TL;DR: "A removal mechanism controlled by the king cannot restrain him. A removal mechanism not controlled by the king outranks him."
A Proposed Monarch Removal Mechanism:
One of the most pressing concerns I have regarding the proposed constitutional monarchy is the absence of any mechanism to remove a rogue king. This is not a mere theoretical issue, but a critical flaw that could doom the entire system. While the proposal is designed to align with biblical principles of justice and governance, it overlooks a fundamental distinction between ancient Israel and any modern nation attempting to implement such a structure.
Israel operated under a unique covenantal relationship with God. When Israel’s kings strayed too far from justice, God Himself would intervene. Saul, for example, was removed by divine decree, and David was chosen to replace him. Even later kings who defied God’s law, such as Ahab or Manasseh, faced divine judgment, whether through prophetic condemnation, foreign invasion, or direct punishment from God. This newly proposed nation would not have that same divine safeguard. There would be no divine promise ensuring that God would directly remove an unjust ruler. Therefore, without a clear and enforceable process for removing a king who violates the law, the system invites tyranny.
The arguments, to this point, against a removal mechanism have been that it would only introduce something else that was “above the law,” and only achieve the undermining of the king’s authority, but this is not what such a mechanism would be. Those who remove a king for violating the law would not be placing themselves above the law, they'd be enforcing it! The king’s authority is derived from the law itself. If he systematically ignores or violates that law, then he has undermined his own legitimacy and thereby usurped his own authority.
A biblically consistent removal mechanism must, therefore, be built into the system, and the most natural way to do this is through the existing judicial structure. Judges already serve as the enforcers of justice within their respective jurisdictions, ensuring that laws are applied consistently. If a judge can be held legally accountable for malfeasance or neglect, why should the king not also be held accountable by the law?
A structured process of escalation within the judicial system would ensure that accusations against the king are neither frivolous nor ignored. If a judge over tens believes the king has violated the law, he may present his concern to a judge over fifties. If the judge over fifties finds the concern credible, he refers it to the next level. This pattern continues until the matter reaches a judge over hundreds of thousands. Only when a judge at this higher level concurs does the issue move forward as a formal charge against the king. At this stage, the case is heard by a panel composed of the highest-ranking judges in the land (i.e. those just beneath the king in authority - judges of millions, perhaps). This panel presides over a trial, ensuring that the king receives due process while also maintaining the integrity of the law.
The legal process would function as follows: Once the higher-level judge confirms the legitimacy of the charge, a formal indictment is issued, and a trial is convened. The panel of top judges serves as both jury and arbiter, with each judge weighing the evidence and arguments presented. The biblical standard of justice requires the testimony of two or three witnesses to establish any matter, and the same would apply to the king. If the judges collectively determine that the king has violated the constitution or criminal law in a manner warranting removal, the judgment is made and enforced by the same means as any other judgment to include the military if need be. Once the king is removed then a successor is appointed in accordance with the constitutional provisions.
Further, there is one additional tweak that I think the propose constitution needs. For the judiciary to function properly in this role, it must derive its authority from the constitution itself rather than serving at the pleasure of the king. If judges serve only at the king’s will, then they lack the independence necessary to hold him accountable. The law, not the king, must be the ultimate authority. This ensures that justice is upheld even against the highest ruler in the land.
Without such a mechanism, history teaches us what will happen. A wicked king who refuses to follow the law will purge his opposition, removing those who stand for justice. Over time, such a system will become corrupt and oppressive, as those willing to defy tyranny will be eliminated from society. Without a covenantal guarantee that God Himself will intervene, there must be a means for the law to be upheld against even the highest authority in the land.
A nation built on biblical principles must take seriously both justice and accountability. To ignore this necessity is to set up a system doomed to eventual failure. If the proposed constitution is to be a viable foundation for a just and enduring nation, then it must recognize the reality of human fallibility and ensure that even the king is subject to the law he is sworn to uphold.
A Biblical System for Appointing Judges:
A natural question arises from my previous post on the role of the judiciary in a constitutional monarchy.
If judges are to derive their authority directly from the constitution rather than from the king, how then would they be appointed and on what biblical basis would such a process be established?
