Leviathan

Leviathan

by

Thomas Hobbes

Sovereign Term Analysis

A sovereign is the central power of a common-wealth. A sovereign power can be either a single person, as it is in a monarchy, or it can be an assembly of people, as it is in an aristocracy or democracy. A sovereign is imbued with all the rights and power of the people through a covenant and is responsible for the safety and contentment of all the subjects of the common-wealth. The sovereign alone is responsible for the passing and enacting of all laws and regulations. While a sovereign may appoint officials to assist in the running of a common-wealth, no official authority can have more power than the sovereign. A sovereign’s power cannot be usurped and is beyond all contestation. If a sovereign power is held prisoner by an invading force, that force has no claim to the subjects of a common-wealth unless the sovereign willingly forfeits their power. If at any time, a sovereign’s power is divided or diminished, the covenant that joins the common-wealth is voided, and the subjects revert back to a state of nature and inevitable war. The main cause of the dissolution of common-wealths according to Hobbes is a sovereign power who is content with less power than they actually have. Power is forfeited in ignorance or for some perceived benefit, but the result is always the same: the sovereign is stripped of power, which is counterproductive to the common-wealth as a whole. One way in which power is stripped from a sovereign is the belief that the Pope in Rome has dominion over all Christians, even those who are subjects of another common-wealth and sovereign. A subject can obey only one sovereign power at a time, Hobbes argues, and subjects must obey the sovereign of their own common-wealth before any other power, including God.

Sovereign Quotes in Leviathan

The Leviathan quotes below are all either spoken by Sovereign or refer to Sovereign. For each quote, you can also see the other terms and themes related to it (each theme is indicated by its own dot and icon, like this one:
Nature, War, and Civil Society   Theme Icon
).
The Introduction Quotes

To describe the Nature of the Artificiall man, I will consider

First, the Matter thereof, and the Artificer; both
which is Man.
Secondly, How, and by what Covenants it is
made; what are the Rights and just Power or
Authority of a Soveraigne; and what it is that
preserveth and dissolveth it.
Thirdly, what is a Christian Common-wealth.
Lastly, what is the Kingdome of Darkness.

Related Characters: Thomas Hobbes (speaker), God
Related Symbols: Leviathan
Page Number: 82
Explanation and Analysis:
Chapter 3 Quotes

For the Thought of the warre, introduced the Thought of delivering up the King to his Enemies; The Thought of that, brought in the Thought of the delivering up of Christ; and that again the Thought of 30 pence, which was the price of that treason: and thence easily followed that malicious question; and all this in a moment of time; for Thought is quick.

Related Characters: Thomas Hobbes (speaker), Christ
Page Number: 95
Explanation and Analysis:

Whatsoever we imagine, is Finite. Therefore there is no Idea, or conception of anything we call Infinite. No man can have in his mind in Image of infinite magnitude; nor conceive infinite swiftness, infinite time, or infinite force, or infinite power. When we say any thing is infinite, we signifie onely, that we are not able to conceive the ends, and bounds of the thing named; having no Conception of the thing, but of our own inability. And therefore the Name of God is used, not to make us conceive him; (for he is Incomprehensible; and his greatnesse, and power are unconceivable;) but that we many honour him. Also because whatsoever (as I said before,) we conceive, has been perceived first by sense, either all at once, or by parts; a man can have no thought, representing any thing, not subject to sense.

Related Characters: Thomas Hobbes (speaker), God
Page Number: 99
Explanation and Analysis:
Chapter 5 Quotes

And words whereby we conceive nothing but the sound, are those we call Absurd, Insignificant, and Non-sense. And therefore if a man should talk to me of a round Quadrangle; or accidents of Bread in Cheese; or Immateriall Substances; or of A free Subject; A free-Will; or any Free, but free from being hindered by opposition, I should not say he were in an Errour; but that his words were without meaning; that is to say, Absurd.

