Lyric discussion by NoWorries1988 

These lyrics are wrong, "Throw the Stone Away" is actually, "Roll the Stone Away". You may think that is a small difference, but it is very important to the meaning of "Let the Right be Wrong".

The chorus is the Gospel of Jesus Christ.

Let Freedom Ring - Mark 16:15 Let the White Dove Sing - Luke 3:22 Today is the day of reckoning - Hebrews 9:27 Let the Weak be Strong - James 4:10 Let the Right be Wrong - Galatians 3:24, Romans 3:20 Roll the Stone Away - Mark 16:3-4 Let the Guilty Pay, It's Independence Day - Matthew 25:46

What the chorus says, is pretty much what every letter in the New Testament says, “Hallelujah, the Christ has come, death has lost its sting!” – 1 Corinthians 15:55 Let the White Dove sing is talking about Jesus being Baptized when God, as a Dove, landed on Jesus’ head and said(sang) “This is my Son.” Today is the day of reckoning is Biblical, but I think it is more to make the chorus fit the song. Everyone is accountable to God at their death, the ultimate statistic is that 10 out of 10 people die, so it’s important that the whole world hear it. Let the Weak be Strong is an emphasis to how often the Bible speaks of the humble and poor being the ones that God has the most affection for. Let the Right be Wrong is the most important part in the road to the salvation of your soul! Paul said that he knew not sin except by the law. If you do not know that you are a sinner, then you do not know you need a savior. In order for Christ to save your soul, your righteousness must be shown to you to be wrongness. How is that? It is by understanding that every lie you have ever told has been written on your conscious, every thing you have stolen, from a pen, to a song on the internet, to taking someone else’s idea as your own is known to God. Every idle word (either a cuss word or blasphemy) will require an account. These are three of the commandments, there are seven more. The Gospel, or good news, is that when the Stone was Rolled Away, Jesus Christ, who was punished and KILLED for your sins, was no longer dead, He DEFEATED death and delivered your soul from the grips of the Devil.

Let the Guilty Pay > The unrepentant, untrusting Sinners. It’s Independence Day > Those that have repented of their sins, trusted in Jesus Christ to save their souls, are Independent from Hell.

Cool Chorus, it started to unfold when I was trying to figure out how she was referring to America when she said, “Let the Right be Wrong”, then I realized it wasn’t about America’s Independence Day from Britain, it is about American’s Independence Day from Hell.

@NoWorries1988 The person who thinks that "Independence Day" is a celebration of the Gospel of Christ, apparently doesn't realize some important things about this song. First off, the Gospel of Jesus Christ never contradicts itself. But when we look at this particular song, we know that the lyrics say, at one point, "I ain't saying it's right or it's wrong..." But when we consider that the song is a rousing anthem, containing a rising of the ringing of bells (a reasonable interpretation might be Christian church bells, perhaps Protestant Christian church bells) and that it would be reasonable to say...

I am looking again at some of the text there from "NoWorries1988", who claimed in 2006 that the Martina McBride/Gretchen Peters song "Independence Day" is a celebration of the Gospel of Christ. And I read the following: "It is about American’s Independence Day from Hell." There is nowhere in the four Gospels, and there is nowhere in the New Testament, where we are encouraged to commit acts of manslaughter. The Gospel of Jesus Christ never condemns war per se (such as the war of the Colonists against Great Britain, or certain other wars), and never celebrates war per se (unless...

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