The answer lies in the very structure laid out in the biblical system of governance. Exodus 18:21-22 records Moses’ instructions to appoint judges over groups of tens, fifties, hundreds, and thousands. Similarly, in Deuteronomy 1:13-16, the people were told to choose wise and understanding men from among themselves, and Moses would set them over the people as judges. This reveals a bottom-up method of judicial selection; one that is merit based, decentralized, and insulated from the king's control.
Judges would be chosen from within their own ranks at each level of authority. The process would work as follows:
- Judges over tens would be appointed locally, selected by the people under their jurisdiction. These would be the most grassroots-level judges, handling the most immediate disputes.
- Judges over fifties would be chosen from among the judges of tens, promoted by their peers. Once selected, they would be replaced in their former role by another judge of tens and chosen in the regular manner.
- Judges over hundreds would be chosen from among the judges over fifties, again through peer selection. This pattern would continue at each level.
- Judges over thousands would be chosen from among the judges over hundreds, ensuring that only those with demonstrated wisdom and experience would rise to the highest levels of judicial authority.
- Judges over millions (if the population necessitated it) would be chosen in the same way, following the biblical pattern of increasing the level of authority by roughly a factor of ten. In a nation the size of the United States, there would likely be only three or four such judges, ensuring a manageable and functional judicial hierarchy.
This system ensures that those who rise in judicial authority are not appointed by a king or a political body but by their peers, those who best understand the demands of the position and who can recognize wisdom, justice, and integrity in their colleagues. This method also prevents a central authority from manipulating the judiciary for its own purposes.
Furthermore, this approach ensures accountability. Since each judge at every level is chosen from below, any failure or corruption can be swiftly addressed by the very people who elevated him. A judge who fails to uphold the law will lose the confidence of his fellow judges and can be removed, just as he was appointed.
This is, in every way, a superior alternative to the flawed and corruptible systems of judicial appointment used in modern governments. It remains consistent with biblical precedent, ensures impartiality, and preserves the judiciary’s independence from both the executive and the populace. If a judicial system is to function properly within a constitutional monarchy, it must rest upon the authority of the law itself, not the whims of a ruler or the fickleness of elections. The biblical model provides exactly this kind of foundation.
As for the king's role in seating judges, it should be similar to Moses' role in Exodus 18 and Deuteronomy 1. Not as the sole appointer but as the final confirmer of the judges selected through the structured process. Moses instructed the people to choose wise and capable men, but he retained the authority to approve their selections. This suggests a model in which the king ensures that the process remains just and that those appointed meet the necessary qualifications.
In practical terms, the king would:
- Oversee the Process: Ensuring that the selection process is carried out fairly and in accordance with the law.
- Confirm Appointments: Reviewing the selections to ensure they align with constitutional and biblical principles, much as Moses affirmed the choices presented by the people.
- Act as a Final Check: If corruption or partisanship taints the selection process, the king could reject unqualified candidates and require a new selection.
Clete,
I'm going to answer posts 303 and 307 together, because the removal mechanism in 303 depends on the altered judicial structure in 307.
Let me start out by saying that I completely understand the concern. An evil king is a real danger. I won't deny that. The question is whether your proposed remedy actually solves that danger, or whether it creates a deeper structural problem.
As I understand your proposal, an accusation against the king would begin low in the judicial hierarchy and then be escalated upward. If the accusation survives that process, the highest-ranking judges would hear the case, determine whether the king had systematically violated the Constitution or Criminal Code, and, if necessary, remove him. Then, in post 307, you propose a judicial structure that is not merely appointed at the king’s pleasure, but derives its authority from the Constitution itself, with judges selected from below and confirmed upward.
That is a more careful proposal than a democratic recall or parliamentary impeachment. But I still think it fails.
The problem is simple:
Either the king has meaningful control over the judiciary, or he does not.
If the king has meaningful control over the judiciary, then an evil king need only appoint, promote, confirm, or favor men loyal to him, dependent on him, or at least unwilling to oppose him. He does not need to abolish the removal mechanism. He only needs to control the men who operate it. A patient evil king would not wait until charges were brought against him. He would spend years shaping the judicial hierarchy, rewarding cowards and loyalists, marginalizing righteous judges, and making sure that by the time a charge was serious enough to escalate, the men above it were already compromised.
