June 18, 2026

z1f Special Reports

Originally published June 5, 2026 for our weekly Issue of Mindful Intelligence Advisor.  Subscribe to get weekly issues.

By Paul Gordon Collier, Editor

“… Augustus won over the soldiers with gifts, the populace with cheap corn, and all men with the sweets of repose, and so grew greater by degrees, while he concentrated in himself the functions of the Senate, the magistrates, and the laws. He was wholly unopposed, for the boldest spirits had fallen in battle, or in the proscription, while the remaining nobles, the readier they were to be slaves, were raised the higher by wealth and promotion…”Tacitus, The Annals, Book 1

NOTE: We understand this report is significantly longer than our regular reports. We considered breaking the report into two parts, with the transition coming in section F, The Final Transition Form.

However, we have so many bellwether events around us that we feel we must minimalize what we call our Evergreen reports, reports not directly connected to current events (such as our Hope Exit Reports). This is why we created the publishing schedule you can find on the last page of this issue.

Our next Evergreen report is scheduled for July 24. It is on the latest developments of 3D printing, also called additive manufacturing.

Because of this, we are publishing the full report, as is, despite it being nearly twice as long as our standard maximum. We can assure you this will be an exception to that principle, not a new standard.

We recommend you divide the reading in half, with the first half ending when you get to section F, which will give you the full historic outline. The second half is comprised of the analysis sections, the comparisons of institutions between the Republic and the Empire, and a Final Assessment of that transition.

INTRODUCTION

The story of Rome does not begin as a republic, it begins as a Kingdom. There were seven Kings of Rome. The last seven kings were, at least in part, Etruscan, the then-traditional enemy of Rome. The last King, Tarquinius Superbus, was killed in 509 BC. His death marked the birth of the Roman Republic. For over three centuries, the Romans were able to keep a Republic in working order, largely operating on unwritten precedent, civic code, to prevent the consolidation of power.

Starting in the early 140s BC, the divide between the plebians and the patricians was such that demands by plebians for reforms were becoming increasingly bellicose. Into that environment, the Gracchi brothers would emerge, patricians seeking to create political power by satisfying the rage of the plebians.

They would start the unwinding of that civic code that prevented political action from becoming violent.

It would culminate with the death of the last great champion of the Republic, Marcus Tullius Cicero, whose death on December 7, 43 BC marks the end of any serious effort to restore the Republic. The Republic fell with the declaration of Julius Caesar as Dictator for Life in early 44 BC, but it died with Cicero.

Before his death, the civil war that followed had factions still hoping for a restoration of the republic. After his death, it became a contest between future Emperors, with Julius Caesar’s adopted son, Gaius Octavius, destined to be the last man standing.

His crowning as Emperor Augustus Caesar, along with his “reforms” marks the final transition from the Republic to the Empire.

By the end of the transition, new unwritten civic codes were established, but none that would be as effective as the Republic’s at preventing civil wars and final collapse.

THE GRACCHI BROTHERS

The Gracchi brothers rose to power and fell during the 130s and 120s BC. They came from the patrician class. They were oligarchs in the making who chose to side with the lower classes.

Their major reforms were settled around land ownership, state subsidization of grain (hints at the welfare programs to come), and generally seeking to create more power for the lower classes.

To accomplish their goal, the Gracchi brothers decided to break with precedent. For instance, while they should have run for consul rather than Tribune of the Plebs, they still ran for the office intended to be filled by a member of the plebian classes.

Some historians assert the Gracchi brothers’ breaking with unwritten codes created the precedent-breaking precedent the oligarchs would follow. Other historians suspect the reforms themselves would have triggered the same unprecedented response from the oligarchs even if they passed through precedent-preserving means.

Despite both being murdered for their troubles, many of their changes stuck, and the reforms that didn’t stick continued to be political issues until the republic itself came to an end.

TIBERIUS GRACCHUS – In 133 BC, Tiberius Gracchus was elected Tribune of the Plebes. Using his position, he attempted “reforms” intended to lessen the power of the oligarchs (patricians) and increase the power of the lower classes (plebians).

The oligarchs fought back, however, and before the year was over Tiberius was murdered by the oligarchs, the Senators.

The Senators, led by Tiberius’ own cousin, along with their clients and supporters, armed themselves with clubs, surrounded Tiberius and beat him and 300 of his supporters to death. They threw his body into the river Tiber.

The murder of Tiberius marks the first time in the history of the republic (which had existed for over three centuries at this point) that political violence was used.

GAIUS GRACCHUS – The little brother of Tiberius, Gaius Gracchus, sought revenge through reforms. He was elected Tribune in 123 BC. He immediately set about attempting to enact not only the reforms of his slain brother Tiberius, but also even more radical reforms, including subsidizing grain.

He won the tribunate again in 122 BC but failed to win a third time. After his loss, the new tribune moved to strike down Gaius’ reforms. Gaius Gracchus’ supporters rioted in Rome, leading to at least one death among them.

In response, the Senate gathered and hastily approved a Final Decree (Senatus Consultum Ultimum) against Gaius and his supporters.

After the Final Decree was publicly posted, a Senator named Opimius assembled a large force to attack Gaius and his supporters. When it became clear they were losing the battle, Gaius retreated to the Temple of Diana, hoping to receive sanctuary. But Opimius attacked, killing many of Gaius’ supporters.

Gaius escaped the melee and fled across the river Tiber where some accounts claim he killed himself and others claim he had his slave kill him, then the slave killed himself.

This was the second major act of political violence in a little over a decade after going centuries without a single major incident. The Final Decree could also be viewed as a shadow of what was to come with Marius and Sulla, the proscription lists, lists of people condemned by the state OFFICIALLY to exile or death, without a trial.

MARIUS AND SULLA

The power struggles between two men, a “New Man” in Marius and a patrician in Sulla, would break most peacekeeping precedents that had held for centuries. Two major precedents were broken, the official declaration of death to citizens without a trial and the use of a personally loyal military for personal power.

Marius’ military reforms in large part made Sulla possible. Marius rose to power appealing to the weak to protect them against the strong while Sulla rose to power appealing to the strong to protect them from the weak. These are the same narratives that played out during the tumult under the Gracchi brothers.

One of the support characters in this struggle between Marius and Sulla was Gnaeus Octavius. He was the support consul and ally of Sulla. In 87 BC, He would become the first head of Rome to be assassinated by his own citizens, mainly Marius allies.

MARIUS’ RISE – Two wars would create an opportunity for a plebian to become a consul. The plebian was Gaius Marius, the wars were the Jugurthine War and the Cimbrian Wars. Both wars began with catastrophic defeats for the Romans, and a series of corrupt, incompetent, patrician generals failing to bring either rebellion to heel.

The Jugurthine War elevated Marius to the position of consul in 107 BC. Sulla also received glory for his part in the Jugurthine War, and Marius resented it, claiming his contributions were exaggerated.

Marius took the consulship as a New Man. A new man is someone who comes from a family that has never held the consulship. Marius came from the plebian class, but his family was well-off, though not wealthy. What was said of Marius is he knew no Greek, which was an insult meaning he was not properly educated, which meant he lacked the gravitas needed to lead.

As soon as Marius took office, he immediately implemented major military reforms, such as opening the army up to all citizens. Only landowners who could provide their own war gear were part of the Republic’s army up to this point.

Marius professionalized the army, creating a standing army that would train year-round, ready for battle when the need arose. This was not possible when your only soldiers had to go home to plant and harvest.

The landless soldier was very different than the land-owning soldier, for this soldier owed no allegiance to the Senate. The soldier would come to be loyal to their General more than to the state as a whole.

The Cimbrian Wars during Marius’ consulship helped propel him to an unprecedented four consulships in a row (104-100 BC). In 101 BC, Marius ended the Cimbrian Wars with a final decisive battle.

Marius left the consulship with the republic appearing to be relatively stable, but underneath the surface, something was brewing, a social war.

SULLA’S RISE – The Social War of 91-88 BC would be for Sulla what the Jugurthine Wars were to Marius. The Social War was a struggle between the Romans and their former Italian allies, who wanted more rights. Like Marius’ two wars, this one started badly for the Romans. Unlike Marius, Sulla had to share glory with Marius and Gnaeus Pompeius Strabo.

