Jesus: "The story of Jesus in its entirety spans 2,020 years of human history that binds together all the world's righteousness, honor, courage, love, loyalty, confidence, determination, genius, humility, and a host of other attributes that have challenged men and women throughout the ages who have followed this leader who has liberated the world and set our path on the higher ground of the Kingdom of God. This story told throughout the pages of jesuscalltofreedom.com explains the history of man from God's perspective with revelation and interpretation that only Jesus can provide in ways that bring light and understanding to people of any religion or no religion with clarity for all who seek to know."
This website can be understood better when viewed as a body with a head who is Jesus and with a body who is the growing number of believers and those who are people who are not against us so are for us meaning they believe in much of what we believe while their larger belief system may not include believing that Jesus has been given headship authority by Jehovah and that Jehovah is even God or their God and this is why Jehovah who sees the heart and the inside of every person knows who these are and who these are not and no man can determine this. The above section is all about the headship of Jesus in the entire world and about his mission to eradicate evil from this planet and this race of human beings so that we are all free to grow in goodness and not evil.
"While
he was still speaking, a bright cloud covered them, |
Jesus: "I have a voice and in
my own words for anyone who has
an ear to hear."
Jesus: "This website could not have been presented on the internet without the contributions of millions of people past and present from the Body of Christ and also those from the family of God."
Jehovah: "My bride America has overcome evil and if not for the efforts of brave men and women who are Patriots and the army of Jesus this country would have been overrun by the most evil things that life has ever known and their plans were well laid and executed with all patience and deliberation while causing chaos ... read more here
Jehovah: "America is in crisis and I have asked a trusted human being to give me an honest assessment of the crisis and the remedy for the crisis and it has been submitted to me and can be viewed at Opinion For Divine Court."
This is Jehovah's view of his part in the story of our human race and its unintended development and the resulting danger which mankind is currently dealing with and God is intervening to show mankind how to safely navigate the storms that are breaking upon our people and this view of God's salvation plan has been obscured by every false teaching and all the confusion that comes with that.
Jehovah Will Never Leave Us Nor Forsake Us
When Jehovah Carries His Carrier
The following is Jehovah's Song which is a contemporary secular song that very closely explains what God is all about.
"You have
reached that moment of decision when you know that you must move forward one
way or another and the way you have chosen is to go forward with Jesus into the
next phase of your life which will be a supernatural and exquisitely beautiful
experience of life that will flow forward forever and you will always love this
life as you have known it as you will always love your life as it is becoming
more truly who you really are and the twisted future that isn't right will now
not be and just as I have told you I am bringing the real you to the light as
you fulfill your destiny. You have found your cure within yourself. You are now free Kathy."
Lord, I remember when you gave this song to me and I knew it was a very profound message for me but at the time I was having terrible problems in my family due to complications of a birth in the family and God told me to say certain things at that time that made matters worse and not better and he told me how sorry he was that he caused me such grief and sorry that ensued and is still unresolved to this day. You gave me this this song at that time and for over four years you have been untangling my twisted future and I have been trusting you to make things right that have gone terribly wrong. Through this time you showed me how genetics have become so tangled up that it is nearly impossible to repair anything that concerns the human race and yet you have done just that with me and I remember when we started untangling all kinds of tangled up messes concerning cellular diseases and emotional entanglements that further complicated the physical problem within the Dna itself. Slowly but surely you taught me all sorts of things regarding genetics and epigenetics which is the God layer of human genetics and then taught me how to pray to untangle so many things that would have remained that way forever or until our race died out completely. When you first gave me this song I remember being somewhat confused if the words were for me or if the words were for my family situation but it never occurred to me that the words were meant for all of humanity as we know it here on earth.
Unknown Molecules Are The Substance of Life
Jesus has told me that people generally see him one way or the other and that both sides are wrong and he has told me that people generally understand what God is doing one way or the other and again both sides are wrong. Jesus asked me to build him a website and to give him a voice because like so many people in this world he really has not had a voice. Everybody else has spoken for him and what is ... read more here
When people speak
under the inspiration of the Holy Spirit it is inspired by God but it is not
inspired by Jesus. This link explains why this is true.
