Hi Billy,

On Jan 5, 2012, at 11:31 AM, [email protected] wrote:

> Radical Centrist Introduction
> 
> Started by Radicalcentrist, Oct 21 2011 05:00 PM

Interesting find. Here's his actual blog posts, which appear focused on 
developing a "Theory of America".

http://www.defendingthetruth.com/blog/20-radicalcentrists-blog/

For example..

http://www.defendingthetruth.com/blog/20/entry-90-america-is-a-christian-nation-part-3-all-about-authority-not-religion/

In the last installment of America IS A Christian Nation, I offered answers to 
a few questions that were on the minds of some readers. I hope that my answers 
were sufficient. But if I left any part of a question unanswered, I hope that 
anyone to whom the answer is not clear will pose it. Never will I purposely 
evade a question. But I may not fully understand the sense of a question, just 
like a reader may not fully understand the sense of what I write. Comments and 
questions are open for anyone. All I ask is that the one who comments or 
questions has read what I have written. Questions should be to clarify, not 
provide bulk information. The bulk will be right here, in each next installment.

I do want to make one more pit stop before we resume with the next scheduled 
installment. I think it might be wise to drop back and clarify one other major 
point here, a clarification that may help readers to more fully understand what 
I have written up to this point. The purpose of this diversion is to drive home 
the point that

It Is All About Authority

That's right. Human rights are all about authority. Consider the answers to 
these questions:
        • Why is a policeman allowed to walk around town displaying a weapon, 
and you and I are not? Answer: Authority.
        • Why is the President of the United States allowed to command the 
military? Answer: Authority.
        • Why are the courts allowed to incarcerate folks whom they determine 
deserve it? Answer: Authority.
        • What allows the IRS to seize one's bank account if it determines that 
taxes are due? Answer: Authority.
        • But what keeps any of these folks from entering into our homes and 
taking what they want at random? Answer: Lack of authority.

So authority is a powerful commodity, is it not?

Now consider a few of the complaints of the American British Colonies against 
actions the King. Among other complaints, according to the Declaration of 
Independence, the King George
        • obstructed the administration of justice, by refusing his assent to 
laws for establishing judiciary powers.
        • made judges dependent on his will alone, for the tenure of their 
offices, and the amount and payment of their salaries.
        • erected a multitude of new offices, and sent hither swarms of 
officers to harass our people, and eat out their substance.
        • kept among us, in times of peace, standing armies without the consent 
of our legislature.
        • affected to render the military independent of and superior to civil 
power.

Well look, you guys in Philadelphia back in 1776, your are talking about the 
King of England here. The King of England rules by divine right, divine 
authority, authority given to him directly from God. So how can the king ever 
be wrong??? The king can do anything he wants. He's the man, the guy who has 
authority over all in his domain, certainly over the colonies. So no matter 
what you might think or say, what the king says goes. So what makes you few 
fellows think that the King of England has to listen to anything you say? 
Answer very simply: Authority.

Regardless what the British divine right system might require, the Declaration 
of Independence contends that God gives absolutely NO authority directly to an 
unelected king. According to America's founding document, authority from God 
does NOT first flow through a monarchy. Instead, all authority for men and 
nations endows directly to individuals, and then flows from individuals to a 
government of their choosing. And because the King of England is mere human, 
even the king has not sufficient authority to deny God's basic rights to other 
men. Yet according to the declaration's contentions, that is exactly what King 
George did. And therein lies the rub.

So because King George denied the colonists their basic rights, personal rights 
which if they are correct flow to them directly from God, the colonists 
possessed the God-given right to abolish the king's rule and institute a new 
government, authorizing it in any fashion on which they might agree. According 
to the Declaration of Independence, the divine right of kings model of human 
government is a violation of God's Natural Laws and thereby contradictory to 
God's charge of authority to mankind.

Well that's all fine and good, but until that allegation is adjudicated by some 
source of common authority that is greater than men making it, and indeed even 
greater than even the King of England, and agreed as a common source of 
authority, then why should anyone, especially the King of England, respect what 
the colonists might have to say about the matter? Great question, one that can 
only therefore be answered by appealing to the common authority of the New 
Testament scriptures, scriptures to which both the American colonists and the 
King of England legally submitted. Because both sides submitted to the 
authority of the New Testament scriptures, the final determination of right and 
wrong is simply a matter of scriptural interpretation.

