The Doctrine of the Lesser Magistrates

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“When rulers abandon justice, obedience is no virtue.” Pastor Matthew Trewhella resurrects a doctrine nearly forgotten for four centuries: the duty of lower authorities to defy higher ones when they issue unjust commands. Drawing on Scripture, history, and the Magdeburg Confession, The Doctrine of the Lesser Magistrates equips Americans to lawfully resist tyranny and restore justice without anarchy. It is both a repudiation of unlimited obedience and a blueprint for principled freedom.

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Description

What happens when civil rulers abandon justice and demand obedience to lawless decrees? The Doctrine of the Lesser Magistrates confronts that question head-on, placing in the reader’s hands a forgotten but powerful tool of resistance. Pastor Matthew Trewhella presents a framework drawn from Scripture and history that offers hope in an age of runaway government power. He names the problem clearly: unchecked authority leads to tyranny, and blind compliance only feeds it.

The doctrine itself is simple but profound. When a higher authority enacts unjust or immoral laws, a lower authority not only has the right but the duty to refuse compliance — and if necessary, to actively resist. This principle predates Christianity, yet it was Christian statesmen who formalized it into Western political institutions. From the Magdeburg Confession of 1550 to the words of Emperor Trajan — “If I give unrighteous commands, use this sword against me” — history affirms the legitimacy of lawful defiance.

Trewhella documents how this doctrine can be applied without unleashing chaos. He exposes the destructive expansion of federal power, the trampling of constitutional restraints, and the assaults on liberty and God’s law. Against this backdrop, he demonstrates how governors, sheriffs, and local officials can interpose on behalf of the people, preserving peace while standing against tyranny.

This is the first book in more than four hundred years devoted solely to recovering and applying the doctrine of the lesser magistrates. Written with pastoral conviction and fortified by deep historical research, it challenges readers to reject passive obedience and embrace their duty to defend liberty. For those unsettled by lawless government and searching for principled resistance, it offers both blueprint and battle cry. (2013, pb, 115pp)

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