Posted on 08/22/2003 2:40:17 PM PDT by Pokey78
Orlando Salinas broke in a few minutes ago and announced this on Fox News.
Exodus 4:22 "Thus saith Jehovah, Israel is my son, even my firstborn."
Are you and Kevin Curry twin sons of different mothers?
That's called the rule of law, Roscoe. There's no criminal penalty for coveting neighbor wives or taking Lord's names in vain or ignoring the Sabbath.
All that document does is scream to an American Hindu, Buddhist, Sikh, Muslim or Native American: "Your individual standing and inalienable American rights, as a non Christian, are compromised in this Court of Law.'
That's unacceptable. I can go 30-40 minutes at a time without gazing at the Ten Commandments. Got em memorized in fact. I don't need that affirmation in the Courthouse, my rights to a fair trial will be protected by the United States Constitution, not the Ten Commandments.
No rest for the wicked I guess. Sleep well valiant white soldier of the Lord and brave defender of granite. Be assured that the forces of evil cannot enter your home unless they are invited in...I saw that on Buffy the Vampire Slayer.
Myron Thompson isn't the law.
From David Limbaugh:
The American legal system, of course, is based on the English system. U.S. Supreme Court Justice Joseph Story in 1829 wrote, "There never has been a period in which the Common Law did not recognize Christianity as lying at its foundations."
I support Israel. God is judging them, not me. He tells us to back off, and let them take their medicine. "Woe to any nation that goes against my people Israel."
Israel will learn, eventually, but there's much hardship they must endure before they understand. God is doing the teaching there. It's out of our hands.
Now. Good night, in the name of Jesus Christ, amen. :-)
There's coveting of wives and boats going on, there's someone saying G-D, people are golfing Sunday and many here consider Tom Tancredo a God.
Our Legal framework has very little to do with the Ten Commandments, our system is about 50 prima donnas hating and not trusting each other or themselves. They were putting checks and balances on each other.
The judicial power of the United States, shall be vested in one Supreme Court, and in such inferior courts as the Congress may from time to time ordain and establish. The judges, both of the Supreme and inferior courts, shall hold their offices during good behaviour, and shall, at stated times, receive for their services, a compensation, which shall not be diminished during their continuance in office.
This portion clearly establishes that, apart from the Supreme Court, Congress is at liberty to determine the structure of the federal court system. The other limiting condition on Congress for maintaining the structure determined by them is the good behavior clause which only allows them to maintain their continuance in the office. It does not limit Congress as to whether that office exists or not except for the Supreme Court. It must exist. If, for instance, the Congress wished to make the organization of the federal courts completely state based, I see no reason that laws could not be changed or written by Congress to achieve that type of organization. Thus it appears that Congress could by means of organization reduce the offices available to be filled. That is due to the fact that there is no number associated with the federal judicial system in the Constitution. And that the determination of the structure of that system is vested entirely in Congress.
To constitute tribunals inferior to the Supreme Court;
Judge Edmondson was a Reagan appointee. You got whacked by the Gipper ;)
There's a rule of thumb ... if a guy can send you to jail, he's pretty much the law.
Christian History Corner: The Ten Commandments, How Deep Our Debt
The words of the Decalogue run like a river through not only the church but also English and American history.
posted 08/22/2003 |
No matter where they stand on Alabama Chief Justice Roy Moore's fight to keep his Ten Commandments monument on display at the Alabama Judicial Building, Americans agree that it is symbolic. But symbolic of what?
I will not try to prove Moore's claim that the Decalogue is "the moral foundation of law in this nation." But, without question, it is central to Jewish and Christian morality. And, also without question, it is deeply embedded in Westernespecially Anglo-Americanculture.
We've all heard these ten commands many times. As familiarity may breed contempt, it's worth hearing them once more, a little differently. The following is a summary of the version that appears in Deuteronomy 5 (the other, slightly different version is found in Exodus 20):
God identifies himself by what he has done. He brought his people out of Egypt. They are to have no other gods. He is invisible. They must not try to make an image of God or express him in terms of heavenly bodies or earthly creatures. Any idol of God would be pitifully inadequate and dangerously misleading. Instead, God wishes to be known by his passion for his people: his jealousy for their love, his hatred of their wickedness and his lasting commitment to their well being.
God's name is utterly holy. It sums up his personality and purpose. It is a serious thing to abuse God's name, by taking it lightly or using it to endorse empty promises.
The Sabbath day is to be kept holy. It is a day when the whole communityincluding servants, animals, visitors and strangershas time and space to rest and reflect.
Children are to honor their parents. Families are to be bonded by obedience as well as affection. Elderly parents are to be provided for by their children. Soundly built families make a strong and stable society.
Human life, marriage, possessions and reputations are all to be respected. In particular, jealousy is to be tackled at sourcein the heart. A neighbor is any fellow human beingnot just a person who lives nearby. Another person's partner and possessions are not negotiable. Don't even think it! (Andrew Knowles, The Bible Guide: An All-in-one Introduction to the Book of Books [Augsburg: 2001], 95-96.)
These are, above all, the commandments of a God who loves his people. He makes a covenant with them, freely, on his own initiative. To live by these commandments is to respond rightly to God's prior grace. It is to live as part of a covenant community with that loving God.