However, Sulla received more glory than Marius, and that did not sit well with Marius, who felt his efforts were more impactful than Sulla’s were. While Marius managed to glean the greatest glory in the Jugurthine War despite Sulla’s efforts, here, Sulla’s faction won the day.

While the Romans won the war, the Italians won enfranchisement, meaning they now had real political power in Rome. This meant more bodies in Rome for political days, more mobs to fear, assuage, or cultivate.

In 88 BC, Sulla was elected consul of Rome. A year before, the King of Pontus rebelled from Rome, leading to the first Mithridatic War.

SULLA’S PURGES – As the newly elected consul, Sulla fully expected to be assigned to the Mithridatic War, but machinations by Marius and his allies led the command being switched to a by-now aged Marius.

However, Sulla would have none of it. He initially fled Rome, but only to rally his legions. In 88 BC, Sulla marched on Rome, the first time a General had marched troops into the city. This starts the First Civil War (88- 85 BC).

Marius and his allies were declared outlaws by Sulla. This began a purge that killed thousands. Sulla created new laws intended to strengthen the Senate before he left to fight King Mithridates VI.

Marius escaped, however, and would bide his time until Sulla left for the East. This was a shadow of what would eventually become the proscription list, a list condemning you to death or exile without a trial.

MARIUS’ PURGES – In 87 BC, Marius returned to Rome with his principle ally Lucius Cornelius Cinna, the former co-consul with Sulla from the year before. Marius and Cinna marshalled their own legions and marched on room, quickly taking control of the city.

It is during this time that Gnaeus Octavius, the joint consul with Sulla, was assassinated after Marian forces captured him. Octavius was defending the Janiculum Hill when he was captured. Marius had him beheaded in his consular insignia. He had his head displayed in the Rostra of the Forum.

As mentioned, this was the first time a head of state was killed by his own citizens while in office.

Sulla and his allies now found themselves declared outlaws by Marius, which had no effect directly on Sulla, but led to thousands being killed. In 86 BC, Marius and Cinna won another consulship. For Marius, it would be his seventh. He would enjoy it for only 17 days before he died.

The proscription list was coming next.

THE DICATOR SULLA – Even after his death, the faction Marius created, the Marian faction, continued to hold power through Cinna, who stayed faithful to Marius’ reforms and continued to target Sulla’s allies. Sulla would end the Mithridatic War in 84 BC, returning to Italy to do battle with Marian forces. Cinna would be killed in a mutiny that same year while on his way to battle Sulla.

In 83 BC, the second civil war began, with the Marian faction still hoping to hold on to power. In 82 BC, Sulla was declared Dictator. This is when the general declaration of “outlaw” against your political opponent and their allies becomes formalized, detailed, and published.

Previously, the declarations were ad hoc, now they were systematic, organized, institutional, and not rare. Sulla’s lists were updated over the course of the year until all his opponents were dead or had fled outside the reach of power.

During his reign (81 – 80 BC), he passed numerous “reforms” that weakened many of the earlier Gracchi reforms, as well as some of Marius’ reforms (though not his major military reforms). In 79 BC, a relatively healthy 59-year-old Sulla suddenly announced his retirement. In 80 BC, Sulla suddenly died, possibly because of chronic heavy drinking.

CATILINE CONSPIRACY

There are two men at the center of the Catiline Conspiracy, Cicero and Catiline.

Cicero, like Marius, was a “New Man.” Marius had little Greek, while Cicero had much. Marius came from a well-off, but not wealthy, plebian family.

Cicero came from the equestrian class, meaning his family were landowners and could afford to send their men off to war with their own horses (or at least their family scions could). Cicero received a full Roman education while Marius did not.

As New Men go, Cicero came from “better stock,” but yet he was still a “New Man” and not a descendent of a scion of the patricians. The New Man, Marius, the plebian, would unintentionally accelerate the death of the republic. The New Man, Cicero, the equestrian, would become the symbol of the death of the republic, and its last effective champion, but also possibly its final straw.

This conspiracy begins with a patrician named Lucius Sergius Catilina (Catiline), who found himself on the losing end of a consulship election in 64 BC. His opponent was the New Man, Marcus Tullius Cicero. Catiline was a former ally of Sulla. Rumors of Catiline’s direct involvement in Sulla’s purges dogged his image and, consequently, his career.

In 63 BC, Catiline ran again. This time, he was soundly defeated, making it clear the people’s vote was no path to power for him.

After the campaign, Catiline found himself in debt and alienated from political power in Rome almost altogether.

It is at this point, Catiline began to draw around himself indebted men of power who could help him execute his plan in exchange for having their debt relieved after he took power.

The conspirators planned on murdering most of the top leaders, especially targeting Cicero for assassination. The conspirators seem to have done a poor job at security because Cicero was able to deliver to the Senate letters alleging Catiline and others meant to do them harm.

From these letters, Cicero was able to secure a Senatus Consultum Ultimum, Senate’s ultimate decree. This granted full powers to the consul. It was only granted during times of emergency.

When certain dates passed without predicted action by the conspirators, Cicero’s standing began to weaken among the Senators. The fact that he was a New Man did not help his cause.

As Cicero’s power was waning, however, a confirmed assassination attempt was made on Cicero’s life.

On November 8, 63 BC, Cicero convened the Senate, delivering his famous First Catilinarian Oration. In the speech, Cicero directly accused a present Catiline of being a traitor of Rome. When Catiline rose in opposition, all he could offer in rebuke was personal insults.

He was shouted down, with the Senators around him intentionally moving away from him.

The message had been sent, so Catiline fled to Eritrea (the former homeland of Rome’s first major rival, the Etruscans).

While he was gone, he was declared an enemy of the state. Cicero would oversee the detainment, arrest, and execution of numerous conspirators, all of which were executed without trial. Catiline himself would die on the battlefield in 62 BC.

Cicero was trying to save the republic but his actions continued to affirm the precedent of state punishment without a Roman trial. Had he understood how existentially essential this standard is to a republic, I doubt he would have done what he did.

From thousands of years later, this is much easier to see than it was during Cicero’s time. Had you or I been in his position, without the understanding of republics we have thousands of years later, we may very well have acted in the same way, in passionate defense of our republic.

The conservatives of America would do well to heed Cicero’s warning through failed example.

The Catiline conspiracy stayed with Cicero for the rest of his life, and most likely led to his own assassination on December 7, 43 BC. He wasn’t killed because of his actions here, but they were used as a character witness against him, sealing his fate.

We will come back to Cicero after we first witness the third assassination of a leader of Rome, Julius Caesar (remember Cinna, Marius’ co-consol, was the second). The Republic went over 300 years without a head of state being assassinated. Now, in the span of four decades, there were three such assassinations.

THE END OF THE REPUBLIC

In 49 BC, Julius Caesar, a patrician, would cross the river Rubicon, this time not in an attempt to just occupy Rome, but in direct opposition to the power of the Senate. During his rise, which was achieved through both military conquest and political gamesmanship, Caesar played both sides of the Roman political divide, those who appealed to the patricians and those who appealed to the plebians.

Upon entering Rome, he would receive his first dictatorship, but only for a brief time. In 46 BC, the Senate appointed him Dictator for 10 years. In 44 BC, he was declared dictator for life. Less than 3 months later, he would be assassinated.

After his death, a civil war broke out in which hopes of a restoration of a republic were still at play. That hope died on December 7, 43 BC, when Marcus Tullius Cicero was beheaded by Roman soldiers (more on this coming).

THE IDES OF MARCHIn late June to early February of 44 BC, Julius Caesar was declared Dictator for Life by the Senate. By February 15, historians know he was already declared Dictator for Life. On that day, an incident happened at the fertility festival of Lupercalia. It is called the Lupercalia Incident.

Caesar’s nephew, Marc Antony, publicly offered Julius Caesar the crown of kingship. Caesar refused the crown, not once, but at least twice, and possibly as many as four times.

The incident was either a way to show the public they need not fear the power of a dictator, for he is no King, OR it was a test to see how the crowd would react. Had they acted more enthusiastically, he might have taken the crown.

