutal nature of slave patrols against Blacks and the assumption that all Blacks off their owner’s property were up to no good directly influenced the behavior of [Southern] police departments, many of which were organized during the time of the slave patrols. The violent racism of slave patrols and the separate and unequal treatment of Blacks through slave codes became institutionalized in Southern policing.”Footnote 103

Southern police departments also helped to transform the white supremacy of slavery, Reconstruction, and Jim Crow into assumptions about Black criminality.Footnote 104 “By making African American predators the new face of public disorder and the new focus of the beefed-up criminal justice system, city officials pandered to jittery voters, affirmed their commitment to white supremacy, and demonstrated their crime-fighting zeal.”Footnote 105

This pattern of using police to target and control Black persons continued through the twentieth century, and not only in the South. In a historical review, Elizabeth Hinton and DeAnze Cook assert that during the Civil Rights era, police targeted “protestors, black power militants, and urban activists dubbed by authorities as domestic insurgents.”Footnote 106 They justified aggressive policing and surveillance of “‘high risk’ low income” Black communities by citing media and governmental reports of mass protests, increased crime, and violence.Footnote 107 The policing of the Civil Rights era set the stage for the implementation of proactive policing strategies that converged on “high risk” neighborhoods and led to “community-based policing experiments and crime prevention tactics.”Footnote 108 The “War on Gangs” during the Clinton administration and the “Wars on Drugs and Crime” declared by the Nixon administration and continuing through the Obama and George W. Bush administrations and beyond simply consolidated the objectives of the earlier eras.Footnote 109 Hinton and Cook conclude that, “it is impossible to disentangle institutional racism in America—past and present—from the simultaneous development of the nation’s criminal legal system” and its roots in the historical use of police as a means of social control in Black communities.Footnote 110

In light of this history, many scholars draw an unswerving line between early slave patrols and today’s racialized policing practices. As Bryan Stevenson puts it, “The presumptive identity of black men as ‘slaves’ evolved into the presumptive identity of ‘criminal,’ and we have yet to fully recover from this historical frame.”Footnote 111

Some contemporary police leaders recognize that acknowledging this history is crucial for building trust between law enforcement and the Black community today. While serving as Stockton’s police chief, Eric Jones said in a presentation to the Progressive Community Church of Stockton in July 2016, “There was a time where police [were] dispatched to keep lynchings ‘civil’… Now, I didn’t do that. These officers didn’t do that. But the badge we wear still does carry the burden, and we need to at least understand why those issues are deep-rooted in a lot of our communities.”Footnote 112

In their in-depth historical account of policing, scholars Robert Wadman and William Allison conclude that in the United States, police have been influenced in at least three critical ways by the Southern police experience. First, slave patrols were the model for the modern police function of patrolling as a technique for crime prevention. Second, the Southern commitment to state’s rights and the suspicion of central authority is reflected in modern policing’s dedication to local control. Third, the almost unlimited discretion that characterized the slave patrols continues to characterize modern policing. This lack of supervision has led to the continuation of race-based abuse of power.Footnote 113 In short, while racism in policing has multiple causes, “The influence of slave patrols on police departments in the South is a cornerstone of the institutional racism that continues to plague American police departments.”Footnote 114

Policing for the Status Quo

As described above, one of the historical functions of Southern policing was to enforce racial boundaries. Speaking more broadly, however, throughout U.S. history, policing has been a method of social control, first of Black people and later of various disfavored minorities.Footnote 115 Police power has been used to control Blacks during and after slavery; newly arrived immigrants throughout the nineteenth and twentieth centuries; Mexican immigrants (who were brutalized by the Texas Rangers in the West); civil rights demonstrators in the 1960s and 1970s; hippies, sexual minorities, and homeless people; and people of assumed Arab origin after 9/11.Footnote 116 In short, a prominent feature of U.S. policing has been its focus on protecting and maintaining the laws and social mores established by the dominant culture.

This has had two salient effects. First, for better or for worse, U.S. policing tends to be about enforcing the status quo and preventing challenges to whatever current societal traditions and mores exist. Second, and relatedly, law enforcement is often a systemic method of social control. Predictably, police officers target people who are in violation of then-current societal customs, values, and practices. In other words, policing is used against individuals or groups who are “out of place” or out of step with the prevailing culture.Footnote 117 Moreover, police officers have not elected to take on this task on their own. Throughout history when police have targeted so-called undesirables, they have been doing exactly what majorities—through laws, societal norms, and informal attitudes and prejudices—have implicitly directed them to do.

Racialized Policing Today

The brief history recounted above, of policing plagued by nativism (that is, discrimination against immigrants) and racism, finds multiple contemporary expressions. For example, what is called “quality of life” policing (also called “broken windows,” “order-maintenance” or “zero tolerance” policing) has led to targeting of poor, socially disadvantaged minority neighborhoods.Footnote 118 “Stop and frisk,” which allows police officers to stop, question, and frisk suspects on a very low bar of suspicion, has led to alarming and pervasive levels of racial targeting or profiling.Footnote 119 “Hot spot policing,” which uses algorithms to position police officers in locations where crime is most likely to occur, results in racialized policing because the algorithms themselves are based on racially biased police records.Footnote 120 Community policing, which is often promoted as a solution to racialized policing by inviting community members to partner with police in crime control, leaves police with the power to define the community. This invites them to exclude disfavored groups and create an “occupying force” that surveils residents rather than protecting them.Footnote 121

The legacy of our racist history is apparent in multiple studies demonstrating racially skewed law enforcement patterns. For example, based on a 2020 analysis of a dataset of nearly 100 million traffic stops, researchers at Stanford University determined that police traffic stops and decisions to search “suffer from persistent racial bias.”Footnote 122 A lawsuit alleging racial discrimination against the New York police showed that in 2009, Blacks and Latinos were nine times as likely to be stopped by police than were whites, but once stopped were no more likely to be arrested and charged.Footnote 123

Blacks are also more than twice as likely to be arrested as whites, a statistic that is not explained by levels of offending.Footnote 124 In 2016, approximately 27 percent of all individuals arrested in the United States were Black Americans, double African American’s percentage of the population.Footnote 125 In a 2021 study, The Sentencing Project found that “Black Americans are incarcerated in state prisons at nearly 5 times the rate of white Americans.”Footnote 126 A 2020 Bureau of Justice Statistics report notes that Blacks and Hispanics are more likely to be the subject of violence during an arrest than are white arresteesFootnote 127 and more likely to be convicted than are whites.Footnote 128 According to a 2023 report by The Sentencing Project, one in five Black men born in 2001 will be incarcerated.Footnote 129

What should be clear is that the recalcitrant racial and ethnic disparities that continue to plague U.S. policing cannot be understood without a deep appreciation of its origins in the slave patrols of the South and the historical role of law enforcement in enforcing the power of the majority and maintaining the status quo.

Romans 13, Law and Order, and Evangelical Views of Policing: Some Historical Highlights

Over the history of modern policing, some evangelicals and other Christians have embraced a mistaken theological conception of law enforcement that has played into the destructive features of police culture described above. In the account that follows, I do not purport to give a comprehensive historical account of evangelical or Christian thought on this topic,Footnote 130 nor indeed to use the historic method. My limited purpose is to demonstrate how one important group of Christian adherentsFootnote 131—schooled by churches, pastors, religious leaders, spiritual support groups, and religious publications—came to adopt certain misguided theological understandings about law enforcement and promote them in their spheres of influence.

The key theological basis for these views is a particular reading of Romans 13:1–7, which is (and has been) the “go-to biblical reference” cited by some Christians to justify the power and scope of policing.Footnote 132 This is the passage that was cited by former attorney general Jeff Sessions in his immigration speech: “Everyone must submit himself to the governing authorities, for there is no authority except that which God has established. … [H]e who rebels against the authority is rebelling against what God has instituted, and those who do will bring judgment on themselves … For [the one in authority] is God’s servant to do you good. But if you do wrong, be afraid, for he does not bear the sword for nothing. He is God’s servant, an agent of wrath to bring punishment on the wrongdoer.Footnote 133

The key take-away that has been drawn from these verses is that law enforcement officers are not merely human “governing authorities” but are called by God to carry out divine judgment on wrongdoers. It follows that obedience is mandatory, as resisting police authority is resisting God.Footnote 134 According to historian Aaron Griffith, Christian conceptions of policing range across a spectrum, but the “punitive law and order” trope, based largely on Romans 13, is one of the most dominant threads.Footnote 135

From Missionaries to Enforcers of Law and Order

Beginning in the mid-nineteenth century and continuing to the present, Christians, and evangelicals in particular, have had significant involvement with law enforcement.Footnote 136 Early on, American evangelicals modeled their involvement on the work of the Christian Police Association, a ministry to police officers founded in London in 1883. This group established more than 120 chapters all over Europe and the United States. Evangelicals involved in the ministry praised police and anti-crime efforts as “sacred.”Footnote 137 In this period, they conceived of police as “missionaries” who, like foreign missionaries bringing the gospel to people across the world, could bring order and safety to crime-ridden cities.Footnote 138

It was in the 1960s—with the convergence of a newly energized evangelical movement and increased concerns about criminal justice—that a Christian law-and-order view of policing first took shape. In the aftermath of the civil rights protests and the urban riots in Watts, Los Angeles, and other cities, leading Christian figures and institutions, like Billy Graham and the National Association of Evangelicals—an association of Christian denominations, churches, and organizations—began to speak to the need for law and order and the important role of police in securing it. While most mainstream Christian leaders welcomed gains in racial equality, such as the Civil Rights Act of 1964 and the Voting Rights Act of 1965, they were vocal critics of the demonstrations and civil disobedience that had made these gains possible.

For example, the prominent evangelical magazine Christianity Today lamented the “basic sinfulness of the Freedom Riders’ riots” equating their tactics with “mob pressures” and complaining that they “exhibit[] a distrust of democratic processes of law” using “pressures that violate constitutional procedures” with destructive “long term implications for America and its people.”Footnote 139 Evangelical missionary L. Nelson Bell, an avid segregationist, wrote in United Evangelical Action, the official publication of the National Association of Evangelicals, that civil rights demonstrators were like “hundreds of yelling children” who had “violated human rights.”Footnote 140 He praised the “restraint exercised by many of the police who were charged with enforcing law and order … in the face of the demonstrations.”Footnote 141 In his regular column in Christianity Today, where Bell served as the first executive editor, he regularly assailed church denominations that offer “support of individuals and movements that are challenging constitutional procedures and encouraging a spirit of rebellion and anarchy.”Footnote 142

In 1966, the National Association of Evangelicals—whose membership at the time included some thirty-two denominations representing more than 1.5 million Christians—passed the following resolution: “We deplore the un-American mood which has invaded our society which demonstrates itself as godless, revolutionary and disloyal to the government … We commend our law enforcement agencies who seek to fulfill their divinely endowed function of maintaining peace and safety and offer our assistance and cooperation in every way consistent with Christian principles.”Footnote 143 Perhaps most pointedly, Samuel H. Sutherland, the president of the Bible Institute of Los Angeles, criticized the “anarchistic” views of civil rights leaders who claimed they had no obligation to obey unjust laws. In so doing, he said, these leaders had shirked the “principle of law and order” found in the Bible.Footnote 144

Over the course of his ministry, which spanned the chaos of the civil rights movement, Reverand Billy Graham often weighed in on the increase in crime and the need to maintain law and order. Although his early ministry efforts were wholly focused on personal spiritual change as the solution to crime, he eventually became the new face of the Christian law-and-order movement.Footnote 145 He was not the only Christian expressing concern about crime in this postwar era, but as one of the “most admired and popular people in America,” he brought the law-and-order message into the mainstream and spoke in a way that linked “law and order, the quelling of social disruption and lawlessness” with the evangelical gospel.Footnote 146 “In this dangerous situation,” he preached, “we need tough new laws as well as a great spiritual awakening in America.”Footnote 147 Graham’s push for legislation had an impact: it was cited as authority by others who blamed the civil rights movement for provoking riots and called for more tough justice. The Watts riots provoked evangelical leaders to make punitive appeals, some of which directly targeted civil rights actions. At the same time, liberals like President Johnson sought to mobilize religious constituencies in an attack on urban unrest.Footnote 148

In his early ministry, Graham avoided addressing the larger issues of race—accepting segregated seating in his crusades—on the grounds that confronting racial segregation would detract from the primary goal of evangelism.Footnote 149 After the Supreme Court’s opinion in Brown v. Board Education Footnote 150 was handed down, however, Graham no longer permitted any form of forced segregation in his meetings, and he spoke about segregation as not only illegal but sinful. He worked to integrate his organization and began promoting racial reconciliation. During that same period, Christianity Today began putting more emphasis on racial issues, publishing multiple articles acknowledging racism and the need for racial healing and reconciliation.Footnote 151

Law-and-Order Politics

While the rhetoric of law and order was first mobilized in the 1950s and 1960s by politicians and law enforcement officials seeking to generate opposition to the Civil Rights movement—and influential religious leaders like Graham who promoted the message—it has continued to be a powerful theme in American politics. Importantly, although the law-and-order rhetoric has encompassed a wide range of harsh crime-fighting tactics, it often fails to distinguish between traditional crimes, riots, and the alleged law-breaking tactics of civil rights activists.

At least since the Nixon administration, the law-and-order message—with its implications for police as God’s law enforcers—has been used to woo conservative voters, especially evangelicals. Nixon linked the then rising crime rate directly to civil disobedience and “to the spread of the corrosive doctrine” that people have the right to decide “which laws to obey and when to disobey them.”Footnote 152 Nixon won nearly 70 percent of the Christian vote in his successful presidential bid in 1968. According to historian Randall Stephens, Nixon’s repeated calls for law and order “inspired the faithful.”Footnote 153 In his presidential bid, Ronald Reagan also pitched culturally conservative messages—including aggressive policing—in ways that rallied evangelicals. Jerry Falwell, founder of the Moral Majority, was so enthused by the Reagan-Bush ticket that he closed the 1984 Republican convention by calling the two “God’s instruments in rebuilding America.”Footnote 154 The law-and-order agenda included increased funding for police technology and personnel and controversial “quality of life” or “order maintenance” policing. Critics of order maintenance policing claim that it failed to reduce crime and led to abuses of judicial and police powers, including police brutality and racial targeting.Footnote 155

Following George H.W. Bush’s presidential victory in the 1988 election, the Washington Post reported that the candidate had garnered 80 percent of born-again white Protestants. Political journalist Albert Menendez wrote that “Bush’s landslide among evangelical Protestants kept Ohio, Pennsylvania, Illinois, and Missouri in the Republican column. It also accounted for his strong showing in the South.”Footnote 156 The Republican candidate had both opened up about his faith and talked tough on crime during the campaign.

Although Republicans, starting with George W. Bush, began moving slowly away from a hardline tough-on-crime stance, more recently, Donald Trump proudly sought to revive it, proclaiming himself in 2020 to be “your president of law and order.” He had used law-and-order rhetoric liberally throughout his 2016 campaign. The aggressive law enforcement message, along with Trump’s cultural conservativism (and many evangelicals’ distaste for Hilary Clinton), all played a role in garnering white evangelical support for the controversial Republican. Addressing crime and restoring law and order were key pillars of the 2024 Republican Party platform. During the 2024 presidential election, Trump promised to provide record funding to hire and support local police officers and criticized the Biden administration and the “radical left” for seeking to defund police departments. Drawn in part by the law-and-order messages, white evangelicals overwhelmingly supported Trump in 2024. As president, he has followed through on his law-and-order promise with a recent executive order, “Strengthening and Unleashing America’s Law Enforcement to Pursue Criminals and Protect Innocent Citizens.”Footnote 157

Police as Spiritual Warriors

The evangelical embrace of law-and-order themes inspired by Romans 13 is also reflected in Christian law enforcement trainings. The Billy Graham Evangelistic Association, one of the predominant Christian organizations providing spiritual support for police officers, implicitly invokes themes from this biblical text. At retreats sponsored by the Rapid Response Team of the Chaplin ministry, participants are told that they are uniquely called by God to facilitate God’s victory over powerful evil forces in the world. As a speaker at the 2015 National Law Enforcement Appreciation Retreat 2015 framed it, “[t]he Lord hasn’t called us to a job, He has called us to a ministry … we’re not cops, we are servants of God.”Footnote 158 Other speakers charged participating officers to remember that their “work is part of God’s victory against the forces of darkness and the chaotic principalities and powers of Satan.”Footnote 159 To leave their jobs as police officers was to turn away from God’s work in the world. Officers and their spouses were reminded that despite the pressures policing placed on marriage, officers should stick to their calling. He said, God has “chosen you and me … how dare you walk away.”Footnote 160

At some level the language cited above is unexceptionable. As I discuss later in this article, the concept of spiritual warfare is a common biblical theme. Believers are instructed to put on “the full armor of God” because the “struggle is not against flesh and blood but against … the spiritual forces of evil in the heavenly realms.”Footnote 161 Moreover, the idea that police officers, like believers in other vocations, are called to serve God in their work is also one that many Christians embrace.Footnote 162 The risk, however, is that when spiritual warfare language is aligned so directly with the policing vocation, the physical work of policing, which uniquely involves the use of coercive force, will itself be viewed as spiritual warfare. The idea that police officers are pushing back the darkness by physical means is a distortion of the concept of spiritual warfare, misreads Romans 13, and plays into the warrior narrative that has been so destructive to U.S. policing.

The attractiveness of the military language in Romans 13 may also explain why even some secular trainings have taken their cue from the text of Romans 13:4. For example, a 2017 Louisville Police Department firearms training, which officers are required to attend twice per year, ended with a slide quoting Romans 13:4 “superimposed over a ‘thin blue line’ flag—a black and white version of the American flag that features a solitary blue stripe.”Footnote 163 The thin blue line flag symbol has become associated with the Blue Lives Matter movement that emerged in 2014 as a militant rebuttal to the Black Lives Matter movement.Footnote 164 On the Louisville police slide, the words “an avenger who carries out God’s wrath” appeared in the middle of the flag, across the blue line.Footnote 165

Other religiously unaffiliated or secular police organizations have also invoked Romans 13 on their websites or training sessions. For example, Law Officers, a law enforcement website and media company with no explicit faith connection includes an educational video that identifies police officers as “Romans 13 Warriors.”Footnote 166 The International Law Enforcement Education and Trainers Association conference apparently offered a session at its 2016 annual conference that referenced the idea that police officers are God’s warriors.Footnote 167 An apparently secular security, training, and investigations company owned and operated by Frank Murphy is called Romans XIII, LLC.Footnote 168 Wright Shooting, a company that offers a wide range of multi-level firearms trainings quotes Romans 13:4 prominently on its website.Footnote 169

The danger posed by these narratives is that thinking of policing as a war and urging police to think of themselves as warriors perpetuates the dark side of police coercion. For example, police scholars worry that officers who think of themselves as, in the language of Romans 13:4, “agents of God’s wrath” may view violent coercion as essential and thus be less likely to critically assess whether uses of force were justified.Footnote 170

Police-Themed Bibles

A law-and-order reading of Romans 13 has also made its way into police-themed Bibles customized for law enforcement personnel. These Bibles feature devotional messages describing policing as a God-ordained vocation to carry out God’s judgment against crime and disorder. Many of them invoke the cultural esthetic of the thin blue line, with blue and black hues and police badges on their covers.

