Why God Commands Us to Obey Imperfect Authorities
Fr. Joseph Gleason | June 17, 2026
A teenager rolls his eyes at his
father and says, “Why should I listen to you? You’ve made plenty of
mistakes.”
A wife refuses her husband’s
direction because she can point to several bad decisions he made last year.
A church member rejects his
bishop because he discovered errors in one of the bishop’s sermons.
A citizen dismisses the laws of
his country because politicians are corrupt.
Different situations. Same
argument.
“He is wrong about some
things, therefore I don’t have to obey him.”
The problem is that this argument
collides head-on with the teaching of Scripture. From Genesis to
Revelation, God routinely requires us to obey authorities who are
imperfect, fallible, and sinful. In fact, if personal perfection were
required before obedience became necessary, there would be almost nobody left
to obey.
The Bible does not teach that
authority belongs only to those who never make mistakes. Rather, it teaches
that authority is a gift and arrangement of God. The authority remains real
even when the person exercising it is flawed.
Consider how many categories of
authority Scripture establishes.
Children are commanded to obey
their parents. The Fifth Commandment simply says, “Honor your father
and your mother” (Exodus 20:12). Likewise, St. Paul writes, “Children,
obey your parents in the Lord: for this is right” (Ephesians 6:1). Neither
passage says, “Obey your parents only if they never make mistakes.” Every
parent is a sinner. Noah became drunk. Isaac showed favoritism. Jacob made
mistakes. David’s family life was filled with turmoil. Yet Scripture never
suggests that children become free from obedience whenever they discover faults
in their parents.
Wives are commanded to obey their
husbands. The apostle Paul gives direct instructions, saying, “teach
the young women to be… obedient to their own husbands, that the word of God be
not blasphemed” (Titus 2:4–5). Yet husbands often fail to fulfill
their own responsibilities. Husbands can be selfish, immature, shortsighted,
and mistaken. The possibility of those failures is precisely why Scripture
contains so many warnings addressed to husbands. Nevertheless, the command
remains for wives to be obedient.
Younger people are instructed to
submit to elders. The apostle Peter writes, “Likewise you younger
people, submit yourselves to your elders” (1 Peter 5:5). Of course,
age does not produce perfection. Every elderly person has blind spots,
weaknesses, and areas of ignorance. Some older people are wise. Some are
foolish. Most are mixtures of both. Yet Scripture still commands respect and
deference toward elders.
Servants are commanded to obey
their masters. The apostle Paul writes, “Servants, obey in all things
your masters according to the flesh” (Colossians 3:22). The apostle
Peter goes even further: “Servants, be submissive to your masters with
all fear, not only to the good and gentle, but also to the harsh.” (1 Peter
2:18). The master’s imperfections do not erase the servant’s duty.
Israel was commanded to obey
judges and leaders. Some of those judges were righteous. Others eventually fell
into serious sins. Yet God still established their offices and expected His
people to obey them within their lawful sphere of authority.
Perhaps the most striking example
comes from Christ Himself. Speaking about the scribes and Pharisees, He
said: “The scribes and the Pharisees sit in Moses’ seat. Therefore
whatever they tell you to observe, that observe and do” (Matthew 23:2–3).
Yet only moments later Christ condemns their hypocrisy in some of the strongest
language found anywhere in the Gospels (Matthew 23:13–33). Their
faults were real. Their authority was also real. Christ recognized both facts
simultaneously.
The same principle appears in
relation to kings and civil rulers. The apostle Paul writes, “Let every
soul be subject to the governing authorities” (Romans 13:1). Likewise,
the apostle Peter commands Christians, “Therefore submit yourselves to
every ordinance of man for the Lord’s sake” (1 Peter 2:13). These
instructions were written in the Roman Empire, hardly a government run by
saints. The rulers were pagan. Some were cruel. Some persecuted Christians. Yet
the apostles still commanded obedience to them in all lawful matters.
Finally, Scripture commands
Christians to obey their church leaders. The apostle Paul says, “Obey
those who rule over you, and be submissive” (Hebrews 13:17). Yet
bishops, presbyters, and pastors are not angels. The New Testament itself
records disagreements among church leaders. St. Paul publicly rebuked St. Peter
at Antioch (Galatians 2:11–14). Churches sometimes needed
rebukes. Clergy sometimes made poor decisions. None of this caused the apostles
to say that ecclesiastical authority should be ignored.