Let us remember the last Roman King, Superbus, was an Etruscan. Kingship was as much of a boogeyman to fear in the Republic’s culture as Hannibal had become. Hannibal was the Carthaginian General who denuded the Roman countryside of soldiers.

On March 15, 44 BC, the Senate would not be meeting at the Senate House, for it was being renovated. Rather, they would be meeting at the Curia of Pompey. This was fitting for the conspirators since the eponym, Pompey, was a bitter rival to Caesar.

Pompey’s death in 48 BC marked the end of the vestige of the first triumvirate, which included Caesar and Crassus (who was killed first in a battle with the Parthians).

When Caesar entered the curia, around 60 assassins who called themselves “Liberatores” were waiting for him. They all had hidden daggers under their togas.

The Liberatores were led by Gaius Cassius Longinus and Marcus Junius Brutus. Their aim was to restore the Republic.

Lucius Tillius Cimber was assigned the task of sending the signal to attack, as well as setting Caesar up for the ambush. At the right strategic point, Cimber suddenly approached Caesar with a plea to recall his brother from exile. He then pulled Caesar’s toga down and prevented him from leaving the pre-assigned space.

Publius Servilius Casca was the first to strike Caesar with a dagger. 23 more blade strikes followed, but only one, according to the physician Antistius, was fatal. Caesar is alleged to have said to Brutus, “you too, child?

He also died at the feet of the statue of his past great rival, Pompey.

With the death of Caesar, what followed would have been uncertain to most Romans, but at least one man, Cicero, the man from the Catiline conspiracy, was still working to restore the Republic.

THE DEATH OF CICERO – After the assassination of Julius Caesar, Cicero publicly supported the Liberatores, the name the assassins had given themselves. Later, he hedged his bets, “acknowledging” they acted hastily, but he advocated for a general amnesty for the Liberatores in the well of the Roman Senate.

He was able to broker a compromise deal that saw Caesar’s reforms preserved, while the assassins were granted amnesty.

After Caesar’s nephew, Mark Antony, took control of Rome. Cicero turned to Caesar’s nephew, Octavius, for political aid. He is alleged to have commented on Octavian that he should be praised and honored while they need him, then disposed of when he ends his usefulness.

As it would turn out, Octavian was not the champion of the republic Cicero thought he was and was hardly a naïve politician.

While Octavian championed Cicero’s cause for a time, Cicero was busy writing and reciting a series of philippics against Marc Antony, calling him a threat to the republic. The Senate, with Cicero’s and Octavian’s influence, supported the war against Marc Antony.

The formation of the second triumvirate in November of 43 BC would be the death knell for Cicero. The triumvirate was a peace treaty between three factions, Antony, Octavius, and Lepidus. As part of the agreement, Antony demanded Cicero be placed on the proscription lists.

This is where Cicero’s involvement in the Catiline Conspiracy worked against him, for Antony and his allies used this as proof Cicero was not a champion of the republic. Furthermore, his actions were not done not to save the republic but to preserve his own power.

Ultimately, though, I suspect Octavius’ decision was purely based on personal power pursuit, nothing more, so even without the Catiline burden on Cicero, it was not likely that Octavian would have done anything other than what he did.

At best, the weight of that history made it harder for Cicero’s allies to find the zeal to defend him, while emboldening the zeal in his opponents, Anthony and his allies.

It is here where Octavius either made his final decision, to not work towards the restoration of the republic or where it became clear that was not his goal. Either way, Octavius agreed to the deal.

Cicero attempted to escape the death sentence, but he was eventually captured outside his villa in Formiae. He was alleged to have been broken in spirit when the Roman soldiers descended on his party. He ordered his litter to be let down before he bore his neck to a Roman soldier, saying “There is nothing proper about what you are doing, soldier, but try to kill me properly.”

The date was December 7, 43 BC, the unofficial death date of the Roman Republic.

BECOMING EMPIRE

“When after the destruction of Brutus and Cassius there was no longer any army of the Commonwealth, when Pompeius was crushed in Sicily, and when, with Lepidus pushed aside and Antonius slain, even the Julian faction had only Caesar left to lead it, then, dropping the title of triumvir, and giving out that he was a Consul, and was satisfied with a tribune’s authority for the protection of the people, Augustus won over the soldiers with gifts, the populace with cheap corn, and all men with the sweets of repose, and so grew greater by degrees, while he concentrated in himself the functions of the Senate, the magistrates, and the laws. He was wholly unopposed, for the boldest spirits had fallen in battle, or in the proscription, while the remaining nobles, the readier they were to be slaves, were raised the higher by wealth and promotion…”Tacitus, The Annals, Book 1

Agustus’ first title was not Emperor, but “First Citizen,” Princeps. His second title was Augustus, the “revered.” He was given the “civic crown,” as well as an imperium proconsulare (proconsular power) for 10 years over “imperial provinces” with major legions.

He also held the annual consulship, which he would do for the first four years of his reign, from 27 to 23 BC. Having it renewed yearly helped sustain its outward appearance of continuing a republic’s tradition.

AUGUSTUS’ REFORMS – The reforms of Augustus happened in two major waves, the first wave maintained most of the institutions of the republic, with even Augustus’ power being derived from republican institutions.

The first round of reforms was called the First Constitutional Settlement. These reforms were ostensibly intended to “restore” the Republic by creating a symbolic representation of power being given back to both the Senate and the people.

His first round of administrative reforms was limited to Imperial provinces. The Senatorial provinces remained under the old administrative system.

The second round of reforms in 23 BC made the republic not only effectively powerless, but without a consul as well. That office had been replaced by the Imperium Maius, which is effectively where Augusts becomes the now-obvious Emperor of Rome.

Augustus was also given the title tribunicia potestas for life, which is tribunician power. This added office gave him all power over all major institutions.

The provinces were now entirely under the emperor’s control, as the whole Empire converted to an Imperial administrative system. The Senate was purged of “unreliable members,” which meant both political and presence unreliability, as some Senators hadn’t been seen in years.

It was now officially clear the Senate was the rubber stamp of the emperor, a de facto administrative branch of the Empire, with the emperor selecting and deselecting Senators according to his preference alone.

THE DEATH OF AUGUSTUS – If the Empire was to hold, the death of Augustus would have been its first major test. In 9AD, Augustus would mourn the loss of his Roman legions in a German forest. Those legions were led by Publius Varus. He was ambushed in the Teutoburg Forest, where three Roman legions were eviscerated by a German alliance led by Roman-trained Arminius.

The battle was a portent of future problems for the Empire, but also the culmination of the beginning of an era called the Pax Romana, an almost 200-year epoch where the majority of the Mediterranean basin would see minimal wars and uprisings.

While the Pax Romana begins before Teutoburg (with August’s ascension as Princeps), the depth of this catastrophe would not be felt again, and it was a brief anomaly in the Pax Romana age.

The Pax Romana would begin to unwind in the late 160s AD under the last of the adoptive Emperors, Marcus Aurelius. With Aurelius’ death, the pax Romana would come to an end, and a new transition would begin, this one leading to balkanization and the emergence of new nations.

With the death of Augustus, Rome would learn it was an Empire after all.

On August 9, 14 AD, Augustus prepared to die, having already secured his succession from his adoptive heir, Tiberius Julius Caesar. His last words were “Have I played my part well? Then applaud as I exit.

Immediately after his death, the Senate duly carried out the wishes of Augustus and handed Imperial power over to his designated heir. The appointment of Tiberius in 14 AD establishes Rome as an Empire.

Beyond his administrative reforms, Augustus would also set the tone for the institutions to come, including cultural, social, and sacred ones. The Final Transition Form would emerge by the time of his death. As usual in transitions, parts of the previous state were retained in the new one, but there were many differences, and some of them profound.

THE FINAL TRANSITION FORM

NATIONAL STORY – The Republic’s national story was Cincinnatus, the Roman farmer who became consul to lead the defense of Rome against foreign invaders. After the enemy was vanquished, Cincinnatus gave up his power and returned to the plow.

Here was a man who had his own sword, his own shield, his own horse. He was a man who was growing his own food (for he worked the land himself), who put the interests of Rome above the interests of the pursuit of his own power.

It was a story of self-reliance in service of a virtuous republic. It was a story of the collective overcoming adversity while continuing to be comprised of self-reliant individuals.