Related Characters: Thomas Hobbes (speaker), Christ
Page Number: 113
Explanation and Analysis:
Chapter 11 Quotes

And therefore the voluntary actions, and inclinations of all men, tend, not only to the procuring, but also to the assuring of a contented life; and differ onely in the way: which ariseth partly from the diversity of passions, in divers men; and partly from the difference of the knowledge, or opinion each one has of the causes, which produce the effect desired.

Related Characters: Thomas Hobbes (speaker), God
Page Number: 161
Explanation and Analysis:
Chapter 12 Quotes

But where God himselfe, by supernaturall Revelation, planted Religion; there he also made to himself a peculiar Kindgome; and gave Lawes, not only of behavior towards himself; but also towards one another; and thereby in the Kingdome of God, the Policy, and lawes Civill, are a part of Religion; and therefore the distinction of Temporall, and Spirituall Domination, hath there no place. It is true, that God is King of all the Earth; Yet may he be King of a peculiar, and chosen Nation.

Related Characters: Thomas Hobbes (speaker), God
Page Number: 178
Explanation and Analysis:

For who is there that does not see, to whose benefit it conduceth, to have it believed, that a King hath not his Authority from Christ, unlesse a Bishop crown him? That a King, if he be a Priest, cannot Marry? That whether a Prince be born in lawfull Marriage, or not, must be judged by Authority from Rome? That Subjects may be freed from their Alleageance, if by the Court of Rome, the King be judged a Heretique? That a King (as Chilperique of France) may be deposed by a Pope (as Pope Zachary,) for no cause; and his Kingdome given to one of his Subjects?

Related Characters: Thomas Hobbes (speaker), Christ
Page Number: 182
Explanation and Analysis:
Chapter 13 Quotes

Hereby it is manifest, that during the time men live without a common Power to keep them all in awe, they are in that condition which is called Warre; and such a warre, as is of every man, against every man. For Warre, consisteth not in Battel lonely, or the act of fighting; but in a tract of time, wherein the Will to contend by Battell is sufficiently known: […] All other time is peace.

Related Characters: Thomas Hobbes (speaker)
Page Number: 185-186
Explanation and Analysis:
Chapter 14 Quotes

The Right of Nature, which Writers commonly call Jus Naturale, is the Liberty each man hath, to use his own power, as he will himselfe, for the preservation of his own Nature; that is to say, of his own Life; and consequently, of doing any thing, which in his own Judgement, and Reason, hee shall conceive to be the aptest means thereunto.

Related Characters: Thomas Hobbes (speaker)
Page Number: 189
Explanation and Analysis:

Men are freed of their Covenants two ways; by Performing; or by being Forgiven. For Performance, is the naturall end of obligation; and Forgivenesse, the restitution of liberty; as being a retransferring of that Right, in which the obligation consisted.

Related Characters: Thomas Hobbes (speaker)
Page Number: 198
Explanation and Analysis:
Chapter 15 Quotes

And in this law of Nature, consisteth the Fountain and Originall of JUSTICE. For where no Covenant hath proceeded, there hath no Right been transferred, and every man has right to every thing; and consequently, no action can be Unjust. But when a Covenant is made, then to break it is Unjust: and the definition of INJUSTICE, is no other than the not Performance of Covenant. And whatsoever is not Unjust, is Just.

Related Characters: Thomas Hobbes (speaker)
Page Number: 202
Explanation and Analysis:
Chapter 18 Quotes

Fifthly, and consequently to that which was sayd last, no man that hath Soveraigne power can justly be put to death, or otherwise in any manner by his Subjects punished. For seeing every Subject is Author of the actions of his Soveraigne; he punisheth another, for the actions committed by himselfe.

Related Characters: Thomas Hobbes (speaker)
Page Number: 232
Explanation and Analysis:
Chapter 19 Quotes

Now a Monarchy, the private interest is the same with the publique. The riches, power, and honour of a Monarch arise onely from the riches, strength and reputation of his Subjects. For no King can be rich, nor glorious, nor secure; whose Subjects are either poore, or contemptible, or too weak through want, or dissention, to maintain a war against their enemies; Whereas in a Democracy, or Aristocracy, the publique prosperity conferres not so much to the private fortune of one that is corrupt, or ambitious, as doth many times a perfidious advice, a treacherous action, or a Civill warre.

