The  Constitutions Part IX 
  Part I: The people were “not a  party” to the Constitution.
  Part II: There are two forms of  government - free and not free. 
  Part III: The people opposed the  Constitution for good cause. 
  Part IV: Consolidation of power  by men is a rejection of God.
  Part V: To retain rights you  must accept responsibility.
  Part VI: Applications, oaths and  affirmations lead to bondage.
  Part VII: Man gave his birth  right for a bowl of benefits.
  Part VIII: Man created  corporation by vesting part of his own life into a creature of his  own making which now devours him daily as a vast corporate mechanical  monster.
  Allegiance and Faith
  “Man’s primary allegiance is  to his vision of truth, 
  And he is under obligation to  affirm it.”1 
  The concept of allegiance is  defined in Black’s as, “The obligation of fidelity and obedience  which the individual owes to the government under which he lives, or  to his sovereign in return for the protection he receives. It may be  an absolute and permanent obligation, or it may be a qualified and  temporary one.”2
  This of course only refers to a  citizen that is a member as opposed to one that is a mere inhabitant. 3 As an example a “Natural Allegiance,” as stated in English law,  “is due from all men born within the king’s dominions,  immediately upon their birth, which is intrinsic and perpetual, which  cannot be divested by any act of their own.” 
  This Natural Allegiance of  course refers to a time when the free dominion of the land was no  longer held by the people individually. They had lost that position  of “freemen” upon the land created by God and had become subjects  under oaths of fealty or acts and applications under the dominion of  kings. Such allegiance is a form of worship and a rejection of God  but once owed it may not be disregarded by a whim.
  In principle, the Declaration of  Independence and the so called “American Revolution” could not  divest that obligation on its own. It was the freemen, domiciled upon  their own land, that had already removed themselves from that  particular binding dominion and obligation to the king after many  years of self reliance, and with the manumitting charters of Charles  I and II. 
  The Charters did not set men  free. Freedom does not come so easy. They allowed men the opportunity  to seek, struggle and strive to eventually be born on their own land,  within their own free dominion in the new world of the Americas. 
  As we saw in Part V “The civil  law reduces the unwilling freedman to his original slavery; but the  laws of the Angloes judge once manumitted as ever after free.”4 
  This Maxim of English law was  either forgotten or ignored by George III, although proclaimed by  many men of England like William Pitt and Parliament itself. And it  was the usurpation, by George, of the rights of the freeman living in  the American republics which gave lawfulness to the Declaration of  Independence. In actuality it was the King who did the revolting not  Americans. 
  “I desire what is good. Therefore,  everyone who does not agree with me is a traitor.” -- King George  III of England 
  The only real freemen in America  were those who made the effort to establish the ownership of land as  an estate, a free dominion as a free individual. Hamilton did not  include the non-landed populace called “our rabble, or all  unqualified persons”.
  He did not intend that they even  should “have the right of voting, or not be taxed; but that the  freeholders and electors, whose right accrues to them from the common  law, or from charter, shall not be deprived of that right.”5
  Very few Americans today can  claim accrued rights of the Common law because they have not accepted  the responsibilities of that law for themselves much less for their  neighbor. Most Americans do not even educate their own children. 
  The principle upon which Natural  Allegiance stands, although presented under other names, is the basis  of the obedience owed a Father by his Children, Parens Patriae,6 the State as Father.
  State of Fidelity
  The original powers of State  governments, as individual Republics of America before and after the  adoption of The Constitution of the United States,7 rested not in the hands of the State governments but in the hands and  hearts of the individual freeman living on his own land, an estate in  fee simple as an allodium. 
  The state governments had no  real sovereign authority to make the United States a sovereign nation  with dominion over the general inhabitants of America any more than  George III. The States knowing they had only a “titular”  authority, adopted the Constitution, creating the United States in  the name of “We the People”. The individual people would need to  take some overt action or contiguous acquiescence  to express consent  to such incorporation and subjugation because “The enumeration in  the Constitution, of certain rights, shall not be construed to deny  or disparage others retained by the people.”8
  Even Alexander Hamilton wrote  against the Bill of Rights:
  “Here, in strictness, the people  surrender nothing; and as they retain everything they have no need of  particular reservations....” 
