Members of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints are taught that the Book of Mormon – Another Testament of Jesus Christ was written for our day. Therefore, it may be a promising idea to look to the Book of Mormon for guidance as we near the Second Coming of Jesus Christ.
The
book of Helaman in the Book of Mormon tells of a situation happening about
20-25 years prior to the birth of Jesus Christ. Helaman 8 tells us that the
judges were members of the secret combination who had gained control of the
government. It also tells us that the judges sought to destroy the authority of
church leaders. Helaman 9 tells us that one judge sought power so much that he
killed another judge.
This background takes us to the situation currently in the United States – explained by Hans von Spakovsky, a Constitution expert at The Heritage Foundation. A duly elected President of the United States is seeking “to make major changes in government policies and root out the pervasive waste, fraud, and diversity, equity, and inclusion [DEI] poisoning our government and its programs.” Yet, he is being “hampered by a handful of biased judges who abused their authority to keep him from implementing the policies the American people voted for.” The author continued with his explanation as follows:
Jurisdiction
is limited to the federal districts where the hundreds of district court judges
reside. However, some of these judges arrogantly assert that they can override
the president in areas of core executive branch competency and issue sweeping
injunctions that affect the entire nation. They even claim they can act on
behalf of people who aren’t parties in the cases before them.
These
judicial tyrants seem to believe that the Constitution gives them more power
than the president to make decisions on the size of the federal government, how
it spends its money, and whom it can hire and fire. They say they have a right
to overrule the president’s national security judgment on issues that affect
our relations with foreign governments, our military readiness, and the safety
of the public from unchecked illegal immigration.
The
Constitution does not give that authority to the judiciary. Perhaps these judges would like to
rewrite President Abraham Lincoln’s Gettysburg Address to say we must preserve “government
of the judges, by the judges, for the judges.”
Make
no mistake: These
judges are acting far outside their authority, and their actions are
unprecedented.
Last
year, the Harvard Law Review noted that of the 127 nationwide injunctions
issued since 1963, 64 were against the first Trump administration. Similarly,
Justice Clarence Thomas noted in Trump v. Hawaii (2018) that district courts
had issued such injunctions in recent years “without considering their
authority to grant such sweeping relief.”
Thomas
said these injunctions “did not emerge until a century and a half after the
founding” and are “inconsistent with long-standing limits on the equitable
relief and the power of Article III courts.” …
Over
the past 100 days, we have again witnessed numerous injunctions against actions
well within Trump’s constitutional authority as the chief executive and commander
in chief….
The
lawfare against the administration is undoubtedly frustrating, but we’ll see
what happens when these cases reach the Supreme Court.
In
Trump v. Hawaii, Thomas said that if the “popularity” of nationwide injunctions
continues, “this Court must address their legality.”
Let’s
hope the justices do that soon.
If
the Supreme Court doesn’t take steps to do that, Congress may remove it from
the court’s hands and deal with the problem itself.
Rogue
judges in our day are acting outside the boundaries of their authority – just like
the judges in Helaman. The U.S. Constitution was written in 1787, ratified in
1788, and in operation since 1789. Constitution Day 2025 will celebrate 236
years of operating under the U.S. Constitution. However, the United States will
be damaged if judges continue to usurp authority from the Executive Branch and
the Legislative Branch of the federal government.
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