What's the Constitution of Israel?
Jan 23, 2024 13:20:40 GMT -8
Post by The Ninevite on Jan 23, 2024 13:20:40 GMT -8
www.jcpa.org/dje/articles/const-intro-93.htm
The way that Israel's government is constituted really had to be abstracted from Bible reading. The most important thing about it is who the twelve leaders of the twelve tribes are. Other than that, modern Israelite legislation is thought to be fundamentally the same thing as ancient Talmud, which might be the word for a congressional bill or orders in council in Israel to this very day. Israel's government is not an invariant static, faithful enough preachers in the English language often focus most of their statist language about Israel on the promise between God (Jehovah in Hebrew) and Abraham, but it's very useful to remember that first, a long span of time exists between this compact on the Plain of Shinar and the establishment of the Temple Service by Moses at Mount Siani. Consider questioning the status of Joseph who was first sold as a slave into Egypt, and Moses, who with his brother Aaron and serval others, led them out of Egypt. Are they prophets? Kings? Military leaders? They are not yet Patriarchs, and the patriarchy of Israel doesn't come into existence until Moses divides the nation into twelve tribes following the Exodus across the Red Sea. It isn't enough to say for governmental purposes that Joseph and his brothers were the first patriarchs, because a civil government requires that written records to be kept. The Hebrews were prevented from writing by the Pharaohs of Egypt, and for this reason the official twelve lines of tribal descent including real records of who's in charge of each one do not exist prior to the Exodus.
A constitution is atomic. The United States thinks of itself as having a rational constitution, and the fact that the written original document is rational is the predicate basis upon which its adherents found their loyalty and allegiance, people are Americans, even American attorneys, because the Constitution "makes perfect sense". The constitution of Israel is not irrational either, and prior to attempting theology around Israel's history, let's look at the two documents and see how the United States Constitution also contains history of itself, and beyond the Bill of Rights, which is a bit of an original Torah, let's look at subsequent amendments, not written and drafted by the same scribe, and see how they are a Talmud.
The way that Israel's government is constituted really had to be abstracted from Bible reading. The most important thing about it is who the twelve leaders of the twelve tribes are. Other than that, modern Israelite legislation is thought to be fundamentally the same thing as ancient Talmud, which might be the word for a congressional bill or orders in council in Israel to this very day. Israel's government is not an invariant static, faithful enough preachers in the English language often focus most of their statist language about Israel on the promise between God (Jehovah in Hebrew) and Abraham, but it's very useful to remember that first, a long span of time exists between this compact on the Plain of Shinar and the establishment of the Temple Service by Moses at Mount Siani. Consider questioning the status of Joseph who was first sold as a slave into Egypt, and Moses, who with his brother Aaron and serval others, led them out of Egypt. Are they prophets? Kings? Military leaders? They are not yet Patriarchs, and the patriarchy of Israel doesn't come into existence until Moses divides the nation into twelve tribes following the Exodus across the Red Sea. It isn't enough to say for governmental purposes that Joseph and his brothers were the first patriarchs, because a civil government requires that written records to be kept. The Hebrews were prevented from writing by the Pharaohs of Egypt, and for this reason the official twelve lines of tribal descent including real records of who's in charge of each one do not exist prior to the Exodus.
A constitution is atomic. The United States thinks of itself as having a rational constitution, and the fact that the written original document is rational is the predicate basis upon which its adherents found their loyalty and allegiance, people are Americans, even American attorneys, because the Constitution "makes perfect sense". The constitution of Israel is not irrational either, and prior to attempting theology around Israel's history, let's look at the two documents and see how the United States Constitution also contains history of itself, and beyond the Bill of Rights, which is a bit of an original Torah, let's look at subsequent amendments, not written and drafted by the same scribe, and see how they are a Talmud.