In the Empire, the story was of Aeneas. In this story, the Trojan hero Aeneas becomes the source of the Roman people, a source whose bloodline runs through Augustus’ family, Caesar.

It is a story, in microcosm, of Empire-building, which cannot happen without the self-sacrifice of Aeneas, who considers his own happiness secondary to serving for the glory of the state.

Where Aeneas’ service to the state is never over, Cincinnatus is given his season of homestead living in service of his own household once he has completed his duties.

The Aeneid was commissioned by Augustus, so it is essentially empire propaganda, though Virgil managed to weave in a counter-narrative about the heavy toll of empire building on innocent human lives.

The version of Cincinnatus we get is largely from Livy, who wrote of him during Augustus’ time, though evidence exists he was real, having existed probably around the late 500s BC.

The earliest preserved reference to Cincinnatus comes from Cicero, who wrote of him in the 40s BC. His version was a little different than Livy’s, who stressed Cincinnatus’ poverty and his contentment with poverty when returning to the plow.

Even one of the Republic’s national stories had been tweaked to align with the Empire’s cultural “values.”

The national story shift was profound. It was no longer Cincinnatus, or even Romulus for that matter. It was Aeneas. The Republic had a real man who exemplified personal self-reliance, civic excellence, and sacrifice in defense of Rome. The Empire had a fictional man who exemplified total self-sacrifice to the state, even at the expense of personal self-reliance.

The emphasis in the Empire’s national story was in building and sustaining empire with no expectation of personal glory or wealth; it was not in protecting the virtuous Republic while living your own self-determined, self-sustaining life at home.

The Roman soldier of the Empire was issued his sword; The Roman soldier of Cincinnatus republic might well have made it himself (though that was not common, yet it happened with rare regularity).

Cincinnatus and Aeneas do not live in the same worlds, even though they worship the same gods and know many of the same stories (even if through different lenses).

GOVERNANCE – There is no real preservation of the governance of the Roman Republic into the Roman Empire. When Tiberius became the emperor, a de facto administrative and prestige body had replaced a policy-making body, but both were called the Roman Senate. This was a similar pattern found throughout the Empire’s new governance, which was effectively centralized control by one man, the emperor.

The Republic’s governance fed off competition and balances of power that took centuries to break down. The Empire’s governance demanded unquestioning compliance with the demi-god emperor. This demigod leadership would make religion the new justifier of state power. The Republic’s justification came from the civic participation and approval of the people.

RELIGION – Here is where we see the most continuity from one system to another. In Greek and Roman mythology, the stories of the gods were mostly about internal struggles, not declarations that fundamentally challenged governance standards.

The Roman gods were mostly all the same by the time of Augustus’ death, though one was added, mainly himself. Augustus began this cult by putting Julius Caesar up as “the divine father,” but as his reign went on, the emphasis was more and more on his own divinity.

The creation of a demigod as head of state did change religion’s influence on governance, however, for it made divine right the ultimate justification for power, whereas under the Republic, power was justified by the people’s assent.

FOREIGN POLICY – The Republic became an accidental Empire, largely led by perceived and real external threats that made them feel as if expansion was needed to protect themselves against further invasion. They had no coherent foreign policy, treating every conflict on a case-by-case basis.

This is not to say they did not have any consistent strategies at all; for instance, the Romans of the Republic certainly knew how to play factions against each other in competing states.

Generally, their overall policy can be said to be one of expansion, with military excellence being the primary driver of that expansion, not geopolitical gamesmanship.

With the Emperor, foreign policy became coherent, consistent, and strategically sophisticated. This Empire could advance with more than just military excellence, though a quality military continued to be a top priority for the Empire.

No longer strictly expansionist, provinces became businesses that were expected to make profits. Where profit could not be made, territory would not be held.

PHILOSOPHY – The Romans were not known for developing philosophical thought. In the Republic, philosophical speculation was not common, nor was philosophical discourse, in general. Of all the Greek philosophies, stoicism started to get a foothold in the days of the Republic.

It was an early form of stoicism that became the Republic’s justification for war, though it did not get integrated with governance as a whole.

The Empire would see two major schools become religions among the oligarchs, epicureanism and stoicism. Neither philosophy challenged the nature of state authority as both were all about the individual’s approach to life in all circumstances, not about changing the circumstances themselves.

Philosophy was internally focused, not external world-changing-focused.

ECONOMY – As the republic grew, wealth grew from land and war booty. If you couldn’t lead legions, you could at least own lands. Slavery was highly profitable in this system, so slavery expanded rapidly, which increased the inequality between the patricians and the plebians.

Not even the Servile Wars, slave rebellions, would make slavery cost prohibitive. The industrial age would take away the profit of slavery.

While war booty was not a source for wealth in the Empire (outside of periods of rebellion and instability), land ownership was still essential for the Roman who hoped to have any power in Rome, or wealth at home.

Under the Empire, the economy became more directed, moving from a concentration of wealth economy to a managed slave-semi-welfare economy. It is not fair to call the Roman Empire a welfare state, but it relied on “bread and circuses,” in the cities at least, to primarily keep the peace.

The continuation of slavery as a profitable practice could not have happened had the Empire not shifted some of the profit to the people of the cities to assure the engines of their Empire’s trade, the cities and the roads, kept running smoothly.

The economy was formalized under the Empire, with a standardized currency being introduced by Augustus and the development of a professional civil service to collect taxes. The civil service helped the constituents in that they replaced the “tax farmers,” men commissioned to collect taxes for the republic.

These tax farmers would try to collect above the contract, for that is how they were paid.

This was also a path to wealth which men could use to create political power in Rome. The civil service ended this path for the individual who had such ambitions. Tax collection was now largely a professional imperial institution, one that did not offer a path to state power.

CULTURE – The biggest shift in culture from the Republic to the Empire is how Greek culture became integrated into the Empire, where under the Republic, Greek culture was useful, but not to be fully trusted.

In the republic, the Roman citizen was expected to honor the ancestral custom, mos maiorum, have manliness, virtus, and fulfill their civic duty. In the Empire, culture became more cosmopolitan. While Roman rituals and customs continued, the meaning behind them was lost, so that the Roman part of their living became increasingly performative.

The Empire’s citizen was expected to honor the emperor, pay their taxes, and be fed and entertained in return for their compliance. The Republic’s citizen was called to a life of restraint and duty, while the Empire’s citizen was called to be part of the magnificent spectacle of Empire’s rewards.

EDUCATION – In the Roman Republic, education was mostly house-based. It was reserved for those who could afford tutors. While education curricula varied, they were very similar.

The focus of education was in preparing your child to have a career in the Senate. Public competition is what the student was being trained for, so they concentrated on oratory, persuasion, and legal argument.

Roman education was Greek education, specifically Greek intellectual culture. This would continue and only deepen in the Empire’s education system.

While household schooling was still happening, schools of rhetoric began to appear under the Empire. Education became more broadly standardized. Its focus changed from preparing men for competition to preparing men to serve a fixed hierarchy with predictable expectations.

In other words, education became about training administrators subservient to a Ruler and not competitors hoping to one day have their time as ruler.

ASSESSMENT

In this transition, what is left of the Republic after the transition is only the languages, the gods and the labels, whose functions were exapted, turning republican institutions into imperial ones, without having to change the terms to do so.

Even their religion was fundamentally altered. While religion was an essential part of statecraft, it was never a legitimizer of it. Religious respect was a reflection of the will of the people, not an imperial decree.

The addition of the emperor as a god made religion directly political, a trait the West would indirectly adopt.

The underlying stability of the Republic came not from the rules on paper, but the tacit rules that were more significant in sustaining stability than any of the laws on paper ever could be.

First, they broke the civic code, the unwritten standards, then they broke law code. First the Gracchi brothers broke the unwritten code that patricians don’t run for Tribune, then they broke laws after a newly elected tribune legally nullified all the reforms they had just made.

The oligarchs responded by murdering the offenders, convicting and punishing these men with no trial.

The tensions that drove the dynamics of Roman politics were mostly between the very wealthy and the next-in-lines, the equestrians and the well-to-do plebians. It wasn’t a battle of the very wealthy versus the very poor, it was a battle between the two top classes.