The pattern is impossible to
miss. God repeatedly commands obedience to people who are capable of error.
Why?
Because obedience is not
primarily a reward given to perfect leaders. Rather, it is an act of
humility offered to God.
Modern people often imagine that
authority functions like a consumer review system. If a parent, husband,
bishop, king, employer, or elder makes enough mistakes, we imagine we have
earned the right to disregard him. We become amateur prosecutors, gathering
evidence and building our case.
The Bible approaches the matter
differently.
God already knows that most
authorities are sinners.
He knew that before He gave the
Fifth Commandment, before He established kings to rule nations, and before He
appointed bishops to rule the Church. He knew that before He commanded wives to
obey their husbands, and before He told younger people to honor their elders.
The existence of human weakness
is not a surprise to God. It is built into the entire structure.
The real test is often whether
we can continue to practice humility after we discover those weaknesses.
Of course, Scripture establishes
limits. Obedience is not absolute. When earthly authorities directly command us
to violate God’s law, we must obey God rather than men (Acts 5:29). The
Hebrew midwives refused Pharaoh’s order to murder infants (Exodus
1:15–21). The Three Holy Youths refused to worship Nebuchadnezzar’s
idol (Daniel 3). The apostles refused commands to stop preaching
Christ (Acts 4:18–20; 5:27–29).
But such exceptions are
frequently abused.
Notice that in each case the
authority was commanding a direct violation of God’s law. The
issue was not a disagreement about strategy. It was not an argument over
prudential judgment. And it was not a discovery that the authority figure had
made mistakes elsewhere.
The exception is actually quite
narrow.
Yet many modern Christians treat
the exception as if it were the rule.
A parent makes a mistake, a
husband exercises poor judgment, a bishop misreads a historical source, a
priest gets a detail wrong, or a king makes an unwise decision…
And immediately people conclude
that obedience is no longer required.
Scripture never reasons that way.
Even Ecumenical Councils had some
issues. That doesn’t make them useless, and it doesn’t give us a right to
ignore them. For example, the 7th Ecumenical Council accepts the Council of
Trullo, and the Council of Trullo accepts the 85 Apostolic Canons. Yet many
Orthodox scholars and a number of Orthodox saints have acknowledged that the
eighty-five so-called “Apostolic Canons” were not written by the apostles.
Indeed, some of these canons don’t even reflect apostolic practices.
Scholarly consensus places their
composition in the fourth century. Yet the Council of Trullo in
the seventh century accepted them as apostolic, and the Seventh
Ecumenical Council later received Trullo as
authoritative.
Whatever conclusions one reaches
about that historical question, it demonstrates an important point. Even
councils can contain historical mistakes or incorrect assumptions — without
thereby losing all authority — just as parents, bishops, kings, and husbands
can be mistaken about certain matters without forfeiting their authority.
The alternative position quickly
becomes unworkable. If every authority loses legitimacy the moment he makes a
mistake, then no authority can survive. Every parent has flaws. Every bishop
has blind spots. Every king has misunderstandings. Every elder has limitations.
Every husband occasionally exercises poor judgment. Every church council makes
one mistake or another. Every judge can reach a mistaken conclusion.
If flaws automatically
invalidated authority, then authority would cease to exist anywhere on earth.
Yet God continues to govern His
people through imperfect instruments.
As it has been said, “God
uses crooked sticks to draw straight lines.”
This should not surprise us.
After all, He also accomplishes His work through imperfect prophets, imperfect
apostles, imperfect bishops, imperfect councils, imperfect priests, imperfect
fathers, imperfect mothers, and imperfect saints. Throughout Scripture, God’s
pattern is not to wait for perfect human beings before establishing order.
Rather, He establishes order among sinners and then commands those sinners to
learn obedience, humility, repentance, and love within that
order.
The question is not whether your
parent has flaws, whether your husband has weaknesses, whether your bishop has
made mistakes, whether your king has faults, or whether your elders sometimes
exercise poor judgment.
The question is whether God has
placed that person in a position of legitimate authority over you.
If He has, then their
imperfections do not automatically release you from obedience. They may require
patience. They may require discernment. They may occasionally require
respectful disagreement. In rare circumstances, they may even require refusal
when they directly command sin.
But most of the time, they
require something far more difficult for modern people:
Humility.
And that is one of the main
reasons why God commands it.
Source: https://movingtorussia.substack.com/p/obeying-authorities-who-are-wrong
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