Society and community: Difference between revisions
No edit summary |
mNo edit summary |
||
(20 intermediate revisions by 5 users not shown) | |||
Line 1: | Line 1: | ||
{{Societycommunity}} | |||
{{Template:Definitions}} | |||
{{Template:Monks}} | |||
{{Template:law}} | |||
{{Template:Rights}} | |||
{{Template:Community}} | |||
{{Template:News}} | |||
==Footnotes== | |||
<references /> | |||
[[Category:Articles]] | |||
[[Category:Definitions]] | |||
Latest revision as of 16:33, 30 November 2023
Society and community
To speak of a free society we must address the right to choose and the limitation of choice. In the formation of society there must be the right to choose[1] but there also must be a governing of that choice. There is a community within communities called the family. Communities are made up of individuals best procreated within the family. While all communes are communities all communities are not communes.
It is withing the family where we first begin to govern ourselves so that upon entering society we may learn to govern the whole of society without infringement upon the right of the individual. Identity politics, socialism, and Collectivism are the enemies of individualism.
In the commerce of a free society there is a lot of work going on behind the scenes that is only shared with ministers and "congregants" in free assemblies. To seek or build the Kingdom of God, which is the right to be ruled by God, a communion of daily bread is one of the most important elements of a free world order which leads to eternal life. All other societies are not free who provide their free bread and benefits through force, fear and fealty.
Only an intentional community based on fervent charity can form a free society bound together by social virtues through love and systematic charity have the hope of being free.
Congregations of Record composed of Elders have no real "members" in a free society, except in the most general sense of the word "member".
Why should we call them congregants instead of members?
Member includes the idea of belonging to a group,[2] A congregant is simply exercising the right of free assembly; there are no legal bonds that control or restrict his or her liberty.
Like the Levites of old, Moses and Jesus created a system of self-government where the ministers were separate and titular. They could not exercise authority one over the other like the Benefactors of the world. While they owned all things in common they did not exercise authority one over the other. The people did not belong to the body of Levites but individually belonged to God[3] Himself or so is the intention of God. The ministers of the Church in the wilderness and the early Church owned all things in common [4] but the people were returned to their possessions and their families[5]. The same as the Church in the wilderness the early Church as a group of appointed ministers called out to minister to the Kingdom of God at hand was composed of men and women who belonged to God, were not of the "world" and were assigned to feed his sheep just as the Levites served the tents of the congregations by providing a Daily ministration through the Corban or sacrifice of the people given as Freewill offerings which the New Testament calls charity. They, the Church and its ordained ministers, held things as joint heirs of a society with a mission of charity as unhewn but lively Stones from which the living Altars of God may be built.
Unfortunately, men and women everywhere have sought the benefits of the world and the Fathers of the earth. People again have become entangled in the elements of bondage offered by the world imagining that way to be one offering social security.
They will not be free unless they repent. You will not be forgiven unless you forgive others, and you cannot be free unless you desire to free others. You must be faithful in loving others, if you desire God to love you.
That means you must attend to the true needs of others in righteous ways.
Christ showed The Way to be free souls under God, which requires gathering in His name, His character, according to the righteousness of God.
You will not find Christ trying to save Himself first.
So what is the Kingdom of God He preached, into which thousands of Jews were baptized back at the beginning? Those who were baptized into one system under Christ were cast out of another system under men, like the one Herod established by his baptism and Corban.
Those Jews who said, "What is Jesus to us?" and went back to the cities of bondage with their civil benefits - those Jews were cast out of the kingdom of God. Or as Jesus said, the kingdom was taken from them and given to those who would bear fruit (Matt 21:43).
What we call the early Church was, in reality, God's government. It was composed of both a society and a community.
- "Constantly bearing in mind that in entering into society individuals must give up a share of liberty to preserve the rest…" --Andrew Jackson, March 4, 1833.
In the Kingdom of God, the people do not enter a society, but they become a part of a community by their communion of love for one another. They become a band of brothers by mutual sacrifice, honor and caring in a system of liberty with no rulers nor kings.
One definition of communion is "the act of receiving the Eucharistic elements."
The elements of the Eucharist were a sharing of daily bread; taking what you have and freely giving it to others who are hungry. Christ talks of this giving and feeding over and over again. This Eucharist involves several spiritual elements which are all a part of Christ's character. Matthew 10:8, "Heal the sick, cleanse the lepers, raise the dead, cast out devils: freely ye have received, freely give."
It is the relationship born out of this communion with God and man in pure religion that is part of the keys to the kingdom.
The Church appointed by Christ is actually a society of service to that community. When you seek the kingdom, you enter not by giving up a share of your liberty as Andrew Jackson stated, but by casting your bread upon the waters (Ecclesiastes 11:1) in faith. Another way to say that is, you sacrifice something to provide communion for your fellow man in righteous service.
“Woe unto you, lawyers! for ye have taken away the key of knowledge: ye entered not in yourselves, and them that were entering in ye hindered.” (Luke 11:52)
- "When I wrote the Covenants of the gods my father, after reading the first chapter, said I was right, but he added 'They will not like you.' He clearly meant the lawyers who did not like Jesus." --Bro. Gregory
The kingdom of God has ministers who make themselves servants of God by serving the community who seek God as the ruler of their lives. That community must seek to love one another in real ways.
The ministers of Christ's kingdom need to exhibit the character of Christ.
If the Titanic was sinking, do you think you would find Jesus in the life boats or do you think you would find him helping get others into the life boats?