But to adjudicate that question sounds very much like going to court, does it 
not? And who even might possess jurisdiction to settle a dispute over 
scriptural interpretation? Another good question! And the authors of the 
Declaration of Independence thought of that very question. According to the 
declaration, the Founders were content to leave it to God, the 'Supreme Judge 
of the World, to judge the rectitude of [their] intentions.' So the American 
Founders recognized that the conflict with the king boiled down to a matter of 
scriptural interpretation. That question regarded whether God deals directly 
with men as the colonists claim, or whether God deals with men, but first 
through an emissary such as a monarch, as the British divine right government 
contends.

Regarding that question, certain authoritative references are found in various 
books of the Bible, one of which is the book of Matthew. In that book, Matthew 
relates that Jesus came into the temple and began teaching the people certain 
lessons He obviously wanted them to know. As you might imagine, that Jesus 
would bypass the presumed authority of the chief priest and elders, and take 
His teachings directly to the people, did not sit well with the priest and 
elders. So they interrupted Jesus asking Him,

"By what authority doest thou these things? and who gave thee this authority?" 
(Matthew21:23,KJV)

That day in the temple, Jesus Christ demonstrated the Christian principles, 
held by the colonists, that no man is authorized to stand between another man 
and God, and that God desires a personal relationship with all men through His 
Son, Jesus Christ. According to the American colonists' interpretation, King 
George played much the part of the chief priest in the scriptures. And because 
Jesus, Son of God, God in the flesh, bypassed the established authorities, the 
priest and his elders, and took His teachings directly to the people, then that 
establishes the right of the people to deal directly with God. That being the 
case, the people are under no compulsion to respect any presumed authority, the 
use of which denies or crosses the personal relationship between man and his 
maker, as they allege King George did.

Now I quote Matthew directly from the King James Version of the Bible, the same 
version adopted by the Church of England, scriptures of which King George was 
infinitely aware. By English law, the Church of England was, and is, the 
established church of England, which church ordained King George, conferring 
English sovereign authority from God directly to George. So the standards 
against which the American British Colonists would cite crimes by King George 
were the very same standards that authorized the king's rule in the first 
place. In citing these standards, these upstart American colonists placed the 
very idea of rule by divine right into question, using the king's source of 
authority against him. That move put King George in a precarious position. If 
the king assented to the demands of the colonists, then he would admit that the 
colonists were correctly interpreting the scriptures. And if that were true, 
then that fact, once understood by the British people, might even topple the 
British monarchy.

So King George found himself motivated by his own earthly desire to remain 
king, to enforce his will against the the colonies. As a result, the American 
Revolutionary War broke out. But that war was much more than simply a war for 
independence for a nation of folks who desired to be free from the rule of a 
certain king. That war was fought over a much larger question. That war was 
fought over conflicting interpretations of the very scriptures that authorized 
the rule of the British monarchy. And in the end, according to the Treaty of 
Paris of 1783, both sides would just agree to disagree, each party to that 
agreement holding to their respective scriptural interpretation, each party 
submitting to the authority of the scriptures, which as they interpret them 
authorize each nation's sovereignty, and thereby each side publicly and 
obviously submitting to the authority of the Holy Trinity, simply under 
different interpretations of the same scriptures.

So this discussion is all about authority; and it is not about religion at all. 
According to the Declaration of Independence, the foundation of God's Natural 
Law that underwrites the sovereignty of the United States is not any sort of 
religious belief. No, that foundation is TRUTH, self-evident TRUTH. Remember, 
religions deal with beliefs, and faith in those beliefs, not truths. Now the 
foundation on which America's declared sovereignty rests is an ASSUMED truth, 
for sure. But the manner in which America's sovereignty is reasoned to exist 
depends on that assumed truth actually being true! The American Experiment, the 
discussion of which will resume in the next installment, is designed to prove 
the truth of that assumption, or disprove that assumption altogether.

Something in the comments I recently received made me realize that I needed to 
backup and retrace these certain points before we went any further. So thanks 
again for your comments and questions. They really help me to understand what 
you are thinking and whether I am making sense. In the next Installment, we 
will resume discussing the American Experiment and the Theory of America.

Hank 

-- 
Centroids: The Center of the Radical Centrist Community 
<[email protected]>
Google Group: http://groups.google.com/group/RadicalCentrism
Radical Centrism website and blog: http://RadicalCentrism.org

Reply via email to