The Strength for the Street Bible published by the American Bible Society, which is in use across the country with thousands of copies distributed in twenty-five states, is the most dramatic: it is black with a thin blue line wrapped around the cover that intersects with an American flag on the back.Footnote 171 The Bible includes a Strength for the Street devotional called “Badge of Honor” that reminds police they have a call like no other, namely to “bring order out of chaos” and “use [their] position in the government to carry out [God’s] higher law.”Footnote 172 They are reminded of Paul’s words in Romans 13:1–2, that “the government exists through God’s authority and can be used for God’s purposes.” Christians are called to “respect [God’s] authorities” lest they “bring judgment” on themselves.Footnote 173 The devotional does go beyond the warrior mentality suggested by its cover to discuss some important topics, such as the meaning of justice, but the readings are superficial and do not wrestle with the hard questions raised by the vocation of policing.

The Law Enforcement Officer’s Bible, which includes guidance on such topics as prayer and promoting a healthy family life, urges police officers to cultivate a loving relationship with Jesus, who is “[t]he most pro-cop person in the universe.”Footnote 174 An introduction to the NIV Peacemakers New Testament challenges law enforcement officers to be “God’s servant warriors” who “hold terror for those who choose to pursue evil” and “stand in the gap between good and evil.”Footnote 175 So close is the association of Romans 13 with law enforcement that the Living Bible, a popular Christian paraphrase of the Bible, inserted policeman into verses 3 and 4 of Romans 13 so it reads, “For the policeman does not frighten people who are doing right; but those doing evil will always fear him … the policeman is sent by God to help you. But if you are doing something wrong, of course, you should be afraid, for he will have you punished.”Footnote 176

A popular devotional, On Spiritual Combat: 30 Missions for Victorious Warfare, offers readings on warrior-oriented topics such as “Identify the Adversary: Rulers of Darkness,” “The Armor of Light—God’s Plan for a Bulletproof Life,” “Take Up Your Shield, Warrior,” and “The Helmet (Blam!) of (Blam!) Salvation (Blam!).” It is promoted as a “spiritual warfare guide for military members, law enforcement officers and first responders [that] prepares their hearts and minds for battle, teaching them to identify, understand, and fight evil forces.” The flyleaf blurb announces, “With God, we will rise as virtuous Christian warriors who defend and protect the innocent, helpless, and oppressed.”Footnote 177

Some of these devotional materials also have teachings that reflect other important biblical values, for example, teachings on the imago Dei (image of God), the call to love what God loves (justice) and hate what God hates (injustice), seeing ones work as unto the Lord and not for human bosses, and loving one’s neighbor.Footnote 178 Unfortunately, these teachings are often read through the lens of the police officer as God’s warrior, which skews the message back to themes of wrath and punishment and away from themes of justice and restoration.

Christian Ministries to Police Officers: A Lost Opportunity

A number of Christian organizations have sought to provide much needed support for the personal and emotional needs of police officers. While this kind of spiritual nourishment is vital, the narrow focus of these ministries is a missed opportunity to help officers think more deeply about the theological implications of their work. In particular, they fail to assist police officers in wrestling with the hard ethical and moral issues entailed in law enforcement as a vocation.

To appreciate the primarily devotional focus of Christian ministries to police, consider one of the earliest efforts to offer spiritual support to law enforcement officers. In 1971, two police officers from Long Beach, California founded the Fellowship of Christian Policeman (now called the Fellowship of Christian Peace Officers), which currently has 260 chapters across the nation. One of the goals of Fellowship of Christian Police Officers is to help both the public and the officers themselves to see that “policing and Christianity are compatible, that one [can] be a tough cop and ‘still love and serve Christ.’”Footnote 179 According to its current website, the Fellowship of Christian Police Officers seeks to “inspire Christian world views, values and actions,” and offer “inspiration and tools” to enable police officers to “fulfill their God-given mission.”Footnote 180 Local chapters offer opportunities to “meet fellow Christian officers, explore God’s word together … give back to your community through service projects, and just generally have fun.”Footnote 181 The website provides a daily devotional, “The One Year Bible Through the Eyes of a Cop,” which provides bible readings and commentary under the categories “Dispatch (Assignment),” “Briefing,” “On the Street,” “Investigational Resources,” and “Officer Safety Principles.”Footnote 182

The Billy Graham Evangelical Association is at the forefront of current efforts to provide spiritual support for police officers. According to its website, the BGEA National Law Enforcement Ministry “strives to give officers the opportunity to build their spiritual fitness and encourage Christ-centered growth in their careers, marriages, and lives.Footnote 183 The ministry offers a range of training activities, including seminars, police retreats and chaplaincy training. A one-day seminar, “Sharing Hope in Crisis,” instructs first responders, church leaders, and counselors how to encourage and care for people who are suffering.

Also offered are a range of retreats for officers and their families, such as Law Enforcement Appreciation Retreats to encourage officers and their spouses through bible study and fellowship; Executive Law Enforcement Officer Retreats” to “discuss the unique issues faced by law enforcement leaders and insights from God’s Word;”Footnote 184 and Marriage Resiliency Retreats to “refresh officers and their spouses physically, emotionally, and spiritually in a stress-free peaceful environment” where they can “reconnect.”Footnote 185 The ministry’s initiatives also include a Critical Incident Response Ministry, which deploys trained law enforcement chaplains to locations where traumatic events have occurred (principally officer deaths)Footnote 186 and a Law Enforcement Chaplain Training Program, a scripture-based program that trains clergy to provide emotional and spiritual support to police officers.Footnote 187 Topics at the yearly Executive Law Enforcement Officer Retreats include personal stories and testimonies about God’s faithfulness in difficult circumstances, such as death, temptation, and loss, and sessions on the unique marriage and family issues faced by officers, spouses and children.

In sum, these ministries provide much-needed emotional and spiritual support for police officers and their families and lead them to consider what kind of a person a police officer ought to be. Missing from the agenda, however, are sessions designed to help police officers grapple with the theological implications of the work they do—issues such as the Godly use of power and coercive force, relating in love to disrespectful or violent civilians, working to unravel racial injustice, applying restorative justice, seeking peace in their communities, and respecting the image of God in themselves and those they serve.

Using Romans 13 and Law Enforcement to Perpetuate Immoral Laws

Many Christian leaders and institutions were horrified by former attorney general Jeff Sessions’s acontextual and simplistic proof texting of Romans 13 to support an immigration enforcement policy that virtually all Americans (including Sessions’s Christian listeners) deemed abhorrent.Footnote 188 Tragically, this is not the first time that a shallow reading of Romans 13:1–7 has been invoked to defend controversial or immoral policies and the police officers who enforce obedience.

For example, when the Fugitive Slave Act was passed in 1850, requiring all “good citizens” to aid police officials in capturing and returning escaped slaves, defenders of the slave system cited Romans 13. They argued that abolitionist arguments not only conflicted with statues legalizing slavery but were “opposed to the Divine Law.”Footnote 189 An article in the Richmond Daily Dispatch during that period proclaimed that there were “hundreds” of biblical passages “proving that slavery has the Divine sanction.” The article specifically cited Romans 13 as biblical evidence that citizens were obligated to support the law, including aiding governmental efforts to find and return fugitive slaves.Footnote 190 Three of the founding fathers of modern evangelicalism—Jonathan Edwards, John Wesley, and George Whitefield—affirmed the institution of slavery. Edwards and Whitefield owned slaves, and only John Wesley came to change his mind on the subject.Footnote 191 While some Christians were avid abolitionists, and, like William Wilberforce, campaigned tirelessly against slavery, others used the law-and order-message of Romans 13 to defend it.

History is full of examples of human willingness to facilitate the enforcement of unjust laws and policies in the name of law and order: German police officers (Gestapo) who enforced the anti-Jewish Nuremberg laws and many citizens who obeyed them defended their actions by saying they had just followed the law. Similarly, when activist Michael Cassidy met with then president of South Africa, P.W. Botha, in 1985 to protest the immorality of apartheid and ask him to dismantle it, Botha quoted Romans 13 to castigate Cassidy for resisting legally imposed segregation.Footnote 192 And, as noted above, the law-and-order message was invoked to resist Martin Luther King, Jr.’s civil rights actions in Birmingham.Footnote 193 As theologian John Fea sums it up, “[Romans 13] is invoked when you have an authoritative body—a government or agent of the government—who wants to put down dissent.”Footnote 194

If Romans 13 is read more accurately and in context it has something crucial to say about the important role of human government as an institution. Romans 13 does not, however, affirm the rightness of any particular government, and it permits (some would say compels) civil disobedience against immoral or unjust laws and policies. The tragic misinterpretations of Romans 13 that pervade these historical examples results from the serious error of proof-texting—using one isolated verse or passage to support a position or policy without taking account of context and the whole testimony of scripture. Both Jeff Sessions’s invocation of Romans 13:1–2 (“be subject to the governing authorities” and “whoever rebels … is rebelling against God”) and the Louisville Police Department’s invocation of Romans 13:4 (“they are God’s servants, agents of wrath”) illustrate these errors.

Failing to Acknowledge Systemic or Structural Racism

Theologian John Piper defines structural racism as “the cumulative effect of racist feelings, beliefs, and practices that become embodied and expressed” in policies, laws, norms, practices, assumptions, strategies, histories, and narratives, “which accordingly disadvantage the devalued race and privilege the valued race.”Footnote 195 At first glance, resistance to the idea that systemic racism exists may seem unrelated to Romans 13. But two assumptions drawn from a common understanding of this text have made it more difficult for readers to recognize or accept systemic explanations: that those who enforce the existing legal regime are God’s agents and, by implication, those who challenge existing legal rules are lawbreakers. These assumptions induce a reluctance to examine or challenge the legal status quo, including existing racist structures. Unfortunately, systemic racism does in fact exist and an adequate theology of policing must acknowledge and address it. Modern Christian reconciliation ministries exacerbate this blind spot by calling individuals to repentance, but failing to call groups, societies, and governments to see and address embedded racism.

In addition, sociologists Michael Emerson and Christian Smith have identified theological beliefs and commitments held by some evangelicals that may contribute to their resistance to the idea of systemic racism.Footnote 196 They argue that the way white evangelicals define their faith—as individualistic and relational—leads them to view racism as caused by individual prejudice resulting in poor relationships between racial groups. Evangelicals are individualistic in the belief that human beings are responsible and accountable for their actions, and that actions have consequences, either good or bad. They are relational in the belief that evangelicals are called to right relationships, individually, with God and with their fellow humans.

Emerson and Smith argue that these beliefs are linked to white evangelical failure to see and understand systemic causes for racism: A common view is that racism results because individuals act sinfully—for example, they are bigoted, prejudiced, angry, hateful, ignorant, lacking respect, or poor communicators—which causes unhealthy relationships between people of different races. In this way of thinking, society is merely an aggregation of individuals who act well or poorly, and “social change is achieved by personal change and renewal.”Footnote 197 In other words, the solution to social problems is not changing laws, but changing relationships, one person at a time. The strategy of facilitating personal repentance and reconciliation between individuals is characteristic of a number of recent efforts by Christians to address racism.Footnote 198 For some involved in these movements, the ultimate solution to the race problem is “people turning to Christianity, maturing in their faith, and loving their brothers and sisters.”Footnote 199 The key is to change people’s hearts, something that passing new laws and adopting new programs cannot do.

While individualistic reconciliation efforts can be credited for addressing important components that are missing from most legal and policy-oriented, structural solutions—such as personal responsibility, repentance and forgiveness, healing of relationships, and acknowledgement of the spiritual and moral aspects of racism—these ministries are ultimately insufficient. They are insufficient because the “making friends” solution does not work unless it includes not only interracial friendships but interracial networks. Footnote 200 More importantly, however, these ministries miss the mark because they fail to address the way social structures influence and constrain individuals.

Toward a Richer Theology of Policing

The beliefs and assumptions about law enforcement that were adopted by some evangelicals (as well as by Christians of other stripes) relied on a particular understanding of Romans 13:1-7 and the role of human government. This understanding of the passage led to certain affirmations or conclusions, including that human government is divinely ordained to dispense God’s wrath against wrongdoers, that law and order is inconsistent with extra-legal dissent, that police officers are God’s warriors in the battle against evil, and that racism is largely a relational problem

I challenge this reading of Romans 13:1–7 and some of the accompanying conclusions. A more accurate exegesis and interpretation of the passage takes into account that it is part of a letter addressed to a particular community in a particular historical moment. A fresh exegesis of the text reveals what it might have meant to its original audience.Footnote 201 It also presents an alternative interpretation and application of the passage and a corresponding critique of readings that have led to destructive downstream consequences as applied to law enforcement.

Romans 13:1–7: An Exegetical and Historical Introduction

It is widely agreed that the book of Romans was dictated by the Apostle Paul in the period immediately before he departed on his final journey to Jerusalem to deliver an offering from the Gentile churches.Footnote 202 There is a broad consensus that the letter was written in Corinth or its vicinity somewhere between 55 and 58 C.E.Footnote 203 Paul’s missionary work in that area had come to an end (15:19, 23), and he planned to stop in Jerusalem before he made his planned trip to Spain and a visit to Rome.Footnote 204 While older commentaries viewed Romans as merely a reservoir of theology, newer interpreters argue that the book is an “ambassadorial letter seeking support for [Paul’s] mission project in Spain.”Footnote 205 Beyond this practical focus, however, Romans is “by common consent [Paul’s] masterpiece,” offering as it does a “breathtaking theological and spiritual vision.”Footnote 206

The audience for Paul’s letter—the church in Rome—was made up of both Gentile and Jewish believers, who found themselves in “uneasy coexistence” resulting in large part from a series of historical events.Footnote 207 In the 40s C.E., a large proportion of Rome’s Jewish population had been expelled after rioting that may have resulted from Christian preaching in the Jewish community in that city.Footnote 208 When Nero became emperor in 54 C.E., he rescinded the decrees of expulsion. As the Jewish Christians began to return to Rome in the 50s, they encountered anti-Jewish sentiment from Roman citizens, which threatened to spill over to the Gentile believers.Footnote 209 Moreover, the returning Jewish believers faced the question of how to live together with their more numerous Gentile co-believers, who had very different cultural traditions and customs.Footnote 210 Paul’s message—that the gospel was “God’s power for salvation to the Jew first and also to the Greek—was designed to address these cultural and religious circumstances.Footnote 211 This historical situation forms the background for my exegesis of the letter.

While Romans 1–11 describes the nature and meaning of the covenant community into which God calls his people, Romans 12–16 describes what it means for this renewed community to live out the gospel in its inner and outward life. In Romans 13:1–7, Paul specifically addresses the issue of responsibility toward the authorities:

(1) Everyone must submit himself to the governing authorities, for there is no authority except that which God has established. The authorities that exist have been established by God. (2) Consequently, he who rebels against the authority is rebelling against what God has instituted, and those who do will bring judgment on themselves. (3) For rulers hold no terror for those who do right, but for those who do wrong. Do you want to be free from fear of the one in authority? Then do what is right and he will commend you. (4) For he is God’s servant to do you good. But if you do wrong, be afraid, for he does not bear the sword for nothing. He is God’s servant, an agent of wrath to bring punishment on the wrongdoer. (5) Therefore, it is necessary to submit to the authorities, not only because of possible punishment but also because of conscience. (6) This is also why you pay taxes, for the authorities are God’s servants, who give their full time to governing. (7) Give everyone what you owe him. If you owe taxes, pay taxes, if revenue, then revenue, if respect, the respect; if honor, then honor.Footnote 212

Romans 13 begins by urging “everyone” to “submit himself to the governing authorities.” In Koiné Greek, the language of the Roman Empire and the language in which the New Testament was written, the word psuche, translated in this version as “everyone,” means all souls; it is a term that is used to denote persons, with all their faculties.Footnote 213 Thus, the passage is addressed to a broad audience—of believers and nonbelievers alike.Footnote 214 Hypotassein, the admonition to “submit” is best understood as calling for willing or voluntary submission or subordination rather than obedience.Footnote 215 Koiné Greek has many other words that would have denoted obedience “in the sense of completely bending one’s will and one’s actions to the desires of another.”Footnote 216 By choosing the word meaning voluntary submission, Paul left room for the option of refusing to do what the government demands while remaining under its sovereignty and accepting the penalties it may impose.Footnote 217

This pattern is evident in Paul’s own interactions with his persecutors: For example, in Acts 23:1–5, Paul accuses the high priest of behaving illegally while sitting in judgment of others and declares God’s judgment on the priest’s illegal conduct. At the same time, he “regarded the governing authorities as having a rightful claim on [his] submission.”Footnote 218 The view that some level of discretion is built into the admonition to submit is supported by Paul’s prior instruction in Romans 12:1–2 that his hearers should not be “conformed to the pattern of this world” but have their minds “transformed” so that they can know “what God’s will is—his good, pleasing and perfect will.”Footnote 219

The language of Romans 13:6–7 also supports the view that some space for discretion or judgment is built into the call to submission. Paul’s readers are told that “the authorities are God’s servants, who give their full time to governing” and that they must “give everyone what [they] owe them.” John Yoder argues that the most defensible exegesis of the first phrase is that the governmental officers are servants of God “to the extent that they devote themselves” or “when they devote themselves” to their legitimate function.Footnote 220 In other words, he says, there are “criteria” by which the functioning government may be evaluated.Footnote 221 This is a view that is shared by other interpreters, who link verses 13:6–7 back to Romans 12:1–2.Footnote 222 The admonition to give what is “owed,” however, suggests again the difference between respecting the office while retaining the right or obligation to criticize the present office holder. Footnote 223

Paul goes on to assert, in multiple phrases, that the authorities that exist are divinely ordained: God has “established them (13:1);” those who rebel are “rebelling against what God has instituted (13:2);” the one who bears the sword is “God’s servant to do you good” (13:4); and the tax collectors are “God’s servants” (13:6). But who are these authorities, and what does Paul mean when he says that the civil authorities bearing the power to reward or punish are divinely ordained?