Related Characters: Thomas Hobbes (speaker)
Page Number: 241-242
Explanation and Analysis:
Chapter 29 Quotes

Of which, this is one, That a man to obtain a Kingdome, is sometimes content with lesse Power, that to the Peace, and defence of the Common-wealth is necessarily required.

Related Characters: Thomas Hobbes (speaker)
Page Number: 364
Explanation and Analysis:
Chapter 35 Quotes

To the contrary, I find the Kingdome of God, to signifie in most places of Scripture, a Kingdome properly so named, constituted by the Votes of the People of Israel in peculiar manner; wherein they chose God for their King by Covenant made with him, upon Gods promising them the possession of the land of Canaan; and but seldom metaphorically; and then it is taken for Dominion over sinne; (and only in the New Testament;) because such a Dominion as that, every Subject shall have in the Kingdome of God, and without prejudice to the Soveraign.

Related Characters: Thomas Hobbes (speaker), God
Page Number: 442
Explanation and Analysis:
Chapter 47 Quotes

To this, and such like resemblances between the Papacy, and the Kingdome of Fairies, may be added this, that as the Fairies have no existence, but in the Fancies of ignorant people, rising from the Traditions of old Wives, or old Poets: so the Spirituall Power of the Pope (without the bounds of his own Civil Dominion) consisteth onely in the Fear that Seduced people stand in, of the Excommunication; upon hearing of false Miracles, false Traditions, and false Interpretations of the Scripture.

Related Characters: Thomas Hobbes (speaker)
Page Number: 714
Explanation and Analysis:
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Sovereign Term Timeline in Leviathan