The poor were at best mob machines variously manipulated by men seeing to be the next last man standing.

Not covered in this transition, except in passing, is the growing slave rebellions, which culminated in the Third Servile War in 73-71 BC, the last great slave rebellion.

Generally, even the poor supported the slave system, so Rome’s engagement with slavery, from top to bottom, was rarely challenged by anyone but the slaves. No one used the plea of the slaves to create political power for themselves as Roman citizens, not the poor, not the wealthy.

The justification for authority was outwardly based on the people’s approval, but the real justification was, to me, the continued demonstration of reasonable good faith when engaged in political decision-making. They had emerged from a couple of centuries of violence under Kingships that culminated with the rape of their one of their own women, the matron Lucretia.

The trauma of that cycle of violence kept the Romans in civic Republicanism for over three centuries. Perhaps they simply forgot the trauma, or perhaps more confident men than Roman Republicans imagined they could truly be the last man standing, the one to end the ambitions of all other men through a projection of pure violent power alone.

First, they claimed an emergency to justify ad hoc slaughtering of political opponents, creating an “exception” to the violation of the Roman standard of “innocent until proven guilty in a court of law.”

When that garnered no backlash from anyone but the targets of the purges, and when those same targets willfully ALSO PURGED their opponents without trials, it was only a matter of time before an ad hoc practice became a new Rule of Law standard.

Now, leaders could declare you guilty and declare your sentence, without trial, just by putting you on their proscription lists.

If this sound like Imperial power, that’s because it is.

The moment when the standard of condemnation without trial could have been killed came with the Catiline Conspiracy. Cicero rightly recognized Catiline as a threat to the Republic, but his decision to essentially legitimize conviction without trial might have been the final straw that forever killed the power of the unwritten coded Republic.

If the Republic’s standards could not protect the Republic, then why have one in the first place?

If men could not defend themselves against accusations, the people could never affirm the state. The legitimization of power had to come from somewhere else, or the center would not hold.

When Augusts emerged as the last man standing, he didn’t immediately destroy all semblance of the republic, yet he effectively nullified their power. He existed in that liminality between “the people rule” and “the divine right of Kings.”

The Progressive Statist’s cries that “freedom of speech doesn’t mean freedom from consequences” is doing the same thing Augustus did, taking a Republican institution and turning it into a progressive one. The Progressive Statist might be cleverer, though, since plainly even Americans understand Freedom of Speech doesn’t mean freedom from consequences.

But their consequences are corporate censorship, HR firings, and direct violence , consequences that render speech no longer free.

They started this path by claiming Nazis are a direct threat to “our Democracy,” therefore we are justified in using violence to silence their speech as long as its just citizens doing it, and not the government.

The progressive sustains the term “Freedom of Speech,” but with their definition tweaking, they effectively render it dead for anyone that accepts the definition change.

It is Augustus military power that largely preserves him initially, but had he not commissioned the Aeneid, one doubts if the transition from a republic to an Imperial Empire would have happened. It would have balkanized as challengers to an illegitimate power would have emerged, many most likely with radically different justifications for ruling over others.

The centralizing unity of Rome would have died with Augustus’ dying authority.

Yet even during and after the final transition, Augustus was still trying to restore republican values like moderation, self-reliance, and self-control. Where the Republic produced such spirits without laws, the Empire would fail again and again to restore such spirits with laws.

This is similar to Progressives pushing “Democratic values” within a system that affords no real opportunity for anyone outside of their orthodoxy to participate in that process. They’ll even attempt to pass censorship laws in the name of assuring “Democratic values” are preserved.

Apparently, dissent within a Democracy is undemocratic.

Like the Progressives who call their social caste authoritarian system a Democracy, Augustus clung to the old term, the Republic, calling it that until the day of his death. I suspect the Progressives would do the same even if they eventually pass laws banning non-progressives, even whites, from voting.

Augustus’ decision to exile his own daughter Julia for disobeying those same laws, serving as a symbol for the Empire’s failure to sustain the Republic’s self-reliant, self-sustaining, self-controlling, but also Republic-honoring and Republic-serving spirit.

The Empire would never be as loved by the people as the Republic was.

Virgil began work on the Aeneid before Augustus became Princeps. He was not finished until somewhere around 19 BC. By the time of Agustus’ Death in 14 AD, the Aeneid was the national story, establishing the new standard of the divine right of kings, a standard Western Europe would adopt on its own.

This has mostly been the standard of most human civilizations throughout human history.

As Republics first emerged in Western Europe, Monarchies would regularly go to war with them to kill the alternative model. Yet today, the standard legitimization for rulership in the West has once again returned to Rome’s, the will of the people, while the institutions of the West increasingly no longer reflect those values.

One does not sense the divine right of Kings might be coming back, but rather the truth through identity standard is coming back. This is the claim there is a mystical understanding of truth only accessible by truth-understanding classes of people. This means truth is justified by class, not data.

If truth is justified by class, then only the people in that truth-detecting class can be rulers. The state is legitimized by two things; the first is the claim that humans can perfectly understand the universal good AND design for outcomes to assure it, and the second claim is that only SPECIAL humans can understand the universal good and design for outcomes to assure it.

Still, in America, there yet exists a strong faction that assumes rulership is justified by the people’s approval, which is FUNCTIONING republicanism at its heart (as opposed to Augustus’ and Kim Jong Un’s Republics).

Rome began as a Kingship, but even those seven kings would have envied the concentration of power and demigod status of an emperor. One could argue the break from the King led to the dependence on an even greater tyrant, the emperor.

One could also argue the 300-plus year history of the Republic tells the story of a successful governance model that suffered the fate of all systems, entropy. The success of the model also enabled men to concentrate wealth, and thus power, at levels not seen until the end of the Republic’s days.

Here in America, we see a similar outcome with our Republic. It has produced opportunities for a concentration of wealth that was previously unprecedented. Men and women now have individual concentrations of wealth that dwarfs the yearly budgets of whole nations.

Elon Musk is the wealthiest of these people.

Perhaps the Roman Republic died at an old age, having given a whole people centuries of opportunity to grow. She lived a good life and died of natural causes. Would they say that about our Republic, America, should she not survive this crisis of unprecedented action we are now witnessing?

FURTHER RESOURCES:

The Roman Revolution – Ronald Syme

From the Gracchi to Nero: A History of Rome from 133 B.C. to A.D. 68 – H.H. Scullard

Rome in the Late Republic – Mary Beard

Civil Wars – Appian

The Lives of the Twelve Caesars – Suetonius

 

 

 

 

 

 

Originally published March 20, 2026 for our weekly Issue of Mindful Intelligence Advisor.  Subscribe to get weekly issues.

By Paul Gordon Collier, Editor

“I gave you a king in my anger, and I took him away in my wrath.”Hosea 13:11

INTRODUCTION

The nation of Israel began as a household of some 70 souls entering the land of Egypt. These peoples were the descendants of a Chaldean named Abram, who answered the call of God to become a sojourner in a land his descendants would one day possess.

Abram became Abraham, who begat Isaac at the age of 100. Isaac would give birth to Esau and Jacob, with Esau building his own household that later became the nation of Edom. Jacob had 12 sons from four women; The 12 tribes that make up the nation of Israel come from these children.

It should be noted that God chose to create a people by first selecting two nonagenarians to be the mother and father of those people, a sure sign God chooses the weak to give his power perfection, which testifies to his greatness to all of creation.

“But he said to me, ‘My grace is sufficient for you, for my power is made perfect in weakness.’ Therefore I will boast all the more gladly of my weaknesses, so that the power of Christ may rest upon me.”2 Corinthians 12:9

One of those sons, Jospeh, would be ostracized by his brothers, sold to Midianite traders, only to become the second most powerful man of Egypt. He would prepare Egypt to become the incubator for the nation of Israel, a nation that would be born under slavery.

Jospeh’s small household would enter Egypt as free men, become enslaved, and exit Egypt as free men. After establishing a nation of Judges, the people one day called for a King, and God said yes, but not out of kindness.

This report focuses on the transition from Judges to Kings, their major similarities and their major differences. We’ll start off outlining how the nation of Judges was born and end that outline with the sanctification of the first temple by Solomon. We’ll end the report with an analysis of the similarities and differences between these two nations.