  “But a minute detail of particular  rights is certainly far less applicable to a constitution like that  under consideration, which is merely intended to regulate the general  political interests of a nation, than a constitution which has  regulation of every species of personal and private concerns.” 
  He went on to say that the Bill  of Rights were “unnecessary” and even “dangerous” because: 
  “They would contain various  exceptions to powers not granted; and, on this very account, would  afford a colorable pretext to claim more than were granted. For why  declare that things shall not be done which there is no power to do?” 9
  The once colonial - and now  state - administrative government and other equitable and economic  interests wanted a Constitution. The State or status of the sovereign  people was independent of the administrating government in the  republics.10 
  In those days of individual  sovereignty, each household was a state “independent of their form  of government”. They learned to come together in groups called  hundreds. But their loving alliances often failed and faltered from  neglect under the burden and temptations of affluence and abundance. 
  Men forget that their neighbor’s  rights are as important as their own and instead of loving their  neighbor as themselves they begun to covet their neighbor’s goods  in social democracies and are more content to live by the sweat of  others than by that of their own brow, which is a sorry state of affairs.
  Today rights are debated in the  solemn halls of Washington to determine the rights of individuals and  the people cry usurpation. But is it usurpation on their part or  neglect on the part of the people. They are no longer individuals but  individual persons and the layers of that membership are many.
  “The powers not delegated to the  United States by the Constitution, nor prohibited by it to the  States, are reserved to the States respectively, or to the people.”11
  Over the years the relationship  of a free people and a subject government has been turned upside  down. That the people complain about assumed usurpation of the Bill  of Rights seem a moot point under the rampant neglect of the ninth  and tenth amendments of that same document. Their cries seem  hypocritical considering the the pervasive sloth of the last century  allowing government to meddle in every aspect of people’s lives,  the extreme disregard of the law against coveting by rampant  socialism, the consistent rejecting of God by the election of strings  of men calling themselves benefactors, and having strange gods and  benefactors before Him.
  If the people will not maintain  the responsibility of the state by faith, hope and charity that  responsibility will be seized by another who will soon turn their  rights into privileges. The kingdom John the Baptist preached  operated by charity12 not by force.13 Without true commitment to the simple charity and love of neighbor  preached by Jesus, Moses and Abraham no society will remain free.
  Status of a Republic and Democracy
  Today, the government is  referenced as the United States Federal Democracy even though at the  beginnings of government in the Americas the word Republic was the  title most sought and most used. Is there a difference?
  “The United States shall guarantee to  every State in this Union a Republican Form of Government…”14 
  “Republic. A commonwealth; that form  of government in which the administration of affairs is open to all  the citizens. In another sense, it signifies the state, independently  of its government.”15 
  We see here that there may be  more than one sense to the word republic. First, the  ‘administration of affairs’ is open to citizens and it can be  referred to as a commonwealth, which denotes the general welfare of  the people or the public. In the other sense, a republic ‘signifies  the state independent of its government’. 
  What does that mean? The state  should be independent from the government. The word state has  almost twenty different definitions. A state is a status or an  estate or a condition of life, which, in the case of a republic can  be independent of its government. 
  In another place we find the  word republic defined, “A state or nation in which the supreme  power rests in all the citizens… A state or nation with a president  as its titular head; distinguished from monarchy.” 
  In this definition we see again  that the supreme power is in the hands of the citizen who is entitled  to vote to choose the titular16 ministers of government not a leader who can rule over his neighbor  and himself. The government leaders were not like elected kings and  law makers who exercise authority, can take everything from the first  fruits to your sons and daughters. 
  A leader of a true republic does  not rule the people nor do the people rule over each other as in a  democracy where the majority rule over the minority. In a republic  people are free to rule themselves, “free from things public”. In  a republic of noble and virtuous souls there are few affairs of the  people that are not taken care of by the people for the people. 