The Koiné Greek exousia (authorities) is best understood as duly constituted human authorities, meaning those who bear official authority as government officers of the state.Footnote 224 Romans 13:4–5, which refers to authorities who “bear the sword” and “bring punishment on the wrongdoer,” suggests that the specific governmental function Paul has in mind is law enforcement or governmental coercion in a broad sense.Footnote 225

The claim that these governmental authorities are divinely ordained is first made in verse 1, which literally reads that the authority is “by God.” This appears to be a formula for asserting that God is the source of all governmental power.Footnote 226 In other words, “whatever the Romans might claim as their authority, it really comes from the God of Jewish and Christian faith,” the God whose nature and work Paul has been describing in detail for twelve chapters.Footnote 227 This claim is closely in line with Jewish tradition, which commends reverence for rulers (Proverbs 24:21) and affirms that the power of all human rulers (even evil ones) comes from God, who uses them to do his bidding (2 Samuel 12:8; Proverbs 8:15–16: Jeremiah 27:5–6; Isaiah 45:1; Daniel 2:21, 2:37, 4:17, 4:25, 4:32, 5:21).Footnote 228

It is important to recognize both how radical and how practical Paul’s claim of divine authority for human rulers was. On the one hand, Paul’s statements totally upended the “specious claim in the civil cult that the empire had been given to Rome because of its superior virtue and piety. What remains is the simple fact of divine appointment, a matter justified not by the virtue of the appointee but by the mysterious will of God who elects who he will.”Footnote 229 Thus, “submission to the governmental authorities is … an expression of respect not for the authorities themselves but for the crucified deity who stands behind them.”Footnote 230 This is a radical, even revolutionary claim, which turns the passage into a “massive act of political cooptation. If the Roman authorities had understood this argument, it would have been viewed as thoroughly subversive.”Footnote 231

On the other hand, Paul’s admonition to submit to the governing authorities was both consistent with Jewish tradition and also immensely practical. Paul’s audience lived within the political structures of the Roman state, where the powers of government were exercised by a very few determined by birth, wealth, connection, or violent competition. “For the rest, the great majority, there was no political power and no hope of wielding it. … Little gatherings of Christians, living in the capital city without political power, dependent on the good will of the authorities, who could be very arbitrary and unpredictable in their rulings regarding minority ethnic or religious groups, were only acting prudently if they sought to avoid giving any cause for offense.”Footnote 232 Under the circumstances of ancient Rome, Paul could not have been expected to do anything but urge cooperation.

Moreover, in Jewish tradition, the reminder that political authority is ultimately from God had served as a comfort when the people were confronted with threats by the rulers of foreign nations (Daniel 4:17, 25, 32). Such affirmations would have been particularly powerful for Jews living in diaspora, often as slaves or immigrants.Footnote 233 The belief was not that this made them less vulnerable to the whims of rulers—history taught the opposite—but rather that rulers “who flouted their responsibility before God would come under the judgment sooner or later—as Nebuchadnezzar had found to his cost in the Daniel story” (See Daniel 4:13–25, 5:20).Footnote 234

It is also important to make clear what Paul is not saying, namely that God’s institution of human government writ large means that any specific government that exists is itself divinely sanctioned.Footnote 235 There is nothing in the text of Romans 13 that makes an “affirmative moral judgment about any particular government” or system.Footnote 236 What is ordained is the concept of legitimate government, which is part of the present world order instituted by God as part of his just and good creation. Paul knew from experience that governments can be more or less good or bad, but his point is that “government, qua government is intended by God” for the common good.Footnote 237 Romans 13 provides no invitation for the “positivistic view,” that “whatever is, is the will of God.”Footnote 238 Moreover, recall again the obligation in Romans 12:1–2 to seek to know God’s will by applying a transformed mind to make moral judgments. “[F]or Paul, being able to say ‘the existing powers are ordained by God’ while living under a system that, as he makes clear elsewhere, was bristling with potential or actual blasphemy and injustice, is part of Christian maturity—a part he urges his Roman readers to made their own.”Footnote 239

The function of the authorities referenced in Romans 13 is to reward good and punish wrongdoing. In a rhetorical conversation with a hypothetical questioner, Paul asks “Do you want to be free from fear of the one in authority?” His answer, “Then do what is right and he will commend you. For he is God’s servant to do you good. But if you do wrong, be afraid, for he does not bear the sword for nothing. He is God’s servant, an agent of wrath to bring punishment on the wrongdoer” (13:3–4). The obvious reaction of modern readers is to point out that many governments do not, in fact, reward good and punish evil. Some do exactly the opposite, including the authorities with which Paul himself had violently clashed. Reading the passage in its historical context, Paul cannot have forgotten his own persecution, and the persecution of other believers referenced throughout the book of Acts and in 2 Corinthians and 1 Thessalonians, letters written before his letter to the Romans.Footnote 240 Indeed, it was the government in Rome that had crucified Jesus, the author of the faith Paul proclaimed. So, what explains Paul’s description of the authorities as being on the side of good and against wrongdoing?

First, it is important to note the parallel between Romans 12:14–21 and Romans 13:3–4. In Romans 12, Paul addresses the issue of private vengeance against persecutors. He writes, “Bless those who persecute you … Do not repay anyone evil for evil … Do not take revenge, my friends, but leave room for God’s wrath, for it is written, ‘It is mine to avenge, I will repay’ (12:14a, 17a, 19). In Romans 13:4, Paul uses the same word, ekdikeo, literally calling the governmental official an avenger to bring about punishment on the wrongdoer. The upshot of this parallelism is that governmental officials are authorized to do, as God’s servants, what private citizens are not.Footnote 241 Combining this insight with Jewish wisdom requiring submission to rulers, Paul is articulating a Jewish, now Christian belief that ruling authorities are in place because God desires some level of justice and order in the world and is not willing to allow chaos to reign.Footnote 242 The alternative is personal revenge, the result that Romans 12:4 forbids. The importance of civil government “can easily be observed by thinking of situations where magistrates and judges are perceived as failing badly in their duty to keep this order; before too long, vigilante groups and lynch mobs arise, taking ‘justice’ into their own hands.”Footnote 243

So, when Paul writes that the governmental official is “God’s servant to do you good,” he is expressing the goal of civil authority, which is to serve the common good, by preserving order in the public square.Footnote 244 The duty of government can be described as falling into two primary categories: “(1) the promotion and protection of the peace of those who do good, and (2) the restraining and punishing of those who do evil.”Footnote 245 In verse 4, Paul introduces the sword as the symbol of penal authority, namely the power to coerce disobedient citizens to submit to the laws of society.Footnote 246 It has sometimes been argued that the sword connotes the legitimate infliction of capital punishment,Footnote 247 but this power seems to have been limited to provincial governors over Roman citizens.Footnote 248 More likely the reference to the sword connotes the law enforcement function of government and may be more of a symbol of authority than of a weapon: the carrying of weapons is one way that governmental authorities exercise dominion over their subjects by implicit threat of violence.Footnote 249

Verse 13:4 ends with the dramatic statement that the governmental authority that bears the sword is “God’s servant, an agent of wrath.” The more literal translation from the Greek is that the official is “an avenger of wrath” against the wrongdoer.Footnote 250 Thus, the civil authority “legitimates for those governmental ‘servants of God’ the task of vengeance that is forbidden to believers acting on their own behalf.”Footnote 251 The Koiné Greek orge (punishment) that appears in Romans 13:5 is the same word that is used to describe God’s wrath against humanity without the gospel in Romans 1:18 (“The wrath of God is being revealed from heaven against all the godlessness and wickedness of people, who suppress the truth by their wickedness.”)Footnote 252 and his eschatological wrath in Romans 12:9 (“It is mine to avenge; I will repay.”).Footnote 253 Similarly, in Romans 13:4, the civil authority’s punishment of the wrongdoer is an expression of divine wrath.Footnote 254 The target of wrath is the “one practicing the bad,” a common expression for an evil person, by which Paul impliedly meant criminal.Footnote 255 Modern police officers, both believers and nonbelievers, have sometimes wrongly described their individual policing role as one of dispensing God’s wrath against wrongdoers.

Romans 13 and Policing: A More Accurate Interpretation (and Theology)

I noted that Paul was speaking into a particular cultural situation and conducted my exegesis accordingly. But this raises an important question: Given its historical setting—a letter to a community of Jewish and Gentile believers living in ancient Rome—should we read the text narrowly as a statement about the Roman Empire at a particular point in history or more broadly, as a general statement about legitimate ruling authorities and citizens’ relationship to them?Footnote 256

While there is agreement that the historical context should be taken into account in the project of interpreting and applying the letter to the Romans, virtually no modern interpreter argues that it has no applicability beyond its immediate historical setting. As N.T. Wright points out, “There may well be elements of particular historical situations visible in the passage; but what Paul actually wrote looks very much like a general statement about ruling authorities, not a pragmatic assessment of Rome or the present situation.”Footnote 257

In line with Wright’s approach, I take seriously the historical circumstances in which the letter to the Romans was written but treat Paul’s words as a more comprehensive instruction about human government as a divinely ordained institution. Just as the exegetical project gives rise to contested readings, so the hermeneutical enterprise does not lead to uncontested results.Footnote 258 While there is no correct or uncontested reading of this or any biblical passage, I offer a well-reasoned and defensible interpretation and application.

Coercive Power: A Different View

As noted above, a prominent Christian view of law enforcement views police officers themselves as, in the words of Romans 13:4, “agents of God’s wrath to bring punishment on … wrong doer[s].” There is much to criticize in this claim.

First, as discussed above, interpreters read Romans 13:1–7 as describing civil government writ large in its law enforcement function, that is, in its official role as an institution to “bear the sword” and “bring punishment on the wrongdoer” (Romans 13:5). The passage is not addressed to police officers as individuals—as they do not singlehandedly accomplish this function—but to the coercive role of government qua government, namely all legitimate processes for pursuing law breakers and bringing them to justice. In other words, police offices as individuals are not “agents of wrath” who “bring punishment on the wrongdoer.” They are only a part—doubtless an important part—of the overall governmental penal system.

This conclusion makes the best sense of the parallelism between Romans 12:19 and Romans 13:3–4. Reading the two passages together, it can be seen that Paul instructs his readers as individuals not to pursue private vendettas against others. They are to trust the institution of human government, which God in his providence has put into place to punish those who wrong or harm them or others. Indeed, one of the primary purposes of human government is to keep the peace by providing an alternative to the natural human tendency to seek revenge against those perceived to have done us wrong.

Thus, when Romans 13:4 says “the authorities” are “Gods servants, agents of wrath to bring punishment to the wrongdoer,” it means the state is “charged with a function which has been explicitly forbidden” to individuals.Footnote 259 Moreover, when individual police officers and other officials act as part of the God-ordained penal system, it “legitimates for those governmental ‘agents of God’” their limited part in dispensing God’s “vengeance” against law breakers.Footnote 260 It is not the individual governmental officials who are authorized to bring wrath on wrongdoers, but only those officials acting as part of the governmental mechanism of law enforcement. Indeed, were the individual officers to view themselves as agents of wrath and act vengefully, they would risk violating Romans 12:19–20 by taking the law into their own hands. Civil government has been put into place to forbid vengeance not to promote it, even by governmental agents.

Second, it is clear from the context surrounding Romans 13:1–7 that police officers, as individuals, are called to sacrificial love even for their enemies. At its heart, Paul’s overriding message in Romans 12–13 focuses on the question, “What does love require?”Footnote 261 The word love appears seven times in these two chapters. Indeed, Romans 13:1–7 is sandwiched between two passages describing the demands of love. On one side is Romans 12:9, in which Paul declares that “Love must be sincere”—directing his hearers to hate what is evil and cling to what is good—and describes what sincere love looks like in practical terms.Footnote 262 Romans 13:1–7 appears directly after this call to self-sacrificial love, and then Romans 13:8 returns to the theme of love: “Let no debt remain outstanding, except the continuing debt to love one another, for whoever loves others has fulfilled the law. The commandments are summed up in this one command, ‘Love your neighbor as yourself.’”Footnote 263 Thus, while Romans 13:1–7 implicitly assumes that police officers will assist in carrying out the law enforcement role of government, the rest of chapters 12–13 calls individual police officers to a life of self-giving love toward both friends and enemies, including those against whom they wield governmental power.

Third, and importantly, unlike the earlier references to government officials as exousia (authorities), Romans 13:4 uses the word diakonos (servant, minister), when referring to the governmental official who is an “agent of God’s wrath to bring punishment on the wrongdoer.” The Greek word diakonos is the same word that is used to describe spiritual ministers, those with an important leadership role in the local churches.Footnote 264 It is significant that Paul did not choose one of the more prestigious titles used for public officials in Rome, preferring “one that had profound Christian resonance: even Christ in [Romans]15:8 is referred to as ‘diakonos.’”Footnote 265 Thus, rather than thinking of themselves primarily as agents of God’s wrath police officers would be better to think of themselves as ministers or servants who are called by God to participate in the law enforcement mechanism of God-ordained human government in the ultimate service of love.Footnote 266

Authority: From Law and Order to Justice

A second troubling interpretive issue is the historical use of Romans 13:1–7 to defend formally legal, but arguably immoral, governmental actions against dissent or civil disobedience. Proponents have quoted verses 1 and 2 for the argument that whatever government is in power (or whatever policy or law is in place) at the time is itself divinely ordained and to resist that authority or law is to rebel against what God has instituted.

The first response, as noted above, is that interpreters generally agree that Paul was affirming human government as a divinely ordained institution designed to serve the common good, but he was not claiming that the then current Roman government—or any specific future government—was itself God-ordained. This reading is consistent with Jewish tradition, which affirmed that even evil governments could be used by God to fulfill His own purposes. Thus, when Paul made the statement that government writ large is God ordained, he was approving an overall obligation to submit to human government without sanctioning the persecution that he himself had endured at the hands of the Roman government then in power.

Relatedly, a close reading of the text supports some scope for dissent. Recall that hypotassein (submit) in verse 1 is best translated as voluntary submission rather than obedience. This suggests one could, on moral grounds, refuse to submit to the government or its laws while accepting any penalties that resulted, as illustrated by Paul’s conduct in front of the high priest in Acts 23:1–5. Paul’s admonition to his hearers in Romans 12:1–2 that they must exercise judgment to seek to know and follow Gods “good, pleasing and perfect will” also supports this view. Finally, the admonition in Romans 13:7—to give “everyone what you owe him”—suggests that there are criteria by which individuals may evaluate a functioning government. This discussion underlines an important distinction between criticizing the policies of the office holder and respecting the office.

More specifically, in both his writings and his conduct, Paul makes clear that the power of the state ends where it requires disobedience to God and his commandments.Footnote 267 That Paul and other early Christians embraced this truth is evidenced by their relentless commitment to preaching and gathering for worship despite the constant persecution they endured from civil and religious authorities. These New Testament believers were carrying on a long tradition of civil disobedience: Jewish history is rife with accounts of God’s people disobeying the law to obey God. To name only the most famous examples: The Hebrew midwives disobeyed Pharoh’s order to kill all Jewish male babies; Shadrach, Meshach, and Abednego were thrown into a fiery furnace for disobeying King Nebuchadnezzar’s order to worship his gods and bow down before a golden image he had set up; and Daniel was thrown into the lions’ den for disobeying King Darius’s order that no one pray to any god but him.Footnote 268 God’s prophets also regularly challenged the authority of governmental leaders such as unjust rulers, corrupt judges, and crooked tax collectors. A full description of the robust concepts of biblical justice and righteousness is beyond the scope of this article but suffice to say that it provides multiple principles by which to judge human governments.

Martin Luther King, Jr. is in good company, then, when he argues that so-called law and order in Birmingham was, in fact, unjust. He pointed out that the law and order being commended by white clergy involved police officers using violence against peaceful marchers, subjecting jailed protestors to “ugly and inhumane treatment,” unleashing “angry and violent dogs,” and pushing, cursing, slapping, and kicking children, women, and old men on the street.Footnote 269 And all of this was in order to “preserve the evil system of segregation.” In short, while the government then in power was God ordained as an institution, it was not performing its proper function of rewarding good and punishing evil. In defending his actions, King reminded his hearers, “We can never forget that everything Hitler did in Germany was ‘legal’” and “it was ‘illegal’ to aid and comfort a Jew in Hitler’s Germany.”Footnote 270 King was deeply disappointed that “the church” in Birmingham, by which he meant the community of believers rather than any particular congregation, was so much on the sidelines that the unjust power structure was not “disturbed by the presence of the church” and instead was “consoled by the church’s often vocal sanction of things as they are.”Footnote 271

The discussion above leads to several conclusions with significant implications for policing: First, there is a distinction between criticizing the policies of the government and its officials and respecting the office. Police officers who recognize this distinction will be more likely to accept peaceful dissent and protect dissenters rather than demonizing, over-policing, or brutalizing them. Second, the broader story of the Bible makes clear that the power of the state is limited, and the respect and submission that a person owes the state “is never absolute, but at the most, partial and contingent.”Footnote 272 The state and its officials are only stewards with the limited and temporary role to restrain evil in a broken world. To be a steward is to carry out the purposes of the master, namely God, who ordained government for limited purposes. Police officers should see themselves as servants in the government’s mission, not as warriors single-handedly punishing evil doers. It bears notice that Jesus called himself a servant rather than the warrior his followers wished him to be. (Philippians 2:6–7)

Finally, along with the mandate to submit to civil authorities as God ordained, there is a correlative obligation to speak out, even to the extent of breaking the law, when the state uses its power to punish the good and reward what is evil or immoral. When Martin Luther King, Jr. called out segregation, when Michael Cassidy called out apartheid, and when Dietrich Bonhoeffer called out Hitler’s actions against Jews, disabled people, and other undesirables, they were on biblical solid ground.

In extreme circumstances, the obligation to resist evil could lead a law enforcement officer to refuse to enforce the law, as some did in the contexts described above. At the least, it should lead them to appreciate and respect that others may feel called to civil disobedience. Police officers may deem themselves obligated to enforce the law, even to arresting protestors, however they can do so without engaging in dismissive or abusive conduct toward dissenters.

Authority: Justice, Restoration, and the Image of God

A further problem with the way Romans 13 has been interpreted is a single-minded focus on the government’s punitive role, so called “retributive justice.” But Romans 13:4 explains that law enforcement officials are in place to execute justice in a more fulsome sense, that is, not only to punish wrongdoers but also “to do … good” toward those who do right or turn away from doing wrong. The Greek word agathos (good) means morally good or intrinsically valuable; public officials are called to do what is “good … morally honorable, pleasing to God, and therefore beneficial” for human flourishing and in pursuit of the common good.Footnote 273 In other words, Romans 13:4 points to a view of law enforcement that goes beyond punishing evil (retributive justice) to promoting the good (restorative justice).