The timeline below shows where the term Sovereign appears in Leviathan. The colored dots and icons indicate which themes are associated with that appearance.
The Introduction
Nature, War, and Civil Society   Theme Icon
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...called a COMMON-WEALTH, or STATE, (in latine CIVITAS) which is but an Artificiall Man.” The sovereign is “an Artificiall Soul,” and the magistrates and members of the judiciary and executive government... (full context)
Chapter 10: Of Power, Worth, Dignity, Honour, and Worthinesse
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...common-wealth; however, the common-wealth has the authority to decide what is honorable or not. A sovereign can honor a citizen with a specific title or office, and dominion and victory over... (full context)
Chapter 15: Of other Lawes of Nature
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Fear  Theme Icon
...the perceived reward for breaking the covenant. Therefore, if there is no common-wealth and no sovereign power, nothing is unjust.  (full context)
Chapter 17: Of the Causes, Generation, and Definition of a COMMON-WEALTH
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The author within a common-wealth is the sovereign, and those whom the sovereign has power over are called subjects. Sovereign power is obtained... (full context)
Chapter 18: Of the RIGHTS of Soveraignes by Institution
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...in which a person (or persons) is to be their representative, and that representative, or sovereign power, is given all the rights and faculties of the assembly. First, since this power... (full context)
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The power of a sovereign cannot be forfeited, either by the sovereign power itself or by the people, and anyone... (full context)
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The sovereign power has the right to make the rules of a common-wealth, whereby every subject and... (full context)
Chapter 19: Of the severall Kinds of Common-wealth by Institution, and of Succession to the Soveraigne Power
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...this is called an aristocracy. There are no other common-wealths apart from these, as a sovereign power can be only one person, a group of people, or all the people of... (full context)
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In common-wealths where a sovereign power has already been determined, the subjects can elect no other power, as that power... (full context)
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It is difficult to compare the different sovereign powers, as they differ not in power but in how they wield that power. A... (full context)
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Reason, Fact, and Philosophy  Theme Icon
...all their possessions, which Hobbes admits is problematic; however, the same authority resides in any sovereign power, not just with the monarchy. Hobbes also admits it is troublesome that an infant... (full context)
Chapter 20: Of Dominion PATERNALL, and DESPOTICALL
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Fear  Theme Icon
In a common-wealth of acquisition, a sovereign power is instituted by the multitudes, who fear death or injury without the establishment of... (full context)
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...the vanquished enter into a covenant, either through words or actions, and submit to the sovereign power of the victor. This is not to say that the vanquished are held captive... (full context)
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Now, Hobbes considers what Holy Scripture says concerning the rights of a monarch and sovereign power. The children of Israel said to Moses: “Speak thou to us, and we will... (full context)
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It is Hobbes’s understanding from reason and scripture that the sovereign power—whether that power is placed in a monarch, a democratic body, or an aristocratic body—is... (full context)
Chapter 21: Of the Liberty of Subjects
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The sovereign power can never be abolished or limited, as nothing the sovereign does to a subject... (full context)
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The liberty that writers praise in past common-wealths is praise for the liberty of the sovereign power, not the liberty of individual people. The people of Athens and Rome were free,... (full context)
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...of common-wealths come from Aristotle and Cicero, and such men assumed that subjects of a sovereign assembly are free and that subjects of a monarchy are slaves. In Aristotle’s Politiques, he... (full context)
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...subject can refuse to do certain things, even if those things are commanded by the sovereign power; however, one’s submission to a common-wealth includes both obligation and liberty. In other words,... (full context)
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A subject has a right to refuse the sovereign power’s commands if the refusal does not affect the reasons why the common-wealth was created... (full context)
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...behave as he or she pleases. If there is controversy between a subject and the sovereign power, the subject has a right to sue the sovereign, just as if the sovereign... (full context)
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A subject’s obligation to the sovereign power lasts as long as the common-wealth, and the right to protect one’s self in... (full context)
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If a sovereign power is captured in war and gives up power for themselves and their heirs, their... (full context)
Chapter 22: Of Systemes Subject, Politicall, and Private
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...common-wealth are either political or private. Political systems are made by authority of the common-wealth’s sovereign power. Private systems, on the other hand, are those made by subjects themselves. Private systems... (full context)
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...political body is one person, whatever that person does to violate the laws of a sovereign power is not the act of all subjects in the body politic. If the representative... (full context)
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...against the body politic is lawful, but it is never lawful to protest against the sovereign power. There are many kinds of political bodies, and they differ by their stated business... (full context)