  The United States Federal  government was to guarantee to every State, status or condition of  life a Republican form of government, a government where men are free  from things public. Why then does the government of the corporate  States and the United States seem to have such a supreme authority  over almost every aspect of its citizenry and their lives? Whose  fault is this, who is to blame? Is it the usurpation of government or  the ignorant, greedy and covetous and slothful applications of men? 
  “When thou sittest to eat with a  ruler, consider diligently what is before thee: And put a knife to  thy throat, if thou be a man given to appetite. Be not desirous of  his dainties: for they are deceitful meat.” Proverbs 23:1-3 
  What is the true nature of the  kingdom of God at hand? What should be the true nature of a pure  Republic? Plato’s Republic was very much contrary to those early  Republics where kings and central governments were ousted or rejected  or exited. 
  Today, there are many nations  calling themselves republics but they are very different from each  other and many are also different than they were in their beginnings. 
  Some may assume that the United  States of America and the original Republic are one and the same  thing but you have to look no farther than April 3, 1918, when the  new American Creed was read in Congress beginning with the words, “I  believe in the United States of America as a government… whose just  powers are derived from the consent of the governed: a democracy in a  republic.” In other words the U.S. Federal democracy is a corporate  political society that exists within the Original Republic, a  Republic that predates the United States’ Constitution. 
  The United States was not a  continuation of the Government of the people, but a departure by  certain select people and institutions. Some may ask why the United  States needed a Creed, but the fact is that all governments are  systems of faith. Fidelity is from the word “fides”, meaning  “confidence, faith, trust”. 
  The creation of the United  States could not subject an entire nation of free people to the will  of that corporate body to make law by the signatures of a few men, by  the adoption of representative forms of government that were not  given such power to begin with. Nor could it gain such power by the  vote of the people. 
  
  What You Bind  on Earth
  How does a government get its  power and authority? 
  “Good  government is no substitute for self-government.” Gandhi, Mahatma
  Some take the belief too far  that the “The State ... is a social institution forced by a  victorious group of men on a defeated group ... [for] no other  purpose than the economic exploitation of the vanquished by the  victors. No primitive State known to history originated in any other  manner.”17
  But no such government would  bind man because “Those captured by pirates and robbers remain  free.”18 For the simple reason that “Things captured by pirates and robbers  do not change ownership.”19 Governments obtain power and men become bound to obey those  institutions on earth, for numerous reasons, which  are almost all  based in consent in one form or another.
  It would be binding for those  who “take any oath of allegiance to the Government thereof”.20 It would be binding for those who sign a social compact. It would  also be binding if people apply and receive benefits because “He  who receives the benefit should also bear the disadvantage.”21 The binding is even more complete if the people take the benefit at  the expense of others, including your children’s future.
  People may desire to claim  usurpation or fraud, or failure of full disclosure but these self  serving mantras will likely fall on deaf ears with volumes of public  records to the contrary. This binding is based on constructive social  contracts, well publicized and no one who takes a benefit can deny  the reciprocating obligations.
  The “social contract,  agreement, or covenant by which men are said to have abandoned the  ‘state of nature’ to form the society in which they now live....  Assumes that men at first lived in a state of anarchy where there was  no society, no government, and no organized coercion of the  individual by the group… by the social contract men had surrendered  their natural liberties in order to enjoy the order and safety of the  organized state.” 22 This  is done at the cost of liberty. 
  The Kingdom of God or the  Kingdom of Heaven was the right to be ruled by God. It was not a new  government but the original state of nature with no civil or social  contract.
  Moses had created a nation of  people to bring them back  to the dominion of God. The people were  bound together with a common faith in a supreme being and creator of  the world, a common law and a literature that attempted to explain  the precepts of that law and its common faith and religion.
  Their religion included a means  of freewill sacrifice that sustained the needs of their society  through that common faith, in the hope and by the charity of the  people. They elected titular leaders to minister that government of  God without relinquishing any rights granted by God. This peculiar  government of the people, served God by the people’s love for one  another and no other social contract. The ministers  were separate  from the people who maintained their status as free souls under God.  The people were the state and the Levites, without authority, held  all things in common so that the people might be free.