While one vital aspect of justice is retribution, that is, vindicating the rights of one who has been harmed by punishing the wrongdoer,Footnote 274 retribution does not exhaust the biblical meaning of justice. The English word justice is also used to translate two important Hebrew words, mishpat and sedeqah, which connote righteousness or right ordering. In other words, “to do justice is to make things right,” not merely to punish.Footnote 275 While biblical justice often includes retribution, “punishment was not—as it usually is for us—the end of justice.”Footnote 276 Retribution always occurred in the context of community, and it “kept open the possibility of eventual reconciliation and restoration rather than perpetual alienation.”Footnote 277 While God is sometimes described, in human terms, as angry or full of wrath, and God is sometimes understood to punish, God is also described as slow to anger and overflowing with lovingkindness.Footnote 278 As illustrated by his acts of justice toward the nation of Israel,Footnote 279 God moves through wrath to restoration. He continually assures his people that he will never give up on them.

What are the implications of applying a purely retributive lens rather than a restorative lens to policing? First, a retributive reading of Romans 13 divides people into two categories: the good law followers and the bad law breakers. The only thing we know about this second group is that they have broken the law. And the only thing they deserve is punishment. But the Bible elsewhere asserts that there is something much more fundamental that unites the two groups: both were made in the image of God.Footnote 280 The fact that persons have done wrong does not change the fundamental truth that they each have the Creator God’s image stamped on them and, therefore, have inherent value, dignity, and worth. Indeed, the most profound teaching of the Christian faith is that Jesus Christ died for flawed, lawbreaking human beings in order to restore them to fellowship with God. In God’s economy, there are not two categories of human beings: law breakers and law abiders. There is only one category: sinful, broken human beings rescued by God’s love and grace.

The notion that law-breakers—those who are being policed—are somehow other has permeated American responses to law enforcement actions. And throughout our history this “othering” has often been tinged with racial overtones. Undocumented immigrants become rapists, murderers, or drug dealers; criminals who “menace American neighborhoods and take American jobs.”Footnote 281 They are called simply illegals, as if being undocumented is their only quality.Footnote 282 Black youth who are alleged to have committed crimes become known by the racist trope “superpredators,” monsters who roam the streets looking for victims to mug, rape, or assault.Footnote 283 Black women are known as “welfare queens” or “baby mamas,” stereotypes used to denote mothers who have multiple children in order to increase their welfare benefits and avoid employment, obtain benefits through fraudulent means, or squeeze their children’s fathers for as much money as they can get from them.Footnote 284

When such terms are used, it betrays the assumption that the most fundamental truth about certain groups of people is that they are law breakers and portrays them as alien to the community. It neglects the fundamental Christian doctrine that these individuals are made in God’s image and eternally valuable. It is then a short step from categorizing to disrespecting to mistreating to brutalizing. Categories based on race, ethnicity, or casteFootnote 285 are especially destructive in undermining the equal respect and dignity owed to all human beings. In the words of Martin Luther King, Jr., racial categories are based on the “myth of the inferior race … the notion that a particular race is worthless and degraded innately and the tragedy of racism is that it is based not on an empirical generalization but on an ontological affirmation. It is the idea that the very being of a people is inferior.”Footnote 286 It is no mistake that those who wished to justify the human degradation of slavery were compelled to justify the enslavement of the Black race by claiming that Black people were less than human.Footnote 287 Sadly, this understanding was [embodied] in the U.S. Constitution where, for the purpose of voting, a Black human person made in the image of God was counted as three-fifths of a person for purposes of determining Congressional representation.Footnote 288

As a result of our racialized criminal justice system a disproportionate number of the people that police put into the law breaker category are Black or Brown. As I discuss above, the reasons are complicated but well documented: It is often the case that police are told to patrol predominantly poor crime-ridden neighborhoods, some of which are so segregated that most of the residents are Black or Brown. When police focus their enforcement efforts on these communities, it follows that most of their arrests, stops, and uses of force will be from these racial groups, even though comparative crime statistics make clear that Black and Brown people are not more likely to engage in criminal activity. More arrests and stops of Black and Brown people mean more charges, more convictions, and more imprisonment, creating even broader racial disparities across the U.S. justice system.

Over time, police officers who interact day in and day out with Black and Brown people who are viewed as criminal suspects begin to identify people’s race as an indicator for crime and danger. According to legal scholar L. Song Richardson, an expert on implicit bias, “Just by virtue of watching the news every night you learn the unconscious bias, because you will always see young black men being connected to criminality. Police officers are engaging in pro-active policing in urban neighborhoods that may be majority nonwhite. And as a result, they’re constantly practicing the association of nonwhite with crime.”Footnote 289 Sadly, the implicit bias created by media coverage is not limited to one racial grouping. For example, news reports on crimes committed by (even legal) immigrants have often resulted in angry backlash against immigrant communities and citizens from immigrant backgrounds.

Authority: Blue Lives Matter and the Thin Blue Line

The use of the slogan “Blue Lives Matter” by police and the public exacerbates the we-they attitude associated with retributive justice and implicitly undermines the values embodied in restorative justice. This slogan was created by law enforcement, and some Christians have publicly and enthusiastically embraced the slogan and sponsored events that proclaim it publicly, sometimes flying the thin blue line flag.Footnote 290

The expression “Blue Lives Matter” has a historical pedigree that is not about simply supporting police officers for their service to the community. It is associated with a sometimes ugly backlash by police officers against the Black Lives Matter movement.Footnote 291 The immediate genesis for the Black Lives Matter movement was the acquittal of a white citizen vigilante who shot Travon Martin, a seventeen-year-old Black youth, as he was walking home from a 7-Eleven store carrying Skittles candy and a soft drink.Footnote 292 More broadly, the movement arose as a protest against a series of police shootings of Black men, many of whom turned out to have been unarmed.Footnote 293 Given the origins of the Blue Lives Matter slogan as an aggressive and targeted rejoinder to a protest movement against police shootings of Black suspects, it cannot be viewed as simply supporting the very important and difficult work that police officers do. It implicitly suggests that protecting the lives of Black suspects during police stops is somehow incompatible or in competition with (or less important than) protecting the lives of police officers.

As understood in the current political climate of the United States, “Blue Lives Matter” makes the same othering mistake as the narrow, retributive view of justice. It creates two categories, the good people and the bad people: the good, heroic police officers who are holding the thin blue line between order and chaos and the dangerous (Black) criminals who are trying to break through the line to do harm. When police officers or the public align themselves with the “Blue Lives Matter” slogan, they are likely to be perceived (especially in Black communities) as supporting police officers over against the victims of police shootings. This alignment can send a signal that participants are either unaware of or uncaring about the racism that is baked into U.S. policing. It also ignores or denigrates the lived experience of Black Americans, for whom Blue Lives Matter is a declaration of police dominance.

The Danger Narrative: Warrior Police and the Normalizing of Violence

Christian law enforcement ministries routinely refer to police officers as God’s warriors, aligning the coercive work of law enforcement with the language of spiritual warfare. In support of this view, proponents rely on Romans 13:4, which describes law enforcement authorities as agents of God’s wrath who bear the sword in God’s name. They also point to the many scriptural passages referring to spiritual warfare, which is viewed as a cosmic struggle between good and evil that is occurring in the world.Footnote 294

Passages in support of these ideas are numerous, some of which personify these evil forces as Satan or the devil.Footnote 295 One of the most prominent and explicit spiritual warfare passages is found in Ephesians 6:10–17. Believers are instructed to “put on the whole armor of God” because their “struggle is not against flesh and blood but against … the spiritual forces of evil in the heavenly realms.”Footnote 296 They are told to put on “the belt of truth,” the “breastplate of righteousness,” the “shield of faith,” the “helmet of salvation” and take up “the sword of the Spirit.”Footnote 297 These beliefs may seem strange to those outside the Christian faith, but they are not outside the mainstream of Christian beliefs.

What should be obvious, however, is that the Ephesians passage is talking about spiritual warfare and spiritual weapons. It is not calling upon human warriors to push back the forces of evil with physical force. It is exegetically and hermeneutically inaccurate to conscript this spiritual warfare language to describe the physical weapons and actions that are employed by law enforcement officials. The danger is that police officers will come to view their work, which involves the use of coercive, often violent force, as itself a form of spiritual warfare. The idea that police officers are pushing back the spiritual forces of evil by physical means plays directly into the warrior narrative that has been so destructive to U.S. policing.

An example of such misappropriation can be found in a devotional by Lt. Col. Dave Grossman and Adam Davis, On Spiritual Combat. Footnote 298 Grossman is a controversial private police trainer who has garnered intense criticism for his warlike training language and his dramatic signature teaching on the importance of police readiness to kill.Footnote 299 In Grossman’s opening chapter, “Identify the Adversary: Rules of Darkness” he writes, “As Christians we understand the enemy is satan. But in our modern world, how do we identify him? … While we understand and accept that the enemy is satan, we must recognize that he regularly uses human beings to execute his plan to take innocent lives…. We must prepare to defend what we love in the mortal realm…. Identifying the enemy allows us to prepare our minds and hearts to overcome the overwhelming fear of deadly encounters with evil, both physically and spiritually.”Footnote 300

While Grossman concedes that “ultimately, the battle will be won or lost in the spiritual realm,”Footnote 301 the battlefield language is designed to prepare its readers for the warfare involved in their work on the street. Throughout the book, the spiritual lessons are couched in military terminology, with lessons such as “God’s Plan for a Bulletproof Life,” “Protecting the Warrior’s Heart,” “Take Up Your Shield, Warrior,” and The Helmet (Blam!) of (Blam!) Salvation (Blam!). While these and other lessons do include spiritual instruction, the military language suggests that the physical work of policing, including the use of force, is specifically sanctioned as part of the spiritual battle.

While Christian trainings like this one and others do not explicitly glorify police use of violence, it is assumed (and sometimes directly declared) that violent force will be necessary to maintain the barrier between good and evil. For example, a speaker at a Billy Graham Evangelical Association Retreat, urged attendees to see their work as a divine mission against Satan, as an “the invasion of God into darkness.”Footnote 302 In recounting a situation in which he shot an armed drug dealer, the speaker said, “By the grace of God he missed, and by the wrath of God I didn’t. And he’s under the sheet, not me. Only by God’s grace.”Footnote 303 While the speaker was understandably grateful that his life was spared, the idea that a shooting that killed a man could be viewed as “God’s grace” seems clearly wrong. Is the underlying insight that the officer was God’s agent, carrying out God’s wrath against one of the lawbreakers described in Romans 13? Even if the officer in that situation shot in self-defense, the broader implication of this way of thinking is that specific police actions—whether arrests, or quelling protests, or using deadly force—are specifically endowed with divine blessing.

When police officers use deadly force, it is important to affirm that regardless of the circumstances, a human life—the life of one made in the image of God–has been lost. The officer’s language above obscures the truth that killing is always regrettable, a reason for sorrow, even if the officer cannot be faulted for taking the shot. While it is right to be grateful that one’s life was protected, the lives of lawbreakers also matter to God; they, too, are made in God’s image. Moreover, this normalization of violence hampers police officers’ recognition that a community has been traumatized and a family has lost someone they loved.

Police officers who take the view that their actions have God’s blessing may also be less inclined to question their uses of force, and police leaders may be less likely to challenge, criticize, or regulate the coercive conduct of those under them. As police expert and historian Aaron Griffith frames it, if police officers’ use of force “is not only something that professionally they might be required to do, but that … [it] is their God-ordained, divinely-supported role … it becomes a way to uncritically justify the use of force.”Footnote 304

Moreover, sociologist Andrew Whitehead, who writes on religion and culture, worries that this way of thinking may actually increase the likelihood that force will be used. He writes, “It seems dangerous to … inculcate this idea that [police officers] are agents of God and God’s wrath. … If there are police officers that see themselves as agents of God’s wrath, will they be more likely to turn to violence in a situation rather than not?”Footnote 305 More starkly, the Black senior pastor of a Louisville church responded to news of a training invoking Romans 13:4 with alarm, “Given the long, nightmarish history that Black people have not only had with … police departments in general, that’s a very scary prospect to have a Bible verse like that and to describe the police force as the wrath of God to carry out justice on evil doers.”Footnote 306

In addition, if police conduct is viewed as divinely sanctioned, it may also be harder for officers and their superiors to acknowledge and address the emotional and spiritual toll that the use of deadly force takes on the officer who was responsible for the death. A killing, whether or not justified, is a deeply traumatic event for the person who pulled the trigger.

Facing Systemic Racism

A richer theology of policing will also recognize that the call from law and order to justice may include the obligation to identify and address structural or systemic injustice as well as immoral laws or policies that affect individuals. The Bible’s conception of injustice views it as both personal and structural. The latter feature is often overlooked. Scripture, of course, condemns many unjust or immoral individual practices and policies, such as lying, cheating, and stealing.Footnote 307 Its strongest critique, however, is typically directed at systemic forms of injustice.Footnote 308 The Old Testament prophets often lament and deride the systemic injustice emerging from the abuse of power by ancient Israel’s political, economic, and religious elites. The prophet Micah, for example, expresses horror at the ways Israel’s rulers have oppressed poor Israelites by subjecting them to harsh labor (possibly forced).Footnote 309 The prophet Isaiah, “presents God as denouncing ‘the elders and princes of his people,’ saying the spoil of the poor is in your houses’ (Isaiah 3:14). Judgment awaits those who extend their land holdings at the expense of others (Isaiah 5:8).”Footnote 310 Amos condemns unjust rulers who have created widespread oppression. Concerning the evil practice of debt bondage, Amos declares, “They sell the innocent for silver, and the needy for a pair of sandals. They trample on the heads of the poor as on the dust of the ground and deny justice to the oppressed” (Amos 2:6–7).Footnote 311

Abuse of power is the heart of injustice, and the conflation of economic, political, social, and religious power leads to oppression of people with less power and standing.Footnote 312 Structural racism is this very combination of ingrained racial prejudice and abuse of social privilege.Footnote 313 Understood this way, a combination of two key beliefs tend to block some Christians from perceiving or acknowledging the existence of structural or systemic racism: The first is the now familiar theme from Romans 13, that police officers are God’s agents of wrath to punish lawbreakers, and the second is the belief that racism is an individual, relational problem.Footnote 314

Turning first to Romans 13, recall the basic argument that those who enforce current law and practices are God’s agents to keep order and prevent chaos, and—by implication—those who resist current law and practices are the lawbreakers who have incurred God’s wrath and deserve to be punished. Readers who embrace these views in the simplistic way described earlier are much less likely to perceive that the current legal regime, the existing status quo, could itself be unjust. If you believe that God has instituted the law enforcement authorities to enforce what is, you are less likely to contemplate and interrogate what ought to be. Moreover, by implication, those who do resist the status quo, are on the wrong side of God’s good purposes. (And as we have been reminded, history is full of examples of society’s unwillingness or inability to perceive, name, and address injustice, and its tendency to demonize those who resist.)

In sum, one of the primary impediments to the changing of an unjust status quo is the inability (or unwillingness) to perceive the injustice. Embracing a simplistic view of Romans 13 that requires obedience to the status quo keeps its adherents from recognizing injustice, let alone asking hard questions about what could or should be changed. Unfortunately, Christians have sometimes suffered from this kind of insensibility.

The second impediment to addressing systemic racism, discussed briefly in connection with the inadequacy of reconciliation ministries, is the tendency of some Christians to view racism as an individual, relational issue. This view “misses the racialized patterns that transcend and encompass individuals and are therefore often institutional and systemic,” and contribute to the perpetuation of a racist status quo.Footnote 315

According to Emerson and Smith’s survey described in Divided by Faith, many white evangelicals view racial tension as real and significant—80 percent of white evangelicals said racism is “very important” for evangelicals to addressFootnote 316—but many seemed unable to recognize a racialized system. For example, they did not appear to distinguish between the terms racism, individual-level prejudice, and individual-level discrimination, instead using these terms interchangeably. Moreover, when asked for specific examples of racism, participants spoke in vague generalities, relied on old historical examples or contemporary issues in the news, or pleaded ignorance on the issue.Footnote 317 Overall, conclude Emerson and Smith, “most respondents assented to the existence of racism … as individual-level prejudice or discrimination and nothing else.”Footnote 318 Emerson and Smith conclude that these “perspective[s] effectively reproduce racialization. Because [the] existence [of systemic racism] is not recognized, action is not taken to overcome it.”Footnote 319 Failure to recognize systemic racism is to effectively (even if not intentionally) deny its existence. And “[t]o the extent that overcoming racialization depends in part on social programs and policies, evangelicals’ general opposition to such programs and policies”—in part because they do not understand the need for them—“serves to heighten racialization.”Footnote 320

A vivid historical example of the failure to distinguish between the sin of broken relationships and the sin of prejudice comes from the Jim Crow era. According to religion and public policy expert William Martin, “Most evangelicals, even in the North, did not think it their duty to oppose segregation; it was enough to treat blacks they knew personally with courtesy and fairness. … Evangelicals of the time challenged the way that black people were being treated and sought to treat them with respect and fairness, but they did not think it was their duty to oppose segregation as a system.”Footnote 321 In other words, evangelicals of the time believed only in the need to change relationships, which left the status quo of institutionalized racism unchanged.

Advocacy and Responsibility

According to the late Timothy Keller, public theologian and New York City pastor, a key facet of biblical justice is not only to recognize, but to advocate for those who have been oppressed or denied equal rights.Footnote 322 Recall Martin Luther King, Jr.’s lament that the white church was silent to the point that the unjust power structure was “undisturbed by the presence of the church” and instead was “consoled by the church’s often vocal sanction of things as they are.”Footnote 323 The call to advocacy recognizes that an important feature of structural injustice is that current opportunities and resources are unevenly distributed so that it is difficult or impossible for oppressed groups to catch up. For example, to be born into a “privileged family” is to ‘automatically have “‘friends’—connections to people with power, immense social capital that paves the way in life.”Footnote 324 To be born in a poor neighborhood is to be disadvantaged from the start. In this country, to be white comes with generations of privilege that have been denied to Black people. The call to advocacy means perceiving and calling out social structures that continue to disadvantage and oppress. For the church, meaning the community of those who follow Jesus, silence is not an option.

Keller argues that white evangelical Christians—including those not personally engaged in acts of discrimination or prejudice—continue to be embedded in social structures that, Keller writes, “exclude and oppress racial minorities.” As such, despite their not personally practicing racist behaviors, “they bear corporate guilt and responsibility for not working to dismantle the structures that [continue to] oppress.”Footnote 325 This implies that white Christians have a duty to work for the end of systemic racism—including the ways that it is expressed through racialized policing.

Moving Forward

Modern U.S. policing cannot be separated from its racist past because the past has resulted in cascading and persistent systemic inequalities.Footnote 326 Throughout history Americans have tasked law enforcement with keeping disfavored ethnic and other troublesome populations in their place. Today the discrimination that is present in racialized police tactics “upholds the social hierarchy created during the times of slavery” that perpetuates the “inequality between … wealthy communities and marginalized communities.”Footnote 327

Some Christians have resisted the necessity of looking back in order to move forward. Individualism coupled with the fact that many white Christians are isolated in segregated churches, neighborhoods, and friend groups, creates a tendency to be ahistorical, to fail to grasp how history has an influence on the present. Just as Christians embrace individual responsibility for one’s sinful actions and resist shifting the blame to someone else, they also tend to disagree with those who reference the past to try to account for today.