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...be made indefinite or for a short time, but they are still limited by the sovereign power. If any political body is given absolute power over the people, there are two... (full context)
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If the sovereign power is part of an assembly, and any number of that assembly attempts to persuade... (full context)
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...it is contrary to the establishment of the common-wealth to take power away from the sovereign. (full context)
Chapter 23: Of the PUBLIQUE MINISTERS of Soveraign Power
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...which are Publique Ministers.” A public minister is a person who is employed by the sovereign power to conduct some business on behalf of the common-wealth. A public minister may be... (full context)
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...governor or viceroy, and the power they have is dependent upon the will of the sovereign. Other public ministers are given administration of specific business at home or abroad, such as... (full context)
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...as both the judge and judged are members of the common-wealth and subjects of the sovereign power. In such instances, the sovereign power may hear the case or appoint a second... (full context)
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Public ministers employed by the sovereign power have authority to apprehend, judge, punish, and imprison subjects of a common-wealth. Public ministers... (full context)
Chapter 24: Of the NUTRITION, and PROCREATION of a Common-wealth
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...accordance with “propriety.” The first law of distribution is the division of land, and the sovereign power is to assign each subject a portion of land that is “agreeable to Equity,... (full context)
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Hobbes admits that a sovereign power may distribute materials in pursuit of private passions and rather than in the best... (full context)
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...the destruction of the common-wealth. All distribution of land inside the common-wealth belongs to the sovereign, but giving each subject a portion of land is not enough to sustain the common-wealth.... (full context)
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...common-wealth are known as colonies, in which any number of subjects are sent by the sovereign under the authority of a governor to a foreign country. Said country may be void... (full context)
Chapter 26: Of CIVILL LAWES
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The legislator in a common-wealth is the sovereign power, and that power makes the laws. Furthermore, the sovereign power—be that power a single... (full context)
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If the sovereign power of one common-wealth takes over the subjects of another common-wealth and then governs by... (full context)
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...written and known—there must also be some sign that said law comes directly from the sovereign power. A law must be “verified,” Hobbes says, not merely “authorized.” Verification is the “Testimony... (full context)
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...applicable to their behavior and actions, but the interpretation of the law depends on the sovereign power. According to Hobbes, all laws must be interpreted. Laws are vague, and even short,... (full context)
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...they involve moral virtues, like justice and equity. Positive laws are those imposed by the sovereign power. Laws can also be either fundamental or not fundamental. A fundamental law is one... (full context)
Chapter 27: Of CRIMES, EXCUSES, and EXTENUATIONS
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...to break a law; to break a law is also to hold a legislator (the sovereign power) in contempt. A crime is a sin that consists of breaking any law of... (full context)
Chapter 28: Of PUNISHMENTS, and REWARDS
Power, Common-wealths, and Monarchies Theme Icon
Fear  Theme Icon
...The right to punish subjects comes from the covenant of the common-wealth, which imbues the sovereign with the power to punish those who do not conform to the law and the... (full context)
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Fear  Theme Icon
...as salary or wages for some service performed. Any benefit that is given by the sovereign by way of fear is not a reward and should not be practiced by sovereign... (full context)
Chapter 29: Of those things that Weaken, or tend to the DISSOLUTION of a Common-wealth
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...“infirmities” or “diseases” resemble those of the human body. One such infirmary is when a sovereign power is content with less power than what they actually possess to defend and protect... (full context)
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...not “Study and Reason” is also damaging to a common-wealth, and so is holding a sovereign power subject to civil laws. A sovereign power is not a subject of the common-wealth;... (full context)
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The dividing of a sovereign power is also harmful to the common-wealth and is fundamentally against the purpose of the... (full context)
Chapter 30: Of the OFFICE of the Soveraign Representative
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The sovereign exists for the safety of the subjects of the common-wealth, and the sovereign is obligated... (full context)
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...subjects, so they will not give honor to another that is reserved only for the sovereign. Subjects must also be taught not to dispute the sovereign power, and there should be... (full context)
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...for the safety of the people of a common-wealth that justice is administered by the sovereign equally to all subjects. Breaking a law is always a crime against the common-wealth, and... (full context)
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Inequality between people of a common-wealth comes from acts of the sovereign, which is why equal taxes are important for equality of subjects. If a subject is... (full context)
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Fear  Theme Icon
A good sovereign makes good laws, but a good law is more than a just law, since no... (full context)
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It is also the sovereign’s duty to appoint good counselors for the betterment of the common-wealth and to seek their... (full context)