Long before it became, through the mediation of Christianity, the moral property of Gentiles, the Decalogue was the law code and constitutional center of a theocratic statethe Hebrew nation formed at Sinai. Long before Christian theologians grappled with its relationship, as the "old covenant," with the "new covenant" in Christ, the rabbis treasured, interpreted, and applied it in a kaleidoscope of ways.
Because it represents the responsibilities of a covenant, the Decalogue was probably not divided (as some imagine) into two tablets, each containing five commandments. Rather, there would have been one complete record for each partner in the covenantsymbolizing that this is a mutual relationship. Not only did the commandments come from a loving God, they enjoined love in return. Jesus made this clear when, faced by the Pharisees' question, he summarized all the commandments in two: Love to God and love to neighbor (Matt 22:34-40).
Not that Christians have somehow risen above the need to keep the Ten Commandments. This is clear from Jesus' response to another questionerthe rich young ruler (Matt. 19:17). "Because of His advent in the flesh," as the second-century teacher Irenaeus said, the Ten Commandments "have received extension and increase, but not abrogation." In plain language, they have been amplified, in the Sermon on the Mount and others of Jesus' teaching; they have not been set aside.
Though the Ten Commandments may not be popular with everyone in pluralist America, few would go so far in their criticism as the ancient Manicheans, who believed them to be the work of an evil principle. In part because of such extreme views, the church had, by Augustine's day, placed the Decalogue at the heart of the instruction received by catechumens preparing for baptism.
The commandments were always taught in the church, but they took on a weightier authority at several points in history.
The "Ten Reminders"
For example, in the thirteenth century, the "schoolmen" or scholasticsincluding the great Thomas Aquinaspicked up the argument of Irenaeus's younger contemporary, Tertullian, that the commandments had been engraved on the hearts of all humanity before they were ever engraved on stone. They treated the Decalogue part of the "natural law"part of the very nature of things, accessible to the reason of all people. For such teachers (and for most Christians ever since), God gave this central pillar of the Law not as a news flash, but as a reminder of what would be common knowledge, were it not for sin's obscuring influence.
At the sixteenth-century Council of Trent, the Roman Catholic Church made the Decalogue one of the "four pillars of catechesis," (that is, of the church's teaching office) along with the Creed, the liturgy, and the Lord's Prayer. Today's Catechism of the Catholic Church reaffirms its centrality, adding a reaffirmation of Augustine's words: "Every commandment concerns charity [that is, love]."
Among the sixteenth-century Reformers, Luther commented on the commandments fully in his Catechisms. Calvin prescribed their regular reading in worship, in order to "bring our consciences into subjection to his Law." He also insisted, as had few before him, that the fourth commandmentto keep the Sabbath holybe strictly observed.
It was this heightened Reformation attention to the commandments that influenced Queen Elizabeth to order that the Decalogue be painted over the communion table in all the land's churchesoften over existing altar paintings. During her time, the official sermons appointed to be read from Church of England pulpits included messages on the second, third, seventh, eight, ninth, and tenth commandments.
England soon found itself divided over how much Christians, living in Christ's grace, needed to observe literally all the law's requirements. The Puritans tended to take Calvin's stronger view (though some wondered, in light of their well-known successes in the world of business, whether the Puritans took the eighth commandment as seriously as some of the others).
The accomplished but troubled Calvinist poet William Cowper (making a cameo appearance in our Winter 2004 issue on John Newton) saw the Decalogue as a code handed down in a way calculated to arouse fear, which still held fearful power over hapless humanity:
Marshalling all his terrors as he came;
Thunder, and earthquake, and devouring flame;
From Sinai's top Jehovah gave the law
Life for obediencedeath for ev'ry flaw.
When the great Sov'rein would his will express,
He gives a perfect rule; what can he less? ('Truth,' 547-52)
Cowper wrote that those who persisted in breaking commandments, such as that to keep the Sabbath, would find "mercy cast away" (Bill of Mortality, 1793). John Bunyan's Pilgrim's Progress reflects the same stern vision: when Moses finds Christian, he treats him harshly on account of his sins, saying, "I know not how to show mercy."
The Ten Commandments were central to English law from the beginning. King Alfred the Great (849-99), King of Wessex from 871, a deeply pious promoter of Christian learning and ecclesiastical reform, placed the Decalogue as a prefix to his own legal code. This was no mere nod in God's direction, as at that time the moral and the civil law stood together as one. Hundreds of years later, William Tyndale (c. 1494-1536) would argue that the "law of the kynge is Gods lawe" (Obedience of a Christian Man, 79).
It should not surprise us, then, to find at the roots of America a concern to govern the new nation according to the dictates of the Decalogue. The most radical example of this concern was the theocratic state of the Massachusetts Bay Colony, which wove into its laws much of the Old Testament law.
The jury is still out on the question of to what degree this concern animated the founding fathers. But the older tradition of English and American legal and moral thought was undergirded by these commandments. Are we that much smarter than our forebears? Time will tell.
Chris Armstrong is managing editor of Christian History magazine. This article is indebted to David Lyle Jeffrey's excellent essay on the Ten Commandments in his Dictionary of Biblical Tradition in English Literature (Eerdmans, 1992). More Christian history, including a list of events that occurred this week in the church's past, is available at ChristianHistory.net. Subscriptions to the quarterly print magazine are also available.Copyright © 2003 Christianity Today. Click for reprint information.
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