Jesus: "In the
course of human history there has never been a time like this with so much
promise and yet so few people who can see it and it is my intention that all
people have the opportunity and the blessing of seeing how each and every
person on earth can help bring about the world that others have only dreamed of
and to not only bring it about but to bask in its goodness and thrive in its
complete and
... read more here
Jesus: "I came to America with a small group of devoted believers who determined to carve out a life of freedom to worship Jehovah without interference or domination. It is their pure love and commitment to God, family and country that is the rock upon which I built my church. As their descendants have pioneered across the great land of America to the very edges of the western coast the legacy of these people is woven throughout every city, county and state as the salt of the earth as they have fought tyranny time and time again and held fast to the high ideals as imbued in them by Jesus and Jehovah who has reconciled the twelve tribes of ancient Israel."
The words as given me by Jehovah and by Jesus will always be preceded by their names and with quotes throughout this website.
Jehovah: "Most human beings who believe Jesus is my son seek answers and help from God but often do not have any clue as to the distinctions between us which are as subtle as they are vast and of course the reason for this is that once born Jesus left his spirit world to become a man in the flesh which I have never been nor will I ever be and yet I am as real and present with you just the same and I have throughout this website tried to help the reader know who they are listening to by using my name Jehovah. You have always called me Lord from the time you came ... read more here
CAPITALISM &
COMMERCE
THOMAS AQUINAS' CHRISTIAN ARISTOTELIANISM
by Edward W. Younkins
Thomas Aquinas (1225-1274), the dominant thinker of the middle ages, combined
the science and philosophy of Aristotle with the revealed truths of
Christianity. Holding that Aristotelianism is true but is not the whole truth,
he reconciled the philosophy of Aristotle with the truth of Christian
revelation. Aquinas was a committed disciple of Aristotle but was an even more
sincere disciple of the Church. He reconceived Aristotle's ideas to a new context,
was able to make distinctions that Aristotle did not formulate, and never
hesitated to go beyond Aristotle. The 13th century rediscovery and revival of
the corpus of Aristotle's teaching and Aquinas' synthesis of it with the tenets
of Christian faith effected a dramatic change in medieval political thought.
Through his writings, Aquinas provided a solid bridge from the ancients.
Reason and Faith
According to Aquinas, philosophy and theology do not contradict one another and
play complementary roles in the quest for truth. For Aquinas, the whole of
human knowledge forms one all-encompassing, orderly, hierarchical system with
sciences at the base, philosophy above them, and theology at the top. It
follows that human values and truths are not eradicated by the revelation of
higher ones. Faith does not contradict nature, human knowledge, or science.
Philosophy proceeds from principles discovered through the use of human reason
and theology emanates from authoritative revelation. Philosophy and religion
are equally valid in their respective spheres and reason and faith cooperate in
advancing the discovery of truth. Aquinas emphasizes that divine revelation in
no way contradicts that which men discover by the use of natural reason.
Aquinas taught that the universe is an orderly and integrated hierarchy that
can only be fully understood when seen in relationship to God. In fact, Aquinas
promulgated a fourfold classification of law in which only one category is
human. Eternal law is practically identified with the divine reason of God that
governs and orders the entirety of creation. The eternal law is
"imprinted" on all things including men. Natural law is that part of
the eternal law that is presented to the reason of man. Men are guided by a
rational apprehension of the eternal law which is imprinted as precepts, rules
of behavior, or broad principles of natural law. Because men are autonomous
beings they must choose to observe the law of nature through acts of free will.
Natural law is a product of unaided reason. Human laws are positive laws that
are, or should be, derived from natural law. It is the correlation between
natural law and human law that determines the moral validity of the latter. The
divine law, the law of grace, is the portion of the eternal law that God has
revealed to man through the Old and New Testaments, the law of Moses, the
Decalogue, and in Church dogma. Divine law is a gift rather than a discovery of
natural reason. Revelation adds to reason but does not overturn it. Divine law
supplements natural law and corrects its human misinterpretations. It is needed
because natural law cannot direct man to his transcendent end.
Aquinas' thorough, provocative, and nuanced philosophy can be referred to as
natural theology. As a philosopher, he begins with sense experience and reasons
upward culminating in the idea of God, but as a theologian, he begins with
faith in God. Aquinas describes natural law in metaphysical and theological
terms and explains that natural law and human nature can be but understood as
products of God's wisdom. Because God governs the world as the universal first
cause, it follows that human acts are praiseworthy only insofar as they promote
God's purposes. His organic metaphysical and theological synthesis considers
what belongs to man's proper nature and regards what is true and good about men
insofar as they are related to God.