A. THE SEED

  1. ENTERING EGYPT AND BECOMING SLAVES – When a famine hit the land of Canaan, Jacob sent his sons to Egypt to buy provisions. The sons could not know Joseph had already prepared Egypt for the famine by interpreting the dreams of the pharaoh. This is how he became Pharaoh’s righthand lieutenant (Genesis 41).

Five chapters later, the nation of Israel began. It began when Joseph finally gave favor to his brothers, welcomed his father, and set aside land especially for them to govern over, the land of Goshen. It began when he exhorted them to take on an identity that would separate them from Egypt:

“When Pharaoh calls you and says, ‘What is your occupation?’ you shall say, ‘Your servants have been keepers of livestock from our youth even until now, both we and our fathers,’ in order that you may dwell in the land of Goshen, for every shepherd is an abomination to the Egyptians.”’Genesis 46:33-34

Joseph compelled them to identify in such a way that they would naturally be separated from the nation of Egypt, even though, by his example, they are also called to serve her.

This is the model that is also illustrated in the captivities of Daniel, Esther, and Mordeci, all of whom were good servants to their captive nation while also being faithful first and foremost to their God (though in Esther that is never explicit since it is the only book in scripture not to mention or refer directly to God).

I theorize by this time this little band would have had the oral traditions of Genesis leading up to Jacob and possibly the book of Job, in oral form, not written form. If I am right, then this little band already had a sacred script to unite them that, by its claims, goes back a few thousand years.

This is how the seed of Jacob entered Egypt, as free people willing to be good servants to their host nation. This is NOT how they would exit.

  1. EXITING EGYPT – The arrangement between Egypt and the Israelites held for a couple of centuries before the Egyptians began to be threatened by Israel’s prosperity and numbers. They grew from a nation of 70 people to hundreds of thousands (or more).

The Egyptians chose to put them under bondage, and eventually sought to kill the male babies in what can only be described as an attempted genocide. One male child, Moses, was set adrift on a river, to be rescued by the Egyptians, an Egyptian princess who took Moses in for herself.

He grew up a servant of Egypt, but in the Pharaoh’s court. As he saw his people enslaved, he turned against them. His first effort at rebellion was a failure, and it would send him into the desert for 40 years before God called him to try a different way.

It is during this process that Moses began to build a unique law for the people. This law includes instructions for feast days and sacrifices, the first one being the Passover. The people learned that the source of their Law was God, the same God who delivered them from slavery using supernatural signs and wonders, as well as words directed to them (and chiseled, written down) through his servants Moses and Aaron.

The foundation of the Judges nation had already been set. It would be governed by the law of God as delivered through Moses his true prophet, and righteous judge of the people. But Moses from the start was also a General, so he fulfilled both the civic and sacred leadership role of the people, though he was no King and no royal inheritance was assumed for the role he was foreshadowing, the role of the Judge anointed by God to lead.

Their full exit from Egypt before they first came to the Promised Land took two years. At the end of those two years, the people would rebel from God and assume they knew more than him, questioning the soundness of attempting to conquer a people as powerful as what they saw.

By this time, Moses had already given them the ten commandments (twice, for good measure), the laws for sacrifice and feast days, the tent of meeting, including the inner sanctuary which included the ark of the Covenant, and even the divisions of labor and camp arrangement for the 12 tribes, especially for the Tribe of Levi, the now-priestly class.

B. BECOMING THE NATION OF JUDGES WHOSE GOD IS THE LORD

  1. ENTERING THE PROMISED LAND – The first attempt to enter the promised land was felled by human fear overcoming God’s promised certainty. After 38 years in the desert, anyone who was 20 years or older was dead, outside of three men (which would be only be two before they cross over the river Jordan). Those three men were Moses, Joshua, and Caleb.

The people entering into the promised land would have been young by this fact alone. Counsel from elders would not be readily available as all of the elders were dead, save for the three mentioned. Yet this generation would conquer the Promised Land in less than 20 years and stay true to the teachings of the Law given to them by Joshua, who received it from Moses,

It was not until this generation died out that the cycle of rebellion, repentance, deliverance through a chosen Judge, followed by rebellion, etc., would begin.

“And the people served the Lord all the days of Joshua, and all the days of the elders who outlived Joshua, who had seen all the great work that the Lord had done for Israel.”Judges 2:7

  1. THE RIGHTOUES GENERATION – While the generation that conquered Canaan was faithful until the end, it did not act with complete faithfulness. As a result, the Promised land was not fully conquered.

The tribe of Dan is a good example of how Israel failed to conquer what they should have, and how rebellion was not completely absent from them either. Dan was intended to take a coastal land on the southwest corner of the boundaries of Israel, but ended up failing to take that land, so they set up at the northeast corner of Israel instead (Judges 17-18).

They also set up their own temple worship system and chose the line of Moses through his son Goshen to be their priestly line. Jonathon, the son of Goshen, was the first chosen in the Goshen line by Dan in Judges 18.

By this time, they had their Pentateuch and the book of Job. Through the Pentateuch, they had basic laws for governance, a complex temple system, a national identity, and a national story. They were the people God chose to demonstrate to the world his glory through. Already they understood that through them would come deliverance for the whole world.

They also had distinct tribal identities, which also included prophecies from both Jacob and Moses specific to each tribe. Judah already understood its special prophetic narrative, that Judah would hold the scepter of the nation (Genesis 49).

  1. ISRAEL EMERGES – For over 300 years, the tribes were run by chiefs. The only documented case of a successful attempt at Kingship is in Judges 8, when Abimelech, the son of the judge Gideon, killed all of Gideon’s sons and proclaimed himself King of Shechem (though scripture “credits” him with ruling over all Israel).

He ruled for 5 years before he was killed by an old woman during a siege.

For the most part, this was a land which prided itself in being different than all the nations around them, a nation without a King, whose tribal allegiances through one shared father, Jacob, was enough alone to make them a nation in their hearts, without a king.

During times of rebellion, after the nations around them oppressed them for a season, they did not cry for a King, they cried for God, who delivered them over and over through numerous Judges, starting with Moses, a Judge-Priest, and ending with Samuel, a Judge-Priest, in 1st Samuel 8.

C. THE TRANSITION

While Samuel is considered to be a righteous judge, and justly so, he was not immune to the same vulnerability the man who trained him, the penultimate judge of Israel, Eli, would fall prey to. Eli’s great sin was in not punishing his sons, Hophni and Phinehas, who were being unrighteous priests, taking parts of sacrifices they were not entitled to (1 Samuel 2).

It would be through the ongoing sins of his sons that Eli’s priestly line would be cursed, the line from Ithamar, which would come to an end a few generations later, leaving only the line of Eleazor to continue.

The ark of the covenant itself was taken from a battle led by these same unrighteous priests, both of whom would die in the battle. Yet, before this moment came, Samuel had been brought to Eli by his mother Hannah after Eli prayed for her to have a son. He recognized Samuel had the Holy Spirit in him and so he personally instructed him in his formative years (1 Samuel 3).

Eli transferred the nation of Judges to Samuel, who would prove to be the transition to the nation of Kings.

Samuel himself had two sons, Joel and Abijah, whom had been appointed judges in Beersheba and appeared to be next in line to be Judges of Israel. The people protested, considering the sons’ rule a burden on them, so they cried out for a King.

“‘… Now appoint for us a king to judge us like all the nations.’ But the thing displeased Samuel when they said, ‘Give us a king to judge us.’ And Samuel prayed to the Lord. And the Lord said to Samuel, ‘Obey the voice of the people in all that they say to you, for they have not rejected you, but they have rejected me from being king over them.’”1 Samuel 8:5-7

Whereas previously they cried out to the Lord, this people cried out for a King. The people had spoken, and even the Lord was inclined to give them what they wanted, but they should have heeded the warning Samuel gave them through God in 1 Samuel 8: 10-18, Samuel’s warning against Kings.

But Samuel wanted to assure parts of the Judges foundation remains the foundation of the Kingdom nation.

“Then Samuel told the people the rights and duties of the kingship, and he wrote them in a book and laid it up before the Lord. Then Samuel sent all the people away, each one to his home.”1 Samuel 10:25

In Samuel’s farewell speech to Israel, he reiterated the Nation of Judges foundation and combined it with the new Nation of Kings.

