Its been a while since Ive read the Declaration of Independence and this time I did pause, first at Natures god, wondering who that is. Christian Scripture says the natural man is a heathen so is natures god for the natural man? Is it Mother Nature? Or is it the god of the secret societies who were promoting the Enlightenment move…
Its been a while since Ive read the Declaration of Independence and this time I did pause, first at Natures god, wondering who that is. Christian Scripture says the natural man is a heathen so is natures god for the natural man? Is it Mother Nature? Or is it the god of the secret societies who were promoting the Enlightenment movement of that time and wanted to legislate the Creator Triune God Jehovah-Jesus as no longer being their King?
Back then at least the rabble rousers had weaponry on par with the tyrants. Today not so much, because what was create behind the closed doors of the Constitutional Convention a few years later created the tyrannical government we have today. When the 2nd amendment was written, it said we have the right to bear arms...Websters 1828 defines "arms" as
1. Weapons of offense, or armor for defense and protection of the body.
2. War; hostility.
Arms and the man I sing.
To be in arms to be in a state of hostility, or in a military life.
To arms is a phrase which denotes a taking arms for war or hostility; particularly, a summoning to war.
To take arms is to arm for attack or defense.
Bred to arms denotes that a person has been educated to the profession of a soldier.
3. The ensigns armorial of a family; consisting of figures and colors borne in shields, banners, etc., as marks of dignity and distinction, and descending from father to son.
4. In law, arms are any thing which a man takes in his hand in anger, to strike or assault another.
5. In botany, one of the seven species of fulcra or props of plants, enumerated by Linne and others. The different species of arms or armor, are prickles, thorns, forks and stings, which seem intended to protect the plants from injury by animals.
Sire arms are such as may be charged with powder, as cannon, muskets, mortars, etc.
A stand of arms consists of a musket, bayonet, cartridge-box and belt, with a sword. But for common soldiers a sword is not necessary.
In falconry, arms are the legs of a hawk from the thigh to the foot. (end quote)
Yet somehow in the last several decades, Arms means something we hunt with using approved weaponry by the STATE. Seems the thought police mostly want people to see arms as something attached to our bodies as limbs.
Hi Jon,
Its been a while since Ive read the Declaration of Independence and this time I did pause, first at Natures god, wondering who that is. Christian Scripture says the natural man is a heathen so is natures god for the natural man? Is it Mother Nature? Or is it the god of the secret societies who were promoting the Enlightenment movement of that time and wanted to legislate the Creator Triune God Jehovah-Jesus as no longer being their King?
Back then at least the rabble rousers had weaponry on par with the tyrants. Today not so much, because what was create behind the closed doors of the Constitutional Convention a few years later created the tyrannical government we have today. When the 2nd amendment was written, it said we have the right to bear arms...Websters 1828 defines "arms" as
(quote) https://webstersdictionary1828.com/Dictionary/arms
'ARMS, noun plural [Latin arma.]
1. Weapons of offense, or armor for defense and protection of the body.
2. War; hostility.
Arms and the man I sing.
To be in arms to be in a state of hostility, or in a military life.
To arms is a phrase which denotes a taking arms for war or hostility; particularly, a summoning to war.
To take arms is to arm for attack or defense.
Bred to arms denotes that a person has been educated to the profession of a soldier.
3. The ensigns armorial of a family; consisting of figures and colors borne in shields, banners, etc., as marks of dignity and distinction, and descending from father to son.
4. In law, arms are any thing which a man takes in his hand in anger, to strike or assault another.
5. In botany, one of the seven species of fulcra or props of plants, enumerated by Linne and others. The different species of arms or armor, are prickles, thorns, forks and stings, which seem intended to protect the plants from injury by animals.
Sire arms are such as may be charged with powder, as cannon, muskets, mortars, etc.
A stand of arms consists of a musket, bayonet, cartridge-box and belt, with a sword. But for common soldiers a sword is not necessary.
In falconry, arms are the legs of a hawk from the thigh to the foot. (end quote)
Yet somehow in the last several decades, Arms means something we hunt with using approved weaponry by the STATE. Seems the thought police mostly want people to see arms as something attached to our bodies as limbs.
current Websters dictionary: https://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/arms