And I'm still waiting where government at all is established.God established monarchies as his preferred mode of government? I’m not near my bible and can’t do a search at the moment. What verses are those?
I’ll gladly stand corrected.
And I'm still waiting where government at all is established.God established monarchies as his preferred mode of government? I’m not near my bible and can’t do a search at the moment. What verses are those?
I’ll gladly stand corrected.
I see what you’re saying, but let’s define terms before going any further.And I'm still waiting where government at all is established.
Government == organisation with monopoly on legal use of force/violenceI see what you’re saying, but let’s define terms before going any further.
Define government.
Deu 17:14 When thou art come unto the land which the LORD thy God giveth thee, and shalt possess it, and shalt dwell therein, and shalt say, I will set a king over me, like as all the nations that are about me;God established monarchies as his preferred mode of government? I’m not near my bible and can’t do a search at the moment. What verses are those?
I’ll gladly stand corrected.
I Samuel 8:7Deu 17:14 When thou art come unto the land which the LORD thy God giveth thee, and shalt possess it, and shalt dwell therein, and shalt say, I will set a king over me, like as all the nations that are about me;
Deu 17:15 Thou shalt in any wise set him king over thee, whom the LORD thy God shall choose: one from among thy brethren shalt thou set king over thee: thou mayest not set a stranger over thee, which is not thy brother.
Heb_1:8 But unto the Son he saith, Thy throne, O God, is for ever and ever: a sceptre of righteousness is the sceptre of thy kingdom.
They did want a physically present King and they did reject the King Yeshua whom was already over them but we are talking about Kings in both cases. When God said that they rejected him, he did not then say, Samuel, they rejected the idea of a king so let's go establish a democracy for them instead. No, He said, go anoint the one that I tell you to anoint as a King over them. Because that is the kind of government that he establishes....I Samuel 8:7
“And the Lord said to Samuel, "Obey the voice of the people in all that they say to you, for they have not rejected you, but they have rejected me from being king over them.”
The nation wanted a king...just like all the other nations. That wasn’t God telling them to have a king. They had the Almighty king of heaven ruling over them, along with his Torah and priests.
They rejected that.
I would question the choice of the verb "ordains." and instead argue for something on the order of "warns first, and then allows," since they had it coming...I contend that God ordains all forms of leadership according to his sovereign will...good, bad and ugly.
I like my verb. He is sovereign. Ultimately all of time is subject to his rule. We may have trouble understanding how despots and rogues can be ordained of God, but nothing passes under his careful command of events. It is all leading to his perfect will and end.I would question the choice of the verb "ordains." and instead argue for something on the order of "warns first, and then allows," since they had it coming...
...although there are clearly cases where He simply brought down His promised wrath. (PS> I would argue that those occur at cyclical "Biblical-level" supercycle turning points.)
I’m not trying to be pedantic, but not all “government” is about force and violence.Government == organisation with monopoly on legal use of force/violence
Conclusion: I don't think this guy has think through his positions.
I’m not trying to be pedantic, but not all “government” is about force and violence.
The whole of Torah is essentially a blueprint for divine government. It details how we are to live at peace with God and our fellow man. God established that.
In theory, no. In practice, YHVH was right, and so were the Founders, who recognized that man was 'fallen', and thus the need to, as Jefferson put it, "bind them down with the chains of the Constitution."I’m not trying to be pedantic, but not all “government” is about force and violence.
True. And yet the world has never seen such a government, even under King David, who still ended up being the 'progenitor' of that eventual Kingdom.The whole of Torah is essentially a blueprint for divine government. It details how we are to live at peace with God and our fellow man. God established that.
They are only about force and violence.I’m not trying to be pedantic, but not all “government” is about force and violence.
A little exaggerated? I opposed all these things and never got a knock on my door.Sure it is. Remember a couple years ago when if you questioned the Official Government Narrative about COVID and their vaccine that they'd send armed men to your home to arrest you and put you in a prison camp? Remember about that same time if parents didn't want their three-year old children to see some homo pervert drag queen's exposed genitals and if you said something about it the FBI would come see you and put you on a list?
All of these things happen in a monarchy, and probably doubly so. That’s the point of this thread.They are only about force and violence.
How are they financed? Are taxes suggestion or do you pay them not to spend time in jail?
Same with laws. All laws either forbids something or order you do to something. What will state do if you break law?
Well they may start with being nice. If niceness doesn't work, don't worry police will shoot you no matter how much law is stupid.
Also, how states persist? If force wasn't willing to be used, anybody could "take reins of power".
I agree almost 100%. Fallen man cannot govern himself well. I don’t disagree with that at all.In theory, no. In practice, YHVH was right, and so were the Founders, who recognized that man was 'fallen', and thus the need to, as Jefferson put it, "bind them down with the chains of the Constitution."
And Franklin was right, too. It was "well-administered," for a brief while, and then fell into Despotism, "as other Forms have done before it, when the People shall become so corrupted as to need Despotic Government, being incapable of any other."
True. And yet the world has never seen such a government, even under King David, who still ended up being the 'progenitor' of that eventual Kingdom.
No one reading this has ever lived with any government of man that didn't ultimately wield power as Mao described it - from the barrel of a gun.
In a constitutional republic, you at least theoretically have righteous and rogue competing for authority and influence.
Bill of Right has too many holes. Let's starts with sound money, bribing voters etc...Sadly, I suspect a majority of AmeriKans don't even know what form of government we once had. ("A republic, madam -- if you can keep it," said Benjamin Franklin. The dumbed-down don't know that demonocracy is 'the devil's own government.")
John Adams: "This constitution was fit for the governance of an educated and moral [religious] people only; it is totally inadequate for that of any other."
Thomas Jefferson: "If a people expect to be both ignorant and free, they expect what never was, and never will be."
The purpose of a Bill of Rights, as a condition for ratification, was intended to prevent what has happened. It is ignored. And people don't understand why.
Problem with democracy is that every war become moral crusade and therefore total. Also politicians are more like robbers.All of these things happen in a monarchy, and probably doubly so. That’s the point of this thread.
But in an absolute monarchy, there’s very little way to protest. Our constitutional republic provides a protected pathway for that.
I prefer the constitutional republic.