The Judicial System is the Levitical Priesthood

 George Gordon's School of Law:

Some years ago at the Feast of Tabernacles in Athens, Tennessee, a local preacher who had heard about our meetings approached me and asked me if it was true that I practiced the Law of Moses. I replied that it was true. He then asked if I practiced the sacrificial laws. Perceiving that he meant the animal sacrifices associated with the Old Testament rituals, I asked him if he practiced the Livitical Priesthood in Tennessee. He emphatically denied that he did any such thing, and proceeded to preach me a fire-and.brimstone sermon about Christ crucified, and how Jesus did away with the Law of Moses. 

Seeing that the man was a Christian in distress over doctrine, I apologised for my outrageous suggestion that HE might be a practitioner of the sacrificial system of the State of Tennessee, explaining that I had heard that the poeple of Tennessee practiced the Levitical Priesthood, with sacrifices and heave offerings under another name, calling it "The Judicial System". As he stared at me as if I had just landed in a spaceship from Mars, I asked him if Tennessee had any State Highway Patrol officers. He admitted that they did. I then asked if they had Police, Lawyers, Judges, Courts Courthouses, Court Rooms with Bars and Benches, and Fines for Criminal activities. Once again he admitted that the County where he lived, and the rest of Tennessee, did have all these things and that they do make up the Judicial System. I told him that since I was from out of State and has only heard that the people of Tennessee were a religious lot, I wanted to be sure that they had the same system that I had back home. Once more he gave me that strange look, and asked how in the world is the Judicial System religious? so I related the following story to him:




Suppose you drive down the road at 80 mph and the policeman, ever vigilant and looking for crimes, sees you and roars off in hot pursuit. When he catches up to you he asks for your driver's license, and notes that it does not give you permission to drive 80 mph. He also smells alcohol and sees an open container of beer in your car. You fail a breathyliser test.

He then arrests you and takes you to the nearest jail from where you are brought before the Judge who is sitting on the bench behind the Bar in the Courtroom which is in the Courthouse. You are stood beside your Lawyer who is before the Bench and in front of the Bar to enter a plea of guilty, which makes you a Criminal. The Judge gives you a Fine to pay, and assesses Court Costs. If you do not like this, you can appeal to the Supreme Court. This is called the Judicial System, or Civil Service. 

In Old Testament times this system was called the Levitical Priesthood, and worked in the same way that our Judicial System does. The Policeman of today is the High Priest's servant who is constantly looking for sin (crime). Sin is the transgression of the Law (1John3:4). When the High Priest's servant uncovers your Sin, he arrests you and puts you in Jail in the Courthouse. Old Courthouses are designed like a Temple and always sat in the town square (in many small towns this arrangement is still the custom), where the High Priest conducts the Temple sacrifices in the Holy Place called the Courtroom today. You, of course, will recognise the High Priest by his long black robe, and you always rise in respect whenever he enters or leaves the Courtroom. The High Priest (Judge) sits behind the Altar (Bench) which is behind the Veil to the Holy Place (Bar). To pass this Veil, and approach the High Priest, requires an Intercessor (Lawyer) who will help you in your Prayer (Plea) to the High Priest about your Sin (Crime).

When you plead that you are guilty of this Sin, you become a Sinner (Criminal). The High Priest then imposes a sacrifice of one ram of the first year, which is called a Sin Offering (Fine). He also imposes a Heave Offering (Court Costs) of two turtle doves. If you think you got a raw deal, you can go to Moses through the Aaronic Priesthood in the Holy of Holies (Appealing to the Supreme Court). This system of law and sacrifice is called the Levitical Priesthood, better known today as the Civil Service, or the Judicial System.

Tennessee is a Sovereign. A Sovereign makes Law. A Lawmaker is god. To violate this Law is Sin. Sin requires a sacrifice as a matter of Law, whether it is Civil Law or Criminal Law. People who practice the religion of the United States makes sacrifices to their god, either voluntarily or involuntarily.




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