  As a people they continuously  turned back to those elements and rudiments of the world that had  brought them into bondage. The voice of the people elected a king to  rule over them, forming a social contract that abandoned the precepts  of their faith. He  was soon able to take by force their sacrifices,  take the first fruits of their labor, the best of their fields, their  sons and daughters, make his instruments of war, and bring them back  into the bondage of the world.
  When the Pharisees elected to  invite Rome to secure their government they continued that journey  away from God toward Babylon. Upon “... the death of Caesar the  Jews of Rome gathered for many nights, waking strange feelings of awe  in the city, as they chanted in mournful melodies their Psalms around  the pyre on which the body of their benefactor had been burnt, and  raised their pathetic dirges.”23
  Jesus  came preaching a kingdom, appointed it and told his titular ministers  and ambassadors to not be like the governments of the world that  called themselves benefactors but exercised authority one over the  other. They were to be that one form of government that led the  people back to God.
  Just as their are forms of  government there are forms of citizenship. Whether a citizen is still  a natural inhabitant or has obtained membership in a political  society, he has certain rights, although, those rights may differ.  The natural inhabitant may be a member of a society or civitas24,but  he remains an individual with civil rights within that general body.  Those “Civil rights are such as belong to every citizen of the  state or country, or, in a wider sense to all its inhabitants, and  are not connected with the organization or the administration of  government. They include the rights of property, marriage, protection  by laws, freedom of contract, trial by jury, etc.”25 An individual, who becomes a member or person in a political society,  also has civil rights, but the origin of those rights, being  political, are rights “pertaining or relating to the policy or  administration of government”.26 So, “as otherwise defined, civil rights are rights appertaining to  a person in virtue of his citizenship in a state or community. Rights  capable of being enforced or redressed in civil action. Also a term  applied to certain rights secured to citizens of the United States by  the thirteenth and fourteenth amendments to the Constitution, and by  various acts of Congress made in pursuance thereof.”27
  The essential difference would  seem to be that the former “are not connected with the organization  or the administration of government”, while the latter are  “subject”.
  “It is quite clear then that  there is a citizenship of the United States and a citizenship of a  State, which are distinct from each other and which depend upon  different characteristics or circumstances in the Individual.” 28 “The rights of a citizen under one (state or United States  citizenship) may be quite different from those which he has under the  other…”29 
  If the benefit of the latter  citizenship includes the duty of subjection, then the assent must  require a voluntary consent, or else such citizenship would be  nothing more than involuntary servitude. There are countless ways of  demonstrating the consummation of a voluntary consent. 
  “The real destroyer of the liberties of  the people is he who spreads among them bounties, donations and  benefits.”30 
  Loosening
  Free republics were “composed  of large numbers of freemen and the law which they administered, was  that which had been handed down by oral tradition from generation to  generation.”31 The virtue of the people was the original “fountainhead of justice”  which provided their own common welfare, ministers and tribunals to  which every freeman could appeal for aid, mercy and  justice.
  To seek the kingdom of God you  need to turn around and go another way. This is an individual journey  but a kingdom is not a man. Men still need to come together as a  community or society, two or more gathered together. What will bind  them as a society cannot be a social compact that diminishes their  natural right to choose. Their conversation in that society is not  without reservation for they remain free. Their contributions and  communion with that society must be freely given and without  reservation. 
  A free individual in the state  of nature is not a kingdom except to himself. To be a citizen of the  Kingdom of God he needs a body or civitas to form the asylum state.32 The asylum state is a city of refuge from local and foreign abuses of  justice. To form a civitas or body politic some men must give up  their liberty so that others may be free.
  By this act of sacrifice an  entrance to the Kingdom of God at hand, the right to be ruled by God  may be maintained. This is what Abraham, Moses, and Jesus were doing  with their called out ministers, their living stones who belonged to  God and were bond servants of Christ, living in the world but not of  it, to set the captive free and return everyman to his family and to  his possessions.