To the contrary, however, historian Jemar Tisby argues that only truth-telling that reckons with the past can bring change in the present: “Both history and scripture teaches us that there can be no reconciliation without repentance. There can be no repentance without confession. There can be no confession without truth.” Only truth telling will make it possible for “reconciliation—robust, consistent, honest reconciliation—[to] occur across racial lines.”Footnote 328 Unless historical and social sins are “confessed and overcome, they are passed on to future generations, perpetuating the racialized system, and perpetuating sin.”Footnote 329

The ugly fact that racially biased policing continues to persist on a systemic level means that unless U.S. policing reckons with the systemic effects of its racist roots, it is likely to keep repeating the mistakes of the past.Footnote 330

Conclusion

Reframing the High Calling of Policing: Five Strategies

Some interpretations and applications of Romans 13:1–7 to policing are not well supported by an accurate exegesis and interpretation of the passage. Addressing this issue is an important first step to developing a Christian theology of policing, as this passage will be one of the scriptural linchpins of any such efforts.

While evangelicals and believers from other Christian traditions are most likely to be interested in such a project, the work of political theology—the process of applying theology to politics—has something to offer even to those who may not embrace the particular religious tradition underlying the proposed theology. As political theologian Luke Bretherton argues, over time, the relationship between theological and political concepts can become intertwined and interdependent: “Theological categories and concepts [can be] used to theorize political life” and then “borrowed back to understand political life, but still with the imprint of their theological meaning embedded within them.” In this way, “as the traffic continues to flow in both directions,” there is an interweaving of ideas and knowledge is made.Footnote 331 For these reasons, the insights of a Christian, political theology of policing should be of interest to anyone seeking to develop a broader ethics of policing.

A truly biblical view of policing will require both a new theology and new practices, and the two are intertwined. One’s theology influences not only the way one thinks about complicated issues, but also how one responds in the world in which they find themselves. So, the U.S. theology of policing must be a lived theology, not an ivory tower theology, and it must take account of history and social structures as well as individual conduct. Toward reframing the high calling of policing, I offer five strategies.

First, an accurate theology of policing must begin with a fresh interpretation of Romans 13:1–7 as applied to individual law enforcement officials and the penal system as a whole. Police officers have an important role in effectuating divine justice, but they are not called as individual warriors to execute God’s wrath against wrongdoers. As individuals, all are prohibited from taking revenge or exercising wrath against lawbreakers. (Romans 12:19–21). Individuals are to “leave room for God’s wrath,” as rightly exercised through God-ordained human government, in which police officers have an important, though limited role.

Second, a faithful reading of the Romans 13:1–7 rejects a single-minded focus on retributive justice and embraces the deeper meaning of God’s justice, which includes restoration as well as punishment. Rather than a retributive reading that divides people into the good law followers and the bad law breakers—which often conflates wrongdoer with race or ethnicity—a strategy of restorative justice would ensure that punishment always occurs in the context of community, keeping open the possibility for the wrongdoer to be restored instead of perpetually alienated.

Third, police officers indeed have a high calling, not to the heroic deeds of the warrior, but to the heroic virtue of a servant.Footnote 332 People cannot enjoy the circumstances that lead to human flourishing if they lack the security and protection necessary to protect them from crime and violence. Moreover, laws that ensure rights, protections and security are no good unless they are enforced, and police officers are on the front lines of this important work. As a servant vocation, policing should be designed to provide security from harm, freedom from fear, peace, protection of the poor and vulnerable, and equal treatment for all human beings, who are stamped with God’s image. In addition, a vital aspect of biblical justice is the responsibility to identify and protect those who are wronged or disadvantaged by the status quo. This should challenge police officers to beware of embracing law and order while neglecting their obligation to defend those who are oppressed by evil laws and those who stand with them.

Fourth, a lived theology of policing will also take account of the differing perspectives of the Black and white communities regarding policing. A lived theology of policing brings awareness of the dramatic difference in perspectives that people carry through their unique life histories. When a white person is pulled over by police, they may be worried about getting a ticket, but they will not fear for their lives and bodily security. Contrast this experience to that of Esau McCaulley, associate professor of New Testament at Wheaton College, who is Black: “My hope for policing is not that complicated. I want to live free of fear. When I am pulled over for a traffic stop, I am afraid precisely because the police have been a source of terror all my life, my ancestors’ lives, and the lives of my people.”Footnote 333 A lived theology of policing—which is, in its essence, loving our neighbors—includes listening and respecting lived experience and responding with respect and wisdom.

Fifth, while modern reconciliation ministries are useful, they need to include, as they did historically, a call for participants to repent of societal and structural racism as well as individual racism and to partner cross-racially to address social structures of inequality.Footnote 334

An accurate theology of policing must come to terms with the racist history of law enforcement, acknowledge the systemic racism embedded in U.S. policing, and accept responsibility for the racial injustice that remains. And here it is important to note that while some modern police practices exacerbate already existing racial patterns—and these practices need to change—U.S. police officers of today do not bear sole responsibility for addressing systemic racism. All Americans are responsible to address the existing inequities that slavery, unjust laws, and racialized practices have wrought.

Historical and social sins that remain unconfessed and overcome are “passed on to future generations, perpetuating the racialized system, and perpetuating sin.”Footnote 335 As those who live under God’s call to do justice, it is not enough to avoid personal racist behaviors—although that is necessary—all Americans also “bear corporate guilt and responsibility” if we fail to work to “dismantle the structures that oppress,” including the structures that support racialized policing.Footnote 336

Acknowledgments and Citation Guide

I am very grateful for feedback from Nathan Chapman, Robert Cochran, Andrew Hayashi, Brandon Paradise, Amy L. Sherman, and participants in my 2023–2024 Ethical Values Seminar at the University of Virginia School of Law. I also thank my former research assistant Daniel McCray for his excellent work, research librarian Leslie Ashbrook, who spent countless hours checking cites and identifying sources, and the assistance of many other wonderful research librarians at the University of Virginia Law Library. Any mistakes are, of course, my own. I have no competing interests to declare. Citations in this article follow the Bluebook, 21st edition. Unless otherwise noted, all biblical quotations are to the 1984 revision of the New International Version.

References

1 11 Religious Leaders Appeal for “Sanity” in Desegregation Issue, Birmingham News (Ala.), Jan. 17, 1963, at 1.

2 White Clergymen Urge Local Negroes to Withdraw from Demonstrations, Birmingham News (Ala.), Apr. 13, 1963, at 2.

3 Martin Luther King Jr., The Negro Is Your Brother, Atlantic Monthly, Aug. 1963, at 80–81 (This is the Letter from Birmingham Jail.).

4 Id. at 88.

5 Jeff Sessions, Attorney General Sessions Addresses Recent Criticisms of Zero Tolerance by Church Leaders, Fort Wayne, Indiana (June 14, 2008), https://www.justice.gov/opa/speech/attorney-general-sessions-addresses-recent-criticisms-zero-tolerance-church-leaders; see also Julia Zauzmer & Keith McMillan, Sessions Cites Bible Passage Used to Defend Slavery in Defense of Separating Immigrant Families, Washington Post (June 15, 2018), https://www.washingtonpost.com/news/acts-of-faith/wp/2018/06/14/jeff-sessions-points-to-the-bible-in-defense-of-separating-immigrant-families/.

6 Well-known evangelical Franklin Graham, who had championed Trump’s policies before, called the policy “disgraceful.” The Southern Baptist Convention passed a resolution calling for immigration reform that maintains “the priority of family unity.” Emily McFarlan Miller & Yonat Shimron, Why Is Jeff Sessions Quoting Romans 13 and Why Is the Bible Verse So Often Invoked?, USA Today (June 16, 2019), https://www.usatoday.com/story/news/2018/06/16/jeff-sessions-bible-romans-13-trump-immigration-policy/707749002/. A 2020 report from HHS that discusses the issue and suggests that upward of 3000 children may have been separated from their parents. See, U.S. Department of Health & Human Services, OEI-BL-18099510, Communication and Management Challenges Impeded HHS’s Response to the Zero-Tolerance Policy 8 (2020) (discussing the class action lawsuit Ms. L v. ICE), https://oig.hhs.gov/oei/reports/oei-BL-18-00510.pdf.

7 See generally Herbert C. Kelman & V. Lee Hamilton, Crimes of Obedience: Towards a Social Psychology of Authority and Responsibility (1989).

8 Romans 13:1–7.

9 In this article, I use the term Christian to denote a broad and diverse array of persons who would self-identify as Christ followers. I use the term evangelical to identify a group of Christian believers who share particular historical origins and embrace a more specific but loosely defined set of beliefs. The term evangelical is complicated in our current political situation because it is poorly defined and has become associated with a group that is largely political rather than religious. In this article, I am using the term to denote a group of Christians who tend to embrace a set of religious beliefs but vary widely in their political alliances. In other words, I denote a religious not a political grouping. While not all self-identified evangelicals would agree on all particulars, the National Association of Evangelicals, an association of a wide array of denominations, churches, and individuals, defines a religious evangelical as having four main beliefs: a high regard for the bible as the ultimate authority; a stress on the sacrifice of Jesus on the cross making possible the redemption of humanity; the belief that lives need to be transformed by a born-again experience and a lifelong process of following Jesus; and the expression and demonstration of the gospel in missionary and social reform efforts. See National Association of Evangelicals, http://www.nae.org/what-is-an-evangelical/ (last visited Jan. 22, 2025).

10 Tobias Winright, Serve and Protect: Selected Essays on Just Policing 5 (2020). In using the term Christian, I include a broader array of Christian believers than is denoted by the term Evangelical. By a Christian theology of policing, I mean the application of the Bible and biblical theology to the subject of law enforcement. Christian theology would consider the biblical text, the work of Christian theologians, and the social teachings of a variety of Christian denominations, both Protestant and Catholic. From this description it should be clear that there is not one theology of policing, but rather a conversation about how the teachings of the Christian faith could or should apply to this area of life.

11 Id.

12 National Conference of Catholic Bishops, Challenge of Peace: Gods Promise, Our Response (1983), https://www.usccb.org/upload/challenge-peace-gods-promise-our-response-1983.pdf.

13 Edward A. Malloy, The Ethics of Law Enforcement and Criminal Punishment (1982). See also James Turn Johnson, Just War Tradition and the Restraint of War: A Moral and Historical Inquiry (1982); Paul Ramsey, The Just War: Force and Political Responsibility (1968); Michael Walzer, Just and Unjust Wars: A Moral Argument with Historical Illustrations (2d ed. 1992). Interestingly, all three of these scholars appear to draw on police use of force scenarios to inform just war considerations, rather than using just war criteria to explore the ethics of police use of force.

14 While other organizations also have distinct organizational cultures—meaning corporately held behavioral expectations and values—service organizations, especially police. and the military, have particularly strong and determinative cultures. See generally Barbara Armacost, Organizational Culture and Police Misconduct, 72 George Washington Law Review 453, 493–514 (2004) (arguing that successful police reform must take account of the power of the organizational culture that is common to the job of policing); Barbara E. Armacost, Police Shootings: Is Accountability the Enemy of Prevention?, 80 Ohio State Law Review 907 (2019) (arguing that police violence is an organizational problem); Seth W. Stoughton, Principled Policing: Warrior Cops and Guardian Officers, 51 Wake Forest Law Review 611, 632 (2016); Robert E. Worden, The Causes of Police Brutality, in Police Violence: Understanding and Controlling Police Abuse of Force 29–32 (William A. Geller & Hans Toch eds., 1996).

15 See Worden, supra note 14, at 28–32, 48 (discussing organizational theory, reviewing the vast scholarship affirming the link between police conduct and features of police organizational culture, and discussing empirical support for the link between police culture and use of force

16 Worden, supra note 14, at 29. See also Stoughton, supra note 14, at 613 and fn.9 (noting that “sociologists have described the role of agency culture in shaping officer actions since the 1960s” and “[e]very major commission that has studied policing has discussed, to some degree, the need for the profession to create an environment that minimizes misconduct” listing commission reports).

17 Jerome H. Skolnick & James J. Fyfe, Above the Law: Police and the Use of Force 91 (1993) (quoting the late Chief James Ahern in James F. Ahern, Police in Trouble (1972)).

18 Worden, supra note 14, at 29 (“[R]ookies soon learn that what is taught in the police academy is somewhat irrelevant to their to their work on the street.”). See also, David Lester, Officer Attitudes Toward Police Use of Force, in Police Violence, supra note 13, at 186.

19 Skolnick & Fyfe, supra note 17, at 92.

20 See, e.g., Skolnick & Fyfe, supra note 17, at 10, 94, 194, 237; Rachel Harmon, The Law of the Police 25–30, 367 (2d ed. 2024); Carl B. Klockars, The Theory of Excessive Force, in Police Violence, supra note 14, at 1 (The chapter is written “with considerable guidance from Bittner’s pioneering work.”).

21 Egon Bittner, The Functions of Police in Modern Society 36–47 (1970). See also Egon Bittner, Florence Nightingale in Pursuit of Willie Horton Sutton: A Theory of the Police, in The Potential for Reform of Criminal Justice 18 (Herbert Jacob ed., 1974). For a detailed discussion of Bittner’s definition and its modern implications, see Harmon, supra note 20, at 25–30.

22 Klockars, supra note 20, at 20. Klockars defines “excessive force” as “the use of more force than a highly skilled police officer would find necessary to use in that particular situation.” Id. at 8. He acknowledges that this definition imposes a high standard and leads to findings of excessive force in many instances where criminal, civil, and police understandings would not.

23 Skolnick & Fyfe, supra note 17, at 92.

24 Id.

25 Bittner, Functions of Police in Modern Society, supra note 21, at 39. See also Skolnick & Fyfe, supra note 17, at 119 (the “raison d’etre” of policing “involve[s] the use or threat of force”).

26 Skolnick & Fyfe, supra note 17, at 94.

27 Bittner, Functions of Police in Modern Society, supra note 21, at 40.

28 Some police scholars and activists, however, argue that police officers do more harm than good. There is a burgeoning literature arguing that police departments should be abolished, or dramatically trimmed back, and replaced by other kinds of social services. See, e.g., Amna A. Akbar, An Abolitionist Horizon for (Police) Reform, 108 California Law Review 1781, 1784 n.6 (2020) (calling the abolitionism movement a “significant political development” and listing abolitionist scholars and activists); Derecka Purnell, Becoming Abolitionists (2021); Mariame Kaba & Andrea J. Ritchie, No More Police: A Case for Abolition (2022) (arguing the case for police abolition from a black feminist perspective); Mariame Kaba, We Do This Til We Free Us (2021); Mariame Kaba, Opinion, Yes, We Mean Literally Abolish the Police, New York Times (June 12, 2020), https://www.nytimes.com/2020/06/12/opinion/sunday/floyd-abolish-defund-police.html. A full discussion of these arguments is beyond the scope of this article.

29 Seth W. Stoughton, Jeffrey J. Noble & Geoffrey P. Alpert, Evaluating Police Uses of Force 1 (2020) (“According to the “best available data—which is admittedly not as robust as we would want—only a small percentage (1.8%) of the more than fifty million police-civilian contacts every year involve a threat or actual use of force.”). Some scholars assert that, considering the ambiguous circumstances that officers often face on the street, police use of force could be deemed “excessive” in “only a small fraction of cases” and, thus, argue that police brutality has diminished over the past fifty years. Skolnick and Fyfe note, however, that not so long ago, police brutality was “routine” particularly in minority communities. Skolnick & Fyfe, supra note 17, at 18.

30 Stoughton, Noble & Alpert, supra note 29, at 2.

31 Id.

32 Id. Stoughton, Noble & Alpert argue that “over the previous ten years, there have been, on average about 56,000 incidents every year in which an officer was assaulted.” Id. They conclude that “this leaves at least 544,000 occasions each year in which officers used force for reasons other than self-defense.” Id. See Federal Bureau of Investigations, 2019 Law Enforcement Officers Killed and Assaulted, tbl. 82, https://ucr.fbi.gov/leoka/2019/topic-pages/officers-assaulted.

33 See Stoughton, Noble & Alpert, supra note 29, at 5 (citing a survey administered by the Bureau of Justice Statistics showing that 1.3 percent of white respondents reported being subjected to force compared to 3.3 percent of black respondents and black suspects were more likely to report that force was “excessive” (59.9 percent) than white respondents (42.7 percent)).

34 See generally William Geller & Michael S. Scott, Deadly Force: What We Know—A Practitioners Desk Reference on Police-Involved Shootings (1992) (Geller and Scott cite a large number of studies.); Stoughton, Noble & Alpert, supra note 29, at 5 (relying on data collected by the FBI and various media outlets for the conclusion that officer-involved homicides fall disproportionately on Black persons: 13.4 percent of the population, but more than 30 percent of individuals killed by police). For the current debate, compare Fablina Sharara & Eve E. Wool, Fatal Police Violence by Race and State in the USA, 1980–2019: A Network Meta-Regression, 398 Lancet 1239 (2021), https://www.thelancet.com/action/showPdf?pii=S0140-6736%2821%2901609-3, and Curtis Bunn, Black People Are Still Killed by Police at a Higher Rate than Other Groups, NBC News (March 3, 2022), https://www.nbcnews.com/news/nbcblk/report-black-people-are-still-killed-police-higher-rate-groups-rcna17169; with Robert VerBruggen, Fatal Police Shootings and Race: A Review of Evidence and Suggestions for Future Research (2022), https://manhattan.institute/article/fatal-police-shootings-and-race-a-review-of-the-evidence-and-suggestions-for-future-research, and Heather Mac Donald, There Is No Epidemic of Fatal Police Shootings Against Unarmed Black Americans, USA Today (July 3, 2020), https://www.usatoday.com/story/opinion/2020/07/03/police-black-killings-homicide-rates-race-injustice-column/3235072001/.

35 For example, consider the effect on a young Black man (and his family) of the reality that police use of force is among the leading causes of death in this population. See Frank Edwards, Hedwig Lee & Michael Esposito, Risk of Being Killed by Police Use of Force in the United States by Age, Race-Ethnicity, and Sex, 116 PNAS 16793 (2019).

36 Stoughton, Noble & Alpert, supra note 29, at 4 (arguing that even if people are comfortable with the “abstract idea” that police officers are permitted to use force, they may not be prepared for the reality that actual use of force can be aggressive, brutal, and ugly, and it may appear that “a governmental official charged with ensuring the public safety [has] turned on a member of the public they are sworn to protect”).