“If you will fear the Lord and serve him and obey his voice and not rebel against the commandment of the Lord, and if both you and the king who reigns over you will follow the Lord your God, it will be well.”1 Samuel 12:14

He bounded Kingship under God’s law and established God as the source for the legitimacy of Kingship, and even the plumbline for it.

With a nation of Kings, the Kingdom of Israel had greater central identity as well as greater standing with the nations around them. Their adoption of divine monarchy was less of a threat to the kingdoms around them than their Judges nation had been. Now, their kingdom “justified” their neighbors kingdoms.

While Israel had a story, the story was not fully aligned with the Word, for the house of Benjamin through Saul would be picked by God, not the house of Judah. The nation of Kings that would be Israel was not fully formed. Under Saul, this was still a nation in transition, with a story not FULLY aligned with their reality.

D. THE HOUSE OF DAVID

“‘Judah, your brothers shall praise you; your hand shall be on the neck of your enemies; your father’s sons shall bow down before you. Judah is a lion’s cub; from the prey, my son, you have gone up. He stooped down; he crouched as a lion and as a lioness; who dares rouse him? The scepter shall not depart from Judah, nor the ruler’s staff from between his feet, until tribute comes to him; and to him shall be the obedience of the peoples. Binding his foal to the vine and his donkey’s colt to the choice vine, he has washed his garments in wine and his vesture in the blood of grapes.’” – Genesis 49:8-11

All of Judah would no doubt know the prophecy of Jacob, which preceded Moses words and also suggested a much greater promise. Moses said Judah, “Hear O Lord, the voice of Judah, and bring him to his people. With your hands contend for him and be a help against his adversaries” (Deuteronomy 33:7).

Moses reserved his greatest prophetic glory for Joseph and his two sons, Manasseh and Ephraim (who were destined to become the half-tribes of Joseph), in Deuteronomy 33:13-17.

He says blessed be Jospeh “with the best gifts of the earth and its fullness and the favor of him who dwells in the bush. May these rest on the head of Jospeh, on the pate of him who is prince among his brothers” (Deuteronomy 33:16).

Yet the nation of Israel just watched God select Saul as King, of the tribe of Benjamin. Saul was a good-looking man who stood head and shoulders among other men, but his tribe was considered the least of the tribes of Israel, and his father’s house, Kish, considered the weakest. God anointed Saul before the people by leading him to prophecy rightly like the prophets.

Samuel validated Saul’s anointing by acknowledging Saul was the man God chose to be the first King of Israel (if you don’t count Gideon’s rebellious son, Abimelech). Saul had an opportunity to build a lasting kingdom that his son, Jonathan, might one day take over.

In the days of Judges, Benjamin was almost destroyed. They had to be saved by allowing Benjamin to “steal” virgin girls from Manasseh and Ephraim (Judges Chapters 19-21). They were a lowly tribe, both in terms of reputation and numbers.

Yet Benjamin’s choice by God to hold the kingship was not unsimilar to Israel’s own story, for they were a small household of 70 who entered the land of Egypt as dependents and would become a nation as slaves to that same nation. God chooses the weak to confound the strong.

This notion of God working through weakness would carry through to followers of Christ, through Paul:

“But he said to me, ‘My grace is sufficient for you, for my power is made perfect in weakness.’ Therefore I will boast all the more gladly of my weaknesses, so that the power of Christ may rest upon me.”2 Corinthians 12:9

Still, the prophecy of Jacob must have gnawed at some of them.

As it would turn out, Saul would not be the righteous King he was set up to be. Rather, he chose human approval over God’s approval; He acted in fear of men rather than fear of God; But above all else, he refused to execute God’s command to destroy the Amalekites and not take possession of the spoils.

Whenever life got in the way of following God’s laws, Saul found ways to circumnavigate those laws. Even when it became apparent to Saul that David was God’s new anointed one set to replace him, he yet plotted to kill him.

David modeled for Christians how to both obey God’s commands and civic authority’s commands. David understood full well the unrighteousness of Saul; even Saul’s own son, Jonathan, recognized this reality. Jonathan himself serves as a shadow of John the Baptist, eschewing his own potential authority in favor of the authority he is seeking to help usher in.

For John, that authority is Christ. For Jonathan, that authority is David, a shadow of Christ, and from the same tribe, the same line as Christ.

While David would not allow Saul to hunt him down and kill him, David would also not take up arms against Saul. Twice he had opportunity to strike Saul down, and twice he delivered mercy, witnessing to Saul his own unrighteousness, which Saul also acknowledged, but in both times to no avail.

Saul would end his days on the mountain of Gilboa, felled in battle by the Philistines. Along with him would fall Jonathan, leaving the path open for David to take the throne. Yet while David was proclaimed King in Hebron, Ish-bosheth, son of Saul, was declared King in Israel.

David would have to wait seven more years before he was finally crowned the King of all Israel, all 12 tribes, having previously only ruled over Judah alone. It was shortly after David was anointed King in all of Israel, in Hebron, the resting place of Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob, that David finally took Jerusalem from the Jebusites, a Canaanite people who founded the city.

From David to Solomon, the foundation of the Judges nation was set.

That foundation is this: God is the law giver whose authority is greater than the King’s and that he has left us a law that servants of Kings can use to hold the Kings accountable. Scripture is a plumbline of the King.

David would conquer the land that would give great treasure to Solomon, who would use it, in part, to build the first temple of Jerusalem.

The nation of Judges was nearly 400 years. The transition to the new nation, the Kingdom nation built on the bones of the past nation, took roughly 90 years. During that transition time, within our experience of creation bound by time, space, and place, the nation could have leaned more completely into the kingships of the lands around them.

These nations offered no way for the people to plumbline their Kings, other than through violent revolt.

Fortunately for them, and us, the Israelites preserved the most essential part of their nation of Judges, earthly authority bound by a law outside themselves, a law that prophets and priests can appeal to when the King oversteps his God-given authority.

Now, with the ascendance of Judah as the kingship, the nation of Israel had a story more in sync with their reality, which certainly must have fostered a great national identity.

While this national identity still exists to this day, the state unity of the nation would dissolve within a generation. This left them with two kingdoms, Samaria and Judah, and one nation, Israel. These two kingdoms would drift further apart until Samaria’s unrighteous culture absorbed Judah.

Yet the foundational principle that held Israel together during Judges would never fully disappear, an earthly authority bounded by a lawgiver who left a plumbline that his anointed, his priests and prophets, can use to check the power of the King.

This seed will one day become the “western civilization” seed that America herself would emerge from.

E. JUDGES VERSUS KINGS

  1. JUDGES – The nation of judges exists roughly from the 14th to the 11th Centuries BC. This period of time is defined, in Mesopotamia, by the rise of global diplomacy and treaties, the birth of the world bureaucratic class.

While the nations around Israel all operated primarily on the Bronze Age governance model, the justification of authority through a local god and through the blood of the chosen family, the nation of Judges had no King but God.

Their governance was mostly adherence to and enforcement of the laws of God by non-government-acting agents. Murder, for instance, was expected to be adjudicated by the offended family, not the state.

Another major difference between the nation of Judges and the nations around them is the source for truth. For the Bronze Age Kings, truth was declared by the only truth teller in the Kingdom or the Empire, the King or Emperor himself (or herself). Truth was defined by the truth teller, not by a plumbline anyone could apply.

The nation of Judges had truth tellers, Judges, but they themselves were plumblined by the Word of God itself, and anyone could rightly challenge their truth claims using scripture as their standard. To be fair, “anyone” would be a small group of people as the printing press would not come into existence for another two millennia.

As we have no record of scripture before the 10th century BC (and that is merely a fragment), it is difficult to know how many complete books of the Pentateuch would have existed, or how many smaller books or collections might have existed.

In material reality, most Israelites would have to rely on the testimonies of priests and rabbis to understand scripture, having little to no access to the text in and of itself. But in the spirit, the idea of a state authority being limited by a text provided by the one True God was most assuredly part of the spiritual DNA of the Israelites.