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The sovereign must also appoint a commander of the Army, and if said commander is not popular... (full context)
Chapter 31: OF the KINGDOME OF GOD by NATURE
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...one of war, and the Laws of Nature function to avoid this war. Without a sovereign power, a common-wealth cannot stand, and the subjects of a common-wealth must be obedient to... (full context)
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God gathers his sovereign power from his omnipotence, or “Irresistible Power.” Punishment is generally understood to come from sin;... (full context)
Chapter 33: of the Number, Antiquity, Scope, Authority, and Interpreters of the Books of Holy SCRIPTURE
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...but scripture does indicate those laws that should not be followed. God is the “Soveraign [Sovereign] of all Soveraigns” and therefore should be obeyed; however, a subject must also know when... (full context)
Chapter 35: Of the Signification in Scripture of KINGDOME OF GOD, of HOLY, SACRED, and SACRAMENT
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...a common-wealth, in which God’s law is instituted as civil law and God is the sovereign power. (full context)
Chapter 39: Of the signification in Scripture of the word CHURCH
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...as people gathered under the Christian faith and “united in the person of one Soveraign [Sovereign]; at whose command they ought to assemble, and without whose authority they ought not to... (full context)
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In all common-wealths, any assembly that is not authorized by the “Civil Soveraign [Sovereign]” is unlawful. Thus, any unauthorized church assembled within in a common-wealth is “unlawfull Assembly.” Furthermore,... (full context)
Chapter 40: Of the RIGHTS of the Kingdome of God, in Abraham, Moses, the High Priests, and the Kings of Judah
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...his own witness, Hobbes asks, then what of Moses’s? Under God’s command, Moses was the sovereign power of the Jews, and after Moses’s time, Aaron was sovereign(full context)
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...many prophets, they were all subordinate to Moses. After the time of Moses and Aaron, sovereign Power went to the High Priest, starting with Joshua. After Joshua, however, there was no... (full context)
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The Kings of Israel had authority in all things religious and civil. This sovereign power was divine, but it was also made by covenant. When the people of Israel... (full context)
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...far as the Old Testament is concerned, it can be concluded that whoever was the sovereign power of the common-wealth of the Jews was also God’s “Supreme Authority” on Earth. (full context)
Chapter 42: Of POWER ECCLESIASTICALL
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...world, his ministers can’t command obedience in Christ’s name, unless that minister is also a sovereign king. Christ was sent to the Jews to convince them to return to God and... (full context)
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...but are Helpers of your Joy.” Hobbes questions what one is to do if their sovereign power, such as a king or a senate, forbids their subjects to believe in Christ.... (full context)
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A sovereign king can tell his subjects what to do and forbid public gatherings and practices associated... (full context)
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...him. Baptism is a type of covenant, but true authority is with an “Earthly Soveraign [sovereign]” until Judgement Day. (full context)
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...anyone out of an assembly, since all places are under dominion of the common-wealth and sovereign power. (full context)
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...one church has authority to excommunicate the members of another. Furthermore, Hobbes argues, if a sovereign power—for instance, a Prince—is a member of a Christian church, that Prince cannot be excommunicated.... (full context)
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...covert others to his way to ensure “Salvation in the world to come.” Before civil sovereigns became Christians, St Paul visited Jews at their synagogue. In Acts 17:2-3, St. Paul “reasoned... (full context)
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...keep a copy of the laws, but, Hobbes says, Moses was also the “Civill Soveraign [sovereign].” (full context)
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...of the Jews. The New Testament, on the other hand, was not considered law until sovereign Christians deemed it so, beginning with Constantine. (full context)
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...contradicts the very nature of a law. Thus, whenever any “Rule” is offered that the sovereign has not endorsed, such “Rule” can only be counsel, not compulsion. In common-wealths where God’s... (full context)
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...make Christ’s command into law. Instead, they taught obedience to established laws. As only a sovereign power in the civil sense can make any “Rule” into law, the Holy Scripture within... (full context)
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...as the assembly lacks the power to make a law. So, in common-wealths where the sovereign power does not make laws to determine a minister’s maintenance, or salary, it relies on... (full context)
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A sovereign power of a common-wealth who is also a Christian has the right to appoint ministers.... (full context)
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...all ministers and pastors preach and teach under the authority given to them by the sovereign power, meaning a minister’s authority is “Jure Civili.” The sovereign power, however, derives their own... (full context)
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...is to designate the one who is receiving the power. In the case of a sovereign power, they have always had the power to teach and ordain others; thus, there is... (full context)
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A sovereign power may transfer the management of religious matters to the Pope, or they can transfers... (full context)
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The sovereign power alone has complete authority to define how Holy Scripture is interpreted, not the Pope.... (full context)
