There’s a reason civilized society depends on structure, boundaries and clearly defined roles. When those lines get blurred, especially between the role of government and the role of the individual, the consequences are not only visible, but destructive.
Walter A. Henrichsen once observed: “God charges the state with the task of justice, the individual with forgiveness. When the state seeks to be merciful, oppression and injustice reign. When the individual seeks justice, relationships are broken, for all are sinners.” This isn’t just a theological concept, it’s a framework for societal order. When we confuse mercy with justice or turn personal grievances into crusades for retribution, we invite breakdown on every level… legal, relational and cultural.
Here in Nevada, like the rest of the nation, we’re witnessing the results of this inversion. Justice, once the cornerstone of law and order, is increasingly neglected in favor of selective enforcement or misguided leniency. Prosecutors decline to press charges. Petty theft and vandalism go ignored. Violent repeat offenders are cycled in and out of the system while victims are left unprotected. The state, charged with upholding justice, instead offers compassion where accountability is needed.
Take Clark County as an example. A surge in property crimes and retail theft has made it unprofitable and unsafe for many businesses to operate. Rather than enforce the law, local leaders offer apologies and explanations. Criminals become victims; victims are told to endure. This isn’t justice… its dysfunction dressed in moral language.
Meanwhile, individuals have taken on the role of judge, jury and executioner in their personal lives. Social media mobs demand public humiliation. Families split over perceived slights. Communities fracture as neighbors refuse to forgive or extend grace. We’ve traded humility for indignation, and mercy for self-righteousness.
The cost of these role reversals is deep and ongoing. When the state abandons justice, the rule of law collapses. When the individual clings to retribution, relationships shatter and civility erodes. Everyone suffers… and the fabric of a free society begins to unravel.
But there is a way back. It starts with realignment of priorities.
We need a government that returns to its rightful charge of enforcing the law without apology or bias. We need to uphold justice swiftly and impartially, not according to popular sentiment or political ideology. Mercy has its place but not in the courtroom. A just society demands that crime be punished and order maintained.
At the same time, we need individuals willing to forgive… truly forgive… not as an act of weakness but of strength. To stop keeping score. To remember that every one of us is flawed, and that personal peace rarely comes through payback. Families, churches, communities… they all begin to heal when people let go of bitterness and stop demanding justice in places it doesn’t belong.
Nevada doesn’t need another task force or awareness campaign. It needs clarity. Let the state return to justice. Let the individual return to mercy.
CALL TO ACTION: Now is the time to act. Demand accountability from those elected to enforce our laws. Refuse to support policies or leaders who excuse lawlessness in the name of compassion. But also, in your own life, practice the harder virtue… forgiveness. Release grudges and rebuild bridges. Call for justice where it belongs… and offer mercy where it’s yours to give. In this proper order, there is hope for restoration. But it won’t happen without our effort.
2 Chronicles 7:14 (NKJV) “If my people who are called by My name will humble themselves, and pray and seek My face, and turn from their wicked ways, then I will hear from heaven, and will forgive their sin and heal their land.”
Originally Posted: https://nevadabusiness.com/2025/07/upside-down-authority/
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