A man cannot serve 2 masters.
To accept man-made laws is to break God's primary Law:
"thou shall have no strange gods before me"
The Story of The Ten Commandments is strange.
Moses comes down from Mount Sinai with the tablets
and immediately gets angry with his people for worshiping a golden calf.
He loses his temper and literally breaks The Commandments:
Having lost his temper, he smashes the 2 tablets on the ground.
I literally don't know about the Bible, I've never read it from start to finish.
I know that the "middle~eastern" Hebrew stories,
written in Hebrew, are not native to these lands.
I know that the legions of the Church of the Roman Empire
waged war against our stories and our storytellers.
Drove da druids over the cliffs of Dover
over the edge of the cliffs of the Angle~sea.
I'm a philosopher poet of the aural tradition,
the sense of a story is what makes sense to a storyteller.
A "teller" adds up and accounts for what is of value,
at the end of the day.
"at the end of the day, it's night time"
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The history of the writ ten word is said to be only about 5000 years old.
There is no way to guess how old the origins of our spoken languages are.
Our stories must be much older than the invention of writing.
Spelling was only necessitated by writing, formalising the expression of word~sounds.
Before spelling, life was allegorical, alliterated, lyrical, stories were enchanting.
Spells and their connotations. Con~notations. Spell binding words. Writ ten in Stone.
Graven images.
Tones writ ten in Stone. The S moves but the one stays still. T one S.
Spell binding Words ~ such as "religion" ~ ligio, as in ligament ~ to bind together.
Words kill with Word Skill ~ the S slithers like a snake, naked in The Garden.
Whispering syllables ~ sickly sweet similes ~ "u can b as God" says the sneaky naked snake.
A syllable is a single unit of written or spoken word, an unbroken sound used to make up words.
Words can be con~fusion, mis~leading, dis~traction dis~in~forming.
Words like red herrings, garden paths and forked tongues of devil's advocate speaking legalese.
The intent of a sentence can be mis~taken.
Meaning can be taken as meaning~less through mis~under~standings.
Here's an example of a true meaning~less mis~under~standing of Words in "Law"
licentious
lʌɪˈsɛnʃəs/
adjective: licentious
1.
promiscuous and unprincipled i