Betty, can you cite your support that our [constitutional] rule of equal justice under law is essentially a Christian concept?
No cite was [or could be] made, as the concept is as old as the hills.
Diamond, thanks for your cite of Samuel Rutherford's Lex, Rex
by Jon Roland
"-- The title, Lex, Rex, is a play on the words that conveys the meaning the law is king.
When theologian Samuel Rutherford published the book in 1644, on the eve of the revolutions that rocked the English nation from 1645 through 1688, it caused a sensation, and provoked a great deal of controversy. It is ostensibly an argument for limited monarchy and against absolute monarchy, but its arguments were quickly perceived as subversive of monarchy altogether, and in context, we can perceive that it provided a bridge between the earlier natural law philosophers and those who would further develop their ideas: the Leveller movement and such men as Thomas Hobbes, John Locke, and Algernon Sidney, which laid the basis for the American Republic.
This book has long been undeservedly neglected by scholars, probably because it is written as a polemic in the political and sectarian controversies that are distasteful to later generations, and many of its references are somewhat obscure, but a closer reading reveals how it laid the foundation for the contractarian and libertarian ideas that came to be embodied in the U.S. Declaration of Independence and Constitution.
Thus, we see that a Christian theologian admits that an earlier 'natural law' had the concept of equal justice under law.
Good morning tpaine!
Where do you suppose the idea of "natural law" comes from?