  The Invidious Assembly
  “If Virtue & Knowledge are  diffused among the People, they will never be enslaved. This will be  their great Security”33 
  In a free society the entire  social welfare provided by the government is the result of freewill  contribution called charity. It will only be provided amongst a  people who love one another as much as they love themselves.  Societies that force the contributions of the people, by their nature  covet their neighbor’s goods. Lacking virtue and knowledge they are  soon caught in a net of their own making.
  The institutions they create  will eventually take on the nature of a beast and like the monster of  Dr. Frankenstein they will become the victim of their own creation.  No reigning by oath or affirmation will chain the monsters, or alter  their destiny.
  When people talk about law and  the constitution they often forget to examine things in the context  of history. In 1776 many families in America had been here for  centuries, struggling, sacrificing to establish a free republic with  Cromwell seeking its protection in the 1600’s.
  A republic is not dependent upon  who its leaders are but upon the willingness by the people, as a  society, to accept their personal and natural obligations to and for  one another freely without hesitation or selfishness solely on the  basis of virtue. 
  In  early America, the success and prosperity of the people was due in  part to “The churches in New England” which “were so many  nurseries of freemen, training them in the principles of  self-government and accustoming them to the feeling of independence.  In these petty organizations were developed, in practice, the  principles of individual and national freedom. Each church was a  republic in embryo. The fiction became a fact, the abstraction a  reality...”34
  The modern Churches have simply  become nurseries which have turned the people into children of  the State. The people apply to benefactors who exercise authority  one over the other contrary to the teachings of Christ. These,  often incorporated, entities of the state provide little more than  token charity amongst their congregations. The practices and  doctrines, rituals and ceremonies, of those state instituted religious organizations today are much different than the  early Church. Instead of freeing the people they placate the people,  making them comfortable in beggarly elements of bondage.35
  Men are fond of proclaiming over  200 years of freedom in America, yet the people have not been free  for a long time. They have been comfortable but most of that comfort  and euphoria is based on debt and ignorance.
  For the last hundred years and  more the people of America have become more and more dependent upon a  system of debt created “legal tender” notes which have altered  their relationship to what they own and how they own it, to their  labor and whom they serve, to their neighbor now and in the future. 
  Few people understand what this  means in law and society or why Israel, early Christians, and  Americans avoided such dishonest currencies. They fail to understand  for several reasons. At least one of those reasons is because they  have availed themselves of free education which has been worth what  they paid for it. And their personal comfort is more important than  others.
  Free education is socialism. It  was not free but others were forced to pay for it. All social welfare  or health care is covetous means and is received at the expense of  others and the expense of their children. 
  The Alien State
  States were once National  states. They were republics which adopted the original constitution  establishing the federal corporate United States of America.36 Just reading the elements of the constitution we can see that it is  an indirect democracy, with constitutional guidelines, which is  supposed to guarantee a republican form of government for the states,  if the people were to “retain” their rights. They have not done  so.
  The constitution also guarantees  our right to contract and the right to be held to contracts both  written and constructive. It also guarantees our right to assemble.  That assembly may be free or corporate and bound by contract, oath,  or debt.
  One of the first acts of the  Congress created by the United States Constitution was to establish a  federal court system in the  architectonic Judiciary Act of 1789.
  In Sec. 16., it states, “That  suits in equity shall not be sustained in either of the courts of the  United States, in any case where plain, adequate and complete remedy  may be had at law.”
  For the citizens of the United  States today there is little remedy  but in equity because the common  law is not competent to give remedy when we establish equitable  relationships.37
  In Samuel 8:19 the “voice of  the people” “rejected” God saying “Nay; but we will have a  king over us”. It would be convenient for our pride and the comfort  of our conscience to blame the assumed or supposed acts of tyranny by  government and its bureaucracies totally on their usurpation of the  law, but would that be true? Would that be honest? Would that be  just? After all, if it is lawful to do with our own what we will,  then is it not lawful for government to do with its own what it  wills?
