Just Society
God, through His prophets, the Founding Fathers, taught us how to build a society in his image, a Just Society.
Where the ancient societies He taught the Jews to build through the prophets documented in the Old Testament were focused on merely existing in a primitive world where existence was a constant battle against the destructive chaos of nature, we as a species are now capable of more. Much like He sent Jesus to teach us individual morality after we mastered the basics of society, He sent the Founding Fathers to teach us justice after we as a society mastered individual morality.
Through them, He taught us that justice is more than the whims of powerful men. It is a principle which, when applied uniformly across society and without bias, unlocks the power of the divine spark within each of us and allows us to reach our full potential. This enrichment is more than mere personal wealth, although that will come too, but extends to both spirituality and society as a whole, as our individual virtue benefits those around us and their virtue in turn benefits us. As God showed us through the Founding Fathers, justice is more than simply prosecuting criminals.
Justice is freedom.
Justice is the freedom to follow God’s will. Freedom from unjust oppression by mortal men. Freedom to discover the secrets of God’s universe. Freedom to invent new ways to improve God’s Earth. Freedom to teach God’s people. Freedom to make and learn from mistakes. Freedom to protect society from evil. Freedom to believe.
We know this to be true because we have seen the power of following God’s will in action. For many years we misunderstood the power of our Just Society as mere mortal progress, not seeing His divine hand guiding us to His side, until the twin evils of Islam and Marxism brought God’s subtle teachings to our fallible attention.
These evils proved that justice does not come naturally for us fallible mortals. A Just Society will always be under siege by evil from without seeking to overthrow it, and will always face subversion from within by evil seeking to undermine it. We must constantly fight for justice, including against those who seek to twist the word into a mockery of God’s divine truth in service to their own subversive evil.
Like all things in this fallen world, perfect justice is impossible, and like all good things in this world, the impossibility of reaching perfection means there is always room to embrace God’s will through improvement.