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...has never been claimed by the church or the Pope that the Pope is the sovereign power over all the world’s Christians. Thus, all Christians are not obligated to obey the... (full context)
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...power to the Pope and no one else, but Hobbes disagrees. It is only Christian sovereigns who can claim power to govern from God or Christ. Any minister who has ecclesiastical... (full context)
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...moot argument, Hobbes implies, if it is considered outside common-wealths where the Pope is the sovereign power. A Pope only has the power to make laws if he is also the... (full context)
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...give them power to command the people. All ministers and bishops (unless they are the sovereign power) get their power to preach and ordain from the sovereign power of the common-wealth... (full context)
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...this limitation. A Pope can never have jurisdiction, Hobbes argues, in the dominion of another sovereign power. A sovereign’s right to power is derived from the covenant of the people. If... (full context)
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...has absolute power, which is to say he has been granted such power by a sovereign, the Pope can depose princes and kings whenever he wants for whatever he wants. This... (full context)
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Cardinal Bellarmine argues that the “Civill Power” of a sovereign is subject to the “Spirituall Power” of the Pope. Even if this were true, Hobbes... (full context)
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...It goes against the Law of Nature for subjects of a common-wealth to disobey their sovereign power. Furthermore, it is the sovereign power, not the Pope, who has the authority to... (full context)
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...same. A Pope can never have absolute power over people, unless he is also the sovereign power of a common-wealth. And, perhaps most importantly, a Pope can never have dominion over... (full context)
Chapter 43: Of what is NECESSARY for a Mans Reception into the Kingdome of Heaven
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...Christian common-wealths arises from the difficulty that comes from trying to obey God and a sovereign power when their laws are contradictory to one another. Many people believe that when two... (full context)
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The command of a sovereign power can be obeyed without forfeiting one’s salvation. To disobey the sovereign for any reason... (full context)
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...faith in what Moses said as Christ’s “Supreme Pastor.” In a common-wealth, Hobbes says, the sovereign power is the “Supreme Pastor.” Different people believe any given religious doctrine or piece of... (full context)
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It is possible to reconcile one’s obedience to God with their obedience to their sovereign power, even if that sovereign is not a Christian. If one’s sovereign is a Christian,... (full context)
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And if the sovereign power is not a Christian, one can still obey the sovereign without offending God, even... (full context)
Chapter 44: Of Spirituall Darkness from MISINTERPRETATION of Scripture
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...his “Peculiar People.” There has not been another common-wealth on Earth with God as the sovereign power since the Jews were freed from their captivity in Egypt. The Kingdome of God... (full context)
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...the distinction between civil laws and canonical laws. Civil law is the work of a sovereign, whereas canon is law passed by the Pope in the very same common-wealth. Yet another... (full context)
Chapter 45: Of DÆMONOLOGY, and other Reliques of the Religion of the Gentiles
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...Heathen” is the “PONTIFEX MAXIMUS,” which bestows the Pope with supreme authority and robs the sovereign of power. (full context)
Chapter 46: Of DARKNESS from VAIN PHILOSOPHY, and FABULOUS TRADITIONS
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...false philosophy, citizens of common-wealths all over the world have been frightened into disobeying their sovereign power. It is from this very same philosophy that people believe the soul of a... (full context)
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Error is also the result when a private citizen, without the authority of the sovereign power of a common-wealth, independently interprets the law. This error wasn’t drawn from Aristotle either,... (full context)
Chapter 47: Of the BENEFIT that proceedeth from such Darknesse, and to whom it accreweth
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...exempt from the laws of a common-wealth and are subjects of the Pope before the sovereign power; however, they are maintained by the common-wealth’s public coffers, which also benefits the clergy. (full context)
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...Holy Confession, too, benefits the clergy, as it gives the clergy “better intelligence” than the sovereign power. False belief in transubstantiation, absolution, Purgatory, demons, and exorcism also benefit the clergy, as... (full context)
A REVIEW, and CONCLUSION
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...to also add that everyone is obligated by Nature to protect during war the same sovereign power they are protected by in peacetime.    (full context)
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...is not victory in war; a conquest is winning power over the subjects of another sovereign power. Thus, if one is killed, they are not conquered, nor are they conquered if... (full context)
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...that the Jews and God entered into a covenant in which God was made their sovereign power by contract. The Jews were God’s “Peculiar People” and differed from others on Earth... (full context)
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...punishment of those who break the law is usually executed by someone appointed by the sovereign power, like a guard or soldier; however, in Israel, the people executed the punishment, usually... (full context)
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...he believes his principles are sound and his rationale is solid, as he has grounded sovereigns’ rights and subjects’ obligation and freedom according to the Law of Nature, which no one... (full context)