37 See Hubert G. Locke, The Color of Law and the Issue of Color: Race and the Abuse of Police Power, in Police Violence, at 129, 137–38 (1996) (citing multiple studies demonstrating that attitudes toward police are most favorable among Caucasians and lowest among African Americans); Matthew Desmond, Police Violence and Citizen Crime Reporting in the Black Community, 81 American Sociological Review 857, 858 (2016) (finding that one highly publicized beating of an unarmed Black man in Milwaukee dramatically reduced the incidence of calls reporting crimes in Black neighborhoods for an entire year after the beating was reported).

38 Seth Stoughton, Law Enforcement’s “Warrior” Problem, 128 Harvard Law Review Forum 225, 230 n.30 (2015) (listing the locations of these riots). Police reform in this area focuses on such issues as how to address racism in policing, ways to deescalate situations to avoid the need for force, discovering and employing strategies of non-lethal force, and regulating and constraining the application of deadly force. See generally Stoughton, Noble & Alpert, supra note 29; Skolnick & Fyfe, supra note 17, at 37–42. A full discussion of such recommendations is beyond the scope of this article.

39 A.J. George, Winning a Knife Fight, Police Magazine (Feb. 11, 2015), https://www.policemag.com/weapons/article/15346979/winning-a-knife-fight (“The dangers we expose ourselves to every time we go [on duty] are almost immeasurable. We know this the day we sign up and the academy certainly does a good job of hammering the point home.”). See generally Seth W. Stoughton, Policing Facts, 88 Tulsa Law Review 847, 865 (2014) (noting that police are continually reminded that “their single overriding goal every day is going home at the end of the shift”). See Scott Fielden, The Mind of a Cop: What They Do, and Why They Do It 21 (2009); David J. Thomas, Understanding Violent Criminals: Insights from the Front Lines of Law Enforcement 191 (2014).

40 Connie Fletcher, What Cops Know: Cops Talk about What They Do, How They Do It, and What It Does to Them 47 (1991).

41 Stoughton, supra note 14, at 640.

42 See generally Skolnick & Fyfe, supra note 17, at 95–103 (discussing police officer’s tendency to be suspicious of anything unusual).

43 Ronald J. Adams, Thomas M. McTernan & Charles Remsberg, Street Survival: Tactics for Armed Encounters 155 (1980).

44 Harmon, supra note 20, at 377.

45 Seth Stoughton, How Police Training Contributes to Avoidable Deaths, The Atlantic (Dec. 12, 2014) (emphasis added), https://www.theatlantic.com/national/archive/2014/12/police-gun-shooting-training-ferguson/383681/.

46 For example, there is a long-standing belief among police officers, courts, and some police scholars that traffic stops are fraught with danger. Existing studies and data, however, show that the incidence of such violence is actually very small and is limited to a narrow set of identifiable circumstances. See Jordan Blair Woods, Policing, Danger Narratives, and Routine Stops, 117 Michigan Law Review 635, 639 (2019). Woods “gathered and analyzed incident narratives from a comprehensive sample of over 4,200 cases of violence against officers during traffic stops across more than 220 law enforcement agencies in the state of Florida over a 10-year period.” Based on a “conservative estimate” his findings demonstrated that the rate for a “felonious killing of an officer during a routine traffic stop for a traffic violation was only 1 in every 6.5 million stops.” Id. at 640, 675–84.

47 Stoughton, supra note 45 (citing Federal Bureau of Investigation, 2013: Law Enforcement Officers Killed & Assaulted). See also Federal Bureau of Investigation, 2019: Crime in the United States, tbls. 1, 80 (finding that approximately 57 officers were feloniously killed, 56,034 were assaulted, or 11.8 per 100 sworn officers, with 17,188 sustaining injuries), https://ucr.fbi.gov/leoka/2019/tables/table-1.xls.

48 Stoughton, supra note 45, at 3. See Susannah Tapp & Elizabeth Davis, Bureau of Justice Statistics, U.S. Department of Justice, NCJ 304527, Contacts Between Police and the Public (2020), https://bjs.ojp.gov/library/publications/contacts-between-police-and-public-2020.

49 For an account of the origins of the term warrior as applied to the police, see Stoughton, supra note 14, at 641–51.

50 Id. at 632–41 (discussing these qualities in some detail). See also Dave Grossman & Loren W. Christensen, On Combat: The Psychology and Physiology of Deadly Conflict in War and Peace 181 (2007) (arguing that police officers need “the gift of aggression,” the realization that evil exists and sometimes violence is required).

51 Stoughton, supra note 14, at 637. As Stoughton points out, police deny people liberty, lock people up, rummage through pockets, kick down doors, touch people in embarrassing and humiliating ways, beat people into submission, and sometimes kill them, all actions that “in other contexts would be anathematic to members of civil society.” Id.

52 See Seth Stoughton, Police Warriors or Community Guardians, Washington Monthly (Apr. 17, 2015), http://washingtonmonthly.com/2015/04/17/police-warriors-or-community-guardians/.

53 Stoughton, supra note 38, at 228.

54 Id. (emphasis added).

55 John Bennett, How Command Presence Affects Your Survival, Police 1 (Sept. 30, 2010), https://www.police1.com/officer-safety/articles/how-command-presence-affects-your-survival-6cPA8v9EjGJZuWuH/. (italics added)

56 See Stoughton, supra note 38, at 228.

57 Radley Balko, Rise of the Warrior Cop: The Militarization of Americas Police Forces xi–xii (2014). See generally id. (describing in detail the political and legislative origins of this militarization in response to the drug war beginning in the 1980s and extending into the 2010s).

58 Id. at xi.

59 Id. at 334.

60 Harmon, supra note 20, at 375.

61 Id. See generally See J. Pete Blaire et al., Reasonableness and Reaction Time, 14 Police Quarterly 323, 336 (2011). See generally, Stoughton, supra note 14.

62 Harmon, supra note 20, at 377.

63 Id; Stoughton, supra note 45 (suggesting that “police officers can be trained to be effective, vigilant, realistic” and reasonably safe, “and use less force at the same time”). See generally Armacost, Police Shootings, supra note 14 (arguing that successful police reform requires consideration of the broader circumstances surrounding police use of force, including whether the officer unreasonably exposed herself to the risk that lethal force could be used by a suspect).

64 Stoughton, supra note 37, at 229.

65 See generally, Balko, supra note 57 (describing various SWAT team raids).

66 Stoughton, supra note 38, at 229. In addition, because community members do not distinguish between people in blue uniforms, police officers as a group may be defined as brutal and deemed appropriate targets for retaliation

67 Stoughton, supra note 14, at 658–59. In a 2000 study, about 900 officers were asked to respond to the following statement: “Always following the rules is not compatible with getting the job done.” More than 40 percent of officers agreed or strongly agreed. David Weisburd et al., Police Attitudes Toward Abuse of Authority: Findings from a National Survey 2 (2000).

68 Stoughton, supra note 14, at 661.

69 Id. at 662. As noted above, Stoughton argues that the warrior cop mentality should be replaced by a mentality of service he calls “guardian policing.” Id. at 666–76.

70 Former SWAT Commander Speaks Out on Police Militarization, the War on Drugs, and Civil Liberties, Libertas Institute (Mar. 26, 2014), https://libertas.org/interview/former-swat-commander-speaks-out-on-police-militarization-the-war-on-drugs-and-civil-liberties/ (describing the “Ask, Tell, Make” approach to interaction with citizens).

71 Stoughton, supra note 14, at 654–55; see also Paul Chevigny, Police, Power: Police Abuses in New York City (1989) (“[T]he one true and inflexible rule [is that] any person who defies the police risks the imposition of legal sanctions, commencing with a summons, on up to the use of firearms.”); John W. Whitehead, Resistance Is Futile: The Violent Cost of Challenging the American Police State, Rutherford Institute (Sept. 9, 2015), https://www.rutherford.org/publications_resources/john_whiteheads_commentary/resistance_is_futile_the_violent_cost_of_challenging_the_american_police_st

72 Skolnick & Fyfe, supra note 17, at 92. The thin blue line symbol has received widespread affirmation from and enthusiastic acceptance by police officers. See also Timothy Roufa, What Is the Thin Blue Line?, Balance (Oct. 12, 2017), https://web.archive.org/web/20180315091619/https://www.thebalance.com/what-is-the-thin-blue-line-974603.

73 Mark Baker, Cops: Their Lives in Their Own Words 208 (1985).

74 Whitehead, supra note 71. See also, Skolnick & Fyfe, supra note 17, at 93 (“Oddly enough, it may be precisely this sense of mission, this sense of being a ‘thin blue line’ pitted against forces of anarchy and disorder, against an unruly and dangerous underclass, that can account for the most shocking abuses of police power.”).

75 Skolnick & Fyfe, supra note 17, at 97 (emphasis added).

76 Malcolm E. Holmes & Brad W. Smith, Race and Police Brutality: Roots of an Urban Dilemma 67, 58 (2008).

77 Skolnick & Fyfe, supra note 17, at 97.

78 See generally Homer Hawkins & Richard Thomas, White Policing of Black Populations: A History of Race and Social Control in America, in Ellis Cashmore and Eugene McLaughlin, Out of Order: Policing Black People 65–86 (1991).

79 See generally Mark W. Bennett & Victoria Plaut, Looking Criminal and the Presumption of Dangerousness: Afrocentric Facial Features, Skin Tone, and Criminal Justice, 51 U.C. Davis Law Review 745 (2018); W.J. Chambliss, Power, Politics, and Crime (2001).

80 Stoughton, supra note 45. See also Michelle Alexander, The New Jim Crow: Mass Incarceration in the Age of Colorblindness 131, at 164–66 (2011) (Similarly, a young Black male with baggy pants standing near his high school with a group of his similarly attired Black friends is more likely to be stopped and frisked by police for suspected drug dealing than is a young white male standing in front of his high school surrounded by his friends.).

81 Kenneth Bolton Jr. & Joe R. Feagin, Black in Blue: African-American Police Officers and Racism 94–95 (2004) (“Many white officers may perceive groups of black men socializing and playing games in certain public places as exhibiting behavior outside the societal norm.”).

82 Id. at 68.

83 Id. at 74.

84 Michael Brown, Working the Street: Police Discretion and the Dilemmas of Reform 8 (1981). See generally Armacost, Organizational Culture and Police Misconduct, supra note 14, at 509–10 (arguing that employees of social control organizations such as police and the military tend to engage in “role-based” decision-making because these organizations “instill in subordinates the sense that obedience to authority is obligatory”).

85 Armacost, Organizational Culture and Police Misconduct, supra note 14, at 511.

86 Skolnick & Fyfe, supra note 17, at 139 (noting that most of the officers present at the beating of Rodney King in 1991 by fellow officers in the Los Angeles Police Department did not actually participate, but they did not intervene, nor did they assist in efforts to hold them accountable). The same can be said for the officers who were present during the murder of George Floyd in 2020 by officers of the Minneapolis Police Department. Shaila Dewan, A New Message for Police: If You See Something, Say Something, New York Times (Feb. 27, 2022), https://www.nytimes.com/2022/02/27/us/police-intervention-minneapolis-george-floyd.html.

87 Samuel Walker & Charles M. Katz, The Police in America: An Introduction 32 (9th ed. 2018).

88 Harmon, supra note 20, at 54.

89 Robert C. Wadman & William Thomas Allison, To Protect and to Serve: A History of Police in America 17, 18–26 (2003).

90 Philip L. Reichel, Southern Slave Patrols as a Transitional Police Type, 7 American Journal of Police 51, 68 (1988).

91 The first black code was enacted in Maryland and Virginia in the 1660s and they spread across the South. The codes were designed to maintain the economically valuable institution of slavery, including making Black slaves and their offspring slaves for life. Wadman & Allison, supra note 89, at 31.

92 See Sally Hadden, Slave Patrols: Law and Violence in Virginia and the Carolinas 185–87, 198 (2001) (describing that slave patrols searched slave quarters, kept slaves off public roadways, curtailed meetings organized by slaves, apprehended runaway slaves, and disciplined slaves for breaking planation rules).

93 Connie Hassett-Walker, How You Start Is How You Finish? The Slave Patrol and Jim Crow Origins of Policing, A.B.A. Human Rights, July 11, 2021, at 6 (citing Gary Potter, The History of Policing in the United States: Part 1 (2013)).

94 Harmon, supra note 20, at 49.

95 W. Marvin Dulaney, Black Police in America (1996).

96 Wadman & Allison, supra note 89, at 35–36.

97 Id. at 34.

98 Id. at 39.

99 The last Jim Crow laws were not overturned until 1965, with the passage of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 and the Voting Rights Act of 1965.

100 Harmon, supra note 20, at 59.

101 Robert F. Wintersmith, Police and the Black Community 37 (1974). See generally Robert F. Wintersmith, Police and the Black Community: A Survey of Their Historical Relationships and Alternative Models for Contemporary Improvement (2022).

102 See generally Harmon, supra note 20, at 59.

103 Wadman & Allison, supra note 89, at 35.

104 See Harmon, supra note 20, at 59. See generally Alexander, supra note 80.

105 Jeffrey S. Adler, Less Crime, More Punishment: Violence, Race and Criminal Justice in Early Twentieth-Century America, 102 Journal of American History 34, 43 (2015).

106 Elizabeth Hinton & DeAnza Cook, The Mass Incarceration of Black Americans: A Historical Review, 4 Annual Review of Criminology 261 (2021).

107 Id.

108 Id.

109 See Yassaman Saadatmand, Michael Toma, & Jeremy Choquette, The War on Drugs and Crime Rates, 10 Journal of Business & Economics Research 285, 285–86 (2012).

110 Hinton & Cook, supra note 106, at 2.5.

111 Bryan Stevenson, A Presumption of Guilt: The Legacy of America’s History of Racial Injustice, in Policing the Black Man: Arrest, Prosecution, and Imprisonment 3, 12 (Angela J. Davis ed., 2017).

112 Quoted in Michael Friedrich, A Police Departments Difficult Assignment: Atonement, Bloomberg (Oct. 23, 2019), https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2019-10-23/what-police-community-reconciliation-can-look-like.

113 Wadman & Allison, supra note 89, at 41.

114 Id. at 27.

115 Bolton & Feagin, supra note 81, at 14 (“A major social function of policing is to maintain existing group-based hierarchies”); Risa Goluboff, Vagrant Nation: Police Power, Constitutional Change, and the Making of the 1960s 3 (2016) (describing police stops and arrests under vagrancy law as “the go-to response against anyone who threatened … to move ‘out of place’ socially, culturally, politically, racially, sexually, economically or spatially”); Holmes & Smith, supra note 76, at 25 (describing the law enforcement role as “policing the dangerous classes”). See also, Hawkins & Thomas, supra note 78 (describing white policing of Black populations as a method of “social control”).

116 On policing of immigrants, see M. Craig Brown & Barbara D. Warner, Immigrants, Urban Politics, and Policing in 1900, 57 American Sociological Review 293 (1992); on the Texas Rangers, see Doug J. Swanson, Cult of Glory: The Bold and Brutal History of the Texas Rangers (2020); on the policing of hippies, sexual minorities, and the homeless, see Goluboff, supra note 115, at 237; on the post-9/11 profiling of people of Arab appearance, see Samuel R. Gross & Debra Livingston, Racial Profiling under Attack, 102 Columbia Law Review 1413 (2002).

117 For a detailed historical account of the use of vagrancy laws and other sources of broad police discretion as methods of social control of people who are “out of place,” see generally Goluboff, supra note 115.

118 See generally Bernard E. Harcourt, Illusion of Order: The False Promise of Broken Windows Policing (2001) (challenging the efficacy of broken windows policing). The idea behind “quality of life” or “broken windows” policing is that signs of decay in a community, such as broken windows or boarded up buildings, are viewed as abandonment by residents and authorities, which facilitates instability, crime, and disorder. In response, police officers endeavor to reverse the appearance of disorder by targeting low-level “quality of life” offenses, such as littering, prostitution, and public drinking. This in turn sends the message that law and order prevails in the community and discourages more serious crime. George L. Kelling & Catherine M. Coles, Fixing Broken Windows: Restoring Order and Reducing Crime 16–27 (1996)

119 Ashley Southall & Michael Gold, Why “Stop-and-Frisk” Inflamed Black and Hispanic Neighborhoods, New York Times (Nov. 17, 2019), https://www.nytimes.com/2019/11/17/nyregion/bloomberg-stop-and-frisk-new-york.html. See also Al Baker, New York Minorities More Likely to Be Frisked, New York Times (May 12, 2010), https://www.nytimes.com/2010/05/13/nyregion/13frisk.html (describing a 2009 study which found that Black and Latino persons were nine times more likely than whites to be stopped by New York City police). See generally Alexander, supra note 80; Aziz Huq, The Consequences of Disparate Policing: Stop and Frisk as a Modality of Urban Policing, 101 Minnesota Law Review 2397, 2432–38 (2017).

120 Historically, police officers have implicitly and explicitly used race in their decisions of whether to engage with minority groups or to patrol minority neighborhoods. Consequently, minority communities become overrepresented in police records, meaning racial bias is built into the police records themselves. When racially biased police records create the basis for the algorithm’s information, the algorithm reinforces these biases by targeting historically over-policed areas—minority neighborhoods. See Kristian Lum & William Isaac, To Predict and Serve, 13 Significance 5, 15, 18 (2016). See also Molly Griffard, A Bias-Free Predictive Policing Tool? An Evaluation of the NYPD’s Patternizr, 47 Fordham Urban Law Journal 43 (2019) (arguing that simply leaving out racial data does not mean the algorithm will not produce racially-disparate results); Julia Angwin et al., Machine Bias: There’s Software Used Across the Country to Predict Future Criminals. And It’s Biased Against Blacks, ProPublica (May 23, 2016), https://www.propublica.org/article/machine-bias-risk-assessments-in-criminal-sentencing.

121 See Maya Schenwar & Victoria Law, The Problem with “Community Policing”: Police Still Get to Define Who Counts as a Community Member, Slate (July 30, 2020), https://slate.com/news-and-politics/2020/07/prison-by-any-other-name-book-excerpt.html. See generally Luis Daniel Gascon, The Limits of Community Policing: Civilian Power and Police Accountability in Black and Brown Los Angeles (2019).

122 Emma Pierson et al., A Large-Scale Analysis of Racial Disparities in Police Stops Across the United States, 4 Nature Human Behavior 736 (2020). For example, black drivers were less likely to be stopped after sunset when nightfall made determining race more difficult. Id.; see also Alexander, supra note 80, at 133. Yet, whites were actually more likely than people of color to be carrying illegal drugs or contraband in their vehicles. See Pierson et al., supra.

123 Baker, supra note 119. Studies in the 1990s of traffic stops on the New Jersey Turnpike found similar disparities: 42 percent of all stops, 75 percent of all arrests, and 77 percent of all consent searches were of minorities, yet only 15 percent of all drivers were racial minorities and blacks and whites violated the traffic laws at exactly the same rates.

