Originally posted by Greywolf
You seem to think that we are disgruntled with our neighbors all the time for the same reason. We get throught that also, so why change anything?
Why favor a system where the people are disgrunted with both the government
and their neighbor over a sysem where the people are only disgruntled with the government but not their neighbor?
I don't think that people get mad at each other over who they voted for, but what they think.
Oh, please. I've got employees who think they should be the ones who make the rules. I don't hate them for their childish attitudes. Rather, I enjoy the opportunity to teach them that if they want to make the rules, they need to start their own business.
BUT if those same employees actually petitioned the government and succeeded in creating a law that mandated that employees be allowed to make the rules and the managers and the owners had to obey the employees,
THEN I'd be severely ticked off at those same employees. I'd be so ticked off, I would only run a business as a sole proprietorship with no employees.
What determines what is a "symbolic law"?
Symbolic laws in the Old Testament pointed to the life and work of Jesus Christ. For example, the commandments to make blood sacrifices from animals pointed to the blood sacrifice Jesus made for us on the cross. After Christ's crucifixion, that symbolic law was no longer necessary. However, moral laws such as "Do not murder" are timeless.
I was more concerned about the "neither shalt thou profane the name of thy God" part.
A bibliocracy under this current dispensation of the Body of Christ would allow people the freedom to commit crimes against God but not crimes against their fellow man.
I never said that bringing them back was radical. I am opposed to making a civil law based solely on one's religious beliefs.
So you think laws against murder should be taken off the books since it originally came from the 10 commandments?
And for those of us who don't think that God exists...
There would be open borders. You would be free to leave if you so choose.
I'm not too inclined to follow the orders of someone who I don't think exists.
That's why there would be open borders. You would be free to leave.
"the·oc·ra·cy
A government ruled by or subject to religious authority.
A state so governed."
In your case, your "religious authority" is the Judeo/Christian God.
The Bible (if I recall correctly) is supposed to be the word of God.
It seems to me that in a Christian theocracy that the Bible would have to determine the laws of the country.
Correct, but I think you are actually thinking of an "ecclessiocracy" which is government ruled by the church. That's not what we are in favor of.
OK, then how would decide what laws the country should have?
From both general principles as well as specific examples found in the Bible.
Do you see any similarity between that and saying that you would be fine with Joe Blow being the head of the country's government?
If Joe Blow decided he no longer wanted to be monarch then he could turn it over to his eldest son or if he had no son, perhaps a new lottery could be drawn.