>>4130256 - Q PB On The Biblical Origin of our Constitutional Rights; "Jury of Peers" and our rights to judge the evil ones.
For TL:DR
>>4130663 PB 3 So when you, a mere human being, pass judgment on them and yet do the same things, do you think you will escape God’s judgment?
Nice try. But correctly read, the bible and law both require us to judge evil works. The Constitution is a work based on biblical history.
I answered this in pics related, with sauce, and go a step further. Not only do we the people have the right to judge the evil ones, we are designated as THE judges by God himself, who first taught in the ancient writings, not only the "jury of peers", but, the "right to face your accuser" and your right to "plead the 5th".
(((They)) teach us to mock the bible, because it is not just a religious book, but a history book. They need us to be ignorant of this historical work that brought free nations to the world.
For the non Christians who love the Constitution and freedom, you can judge for yourself. Your religion, or the lack of it is pretty irrelevant to the question. We are talking history and ancient writings. Look at any globe. Where did the Bible travel this past 2000 years? And where have the first world free nations been set up with Executive/ Legislative/ Judicial of various types? (((They))) can not set up un-elected global tyranny until the bible and it's resulting Constitution are lost in a rewritten history.
They use "religion" to keep you ignorant of the history of freedom.
Religion!!! Boo!
Be fearless.
Dare to look at history written ages ago, where the rights now enshrined in the Constitution were first formed.
This writing covers only a small dig on one single passage about where the right of trial by a jury of PEERS comes from, who gets to judge who, how, why, and when. There are other passages. I just discussed the one, tying it to our Constitution. One could write a book on the biblical origin of our Constitutional rights. You may be surprised at what exactly mankind may be the judge of.