  We know that “If we will not  be ruled by God, then we will be ruled by tyrants”.38 In far less than two hundred years “We the  People” have gone from a free republic to a social democracy, from  a government of for and by the people to a government of the  politicians, by the bureaucrats, and for the special interests.
  As we have seen earlier in the  Slaughter House Case the United States and  State citizenship are  “distinct from each other” and  “depend upon different  characteristics or circumstances in the Individual” where the  rights are “quite different”. 39 
  “Constantly bearing in mind that in  entering into society individuals must give up a share of liberty to  preserve the rest…40
  Almost all governments are  corporations in one form or another.41 After the Civil War there was a decided change in the relationship of  State and Federal government and subsequently in the natural citizens  or inhabitants in the states and citizens of the Federal Government.
  Citizenship is: “The status of being  a citizen” and may include a, “Membership in a political society,  implying a duty of allegiance on the part of the member and a duty of  protection on the part of society.”42
  “A citizen is a member of the nation.  A citizen of the United States is a member of the large society which  we call the United States of America.”
  “In the United States citizenship is  defined in the fourteenth amendment to the Constitution as: ‘All  persons born or naturalized in the United States and subject to the  jurisdiction thereof are citizens of the United States and the States  wherein they reside.’”43
  When people speak of “State”  are they referring to the corporate “State of ---“ existing under  the Authority of the United States, or do they mean one of the  National states44 which, in those early days, adopted the original constitution  establishing the corporate United States of America.45
  “The term ‘citizen’ is  distinguishable from ‘resident’ or ‘inhabitant.’ One may be a  citizen of a state without being an inhabitant, or an inhabitant  without being a citizen.” “Word ‘resident’ has many meanings  in law, largely determined by statutory context in which it is  used.”46 “Residents, as distinguished from citizens, are aliens who are  permitted to take up a permanent abode in the country.  Being bound  to the society by reason of their dwelling in it, they are subject to  its laws so long as they remain there, and, being protected by it,  they must defend it, although they do not enjoy all the rights of  citizens.  They have only certain privileges which the law, or  custom, gives them.”47 
  If residents are “aliens who  are permitted to take up a permanent abode in the country” and they  are a resident of a State then their citizenship originates somewhere  else other than the State in which they live. “A citizen of the  United States is a citizen of the federal government ...”48 who resides in one of the States. “A person may be at the same time  a citizen of the United States and a citizen of a State, but his  rights of citizenship under one of these governments will be  different from those he has under the other.”49
  To be a citizen of the United  states and a resident of a state should not be confused with a resident alien, “One, not yet a citizen of this country, who  has come into the country from another with the intent to abandon his  former citizenship and to reside here.”50
  This may seem confusing but the  complexity of the change, the relationships wrought from those  changes explain a great deal of the confusion about what are rights  and what are privileges. The interchangeability of many words and  their casual misuse create a great deal of confusion rather quickly  if terms are not properly defined in the sense and context of their use.
  “Civil rights”, for example,  “are such as belong to every citizen of the state or country, or,  in a wider sense to all its inhabitants, and are not connected with  the organization or the administration of government. They include  the rights of property, marriage, protection by laws, freedom of  contract, trial by jury, etc.”51 
  An individual, who becomes a  member or person in a political society, also has civil rights, but  the origin of those rights, being political, are rights “pertaining  or relating to the policy or administration of government”.52 
  Both are civil rights but are  absolutely different in nature and in their regulatory subjection. We  see in the same definition of Civil Rights it is stated, “as  otherwise defined, civil rights are rights appertaining to a person  in virtue of his citizenship in a state or community. Rights capable  of being enforced or redressed in civil action. Also a term applied  to certain rights secured to citizens of the United States by the  thirteenth and fourteenth amendments to the Constitution, and by  various acts of Congress made in pursuance thereof.”53
  While there at least three  definitions of civil rights there is at least one essential  difference between the first and the last. In the first those rights  “are not connected with the organization or the administration of  government”. This is easier to understand if we realize God endowed  men with rights, not governments. So all civil rights originated in  the individual man and are not lawfully subject to governments or our  neighbors. The last definition of civil rights are rights secured  to citizens by government. That  would be rights endowed by government gods of other inhabitants. You  obtained those rights and benefits by contracting as a member with  the other inhabitants who are also contracted.54 This latter citizenship is “subject to the jurisdiction” of the  institution of men.
