n7axw wrote:It is too bad we can't actually study the Writ. As it is, we are discussing the teachings of a book we've never read. The result is that even more than normal, we bring who we are along with own biases to the discussion.
As for the Temple Lands, I think that, as Randomizer said, it's going to get really messy. Will there be an allowed church there other than the COGA? If you leave the COGA in place as a governing authority, that inevitably leads to the COGA collecting taxes to pay for the essential services that societies normally provide. If you do have an allowed church other than the COGA, that means that you have people financially supporting a church with which they disagree. That means that nothing has really changed at all in the Temple Lands.
Back to my first paragraph, my own biases prejudice me against that. Too many people came to America to escape the oppression of state churches in Europe for me to see it any other way... Just what is it about the history of the COGA that could pursuade us that she wouldn't oppress, given even the slightest opportunity?
I understand the church's strong role in governance in the past, esp. in the Temple Lands. I know it's going to be difficult. But I still think that a separate governing structure is needed to collect taxes and administer those functions of society that all citizens need and benefit from. Then the COGA would have its own structure and would do those things together that its membership would be willing to voluntarily support.
Don
Safehold's traditionally had the Church to provide social services (take it broadly enough to include cartography, farming advice, plumbing help, and lotteries, please) and "conscience services", helping you get right with God as revealed unto Safehold by His Archangel Langhorne. (And a lot of banking services too, but those aren't crucial here.) In addition, secular governments have been doing most "force services", keeping control over the use of violence by (approximately) monopolizing it and punishing unauthorized use, under the auspices and with the permission of the Church.
On Earth, we've had governments for force services and (varying amounts of) social services, and churches (and parents, neighbors, advice columnists, etc.) for conscience services or their counterparts, at least in the rough layout we've gotten around to since the Enlightenment. And most of us like it, if we zoom out this far and squint and avoid the politics forums for messy details. Mixing force and conscience services works out poorly - we lose all sorts of take-it-or-leave-it we like with our conscience services when the preachers have guns and the authority to use them, and the force services folk suffer/inflict a lot of mission creep when controlling what people think is on their plate.
Charis still has Safehold's basic division of services, but (1) the secular government isn't taking its license from Zion at least, (2) the national church and national government are working on a more equal basis but also with a bit more distinction of spheres than elsewhere on Safehold, (3) force is off the table for conscience services - they're really free to be conscience
services rather than orders under the Church of Charis, and (4) it
may be that the split between the Church of Charis and the Temple Loyalists there is more pronounced among the conscience services elements than the public services one. I doubt anyone has to be sure their Pasqualate healer belongs to the Church of Charis or is a Temple Loyalist the way it will matter where you go to hear a sermon on Wednesday. (It's a guess, I could be wrong, I welcome correction, but it's the impression I've had and haven't come across anything contrary.)
You've still got taxes going to the government and tithes to the Church there, and authority flowing from both of them. (Well - arguably, the authority of the state is still derived from the national Church, but that seems to be taken more pro forma rather than as a tight leash that may be tugged at any time.) It's not the spread of functions we've had on Earth, but it's working decently in the Empire, with a whole lot of prep-work, good-will (even out of the Temple Loyalists, really!), and inside information on both the Church and state sides. Maybe the
easiest way of getting Safehold to some sort of arrangement that gets people what they need and minimizes abuses is moving to something like Charis' model - even if it still makes some of us itchy - but it's a huge step for the most open-minded but sincerely faithful sorts on the mainland.
We should expect messiness.