Rome is in decline and falling.
The people who want to exit Babylon first before they make arrangements for others - sometimes even their own families - are probably not minister material.
Christ was rich, but He made Himself poor. He had a life, but He laid it down for others. That is the name of Christ. He is known for having that reputation.[6]
This is the spirit of His ministers. It is not about saving ourselves, but about saving others. And the people who congregate in that spirit with a similar attitude of sacrifice are hearing Christ.
Everyone on these groups needs to select a congregation of record and become part of that communion of Christ.
Those who hear His voice and come to His ways are His Sheep.
Everyone should be a congregant with an existing congregation of record, or begin to form a congregation of record by gathering with two or more, testifying that you are looking for the ministers of God. Early Christians did this by the thousands, and they were saved from much of the wrath which later came.
It is no different today.
See more Forbidden Definitions
Monks |
Minister |
Titular Servants |
Elder |
Deacon |
Bishop |
Overseer |
ordain |
appoint |
Orders |
Religious Orders |
Rules of St Benedict |
Married Monks |
Mendicant |
Lost Monks |
Monasticism |
Modern Monastic life |
Churches |
Levites |
Vow of poverty |
All things common |
Guidelines |
Liturgy |
Priests |
Eucharist |
Daily ministration |
Christian conflict |
Diocletianic Persecution |
Altars |
Fringes |
Breeches |
Red heifer |
Sabbath |
Law
Law |
Natural Law |
Legal title |
Common Law |
Fiction of law |
Stare decisis |
Jury |
Voir dire |
Consent |
Contract |
Parental contract |
Government |
Civil law |
Civil Rights |
Civil Government |
Governments |
No Kings |
Canon law |
Cities of refuge |
Levites |
Citizen |
Equity |
The Ten Laws |
Law of the Maat |
Bastiat's The Law and Two Trees |
Trees |
The Occupy Refuge Movement |
Clive Bundy |
Hammond |
Barcroft |
Benefactors |
Gods |
Jury |
Sanhedrin |
Protection |
Weightier matters |
Social contract |
Community Law |
Perfect law of liberty |
Power to change |
Covet |
Rights |
Anarchist |
Agorism |
Live as if the state does not exist |
Rights |
Property rights |
Human Rights |
Human Events |
Law |
Natural Law |
Civil law |
Legal |
Common Law |
Fiction of law |
UNIVERSAL DECLARATION OF HUMAN RIGHTS |
Parents have a prior right |
Universal Declaration on Bioethics and Human Rights |
Human resources |
Merchandise |
Employ |
Universal Service |
Tribute |
Corvee |
The Way |
Foolishly |
Foolish virgins |
The Right of Self-determination |
Fraud |
Free Assemblies |
CORE |
Righteousness |
Workers of Iniquity |
Doers of the Word |
Fruit |
Community |
Intentional Community |
Sense of Community |
Community Types |
Community Ethics |
Community Law |
Voluntary society |
Voluntaryist Constitution |
Volunteer |
Society |
Individualism |
Liberalism |
Classical liberalism |
Transcendentalist |
Communities Ancient |
Communitarian |
Collectivism |
Identity politics |
Socialism |
Communism |
Primitive Communism |
Communion |
Eucharist |
Social Virtues |
Daily ministration |
Tens |
FEMA |
Burning Bush Festival |
Burning Bush Festival |
Feasts |
Feasts and festivals |
Pentecost |
Celebrate |
Law |
Rights |
Economy |
Education |
Welfare types |
Stimulus |
Building back |
The Greatest Reset |
Agorism |
Permaculture |
Guru theories |
Perfect law of liberty |
Benefactors |
Covetous practices |
Christian conflict |
Pure Religion |
Public religion |
Imperial Cult of Rome |
gods |
Covet |
First to do List |
Fundamental orders |
Network |
Newsletter |
Dear Network |
Network Notes |
The Kingdom Newsletter |
Thought for the day |
Events List |
Free speech |
Conversation
Footnotes
- ↑ "Freedom is the Right to Choose, the Right to create for oneself the alternatives of Choice. Without the possibility of Choice, and the exercise of Choice, a man is not a man but a member, an instrument, a thing.” Archibald MacLeish
- ↑ Member: "an individual, thing, or organization belonging to a group."
- ↑ Numbers 3:12 And I, behold, I have taken the Levites from among the children of Israel instead of all the firstborn that openeth the matrix among the children of Israel: therefore the Levites shall be mine;
- Numbers 3:45 Take the Levites instead of all the firstborn among the children of Israel, and the cattle of the Levites instead of their cattle; and the Levites shall be mine: I am the LORD.
- Numbers 8:14 Thus shalt thou separate the Levites from among the children of Israel: and the Levites shall be mine.
- ↑ Acts 2:44 And all that believed were together, and had all things common; Acts 4:32 And the multitude of them that believed were of one heart and of one soul: neither said any of them that ought of the things which he possessed was his own; but they had all things common.
- ↑ Leviticus 25:10 And ye shall hallow the fiftieth year, and proclaim liberty throughout all the land unto all the inhabitants thereof: it shall be a jubile unto you; and ye shall return every man unto his possession, and ye shall return every man unto his family. Leviticus 25:41 And then shall he depart from thee, both he and his children with him, and shall return unto his own family, and unto the possession of his fathers shall he return.
- ↑ Prov 22:1 A good name is rather to be chosen than great riches, and loving favour rather than silver and gold.