   Are we aliens in the land of  the free and the home of the brave? Have we traded our birthright of  liberty for a cauldron of benefits at the expense of our neighbor and  been snared in a trap of our own making?  Have we gone against the  will of God and now suffer from a strong delusion?
   “No  one is obliged to accept a benefit against his consent. But if he  does not dissent, he will be considered as assenting.”55
   “It  is immaterial whether a man gives his assent by words or by acts and  deeds.”56
  The Citizenship by “membership”  also includes a “duty of allegiance on the part of the member.”57 Man’s primary allegiance was to his vision of truth until he binds  himself to the obedience of another. Then he is under obligation to  affirm this new contract, covenant, or constitution. 
  Our present state of bondage  rests upon our own heads and 100 years of sloth and avarice. We have  failed to affirm the freedom and liberty won by 200 years of self  reliance and struggle by our forefathers before the revolution. The  road back cannot begin on paper with declarations and proclamations  but where it began with early Americans, in the hearts and minds that  led us from God.
  Pitfalls, Traps and Snares
  We are warned of all the  pitfalls, traps and snares where men are mired in bondage in the  Bible and by the teachings of Jesus Christ. We are not always warned  by those who profess to know Christ. 
  One thing common to Republics is  the remaining power of the people to contract for, apply to, and  receive gifts, gratuities, and benefits. Such contracts or  applications steadily erode access to freedom common to a  responsible, self-reliant and free people. 
  “The hand of the diligent shall bear  rule: but the slothful shall be under tribute.” Proverbs 12:24 
  Anglican ordination in England  required an oath of allegiance to the British crown which had ordered  the oaths of allegiance and supremacy, and the “Test Act” again  required all civil office holders to take oaths of supremacy and  allegiance. 
  A 1393 “Statute of Praemunire”  stipulated that “lands, tenements, goods, and chattels are to be  forfeit to our lord the king” for showing disrespect and contempt  for the crown by asserting superiority of any legal authority outside  the kingdom. There was a great pressure to compel these oaths and  there was a great movement to avoid them based on a Biblical faith in  Christ the King and Lord of a kingdom which was at hand.
  To avoid such oaths of  allegiance men fled with their families to the Americas in hope. To  be freemen under God instead of subjects serving governments by the  sweat of their brow and bowing down to law makers who exercise  authority required change. To be a Christian required repentance and  seeking a kingdom of God and His righteousness. To say we believe in  Christ and not do what he said is to take His name in vain.58
  Religions and the World
  All governments have elements of  religion in them including faith. “Religion” only appears five  times in the Bible and is only used once in a good sense. Pure  religion59 is the gathering together in the name of Christ for the purposes of  caring for one another in by faith, hope and charity which is love  “unspotted by the world”. Every  time you read the word “world” in the Bible you need to know  which Greek was used to produce that word because there were more  than five in the New Testament alone.
  The  Greek word kosmos actually meant the state and is recently defined as “an  apt and harmonious arrangement or constitution, order, government.”60 The Greeks produced other forms, such as the Homeric kosmeo,  used in reference to the act of “marshaling troops.”61 From the Greek and Roman point of view, the “... word kosmos ... meant originally the discipline of an army, and  next the ordered constitution of a state.”62 
   Today’s Churches practice and preach religion very much spotted by  the world. They completely care for their needy by the benefaction of  the world and not charity. 
  There are many ideas that have  crept into the thinking of the modern Church that needs to be brought  to light so that we may repent and seek the kingdom and the  righteousness of God.