124 Harmon, supra note 20, at 344–45.

125 The Sentencing Project, Report to the United Nations on Racial Disparities in the U.S. Criminal Justice System (2018), https://www.sentencingproject.org/reports/report-to-the-united-nations-on-racial-disparities-in-the-u-s-criminal-justice-system/ (citing Federal Bureau of Investigation, 2016: Crime in the United States, table 21A). These statistics are not explained by the level of criminality of African American citizens. In 2019, the most recent report of arrest data demographics provided by the FBI stated Black Americans were still around 26.6 percent of the United States’s total arrests. Federal Bureau of Investigation, 2019: Crime in the United States, supra note 47, tbl. 43.

126 Ashley Nellis, The Color of Justice: Racial and Ethnic Disparity in State Prisons 5 (The Sentencing Project 2021). In 2016, The Sentencing Project found Black Americans and Latinos made up 57 percent of the U.S. prison population despite comprising 29 percent of the U.S. total population. The Sentencing Project, supra note 125.

127 See Devon W. Carbado & Patrick Rock, What Exposes African Americans to Police Violence?, 51 Harvard Civil Rights-Civil Liberties Review 159, 173–74 (2016). A 2020 special report by the U.S. Bureau of Statistics found that “Black (6%) and Hispanic (3%) person were more likely to experience the threat of force or use of nonfatal force during their most recent police contact in 2020 as a white person (2%).” Susannah N. Tapp & Elizabeth Davis, Bureau of Justice Statistics, Contacts Between Police and the Public (2020).

128 See generally Alexander, supra note 80.

129 Nazgol Ghandnoosh, One in Five: Ending Racial Inequity in Incarceration (The Sentencing Project 2023), https://www.sentencingproject.org/app/uploads/2024/02/One-in-Five-Ending-Racial-Inequity-in-Incarceration.pdf.

130 Although I outline some contexts in which evangelicals were on the wrong side of history, there are myriad counter examples of evangelicals and Christians of all stripes engaged in the pursuit of justice. Some examples include the work of Wilbur Wilberforce to end the slave trade in England, see William Hague, William Wilberforce: The Life of the Great Anti-slave Trade Campaigner (2007); the work of Christian abolitionists before the Civil War, see Daniel J. McInerney, A Faith for Freedom”: The Political Gospel of Abolition, 11 Journal of the Early Republic 371 (1991); John R. McKivigan, The War Against Proslavery Religion: Abolitionism and the Northern Churches, 1830–1865 (1984); the work of the International Justice Mission to free bonded laborers and prosecute police misconduct around the world, see Gary A. Haugen, Good News About Injustice (2009); work by Equal Justice USA to abolish the death penalty, Equal Justice USA, https://ejusa.org; Bryan Stevenson’s Equal Justice Initiative representation of death row inmates, Equal Justice Initiative, https://eji.org/bryan-stevenson/. This list only scratches the surface of social justice by Christians now and throughout history.

131 The history I offer in this section focuses primarily on Protestant evangelical Christian involvement with policing. As far as I know, Catholics were not actively involved in law-and-order politics or ministries to police officers. Catholic social teaching, however, has much to say about moral issues that could be relevant to a theology of policing. This discussion, however, is beyond the scope of this article.

132 Aaron Griffith, “Policing Is a Profession of the Heart”: Evangelism and Modern Policing, 12 Religions article no. 194 (2021), at 5, https://www.mdpi.com/1035094.

133 Romans 13:1a, 2, 4.

134 Griffith, supra note 132, at 2.

135 Id. The primary focus of Christian involvement with police officers themselves has been the various emotional challenges officers face in their work and private lives, from marital stresses to on-the-job pressures. These two themes are intertwined in the history of Christian involvement with policing. Id.

136 For a detailed account of the historical relationship between evangelicals and criminal justice, including policing, see generally Aaron Griffith, Gods Law and Order: The Politics of Punishment in Evangelical America (2020); see also Griffith, supra note 132, at 2.

137 Griffith, supra note 132, at 4.

138 See Charles M. Sheldon, Missionary Police, Christian Herald, Aug. 1, 1925, at 3–4. Sheldon was the well-known social gospel icon who coined the phrase “What would Jesus do?”

139 Editorial, The Basic Sinfulness of the ‘Freedom Riders’ Riots, Christianity Today, June 5, 1961, at 22; Editorial, The Love of Freedom and Judicial Determination, Christianity Today, July 17, 1961, at 22. Importantly, the National Association of Evangelicals takes a very different position on race and racism today. See, for example, Statement, NAE Addresses Racial Turmoil, Calls for Action (May 29, 2020), https://www.nae.org/nae-addresses-racial-turmoil-calls-for-action/; Statement, Pursuing Racial Justice and Reconciliation (July 24, 2019), https://www.nae.org/affirming-the-dignity-of-all-races-and-ethnicities/; Statement, NAE Condemns White Supremacy (August 16, 2017), https://www.nae.org/affirming-the-dignity-of-all-races-and-ethnicities/.

140 L. Nelson Bell, A Plea for Communication and an Examination of Long-Held Opinions, United Evangelical Action, Aug. 1963, at 31.

141 Id.

142 L. Nelson Bell, A Layman and His Faith: Civil Disobedience, Christianity Today, April 26, 1968, at 20. The editors of Christianity Today have subsequently expressed very different views that acknowledge the existence of racial inequality and systemic racism.

143 Law and Order 1966, National Association of Evangelicals (January 1, 1966), https://www.nae.org/law-and-order-1966; History, National Association of Evangelicals, https://nae.org/history-extended/(last visited Sept. 19, 2024).

144 Samuel H. Sutherland, A Message from the Editor: A Glimmer of Light, Kings Business, Nov. 1965, at 6.

145 See generally, Griffith, supra note 136, at 102–06.

146 Id. at 106.

147 Billy Graham, Saved or Lost?, Sermon, Montreat, North Carolina (Aug. 15, 1965) (archived in collection 265, box 28, folder 8, Billy Graham Center Archives, Wheaton College, Wheaton, IL), quoted in Griffith, supra note 136, at 120.

148 Griffith, supra note 136, at 120–25.

149 See Steven P. Miller, Billy Graham and the Rise of the Republican South, 13–14, 26–27 (2009).

150 347 U.S. 483 (1954).

151 See, for example, William A. Mueller, Review of Current Religious Thought, Christianity Today, Oct. 29, 1956, at 38; H.H. Barnette, What Can Southern Baptists Do?, Christianity Today, June 24, 1957, at 14–16; William A. Mueller, Current Religious Thought, Christianity Today, Feb. 18, 1957, at 39; Editorial, Race Relations and Christian Duty, Christianity Today, Sept. 30, 1957, at 23; Timothy L. Smith, Christians and the Crisis of Race, Christianity Today, Sept. 29, 1958, at 6–8.

152 Alexander, supra note 80, at 41 (citing Richard Nixon, If Mob Rule Takes Hold in the U.S., U.S. News and World Report, Aug. 15, 1966, 64).

153 Randall J. Stephens, Evangelicals and Trump—Lessons from the Nixon Era, The Conversation (June 15, 2018), https://theconversation.com/evangelicals-and-trump-lessons-from-the-nixon-era-97974.

154 Steven M. Gillon, Reagan Tied Republicans to White Christians and Now the Party Is Trapped, Washington Post (March 22, 2021), https://www.washingtonpost.com/outlook/2021/03/22/reagan-tied-republicans-white-christians-now-party-is-trapped/.

155 See generally, Bernard E. Harcourt, Illusion of Order: The False Promise of Broken Windows Policing (2001); see also Floyd v. City of New York, 959 F. Supp. 2d 540 (S.D.N.Y. 2013) (finding the New York City Police Department liable for a pattern and practice of racial profiling and unconstitutional searches in relation to the department’s “stop and frisk” policy). For a description and defense of order maintenance policing, see George L. Kelling and Catherine M. Coles, Fixing Broken Windows: Restoring Order and Reducing Crime in Our Communities (1996).

156 Albert J. Menendez, Protestant Support a Factor in Bush Win, Washington Post (Nov. 26, 1988), https://www.washingtonpost.com/archive/local/1988/11/26/protestant-support-a-factor-in-bush-win/d831e8b3-c7ad-470a-8985-492db6c8e314/.

157 See Executive Order No. 14, 288, 90 Fed. Reg. 18,765 (2025).

158 Stephen Parker, Detective with the Charlotte-Mecklenburg, N.C. Police Department, If Jesus Were a Cop (Nov. 4, 2015) (presentation at the 2015 National Law Enforcement Retreat, Ashville, NC), https://rrt.billygraham.org/nlem/media-archives/, cited in Griffith, supra note 132, at 12.

159 Griffith, supra note 132, at 12.

160 Stephen Parker, Detective with the Charlotte-Mecklenburg, N.C. Police Department, Session 8 presentation at the National Law Enforcement Retreat, Ashville, NC (Oct. 25–28, 2020), https://rrt.billygraham.org/nlem/media-archives/, cited in Griffith, supra note 132, at 12.

161 Ephesians 6:11–12.

162 See, for example, Colossians 3:23–24 (“Whatever you do, work at it with your whole heart, as working for the Lord, not for human masters, since you know that you will receive an inheritance from the Lord as a reward. It is the Lord Christ you are serving.”); 1 Corinthians 15:58 (“Therefor my dear brothers and sisters, stand firm. Let nothing move you. Always give yourselves fully to the work of the Lord, because you know that your labor in the Lord is not in vain.”).

163 Josh Wood, LMPD Training Materials Portrayed Police as Avengers Who Carry Out God’s Wrath, Leo Weekly (Mar. 11, 2022), https://www.leoweekly.com/news/lmpd-training-materials-portrayed-police-as-avengers-who-carry-out-gods-wrath-15762376. Wood notes, “The verse that appears on the image of the flag reads, ‘For he is God’s servant for your good. But if you do wrong, be afraid, for he does not bear the sword in vain. For he is the servant of God, an avenger who carries out God’s wrath on the wrongdoer.’” Id.

164 See Id.; Aaron Griffith, American Christians Backing the Blue: On Faith and Policing, Religion and Politics, May 17, 2022, https://religionandpolitics.org/2022/05/17/american-christians-backing-the-blue-on-faith-and-policing/; Jamie Longazel, Blue Lives Matter and the Legacy of Blackface Minstrelsy, 63 Race & Class 91 (2021). While the thin blue line flag is sometimes intended as a message of support for law enforcement, it is also a known favorite of white supremacists.

165 Similarly, a small-town police department in Kansas put decals of the text of Romans 13:4 on police cars. The department removed them after complaints by Freedom from Religion Foundation. See Wood, supra note 163.

166 See The Romans 13 Warrior, Law Officer, Feb. 22, 2016, https://www.lawofficer.com/the-romans-13-warrior/.

167 See id. See also International Law Enforcement Educators & Trainers Association, https://www.ileeta.org/ (last visited Sept. 19, 2024).

168 See Romans XIII, LLC, https://www.romansxiii.com/ (last visited Sept. 19, 2024).

169 See Wright Shooting, https://www.wrightshooting.com/ (last visited Sept. 19, 2024).

170 See infra the subsection The Danger Narrative: Warrior Police and the Normalizing of Violence for a discussion of the warrior narrative in U.S. policing.

171 American Bible Society, Holy Bible: Strength for the Street (2016). Included is a multipage devotional reading called Strength for the Street, Badge of Honor: A 7-day Scripture Journey. Christina Miller, Strength for the Street, Badge of Honor: A 7-day Scripture Journey, in Holy Bible: Strength for the Street, supra. On Strength for the Street, see also Griffith, supra note 132, at 1; Police Officers Find Strength in God’s Word, American Bible Society (March 22, 2017), https://news.americanbible.org/article/police-officers-find-strength-in-gods-word.

172 Miller, supra note 171, at 9.

173 Id.

174 Jimmy Meeks, Dirty Harry, in The Law Enforcement Officers Bible 1116, 1116 (Holman Bibles, 2016).

175 NIV Peacemakers New Testament with Psalms and Proverbs (Zondervan, 2022) (unnumbered introductory section, “A Special Breed”).

176 The Living Bible (Tyndale House ed., 1971). The Living Bible was the best-selling book in the United States in 1972 and 1973. Griffith, supra note 132, at 6.

177 Publisher’s blurbs for Dave Grossman & Adam Davis, On Spiritual Combat: 30 Missions for Victorious Warfare (2020).

178 See generally Miller, supra note 171.

179 Hardened Police Officers Form Fellowship to Further Religion, San Bernardino Sun-Telegram (Cal.), Aug. 13, 1977, at B4. For a description of pop cultural products such as movies and books promoting policing as a divine vocation, see Griffith, supra note 132, at 5–8; Griffith, supra note 136, at 161–65.

180 See Fellowship of Christian Peace Officers, https://www.fcpo.org/ (last visited Sept. 19, 2024).

181 See Find a Local Chapter, Fellowship of Christian Peace Officers, https://www.fcpo.org/find-a-local-chapter (last visited Sept. 19, 2024).

182 These devotions appear in Charles Gilliland, The One Year Bible Through the Eyes of a Cop (2023), and are used by the Fellowship of Christian Police Officers with permission. The book is on the organization’s website, https://www.fcpo.org (last visited October 14, 2024).

183 National Law Enforcement Ministry, Billy Graham Evangelical Association, https://rrt.billygraham.org/nlem/ (last visited Sept. 19, 2024).

184 See National Law Enforcement Ministry: Executive Law Enforcement Officer Retreat, Billy Graham Evangelical Association, https://rrt.billygraham.org/nlem/cleo/ (last visited Sept. 19, 2024).

185 See National Law Enforcement Ministry: Law Enforcement Appreciation Program, Billy Graham Evangelical Association, https://rrt.billygraham.org/nlem/law-enforcement-appreciation-program/ (describing an upcoming Marriage Resiliency Retreat) (last visited Sept. 19, 2024).

186 See Billy Graham Evangelistic Association, Rapid Response Team https://rrt.billygraham.org/nlem/ (follow link for “recent deployments” under “Critical Incident Response”).

187 See National Law Enforcement Ministry: Law Enforcement Chaplain Training Program, Billy Graham Evangelical Association, https://rrt.billygraham.org/nlem/law-enforcement-chaplain-training-program/ (last visited Sept. 19, 2024).

188 Critics included the African Methodist Episcopal Church; Friends Committee on National Legislation (Quakers); the Rev. Randolph Marshall Hollerith, dean of Washington National Cathedral; and the Rev. James Martin, editor at large of America magazine. Evangelical leader and businessman Johnnie Moore accused Sessions of “proof texting,” that is, selectively using an isolated Bible passage to prove a point. By contrast, the Christian Broadcasting Network tweeted out that mainstream media “might want to open up to Romans” and read the Bible. Miller & Shimron, supra note 6.

189 Lincoln Mullen, The Fight to Define Romans 13, The Atlantic (June 15, 2018), https://www.theatlantic.com/ideas/archive/2018/06/romans-13/562916/.

190 Obedience to the Laws, Richmond Daily Dispatch (Va.), July 6, 1855, at 2, quoted in Mullen, supra note 189.

191 See Sean McGever, Ownership: The Evangelical Legacy of Slavery in Edwards, Wesley, and Whitefield (2024).

192 Michael Cassidy, The Passing Summer, A South African Pilgrimage in the Politics of Love 298–99 (1989). For an extended exegesis and discussion of Romans 13, see chapter 18.

193 Romans 13 was also used to justify military action in the wake of 9/11. See N.T. Wright, The Letter to the Romans: Introduction, Commentary, and Reflections, in 10 The New Interpreters Bible: A Commentary in Twelve Volumes 723 (Leander E. Keck ed., 2002).

194 Wood, supra note 163.

195 John Piper, Structural Racism: The Child of Structural Pride, Desiring God (Nov. 15, 2016), https://www.desiringgod.org/articles/structural-racism.

196 Michael O. Emerson & Christian Smith, Divided by Faith: Evangelical Religion and the Problem of Race in America 117 (2000). Emerson and Smith’s conclusions are based on a survey of 2,500 Americans and hundreds of face-to-face interviews. They use a definition of evangelical that includes the belief that the Bible is the “conclusive authority,” that Jesus died for the salvation of all, and that anyone who accepts Christ as the way to eternal life will be saved. They also apply the term to those who self-identify as evangelicals by answering a series of questions that Emerson and Smith pose. Id. at 3.

197 Id. at 117.

198 While the earliest reconciliation ministries, which trace back to John Perkins, Tom Skinner, and Samuel Hines, called for repentance, forgiveness, and cross-racial relationships, they also called for participants to address social structures of inequality because “to sit on the sidelines while unequal and oppressive forces harm part of the Christian community is a grievous wrong.” Id. at 55. Over time, however, “as the message of racial reconciliation spread from black evangelicals to white grassroots evangelicals, the message was popularized and individualized, coming to mean only that one should express forgiveness and make a friend across racial lines,” and the systemic element of the reconciliation paradigm largely dropped out. Id. at 127. This has led to increased criticism by Black leaders who argue that “Calling sinners to repentance means also calling societies and structures to repentance—economic, social, educational, corporate, political, and religious structures.” The gospel impacts both individuals and their society; “to change one, we of necessity must change the other.” Id. at 67 (quoting Cecil “Chip” Murray, senior pastor of the First African Methodist Church in Los Angeles).

199 Emerson & Smith, supra note 196, at 119. This idea has been dubbed the miracle motif, meaning that if everyone would just convert to Christianity, racism would fade away.

200 Mary R. Jackman & Marie Crane, “Some of My Best Friends are Black ….”: Interracial Friendship and Whites’ Racial Attitudes, 50 Public Opinion Quarterly 459 (1986).

201 This approach, which is widely shared by Bible interpreters, reflects the assumption that biblical text must be read in its historical and cultural context in the first instance before seeking its application to one’s time and place. A full defense of this position is beyond the scope of this article.

202 Robert Jewett, Romans: A Commentary 18 (2007); Joseph A. Fitzmyer, Romans: A New Translation with Introduction and Commentary 85 (1992); James D.G. Dunn, Word Biblical Commentary: Romans 1–8, at xliii (1988). See Romans 15:25–28 (describing the gift to the churches in Jerusalem).

203 Jewett, supra note 202, at 18; Wright, supra note 193, at 396.

204 Fitzmyer, supra note 202, at 85; Wright, supra note 193, at 396.

205 Jewett, supra note 202, at 23. See also Fitzmyer, supra note 202, at 85.

206 Wright, supra note 193, at 395.

207 Id. at 406. The church in Rome had begun with Jewish converts, but Gentile converts now made up a majority of the congregations.” Jewett, supra note 202, at 70.

