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Silesianus's avatar

This approach to sovereignity and the simultaneous ability to impose law, but also be subject to it, creates coherence that modern liberal rule often overlooks, where invocation of the sovereignty of the nation creates an exception for rule that is often not subject to laws it creates.

This moral gap and absolutism of modern political systems ends up creating far less freedom than people perceive to have.

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Blake's avatar

I found this article surprisingly... moving. The realm of political and constitutional theory can be very high-level and abstracted. It's beautiful and rational in its own way, but often lacking in poetry and theological imagery.

The image of Mary as sovereign, giving her fiat freely in submission to the Divine Word, prefiguring Christ who himself freely submits to a position lower than his nature requires, and this being the example of excellence, the requirement for a just ruler, is at once so obvious and powerful that it feels like it's something I've known forever. It's a beautiful image for a complicated question. It has more explanatory power in its imagery than it does in words. It feels like something that we can chew on for centuries.

One observation: It seems that in all three cases, the sovereign is freely binding to something which is not strictly required. Christ bind's himself to the Divine Will to take on human nature (and further, to the Mosaic Law). Mary binds herself to the Word of God to bear a son (and further, to the Mosaic Law). And the prince binds himself in a legal sense to the Divine and natural law (and further, to civil law).

Surely the prince is always bound to divine and natural law (just as Mary), but not in a legal sense -- as sovereign, there are none to hold him to account, no apparatus of state above him; he is immune. And further, it seems there may be some parallel between what the Mosaic Law was for Christ and Mary to what the civil law is for a prince. Something additional that they choose to be bound to, though they are in no real way required to be, for that law is purely for the subjects, not the sovereigns.

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