  Christ appointed a government to  His apostles63 but did not allow His government to exercise authority.64 You may call that government of God the Church, the ekklesia, the  called out. They were to feed His sheep.65
  The ministers of the Church are  to be the ministers to the people for God to keep them free souls  under God and not under the Pharaohs and Nimrods of the “world”
  They do this by the charity of  the people, for the people and by the people freely giving and  receiving in God’s name. The ministers are separate from the world  and are servants of the people. The ministers are separate from the  people but work together as a body so that neither the ministers nor  the people will be snared by the gods of the world. 
  What Church provides all the  social welfare for the people by faith, hope and charity? What Church  does not send the people to men called benefactors but who exercise  authority? What Church is faithful to the word and ways of God?
  How can so many people call  themselves Christians today, read the Bible--- and take so much of it  literally--, but cannot see that Christ was preaching a form of  government which operated on faith, hope, charity, and the perfect  law of liberty? Abraham left the men that devised civil government  with codified laws and compulsory taxes in Ur and Haran. Moses  brought the people out of a government of Egypt where the people had  a tax liability equal to several months of labor each year, the gold  and silver was in the treasuries of the government, the people only  had a legal title to land and the banks charged interest on anything  you borrowed. So was Christ doing something all that different by  setting the captive free?
  Moses gave the people a  government where they only paid taxes to support the ministers  “according to their service”. Charitable contributions were given  as “freewill offerings” or self inflicted “sin offerings”;  all the gold and silver was in the hands of the people and interest  was almost completely forbidden. There was no king in Israel or  need for one as long as the people remained faithful to God. 
  Jesus did much the same as  Moses, Abraham and many other free governments. The first century  Church was a well organized and self disciplined republican system of  self governance. It was not like the kingdoms of the other nations  where men ruled over other men.66
  Christ preached a kingdom of  service and charity sacrifice, not entitlements, benefits, and forced  taxation. He told us to apply to His Father in Heaven. It is because  men apply to Caesar and eat at his table that men owe Caesar what  should be God’s alone. 
  You may have to pay Caesar what  you owe him. You may have to be friends with the “unrighteous  mammon.”67 But you should repent and begin to go the other way. If your Church  will not conform to the message of Christ and perform the services of  the first century Church stop tithing to it. Seek a faithful minister  who will lead you to the kingdom and in the ways of righteousness.
  The Church - as we have come to  call it - had a particular structure and was composed of particular  kind of men, ordained under particular conditions specified by Christ  to do particular tasks for the people who sought the kingdom of God  on earth. 
  “Again he said unto me, Prophesy upon  these bones, and say unto them, O ye dry bones, hear the word of the  LORD. Thus saith the Lord GOD unto these bones; Behold, I will cause  breath to enter into you, and ye shall live: And I will lay sinews  upon you, and will bring up flesh upon you, and cover you with skin,  and put breath in you, and ye shall live; and ye shall know that I am  the LORD.” Ezekiel 37:4 
“... and I praised and honoured him  that liveth for ever, whose dominion is an everlasting dominion, and  his kingdom is from generation to generation:” Daniel 4:34 
  Letters from the Earth
  “But it was impossible to save the  Great Republic. She was rotten to the heart. Lust of conquest had  long ago done its work; trampling upon the helpless abroad had taught  her, by a natural process, to endure with apathy the like at home;  multitudes who had applauded the crushing of other people’s  liberties, lived to suffer for their mistake in their own persons.  The government was irrevocably in the hands of the prodigiously rich  and their hangers-on; the suffrage was become a mere machine, which  they used as they chose. There was no principle but commercialism, no  patriotism but of the pocket.” Letters from the Earth: Uncensored  Writings, Mark Twain 
      
  
 
  
            
 
 
  
 
  
Contracts, Covenants, and Constitutions 
The book Contract, Covenants, and Constitutions, reveals the contrasting nature of a free government and those established by contract. It brings the original Constitution of the United States into historical contexts and the change in the modern American  government into a unique revealing perspective. It also takes a detailed look at the prohibition in the Bible concerning government by contract; the Biblically delegated elements for constitutions; and the debt and bondage that always results from the failure to adhere to  Godly precepts.
 
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