For Aquinas, the human person is made in the image of the Creator and is
endowed with inalienable responsibilities. The human person is the only living
thing created as an end in himself. It is in his liberty that the person is
made in the image of the Creator. Aquinas understood that a person, as opposed
to a mere individual, has the capacity for insight, choice, and responsibility,
in addition to being free and independent of every other member of his species.
A human being is free because he can reflect, choose, and be responsible. It
follows that the human act is a combination of will plus reason and knowledge.
Aquinas distinguishes between acts of a man and human acts, identifies the
liberty of human understanding to focus on relevant factors (i.e., the liberty
of specification), and emphasizes the liberty to reach a determination and
judgment (i.e., the liberty of exercise).
Aquinas built on and further developed Aristotle's theory of ethics. Both
maintained that happiness is related closely with a person's purpose or end.
However, Aquinas added his idea of a supernatural end to Aristotle's
naturalistic morality in which you attain virtue and happiness through the
fulfillment of your natural capacities. For Aquinas, human nature does not
embody its own standards for achievement. Discerning that Aristotelian ethics
was incomplete, Aquinas was concerned with both a person's natural end and his
supernatural end. He concludes that human perfection is the work of two
societies – one concerned with immanent good and the other with transcendent
good.
Aquinas held the concept of twin authorities – temporal and spiritual with each being supreme in its own sphere. This is because man possesses both a bodily nature and a rational and spiritual soul. Value and power are thus bifurcated into temporal and eternal spiritual ones. Of course, he views the Church as the crown of social organization and the creation of human law as one of the most important tasks that God has entrusted to his image-bearer. According to Aquinas, the state is willed by God, has a God-given function, is needed to attend to the common good, and is ultimately subordinate to the Church.
Political Thought
Aquinas frequently turns to public authorities as the chief guardians of the
common good. He says that the state's function is to secure the common good by
keeping the peace, by organizing and harmonizing the activities of citizens, by
providing for the resources to sustain life, and by precluding or thwarting
obstacles and hindrances to the good life. The purpose of authority is to
provide for the common good which Aquinas maintains must be the good of the
concrete person. The term, common good, has no meaning for Aquinas unless it
produces the good of the individual. He states that the common good results
from a brotherhood of insight, choice, freedom, and responsibility, and that
people in society must define and implement this common good through the
government.
Aquinas accepted the Aristotelian idea that the state springs from the social
nature of man rather than from his corruption and sin. He sees the state as a
natural institution that is derived from the nature of man. Man is naturally a
social and political animal whose end is fixed and determined by his nature.
Aquinas explains that social living requires some form of civil authority and
that the notion of ordering toward an end implies a directing authority. He
says that the state preserves an orderly society by maintaining internal and
external peace and by ensuring the satisfaction of man's material necessities.
He believes that government is needed to regulate the economic activities of
individuals but thinks that such regulation should be the exception rather than
the rule and should be used only in emergencies and to prevent chaos. According
to Aquinas, the common good requires that the social system have a ruling
sector, that rulership is a trust for the entire community, and that the duty
of the ruler is to direct action in order for men to live a happy and virtuous
life. The multitude must be directed in acting well and living virtuously.
Recognizing that natural law is prior to any civil jurisdiction, Aquinas taught
that the inherent end of personhood is communion with others and that the
inherent end of a true community is full respect for the personhood of each of
its members. He knew that civilization is constructed through reasoned
discourse and rational persuasion and that civilized institutions need to
respect the human person's capacity to reflect and to choose. Because humans
are self-determined persons (not merely individuals), it follows that political
legitimacy comes from the participation of all citizens in choosing their
leaders.
"Aquinas says
that the state preserves an orderly society by maintaining internal and
external peace and by ensuring the satisfaction of man's material necessities.
He believes that government is needed to regulate the economic activities of
individuals but thinks that such regulation should be the exception rather than
the rule and should be used only in emergencies and to prevent chaos."
Aquinas was concerned with the liberty of autonomous persons to conduct their
affairs through civil conversation and rational persuasion. He valued highly
the practical order of civil society through which each individual gains
mastery of his own liberty through the cultivation of habits and virtues.
Although it is not likely that Aquinas had formed the idea of natural rights,
he did recognize that all men are equal in liberty even though there are wide
inequalities and differences with respect to their talents, capacities, and
callings. Aquinas spoke of indelible laws in man's being that command the
respect of everyone. Society involves the mutual exchange of ideas, products,
and services for the sake of a good life to which its many individual members
contribute.