So in that case, the removal mechanism only works against a careless evil king. It does not work against a calculating one.
But if the king does not have meaningful control over the judiciary, then the judiciary has become an independent power center. And if that independent judiciary can indict, try, condemn, and remove the king, then the king is no longer the supreme earthly civil authority. The judiciary is.
That is the dilemma.
A removal mechanism controlled by the king cannot restrain him.
A removal mechanism not controlled by the king outranks him.
And that second option is not monarchy in the meaningful sense Bob was defending. It is judicial oligarchy with a king beneath it.
You say this would not put anyone above the law, because the judges would merely be enforcing the law. But law does not enforce itself. Men enforce it. Men interpret it. Men decide what counts as “systematic violation.” Men decide whether the accusation is credible. Men decide when the king has lost legitimacy. Men decide whether he is removed. Men command the force necessary to carry out the judgment.
So the question is not whether “the law” is above the king. The question is which men have final earthly authority to interpret and enforce that law against the king. The law may be above the king morally, but the men empowered to enforce it against him are above him civilly. If the highest judges have that authority, then they are above the king at the decisive point.
That brings us back to the larger principle (the overview) behind Bob’s proposed constitution. His objection to juries, committees, democracy, and bureaucracy was not merely that they sometimes make bad decisions. It was that they diffuse responsibility. They conceal blame. They create power without clear personal accountability.
Monarchy locates responsibility. One man bears final earthly responsibility. His actions can be named, recorded, judged by history, resisted by righteous men, and ultimately judged by God.
But your mechanism reintroduces diffused institutional authority at the highest level. The king may wear the crown, but the judicial class holds final power over whether he keeps it.
And history gives no reason to think such a mechanism would remain limited to obvious monsters. The first generation may use it only against a manifestly wicked king. Later generations may use it against an “unstable” king, or a “dangerous” king, or a king who “undermines confidence in the constitutional order,” or finally a righteous king who obstructs the dominant faction.
That is not hypothetical paranoia. That is what wicked men do with legal mechanisms over time.
The U.S. Constitution had checks and balances, divided powers, federalism, courts, elections, amendments, and enumerated rights. Yet those safeguards did not prevent the growth of a permanent ruling class, bureaucratic inertia, judicial invention, executive overreach, and massive violations of liberty when the ruling class decided circumstances justified them.
So I do not think the question is merely, “What do we do about an evil ruler?”
The question is whether there is any civil structure that can finally prevent an evil ruler, whether a king or a ruling class, from becoming the very vehicle that carries the nation down the path of anacyclosis.
Polybius is useful here. In Book VI of The Histories, he explains how forms of government tend to decay: monarchy into tyranny, aristocracy into oligarchy, and democracy into mob rule. So yes, monarchy can decay into tyranny. And in Polybius’ cycle, tyranny gives way to aristocracy, rule by the few who overthrow or replace the tyrant. That is a real danger. But it does not follow that the solution is to create an aristocratic or judicial power over the king, because that power has its own predictable corruption: it becomes oligarchy.
In other words, answering the danger of a tyrant by empowering the few over the one does not escape the cycle. It advances it.
A tyrant will eventually die. That does not make tyranny harmless, but it does mean the danger is personal, visible, mortal, and historically accountable. A ruling class, however, can become functionally immortal. It can reproduce itself through appointments, promotions, credentials, panels, procedures, precedent, and institutional culture.
If the answer to the rogue king is a standing judicial structure with final authority over the throne, even if its individual members change over time, then the monarchy has already been compromised. The rogue king problem has been answered by creating a rogue ruling-class problem.
That does not escape the cycle Polybius describes. It merely moves the point of corruption from the one to the few.
There will always be a ruling class. The issue is whether that ruling class is visible, personal, mortal, and historically accountable, or hidden behind panels, procedures, offices, and institutional language.
A tyrant dies. An oligarchy recruits.
Your proposal tries to keep the king under law, which is a good instinct. But structurally, it does so by placing the king under the judiciary. And once that happens, the judiciary becomes the true final earthly authority.