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  1. The Ultimate Sovereign, God

    The Ultimate Sovereign, God THE ULTIMATE SOVEREIGN, GOD According to Webster's dictionary a sovereign is, "One who exercises supreme, permanent authority."(www.dictionary.com/sear

  2. Hobbes

    a commonwealth ruled by a sovereign leader that is based on the laws of nature and the kingdom of God. At the root of the commonwealth is a social contract, which

  3. Hobbes Leviathan State Government Social Order State Of War

    are so powerful and expansive that sure enough you may call the sovereign an (earth born) ultimate god of his subjects. Institution says that sovereign has the right

  4. The Problem (Romans)

    choices are crucial, but they are not the final, decisive power in bringing him to glory, God's sovereign grace is. 1. God elects, chooses, before the foundation

  5. Euthanasia

    which is always condemned, not killing per se. As Creator and Sovereign, God alone has the ultimate prerogative of giving and taking human life. The worth of each

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The Ultimate Sovereign, God

Submitted by edanmanu on December 4, 2005

Category: Philosophy
Words: 2037 | Pages: 9
Views: 165
Popularity Rank: 85,267
Average Member Grade: N/A (Add a Comment / Grade this Paper)

THE ULTIMATE SOVEREIGN, GOD

According to Webster's dictionary a sovereign is, "One who exercises supreme, permanent authority."(www.dictionary.com/search?q=sovereign) This definition would seem to be accurate when compared to sixteenth century theorist Thomas Hobbes' definition of what a true sovereign is. Hobbes believed that the sovereign be it one man or a counsel of men, rules supreme over the populous in the land. When paralleled to Christianity, there are a few evils that plague Hobbes' theory of who reigns as the supreme sovereign. God is the characterization of a sovereign.
In Hobbes', LEVIATHAN there are multiple themes that are contemplated and philosophized on however one theme protrudes through the book more than the others and that comes in chapter twenty seven where Hobbes begins to establish a theory on sin and crime. He states, "A sinne, is not onely a transgression of a law, but also any contempt of the legislator. For such contempt, is a breach of all his Lawes at once. And therefore may consist, not onely in the commission of a fact, or in the speaking of words by the Lawes forbidden, or in the omission of what the law commandeth, but also in the intention, or purpose to transgresse."(Tuck, 201) Here Hobbes is stating that when a person commits a sin, they are not only defying God's law, but they are also showing disrespect for the law of their earthly legislator. This is found to be true of God's word in first Peter in the third chapter at the fourth verse where Peter states, "Everyone who sins breaks the law; in fact, sin is lawlessness."(Barker, 1,950) There are other passages in the Bible that state that one must obey the law of the land as well as the laws of God. The laws of God are higher than the laws of man so there is a point of conflict here. One must uphold the laws of God before the laws of man for God is immensely more powerful than any on being on earth could ever be and His punishments are eternal....

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