For it is impossible for those who were once enlightened...
For it is impossible for those who were once enlightened...
Caledvwlch said:
Number 1: I was homeschooled by my Christian parents until fifth grade. Until graduation I was at a protestant Christian school. So the only indoctrination was the same indoctrination that you've been put through.
Number 2: These United States as they stand today, are not governed by the Declaration of Independence. (On a short side note, the theology in the Declaration of Independence is questionable at best from a Christian standpoint, as Thomas Jefferson was a deist) These United States are governed by the Constitution. The Constitution derives it's power from the people. The Declaration has no governing or legal authority.
Number 3: How did Cromwell maintain control? With his army. It was a military dictatorship. You said it yourself. He drove people out of Parliament. With what? A baseball bat in his tank-top?
Number 4: (Sorry I went completely backwards) What about Israel's government made it a theocracy? (I'll admit your differentiation before and after the kings) As far as I can tell from reading the Books of the Law, the only government prescribed was a hierarchal civil court system. There doesn't seem to be any provisions for ENFORCING God's laws. Besides of course, dragging someone before the town elders in sort of a mob-style court. How often did these elders simply allow someone to be stoned because the crowd desired it? The only thing I guess you could say is that God personally enforced his laws. According to the Books of the Law (and Judges, and Joshua), God only judged the nation as a whole for idolatry. There aren't too many instances of personal sanctions applied by God. But maybe these requirements are enough to declare it a theocracy... You win this time... but I'll be BACK!!!
Oh yeah, but I still hold to my arguments pertaining to Cromwell, these United States and my upbringing.
Peace :mrt:
I said it "sounds" like you got your revisionist indoctrination from our public schools, if not there, where?
Ok, well anyway lets just work on the United States first and then we'll explain why Cromwell's elimination of a monarchy form of government from western civilization was so important. By the way, when you say the Declaration of Independence has no authority you lose credibility. The Declaration of Independence is our "articles of incorporation," it formed us. Of course it has authority, its our birth certificate.
Many have called our government a model from the "Hebrew Commonwealth" and have seen our present constitutional model of government as based on this ideal. In fact, a sermon preached in 1788 had the ratification of the U.S. Constitution in mind: The Republic of the Israelites An Example to the American States by Samuel Langdon. Langdon was prominent in securing the adoption of the Constitution as a delegate to the New Hampshire state convention in 1788.
The New Hampshire Congregationalist minister argues that Deuteronomy 4:5 is a model for our American republic. Thus, in the words of Langdon, we have proof that some representatives who ratified our Constitution were men who believed that: "the Israelites may be considered as a pattern to the world in all ages; .... Let us therefore look over their constitution and laws, enquire into their practice, and observe how their prosperity and fame depended on their strict observance of the divine commands both as to their government and religion."
The Old Covenant basis for the representative congress, the senate, the judicial system, the order of military, the religious and ceremonial observances, the different and weaker forms of government which succeeded that commanded by Moses, and the complete revelation supplied by Jesus Christ, are all expounded on by Langdon and then applied to the newly birthed American Republic. There are comparisons between Moses as Israelite general and Washington as our military leader, the twelve tribes and our thirteen colonies. Soon after this sermon was published the U.S. Constitution was ratified by New Hampshire.
Although it is true that there was a strong deistic influence at the time of the signing of the Declaration, there is no question that there were the residual effects of strong Puritan influence. The American Revolution could not have occurred without the 150-year-old Puritan foundation in America.
Thomas Jefferson, a man described by his contemporaries as "a French infidel in respect to religion," was indebted to the Puritans for his model of civil government. The evangelical explosion of the Great Awakening in Puritan New England provided the seeds for the first Baptist churches to be planted in Episcopal Virginia, which held to a Covenantal theology and a congregational form of church government. Jefferson gained his first clear idea of a republican government from seeing the congregationalism of a Baptist church in his vicinity. It was good politics, too, since he strengthened his state party's stance among the people through an alliance with the Baptists and all friends of religious freedom. (Joseph Tracy, The Great Awakening (Tappan and Dennet, Boston, 1842), pp. 419-420.)
Thomas Hooker was a leader in the area of government as well. In May of 1638 he was asked to address the General Court of Connecticut, which apparently had been given the responsibility of drafting a constitution. It was there he preached his famous sermon on Deuteronomy 1:13: Take you wise men, and understanding, and known among your tribes, and I will make them rulers over you. "In this sermon he laid down three doctrines. Doctrine I. That the choice of public magistrates belongs unto the people by God's own allowance. Doctrine II. That the privilege of election which belongs unto the people must not be exercised according to their humor, but according to the blessed will of God. Doctrine III. That they who have the power to appoint officers and magistrates, it is in their power also to set the bounds of the power and the place unto which they call them." In January 1639 the "Fundamental Orders" were adopted, serving as the constitution of Connecticut. Historians have recognized Thomas Hooker’s leadership and influence in the final document.
Modern theonomists can neither completely defend the rigidity of the Massachusetts Bay Colony nor completely disparage the attempts towards a godly separation of powers by Roger Williams and the Rhode Island colony.
A more honest approach would be to settle on the example of civil liberty found in the Fundamental Orders of Connecticut. (Another example for you)
The United States Constitution owes allegiance to Thomas Hooker, more than any other man, for providing a working model of decentralized government, one which had not appeared on the face of the earth since the time of the ancient Hebrews.
The Fundamental Orders of Connecticut was the first biblical covenant in modern times, which founded a federal government. The Mayflower Compact was not a constitution, in that it did not define and limit the functions of government. The Magna Charta had the nature of a written constitution because it described the rights of the people, but it did not create a civil government.
This constitution states that Connecticut is submitted to the "Savior and Lord." There are none of the patronizing references to a "dread sovereign" or a "gracious king" nor the slightest allusion to the authority of British government or any other government over the colony. It presumes Connecticut to be self-governing. It does not describe church membership as a condition for suffrage. In this federation, all powers not granted to the General Court remained in the towns. Each township had equal representation in the General Court. The governor and the council were chosen by a majority vote of the people with almost universal suffrage.
In his sermon to the General Court, May 31, 1638, Hooker said, "The foundation of authority is laid in the free consent of the people...the choice of public magistrates belongs unto the people by God's own allowance...they who have power to appoint officers and magistrates have the right also to set the bounds and limitations of the power and place unto which they call them."
John Fiske, a Harvard historian: "It was the first written constitution known to history, that created a government, and it marked the beginnings of the American republic, of which Thomas Hooker deserves more than any other man to be called the father. The government of the United States today is in lineal descent more nearly related to that of Connecticut than to that of any of the other thirteen colonies."
Unless law is anchored in moral absolutes, Supreme Court Justice John Marshall's statement that the government of the United States is a "government of laws and not men" makes no sense. If there is no consensus as to what constitutes the law, often called the "Higher Law," and where it can be found, then we are governed by men and not laws. The colonists believed that this "Higher Law" was a definite thing and could be found in a particular place, namely the Bible, under whose commandments all would be equally subjected: "The right of freedom being a gift of God Almighty, ... the rights of the colonists as Christians ... may be best understood by reading and carefully studying the institutes of the Great Law Giver ... which are to be found clearly written and promulgated in the New Testament," wrote Samuel Adams, the great revolutionary organizer, in his 1772 classic of political history, The Rights of the Colonists.
I know this is getting long so I'll stop now but if you like I can walk through both the Constitution and Declaration of Independence and demonstrate where all the concepts and ideas in these documents originated from the Protestant Reformation and Calvinism, which of course is really just basic biblical Christianity.
Please just let me know.