Common grace, more broadly speaking, is God’s forebearance of due judgement, and God’s allowance for human culture to exist and develop, despite sin. You will find this theological concept well extrapolated by Reformation theologians like John Calvin and modern reformed apologists such as Cornelius Van Til.
Pardon my typos in my last entry. I should’ve known better. And, thanks for your interest.
]]>The instance of similarity between codes (i.e. Tooth for tooth, etc.) does not necessarily mean that the Sinai code borrows (or ‘rips off’) from the Hammurabi code. It just demonstrates the existence of something it theological terms that is called “common grace”. Common grace is descibing God’s kindness toward sinful man to allow the enjoyment of the things he enjoys and benefits from in this world, whether he is a believer or non-believer, or theologically put: a covenant-keeper or covenant-breaker. Please check a copy of the Bible at Acts 14:14-17 and Acts 17:24-28.
Hammurabi simply picked up common grace legal concepts and codified them before Sinai.
P.S. I didn’t pick up your reaction to the tennant parable, but I was merely illustrating who the Bible says is the true arbitrator, definer, and enforcer of the concept “fairness”. For all the multiple amounts of atheists out there, “fairness” is just pulled out of the sky from difference expedient places with not even a concensus of opinion anywhere. It is a sinking sand worldview metaphysically, epistomologically, and ethically. What you asked in your tennant fairness scenario had a Rousseau/Kantian premise – which they pulled down from the arbitrary sky. I call it the gospel according to Kant. Christian Goverance is interested in a clean, non-arbitrary worldview and social theory according the the Law and gospel of Christ.
]]>The nature of reality (and the actual reality) is that the stone monument with Hammurabi’s civil laws preceded the writings of Moses.
]]>All of Hammurabi’s laws were secular in nature (e.g. no laws relating to God’s wishes). This civil government existed before God spoke to Moses, so I have to disagree with part of premise #3 (that theocracy pre-exists non-theocratic civil government). I disagree on the grounds of the facts presented.
Comparison of the Mosaic Laws to the Code of Hammuabi:
http://www.specialtyinterests.net/codexhammurabi.html
2. Again, you assume the existence of a deity, which is an unprovable stance and thus to be ignored. Your position is meaningless unless you define and prove the existence of this God you posit.
3. Does the fact that the Hitler reference was presented with others make it any less wrong? No. I also briefly explained why your argument about the communist states was wrong yet you ignore that. Do you ever face a criticism head on? Your dancing around the point is tiresome.
]]>2. Theocracy is the rule of God over His creation, therefore it does indeed predate civil government. It has applications to civil government, but it predates it.
3. The comparison to Hitler was but one of several points. You were the one who chose to take issue with it and respond. I also referenced Communism, which is inherently atheistic, and which has killed tens of millions more people than even fascism has, in the former USSR, communist China, North Korea, and many other Asian and African countries.
]]>1. Your definition of Theocracy is incorrect. A Theocracy is leadership by a group of religiously motivated authorities. You definition assumes a god or gods exists, which is an unprovable assertion and thus not to be believed. This makes most of your points null.
3. Theocracy does not predate government, it is a form of government.
5. As always, a theist turns to comparison to Hitler. Nazi Germany was an self-identified Christian state. The others are communist states where the state is the object of religious fervor. In your desire for a “christian” state, you are exactly the same as an illiterate Soviet private guarding a camp where thousands are dying of starvation. You are motivated not by reason but by blind, foolish faith. Your blind foolish faith just has a different false object.
]]>The Magna Carta and U.S. Constitution are not things to be afraid of (except maybe socialists, Marxists or other pro-tyranny formulas). The intended common undergirding foundation of both of these examples is the Christian God of truth and order.
Amazing! Christian Governance is a concept that should be embraced by people who love maximized freedom within a fallen world.