n7axw wrote:Weird Harold wrote:In the Temple Lands, there has been direct rule by Vicars of the CoGA, and virtually zero secular government. There is no practical way to change that state of affairs by fiat/conquest, so the best that can be accomplished is to force a choice: Vicar or Knight, one or the other, but not both. Take an oath of fealty from the succeeding Knight and monitor events for treachery.
Actually, this is about as close as I've seen so far to an answer to the question we have been discussing.
What the rest of you guys seem to be coming up with seems to me like saying that since the chickens seem to be accustomed to the fox in the coop, once we've cornered and neutralized the fox, we should very politely put the fox in the coop and apologize to the chickens for disturbing the foxes normal routine of devouring chickens!
Randomizer, you keep comparing the situation with European churches who no matter how powerful they were at one time never had the reins of power to themselves. Ever at the very height of her secular power, the church always had a rival seat of power to deal with in the state, expressed in its various levels and forms That's very different situation from Safehold where the church reigned supreme with no check on her power.
I don't think that you can consider the COGA's political power broken as long as she is allowed anywhere near the reins of secular power. I recognize the difficulties you guys are stating. But assuming it turns out your way, where are the checks and balances that prevent the COGA from arranging a repeat act up the road?
Don
Don, you've grown up in a tradition that's comfortable with powerful government - or at least where whatever power that's about that isn't rounded up by government is left wild among private individuals. But that's not the sole orientation of actual terrestrial governments that DO still respect individual rights pretty well, and it's certainly not something that Safehold is used to or ready for. It's stepping down, carefully, slowly, from a world government with ultimate (and largely immediate) authority over everything people do, say, or think, said authority coming right from an unquestioned God the Creator by an unquestioned descent, with the only historic dissension from that authority identified with a demon-goddess of evil. (If you're not going to quibble with the spirit of that description, please allow me an adequately flowery statement of it.)
Charis is only now loosening up the national Church's grip on the state and the ties between conscience and social services, with a much stronger rejection of the central church authority. And those steps are enough to spark a war of annihilation.
Whatever is going to work out for the area of Safehold with no distinct secular government so far and the most powerful, consistent, overwhelming presence of central power is going to have that sort of small step as a giant leap - in no small part because the entire secular government will have to be created and imposed (if at all) and the tradition of looser ties among service authorities is both non-existent and the sort of thing they will have just been made tolerant of torturing children to death in rejection of.
It could really be that the best practical government to set up, or accept, in the Temple Lands may be a chastened, somewhat reformed CoGA - just because anything "better" would be too hopeless for acceptance by the people there. And that may not make for any real checks or balances inside the constitutional law or tradition they will have. They'll be left with the old standbys: revolution, re-invasion, or reform motivated by conscience and/or fear of revolution or re-invasion.
For constitutional suggestions for a Temple Lands government following an occupation, aim as conservatively as you can while maintaining some hope that what results isn't going to need a bloody revolution or re-invasion to improve, and won't go in for more torturing people to death. Maybe aim for a lot more distinction between the governing, preaching, and supportive parts of the Church, and allow them to be run independently. See what can be done so that traditions of checks and balances and separation of powers can develop, if it is a step too far to put them in place immediately. One grace the Temple Lands have at least is no landed aristocracy, so it can go from a Church republic to a different Church republic without having to deal with hereditary government. If you can set up a government so that officials are responsible to the people, and throw out the Book of Schuler (or put it back on a shelf and make it gather dust), you're doing both not badly and maybe as well as you can hope for now.