Four sentences. Well done!
But if the people accept their tyrants, they are a nation and state. Thus with Hitler, Mao, Stalin and North Korea. The only way to escape oppressive government is to rebel against it. This is what the Founders did. Then they created a nation state that became acceptable to the governed, more or less. In Christian nations, even in the Middle Ages, the Church held kings to be answerable to God. So did the American Founders.
At the Constitutional Convention, 1787, James Madison recorded the following remarks made by Benjamin Franklin to the president of the Convention:
"I have lived, Sir, a long time, and the longer I live, the more convincing proofs I see of this truth – that God governs in the affairs of men. And if a sparrow cannot fall to the ground without his notice, is it probable that an empire can rise without his aid? We have been assured, Sir, in the sacred writings, that ‘except the Lord build the House they labor in vain that build it.’ I firmly believe this; and I also believe that without his concurring aid we shall succeed in this political building no better than the Builders of Babel; We shall be divided by our little partial local interests; our projects will be confounded, and we ourselves shall become a reproach and bye word down to future ages. And what is worse, mankind may hereafter from this unfortunate instance, despair of establishing Government by Human Wisdom and leave it to chance, war, and conquest.
"I therefore beg leave to move – that henceforth prayers imploring the assistance of Heaven and its blessings on our deliberations, be held in this Assembly every morning before we proceed to business, and that one or more of the Clergy of this City be requested to officiate in that service.”
But the influence of religion in tempering the power of tyrants began long before the Founders.
Stephen Cardinal Langton, Archbishop of Canterbury in the early 13th century, was not merely the man who divided the Scriptures into the chapters we know them by today in both the Catholic and Protestant bibles. Nor was he just the supposed author of the immortal verse, Veni Sancte Spiritus. What he will be remembered most for is his role in getting King John to sign the Magna Carta (Great Charter). John, a tyrant of England if ever there was one, was famous for lording it over the barons by enacting any laws he wished to enact at any time he wished to enact them, and without the consent of the barons. Langton, at the urging of Pope Innocent III, talked John into recognizing and respecting a formal and fixed declaration of the rights of the barons. Langton’s role was pivotal, siding with and leading the barons until the King, realizing that all the world was against him, caved in and signed the Charter. Langton later became such a loathsome presence to the king that the latter prevailed upon the pope to remove him from his episcopal office (after the deaths of the pope and the king, Langton was reinstated as Primate of England).