208 Wright, supra note 193, at 406.

209 Id. at 407 (“How easy … it would have been for the Gentile Christians who had remained in Rome through the early 50s to imagine that God had somehow endorsed, at the theological level, what Caesar had enacted at the political level and that God had in fact written the hated Jews out of the covenant altogether” and that “there was no point in attempting to win over any more Jews.”).

210 Id.

211 Id.

212 Romans 13:1–7.

213 Jewett, supra note 202, at 787.

214 Id.; Fitzmyer, supra note 202, at 665; and Dunn, supra note 202, at 760.

215 Jewett, supra note 202; Wright, supra note 193, at 720; Fitzmyer, supra note 202, at 665.

216 John Yoder, The Politics of Jesus 209 (2d ed. 1994).

217 Id.

218 Wright, supra note 193, at 719–20. A similar pattern can be seen in the accounts of Paul’s appearances before pagan magistrates described in Acts. See Acts 16:19–40, 22:22–29, 25:6–12); see also Wright, supra note 193, at 720.

219 See generally Jewett, supra note 202, at 801 (“The element of discretion implicit in this entire ethic is informed by 12:1–2, which assigns early church groups the task of ascertaining the will of God by weighing “the good, the acceptable and the perfect.”). See also Fitzmyer, supra note 202, at 665–66 (one must keep in mind that Paul would not “lose sight of the Christian’s “freedom in Christ Jesus”) (citing Ephesians 5:21); Wright, supra note 193; Dunn, supra note 202.

220 Yoder, supra note 216, at 205.

221 Id.

222 See, for example, Jewett, supra note 202, at 802 (“government obligations are to be paid to those who qualify … Instead, if absolute subservience, obligations are to be met if they prove legitimate” leaving “space for assessments of appropriateness made by the community as defined by 12:1–2.”). See also Dunn, supra note 202, at 767, 772 (by inviting judgment based on Romans 12:1–2, Paul has broken down the division between sacred and secular).

223 Wright, supra note 193, at 720–21.

224 Fitzmyer, supra note 202, at 666; Dunn, supra note 202, at 760. Oscar Cullman argued that “authorities” here denoted angelic powers acting behind and acting through the political authorities. See Oscar Cullman, The State in the New Testament 95–114 (1957). This view has been rejected by more recent translators. See Dunn, supra note 202, at 760, 763; Jewett, supra note 202, at 787–88; Wright, supra note 193, at 720–21; John Stott, Romans: God News for Gods World 341 (1994).

225 Dunn, supra note 202, at 764; Jewett, supra note 202, at 795.

226 Jewett, supra note 202, at 789. See also Wright, supra note 193, at 721.

227 Jewett, supra note 202, at 789.

228 Dunn, supra note 202, at 772; Fitzmyer, supra note 202, at 665. See also Wright, supra note 193, at 719 (outlining the “many Jewish precedents” in which the prophets spoke of pagan rules accomplishing God’s purposes”).

229 Jewett, supra note 202, at 790; see also id. at 789 (“The God who grants authority to governmental agencies in Paul’s argument is not Mars or Jupiter, as in the Roman civic cult; nor is he represented by the pantheon of Greco-Roman deities that had been assimilated into the civil cult since the time of Augustus.”).

230 Id. at 791.

231 Id. at 789. See also Wright, supra note 193, at 719.

232 Dunn, supra note 202, at 770.

233 Id.

234 Id. at 771.

235 Yoder, supra note 216, at 199.

236 Id.

237 Wright, supra note 193, at 719. See also Fitzmyer, supra note 202, at 668.

238 Yoder, supra note 216, at 199.

239 Wright, supra note 193, at 722.

240 See 2 Corinthians 6:3–10 (Paul describes troubles, hardships, and distresses; beatings, imprisonments, and riots in connection with his missionary work.); 1 Thessalonians 1:6, 2:14–16, 3:4, 7 (Paul describes severe suffering and persecution.).

241 For articulations of this point see Dunn, supra note 202, at 765; and Jewett, supra note 202, at 796.

242 Wright, supra note 193, at 718.

243 Id.

244 Fitzmyer, supra note 202, at 668.

245 Israel A. Kolade, Civil Government and Political Authority on Romans 13, 48 Evangelical Review of Theology 53, 57 (2024).

246 Id.

247 John Calvin, Commentaries on the Epistle to the Romans 481–82 (John Owen trans., Edinburgh, T. Constable 1849) (calling the magistrate the “executioner of God’s wrath).

248 Id. Yoder also disputes this meaning of sword on the ground that the Romans crucified their criminals. Yoder, supra note 216, at 203.

249 Yoder, supra note 216, at 204. See also Jewett, supra note 202, at 795.

250 Jewett, supra note 202, at 795.

251 Id. at 796.

252 Fitzmyer, supra note 202, at 270.

253 Id. at 657.

254 Id. at 669. Wrath is a prominent theme in the book of Romans. See Romans 1:18, 2:5, 8, 3:5, 4:15, 5:9, 9:22, 12:19).

255 Jewett, supra note 202, at 796.

256 See Wright, supra note 193, at 717 (discussing these options and adopting the latter).

257 Id. (emphasis added).

258 See Richard B. Hays, The Moral Vision of the New Testament: Contemporary Introduction to New Testament Ethics 6 (1996) (arguing that “hermeneutical translation”—“an integrative act of imagination”—is necessary for us to understand “texts that were not written in the first instance for residents of the United States” in the twenty-first century).

259 F.F. Bruce, The Epistle of Paul to the Romans: An Introduction and Commentary 224 (1985).

260 Jewett, supra note 202, at 796.

261 See Yoder, supra note 216, at 196–97.

262 Paul calls his readers to love one another in dramatic, self-sacrificial ways that require them to “bless those who persecute” them, not “repay evil for evil,” to “live at peace with everyone” and not to “overcome evil, but [to] overcome evil with good.” Romans 12:14s, 17a, 18a, 21.

263 Romans 13:10.

264 Jewett, supra note 202, at 794.

265 Id.

266 See Stoughton, supra note 14, at 666–76, for a recommendation by a secular scholar that police officers should see themselves more like servants, that is, as “guardians.”

267 Stott, supra note 223, at 342.

268 Exodus 1:15–19; Daniel 3:1–27, 6:6–23.

269 King, supra note 3, at 88.

270 Id. at 81.

271 Id. at 88.

272 Bruce, supra note 258, at 224 (quoting T.M. Taylor, The Heritage of the Reformation 8 (1961)).

273 W.E. Vine, An Expository Dictionary of New Testament Words 494 (1939) (“Governmental authorities are ministers of good, that is, that which is salutary, suited to the course of human affairs.” (citing Romans 13:4)). See also, Walter Bauer, A Greek English Lexicon of the New Testament and Other Early Christian Literature 2–3 (2d ed. 1979).

274 The Greek word ekdikeo (avenger) used in the last part of Romans 13:4 means to vindicate a person’s right or to avenge a thing. Vine, supra note 273, at 82.

275 See Howard Zehr, Changing Lenses: Restorative Justice for Our Times 139 (Twenty-Fifth Anniversary ed., 2015).

276 Id. at 144. “The phrase ‘eye for an eye’ is commonly taken to summarize the retributive tit for tat nature of biblical law. However, the phrase only occurs three times in the Old Testament. In the New Testament, Christ specifically rejects it. ‘You have heard that it was said, “An eye for any eye, and a tooth for a tooth” but I tell you, do good to those who harm you.’” Id. at 148 (quoting Matthew 5:38–39).

277 Id. at 144.

278 Id. at 150.

279 See, e.g., Leviticus 26; Deuteronomy 4.

280 Genesis 1:26–27; Genesis 5:1, 9:6; 1 Corinthians 11:7, Colossians 3:10; James 3:9.

281 Vivian Yee, Kenan Davis & Jugal K. Patel, Here’s the Reality about Illegal Immigrants in the United States, New York Times (March 6, 2017), https://www.nytimes.com/interactive/2017/03/06/us/politics/undocumented-illegal-immigrants.html; see also Michelle Ye Hee Lee, Donald Trump’s False Comments Connecting Mexican Immigrants and Crime, Washington Post (July 8, 2015), https://www.washingtonpost.com/news/fact-checker/wp/2015/07/08/donald-trumps-false-comments-connecting-mexican-immigrants-and-crime/; Z. Byron Wolf, Trump Basically Called Mexicans Rapists Again, CNN (Apr. 6, 2018), https://www.cnn.com/2018/04/06/politics/trump-mexico-rapists/index.html.

282 See, for example, Factsheet: President Donald J. Trump Protects the States and the American People by Closing the Border to Illegals via Proclamation, White House (Jan. 22, 2025), https://www.whitehouse.gov/fact-sheets/2025/01/fact-sheet-president-donald-j-trump-protects-the-states-and-the-american-people-by-closing-the-border-to-illegals-via-proclamation/. Merely being in the United States without documentation is not, in itself, a crime unless one entered the United States illegally, rather than, for example, overstaying one’s visa.

283 Carroll Bogert, Analysis: How the Media Created a “Superpredator” Myth that Harmed a Generation of Black Youth, NBC News (Nov. 20, 2020), https://www.nbcnews.com/news/us-news/analysis-how-media-created-superpredator-myth-harmed-generation-black-youth-n1248101. The term was introduced by John J. DiIulio, at the time a young law professor at Princeton University. Extrapolating from a study of Philadelphia youths that calculated that a small percentage of them accounted for more than half of the crime, he warned that by the year 2000 an additional 30,000 young “murderers, rapists and muggers” who “place zero value on the lives of their victims” would be roaming America’s streets. Diulio attributes this idea to his mentor at Harvard, James Q. Wilson, who had apparently been predicting for years “a new breed of conscience-less killers.” Id.

284 See generally Jennifer L. Turner, Beyond “Welfare Queens” and “Baby Mamas”: Low- Income Black Single Mothers’ Resistance to Controlling Images, in Lesly Deschler Canossi et al., Black Matrilineage, Photography, and Representation: Another Way of Knowing 53–72 (2022) (arguing that these two images or stereotypes have come to define Black womanhood in the United States).

285 On the relationship between race and caste, see generally, Alexander, supra note 80.

286 Martin Luther King, Jr., Speech on Receipt of Honorary Doctorate in Civil Law, University of Newcastle upon Tyne (Nov. 13, 1967), https://www.ncl.ac.uk/mediav8/congregations/files/Transcript%20of%20Dr%20Martin%20Luther%20King%20Jr%20speech%2013th%20November%201967_compressed.pdf.

287 For example, during the nineteenth century, white Christian churchmen defended segregation from Black Christians based on the belief that God himself required segregation because he had made the races different. Emerson & Smith, supra note 196, at 39. See also Katherine Bankole, The Human/Subhuman Issue and Slave Medicine in Louisiana, 5 Race, Gender & Class Journal no. 3 (1998), at 3 (a history of health care during the antebellum South notes the prominence of discussions over whether Blacks were really fully humans).

288 U.S. Constitution art. I, § 2 (changed by section 2 of the Fourteenth Amendment in 1868).

289 German Lopez, How Systemic Racism Entangles All Police Officers—Even Black Cops, Vox (Aug. 15, 2016, 9:35 AM), https://www.vox.com/2015/5/7/8562077/police-racism-implicit-bias. In 2016, L. Song Richardson was a professor at the University of California, Irvine School of Law, where she also served as dean. She is currently the president of Colorado College.

290 For example, after the murders by police officers of Brianna Taylor and George Floyd and the protests that followed, the Resurrection Baptist Church in Kannapolis, N.C., hosted a “Blue Lives Matter Event” to show support for law enforcement officers. A sign outside the church announced, “All lives matter! Blue, Black, and White” and two thin-blue line police flags flew inside and outside the church. Pastor Tim Jones affirmed that the church “condemned” the shootings but that they were “isolated incidents” perpetrated by “officers who stepped outside the law.” It was important, he said, to demonstrate their support for law enforcement. N.C. Church Shows Appreciation for Law Enforcement, Says ‘All Lives Matter, WBTV (Aug. 2, 2020), https://www.wbtv.com/2020/08/02/nc-church-shows-appreciation-law-enforcement-says-all-lives-matter/. Ezekial Kweku, The Thin Blue Line that Divides America, New York Times (Jan. 4, 2024), https://www.nytimes.com/2024/01/04/opinion/thin-blue-line-capitol.html (arguing that “like all mash-ups of identity flags with the American flag, the thin blue line is a rallying point for a marginalized identity, a way to lay claim to the American birthright, a demand for long-denied response”).

291 Kweku, supra note 290.

292 Jenn Hatfield, 8 facts about Black Lives Matter, Pew Research Center, July 12, 2023, https://www.pewresearch.org/short-reads/2023/07/12/8-facts-about-black-lives-matter/

293 As discussed above in the section “Police Culture and the Danger Narrative,” the number of police officers shot during police citizen encounters, while tragic and deeply regrettable, is comparably quite small.

294 See, for example, N.T. Wright, Evil and the Justice of God (2006). See also theologian, biblical scholar, and activist Walter Wink’s seminal works on the subject: Walter Wink, Naming the Powers (1984); Walter Wink Unmasking the Powers (1986); Walter Wink, Engaging the Powers (1992); Walter Wink, When the Powers Fall (1998); Walter Wink, The Powers that Be (1999).

295 For just a few examples, see the conversation between God and Satan in the book of Job; Jesus’s temptation in the wilderness in Matthew 4; the reference in Ephesians 6 to the struggle against the “spiritual forces of evil in the heavenly realms.” See also, 2 Corinthians 10:3–5, 11:14; James 4:7; Matthew 18:18–20; Luke 10:19; 1 Peter. 5:8; 1 John 5:4–5; 1 Timothy 1:18; Psalm 91; Psalm 20:7.

296 Ephesians 6:11–12.

297 Ephesians 6:13–17.

298 Grossman & Davis, supra note 177.

299 See Justin Peters, I Learned to Think Like a “Warrior Cop,” Slate (Aug. 28, 2020), https://slate.com/news-and-politics/2020/08/warrior-cop-class-dave-grossman-killology.html; David Knowles, George Floyd Puts Spotlight on “Warrior Training” for Police, Yahoo!News (May 29, 2020), https://www.yahoo.com/news/george-floyd-death-in-custody-puts-spotlight-on-warrior-training-for-police-195640810.html.

300 Grossman & Davis, supra note 177, at 33–34.

301 Id. at 34.

302 Griffith, supra note 132, at 14.

303 Id.

304 Quoted in Wood, supra note 163.

305 Quoted in id.

306 Quoted in id.

307 See, for example, Proverbs 12:22, 21:6, 26:28; Hosea 4:1–2; Exodus 22:1, 3; Amos 8:4–6.

308 See Piper, supra note 195 (addressing structural racism as part of structural injustice within a biblical theology).

309 Kody Leland Bartley, An Exegesis Over Micah 1:3–12 (April 15, 2016) (Student Paper, Theology 7372-01, Truett Seminary, Baylor University), https://www.academia.edu/38094017/An_Exegesis_over_Micah_3_1_12; Walter J. Houston, Social Justice and the Prophets, Bible Odyssey, Bible Odyssey, https://www.bibleodyssey.org/passages/related-articles/social-justice-and-the-prophets/ (last visited Sept. 24, 2024).

310 Isaiah 3:14, 5:8. See Houston, supra note 309.

311 See also John Mark Hicks, Amos 2:6–8—The Sins of Israel (Jan. 24, 2013, 10:26 AM), https://johnmarkhicks.com/2013/01/24/amos-26-8-the-sins-of-israel/.

312 Esau McCaulley, Opinion, Why Christians Must Fight Systemic Racism, New York Times (July 18, 2021), https://www.nytimes.com/2021/07/18/opinion/racism-christianity.html (“The Hebrew Scriptures see the links between power, money and justice. … Christianity teaches that humans, left to our own devices, often pursue their own distorted interests. … When you add in political and economic power to get what you want at the expense of others, you have the recipe for systemic injustice.”).

313 Piper, Structural Racism, supra note 195.

314 See generally Emerson & Smith, supra note 196, at 86–91.

315 Emerson & Smith, supra note 196, at 90.

316 Id. at 86.

317 Id. at 87–88.

318 Id. at 88.

319 Id. at 90.

320 Id. at 90. Sadly, Emerson and Smith’s data show that the focus on racism as an individual problem means that a person—including a white person—is much less likely to miss racial issues when the person herself has experienced allegedly racial discrimination.

321 William Martin, A Prophet with Honor: The Billy Graham Story 168–69 (1991).

322 See, for example, Psalm 41:1 (“Blessed is the one who gives active consideration to the weak and the poor.”). See Timothy J. Keller, Justice in the Bible, Gospel in Life (Fall 2020), https://quarterly.gospelinlife.com/justice-in-the-bible/.

323 King, supra note 3.

324 See Keller, supra note 322.

325 Id. Timothy J. Keller, The Sin of Racism, Gospel in Life (Summer 2020), https://quarterly.gospelinlife.com/the-sin-of-racism/.

326 See generally, Jemar Tisby, The Color of Compromise: The Truth About the American Churchs Complicity in Racism (2020).

327 Kala Bhattar, The History of Policing in the US and Its Impact on Americans Today, UAB Institute for Human Rights Blog (Dec. 8, 2021), https://sites.uab.edu/humanrights/2021/12/08/the-history-of-policing-in-the-us-and-its-impact-on-americans-today/.

328 Tisby, supra note 326, at 15.

329 Emerson & Smith, supra note 196, at 55.

330 Connie Hassett-Walker, The Racist Roots of American Policing: From Slave Patrols to Traffic Stops, The Conversation (June 2, 2020), https://theconversation.com/the-racist-roots-of-american-policing-from-slave-patrols-to-traffic-stops-112816. See also McCaulley, supra note 312.

331 Luke Bretherton, Christ and the Common Good: Political Theology and the Case for Democracy 3 (2019). Bretherton offers the historical development of human rights as a case in point: “It draws on prior theological notions of natural rights and natural law, but today many churches adopt nontheological discourses of human rights as a way of framing their political claims.” Id.

332 See Esau McCaulley, Reading While Black: African American Biblical Interpretation as an Exercise in Hope 46 (2020). See Stoughton, supra note 38, 23031 (urging police officers to think of themselves not as warriors but as guardians who “prioritize service over crimefighting”).

333 Esau McCaulley, Paul and the Police: The New Testament’s Take on Cops Is Good News for the Oppressed, Christianity Today, Sept. 2020, at 36.

334 See Amy Sherman, Agents of Flourishing: Pursuing Shalom in Every Corner of Society 182 (2021) (David Bailey and his reconciliation ministry).

335 Emerson & Smith, supra note 196, at 55.

336 Timothy J. Keller, The Sin of Racism, Gospel in Life (2020), https://quarterly.gospelinlife.com/the-sin-of-racism/.