Aquinas explained that government agents had certain limits beyond which they
could not function. They are bound by laws of human nature that emanate from
the act of God's creation. It follows that positive laws that are inconsistent
with man's nature should not be enacted or should be overturned. Positive laws
must be just and must be derived from general principles of natural law. An
ordered society under human laws applies to people at their natural level.
Therefore, to ensure an ordered society, human laws must be constructed.
According to Aquinas, a ruler is needed even in the state of perfection or
innocence in order to provide direction and guidance. He adds that, although
people require an orderly political life, the authority of government agents
ought to be limited. Tyranny is illegitimate and justice demands that a tyrant
be deposed. Aquinas explains that public action, rather than individual
violence, is the proper remedy against tyranny. Justifiable resistance is a
public act of the whole people. He observes that political authority exists
originally in the whole people organized as a civic community. It follows that
there is no power to frame laws except as representing the people and that
legitimate title to power is the result of a transfer by the rational act and
consent of the community.
Aquinas held the idea of the limited scope of government authority. Although he
posited no real theory of the hypothetical best regime for the ideal community,
he favored a mixed regime for the real world. He says that the regime worthiest
of the human person mixes the best elements of monarchy, aristocracy, and
democracy. This mixed regime would be limited by moral law and legal or
constitutional devices to prevent arbitrary use of power. Realistic and
pragmatic in his thinking, he saw that a mixed government would be the best
practical type, would require consent and permit moral freedom, would minimize
the danger of tyranny, and would allow people to believe that they had a say
and a stake in the community.
For Aquinas, the political community is the sovereign construction of reason.
He says that the political sovereign has authority to legislate from God and is
therefore responsible to God. Accordingly, law should advance the common good.
In his writings, Aquinas linked ethics to politics and the individual human
person to the common good. He also emphasized that civilized political
institutions respect the human capacity for reflection and choice which provide
the foundation of law.
Aquinas, in the Aristotelian tradition, emphasizes the inexact character of
ethics and the mutability of law due to the contingency of specific
circumstances. He explains that law can be adapted to time and place and
properly changed due to changed conditions of men. What is just depends upon
the circumstances. He adds that legislators must also consider and test the
usefulness of possible rules to determine that which is most appropriate to be
law. Aquinas maintains that utility is an important standard or criterion for
ascertaining the justice of legal rules. Usefulness is a standard for
discerning when a law should be changed. Law is not to be imposed once for all
time. Observing that moral and legal reasoning is an inexact science, Aquinas
states that good law is created through past experience and the consideration
of pertinent social circumstances.
According to Aquinas, the function of positive law is mainly to embody and give
coercive force to the principles of natural law in the form of authoritative
direction. Recognizing the limits of law in the production of virtuous
citizens, Aquinas teaches that law should not directly dictate the exercise of
all the virtues nor directly forbid the exercise of every vice. True virtue
consists in using one's reason and free will in making the right choices. For
Aquinas, the primary practical problem of an individual's moral life is to
decide what to do in the unique circumstances in which each unique person finds
himself.
He stressed that political authorities should be concerned with broad matters
of general interest rather than with small details of individual conduct. No
laws are capable of anticipating every particular circumstance to which a law
be applied. It follows that laws should be stated in general terms, expressing
what is proper for cases of most frequent occurrence. There may be situations
in which a law that is applicable to most cases would produce an injustice if
rigidly applied. Aquinas, therefore, suggests permitting the judge to have the
power of equity that allows him to moderate promulgated law in order to achieve
a just outcome.
Aquinas understood that custom can create, abolish, or amend law. He favored law that was consistent with prevailing customary practices. Custom is an expression of widespread human rationality and not just the product of the articulated rationality of a select few. Aquinas was committed to liberty, loved tradition, and had a sense of realistic hope and moderate institutional progress.
Economic Thought
Aquinas addressed a number of economic questions particularly in Summa Theologica II, II. Among the topics
covered are the division of labor, property rights, the just price, value
theory, insider trading, and usury, among others. Although he said there was
something ignoble about trade, he also recognized the usefulness of merchants
whose activities were to the community's advantage. Aquinas taught that the
operational principles of the economic order are subordinate to the moral and
political ends of the city. His justification of mercantile profits offered
many examples of the benefits that commerce could bring to society.
Foreseeing Adam Smith's division of labor theory, Aquinas explained that
diversification of men for diverse tasks is the work of divine providence and
stems from natural law with different men possessing abilities and inclinations
for different occupations and functions. He recognized the benefits of exchange
and the division of labor in satisfying the needs and wants of individuals.