This made them radically different than the nations around them, and that’s before you consider their mostly decentralized authority being led in times of crisis by God’s anointed Judges. While scripture doesn’t show it, one cannot help but believe there were many (or at least a few) false judges, with scripture only telling us about the true ones.

Perhaps we can say Abimelech is the one example of a false judge, so false he tried to take a kingship God did not grant and only Shechem (Ephraim) cried out for).

This civilization is one based on a sacred script that gives them the means to govern and mitigate sin. Its authority comes from its adherence to the laws of God. Its governance is primarily at the familial, not state level, though state authority comes more directly into play during times of war and conquest.

The holiest of holies for this nation was the Ark of the Covenant, which contained the Book of the Law in it. The temple had not been built; Jerusalem hadn’t even been conquered. David would conquer it shortly after he was declared King of ALL of Israel in Hebron.

The tent of meeting was a mobile shadow of the temple to come, and it was not fixed to one place, though it spent most of the time during Judges in Shiloh up until the death of Eli and his sons (1 Samuel 4).

Still, there was no official centralized site for worship in the Judges nation. Jerusalem itself was still occupied by the Canaanite tribe, the Jebusites. During the time of Judges, no one even knew Jerusalem would be the final choice for God’s “earthly dwelling.”

From the Jebusites would come Araunah (2 Samuel 24), or Ornan (1 Chronicles 21), who would sell his threshing floor to David. This would be the site for the temple.

As the 12th Century BC approached, the whole region went through what was called the Bronze Age collapse, which would lead to the emergence of a new civilization to replace the old, the Kings civilization of Israel.

This civilization was radically different than the Judges civilization, but yet was built on the foundation of that Judges civilization, a foundation that remained for the new civilization, the Kingdom civilization.

  1. KINGS – The transition from Judges to Kings lasts roughly 90 years, culminating in the sanctification of the temple by Solomon, the son of David. By the time we get to Solomon, we have the new civilization of Kings fully formed.

Like the nation of Judges, the Kingdom derived its authority from the one true God, not a local god recognizing the authority of other local gods. Like the nation of Judges, the Kingdom had a sacred script that served as the ultimate plumbline for state authority. The script was assumed God-given, reflecting the wisdom and will of God.

By Solomon’s time, they would have more of a script to meditate on, mainly Judges and Ruth (in addition to the Pentateuch), if my assumptions are true.

While the nation of Judges and the Kingdom of Israel are significantly different, they had far more in common with each other than they did with their neighbors. What makes them still similar with each other and radically different from their neighbors is the foundation of a divine law in text form assumed given to them by the one true God of all creation.

Yet their differences were still profound.

First and foremost, Kings were sometimes chosen by God in a transparent way, like he did with Saul and David, but mostly Kings were chosen by blood, making them more like the nations around them (and, as I stated earlier, probably less of a threat to their neighbors because of it).

And even when God prophesies downfalls and new Kingships, these events would have been experienced at the time simply as violence overcoming authority, which they ultimately allowed, having rewarded some vanquishers, like Omri, with dynasties (which, for Omri, included Ahab).

Kings also had far more authority than Judges, both in terms of earthly realities of power and even as far as what God ordained for them. There were no Judges’ palaces, for instance.

Kings were always intended to be plumblined by scripture, and sometimes by divine Words from God through prophets. Both things happened, but more often than not they didn’t, even when they should have.

When Jeremiah confronted one of the last Kings of Judah, Jehoiakim, with God’s newly received Word, the King had God’s Word burned, which symbolizes the final break from that foundation at the end of the Kingdom.

Kings became more and more absolute and authoritarian. The ideal of earthly authority checked by divine wisdom that anyone could use to challenge authority with was still a key part of the Israel story, but in practice, it was happening less and less, and then not at all.

Under Solomon, the centralized temple system was established. Jerusalem became the fixed center of their worship. Once the House of Judah claimed the whole kingship of the 12 tribes of Israel, the Kingship was aligned with the prophecies of Jacob, making the Israel story a more complete one through the state.

SUMMARY

The most significant difference between the two civilizations is the fixed centralized authority and worship of the new civilization, the Kingdom, versus the mostly decentralized authority and worship of the old civilization, Judges.

The Kingdom still ostensibly claimed God as King, but their King would, more often than not, gain more praise from the people than God would. While God ordained it and allowed it to happen, it was not his desire. He knew the hearts of men. He knew one day his own people would call for a King even after they had one supernaturally deliver them from slavery.

“I gave you a king in my anger, and I took him away in my wrath.”Hosea 13:11

While they held on to the foundation of the Judges nation, what they built on top of it, kingship, would ultimately undermine the foundation that gave them legitimacy, which ultimately led to the death of the Kings nation and the eventual rise of the 2nd Temple province of many Empires (save for the era of the Maccabees).

The differences between the two are, to me, radical enough to identify them as two civilizations (but one people). The second civilization sought to compromise with the civilizations around it. The kingdom sought the approval of neighboring Kings, not that of the King of Kings they once declared their sovereign.

The Judges nation lasted nearly 400 years. It was mostly united in the broad sense of the term, with some internecine wars, but mostly it fought together against other nations and kingdoms. The 90-year transition from Samuel to Solomon’s temple sanctification led to almost 400 years of the Kingdom civilization. The two civilizations existed for almost the same number of years. The Kingdom civilization was finally felled by Babylon in 586 BC.

The Kingdom as the culmination of the promise iterated by Jacob would fall not soon after Solomon died, with his son Rehoboam losing 10 of the 12 Kingdoms to Jeroboam of Nebat. He is the one who set up golden calves in Bethel and Dan, dividing worship into three places, Jerusalem, Dan, and Bethel.

The sin was so egregious that the tribe of Jeroboam of Nebat, Ephraim, and the tribe of Dan are BOTH removed from the call to the 12 tribes in Revelation 7.

Though from a Christian perspective the Kingdom of Israel leads to the birth, execution, and resurrection of our King of Kings, Christ, the Kingdom’s replacement of God as the direct sovereign with a direct sovereign King who submitted to the true sovereign, was a failed experiment.

Ironically, at a time when superpowers like Midian, the Hittites, and Egypt roamed the deserts, the decentralized Judges nation was able to hold together and resist the onslaught for nearly 400 years. The Kingdom model IMMEDIATELY produced a schism less than 20 years after the new Kingdom civilization was fully established.

Judah became just the tribes of Judah and Benjamin, with its kings more faithfully following God than the Israelite kings would (not that Judah was without unrighteous rulers).

That schism was never restored. To this day, the nation of Israel under Solomon would never be found again after the schism between Rehoboam and Jeroboam. Even today’s Israel is not unified, for it has no possession, directly, or completely, even of Samaria and Jerusalem, let alone Gilead, the former home of Reuben, Gad, and Manasseh (in present-day Jordan).

For the purpose of this series (leaving theology out of this), this is a transition that saw the new civilization build on the old in a way that eventually undermined that same foundation, leading to its ultimate collapse.

The Kingdom civilization would almost survive four centuries, but those centuries would be filled with even more turmoil than the time of Judges (not that the Judges were without turmoil).

In striving to be more like their neighbors, they lost what made them so powerful, their differences from their neighbors.

Their insertion of what was an effective mediator between the authority of God and man empowered that same man to become, more and more, a law unto himself. In the time of Judges, each man did as he pleased, meaning his unrighteous actions, when he took them, didn’t affect the whole kingdom. When kings do as they please, whole peoples become corrupted by that action.

In the Christian Kingdom, we are all Kings and Priests, which makes none of us uniquely King as you saw in the Kingdoms of Israel and Judah. In the prophecies, from Old to New, there is no future for a King of Israel, only a King of Kings, Christ, through which we will all rule in the new earth to come.

The Israelites asked for a King, and God gave him to them, to demonstrate to them that the path to salvation, the path to flourishing on earth, is only through God, not man. The less you trust in God, the more you trust in men. The more you trust in men, the further you are led from God, until your kingdom is consumed from within and without. Such a thing happened to Israel. Such a thing is happening to America.

FURTHER RESOURCES:

The Religion of Ancient Israel – Th. C. Vriezen

Ancient Israel (A New History) – Niels Peter Lemche

Ancient Israel: The Old Testament In Its Social Context – Edited by Philip Esler

Ancient Israel and Judah – Beth Tanner