Idolater
"Matthew 16:18-19" Dispensationalist (Catholic) χρ
So ... some sort of "expert," is what I'm gathering from that sort of response. It's unclear but seems like perhaps people with doctorates in at least two disciplines, theology and law. You did not specify, this is just me taking the pulse of your response to that question.I'm not sure you're following what I said. Let me try to clarify.
There are laws that only applied to Israel. Those laws should not be applied to any other nation's laws.
The rest of the laws that God gave in the Mosaic Law are moral laws. They apply everywhere, in every circumstance at all times, and are not restricted by a nation's border.
Of the latter group, there are two sub-groups, laws that define some sins as crimes, and laws that define other sins as only sins, with no earthly punishment for breaking those laws.
The only laws that would be used would be the laws that define some sins as crimes.
Namely, do not murder, do not steal, do not commit adultery, do not bear false witness.
In other words, it's not that someone authorizes it or prohibits it, it's that the law either applies or it does not.
That backs up what I'm saying, you're thinking that someone accomplished in theology is going to be authenticating which of the numerous possible candidates are truly God's law, or God's laws. Your response indicates that you're thinking they would be able to articulate which particular candidate laws are authentic through some theological argument, which depends upon quality biblical interpretation, because when God's law is authenticated essentially the default or null hypothesis is that literature should be taken at face value unless it is demonstrated why it should not be taken at face value, which should be easy for an authentic authority in the discipline of theology to do. It should look easy for them.There is good indication that that law was meant for Israel only.
Which Bible? And who gets to say which is the right interpretation of that Bible, that you mean? Would you say that the Bible is officially the 1900 version of the KJV? Why not the 1611 version? Why English, why would God only communicate in "King James" English, circa 1900? Did He previously communicate in 1611 "King James" English, but now He communicates in 1900 "King James" English? Or is the authoritative version of the Bible in "the original Greek?" And if so, then who authenticates any English translation /rendering of the Bible, or who has the power to formally annul an English version as representative of the Bible at all? iow who in your theonomy has the power to send police to arrest publishers of an English version of the Bible, that is outlawed to print, on an otherwise free press?They are defined by the Bible
This is why I know you also mean that whoever is authenticating what God's law actually is, in your theonomy, must also be an authentic doctor of law, along with a doctor of the philosophy of theology.
Just for clarity, I also as a Catholic consider God to be the ultimate source of truth, in all matters of faith and morals, but not in political theory. That's where you and I differ, directly opposite. God does not prefer one political theory to another. He does prefer one theology and one morality, and He tells us precisely His will in these matters, but He leaves politics up to us. The implication is that He believes it's possible to have good government in any model of government imaginable, as difficult as it might be to believe., and ultimately, God.
This is just classical liberalism.
By whom? Who sets them in stone? I've set out that from what I gather it must be a doctorate in the philosophy of theology, plus a doctor of law also. iow, what I'm getting at here, is that there's no discipline for authentic authorities specializing in discerning God's law or discerning God's laws. The closest thing possible to that is a doctor of law who is also an authenticated doctor of theology. A JD +PhD /ThD (/DD, doctor of divinity, also possible). But even then that doesn't authorize someone to be able to declare to other ppl, that their interpretation of "God's law" should authorize police and military to aggressively penalize these ppl, if they disobey it. What if you don't like the chosen /authorized interpretation of God's law? Do you have any recourse, or is your freedom of speech and of press infringed, because it damages your social contract of theonomy?However, the government I advocate is a constitutional monarchy. The constitution defines the laws for the people, and the no one is authorized, not even the King, to change the criminal code (the four laws above and the laws that are built on them).
They're set in stone, if you will.
I have a draft written up by Kgov.com if you would like to go through it.
You still didn't answer that. Who would make that choice? What happens when they die? Who takes over? How does that succession work? How does the nature of their chosen interpretation relate to the chosen /authorized interpretation of their successors in the future? Are their successors authorized to change the authorized interpretation of God's law? Or do they have to preserve what the first generation chose /authorized?See above.