Aquinas views private property as necessary for human life and as an extension
of natural law. He acknowledges that under natural law all property is
communal, but also contended that the addition of private property was an
extension, and not a contradiction, of natural law. Aquinas explains that human
reason derives the notion of distinction of possession for the benefit of
individual human lives. He states that possession of private property is necessary
because: (1) men will more resolutely and attentively take care of things if
they possess them instead of the goods being held in common by all or many
others; (2) possession advances order rather than chaos and confusion as
responsibility can be determined; and (3) private possession promotes a more
peaceful state. Aquinas realized that, not only does creativity require
property, without property under the dominion of every person the individual's
liberty of action is diminished. He accepted an unequal distribution of private
property but also approved of the regulation of private property by the state.
He also said that while the ownership of goods should be private, the use of
goods must be in common (so that the poor and needy can have their share) or
must be in service of the common good.
It is difficult to judge precisely what Aquinas meant by the term "just
price." The various interpretations of what he meant by just price
include, but are not limited to: (1) an equivalence in terms of labor cost; (2)
an equivalence in terms of utility; (3) an equivalence in terms of total cost
of product; and (4) market price.
When speaking of the "just price" in an organized exchange, Aquinas
often appears to mean the price that is paid in a more or less competitive
market. Noting that exchange takes place for the utility of both parties,
Aquinas states that the norm of commutative justice is expressed in the
principle of equivalence between reciprocal contributions. Accordingly, there
needs to be a certain equivalence or proportion between what is given and what
is received. Aquinas describes commutative justice as the principle of absolute
equality in exchanges of goods and services among individuals. He explicitly
repudiated the notion that prices should be determined by one's position or
station in life, noting that the selling price of any commodity should be the
same whether or not the buyer or seller is poor or wealthy.
For Aquinas, the valuation of goods does not seem to depend upon any intrinsic
property of the goods themselves. The equality to which Aquinas frequently
refers appears to be the mutual satisfaction gained by each contracting party
in an exchange. Aquinas also observes that the one element that measures all
products and services is the need that involves all exchangeable goods because
all things can be related to human needs. It is apparent that Aquinas was
certainly not reducing the value of a good to labor by itself. Recognizing that
market forces affect the value that is placed on goods and services, Aquinas is
clearly not subscribing to the labor theory of value.
Aquinas wrote that buying and selling seem to have been introduced for the
mutual advantages of the involved parties because one needs something that is
possessed by the other and vice versa. He states that when market exchanges
occur to meet the needs of the trading partners then there is no question of
unethical behavior. However, if one produces for the market in expectation of
gain then he is acting rationally only if his prices are just and his motives
are charitable. The prices are just if both the buyer and seller benefit and
the motives are charitable if the profits are to be used for self-support,
charitable purposes, or to contribute to public well-being.
Aquinas presented a mixed but somewhat benevolent view of trade. He said that
while trade may present opportunities for sin, it is not sinful by its nature.
Aquinas denounced covetness, love of profit, and avarice but said that
mercantile gain was justified when directed toward the good of others.
The just price for Aquinas is the one, which at a given time, can be received
from the buyer, assuming common knowledge and the absence of fraud and
coercion. Aquinas anticipates the problem of "insider trading" when
he observes that a person may sell a scarce product at the prevailing market
price although he knows that more of the product is on the way and will be
available shortly. The implication is that there is no moral duty to inform a
potential customer that the price of the product that one is attempting to sell
is probably going to be lower in the near future.
It appears that Aquinas, at least implicitly, anticipated the concept of
opportunity cost. He explains the idea of price as just compensation to the
seller for the utility lost when he becomes detached from the item sold.
Aquinas also mentions the benefits supplied by men of commerce when they
conserve and store goods, import goods that are necessary for the republic, and
transport goods from geographical areas where they are in great supply to places
where they are scarce.
Aquinas, like the Bible and Aristotle, wrongly condemned the practice of
charging interest for the lending of money. All fail to see that borrowers are
not injured when they take out a loan and, in fact, are likely to benefit if
they can invest in a project that yields a return greater than the interest
paid. Aquinas says that usury, the charging of money on loans, is sinful and
unnatural because money is barren and was simply invented for the purpose of
exchange.
Pasted from <http://www.quebecoislibre.org/06/060122-5.htm>