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Question
james is speeches to parliament
the state of monarchy is the supremest thing upon earth, for kings are not only gods lieutenants upon earth and sit upon gods throne, but even by god himself they are called gods.... you do not meddle with the main points of government; that is my craft:... - to meddle with that were to lessen me.
what argument is james making in this speech?
○ kings should not believe in god, for they are gods themselves.
○ kings are gods representatives on earth and should not be challenged
○ kings should respect parliaments role in government.
○ kings should not meddle in the affairs of government, that is parliaments job.
James I's speech asserts monarchy is supreme, framing kings as God's earthly lieutenants (called gods by God) and stating Parliament should not interfere with core government matters, as that is the king's domain. This matches the argument that kings are God's representatives and should not be challenged, while the other options contradict the text: he does not say kings are gods instead of believing in God, he rejects Parliament's role in core governance, and he claims governing is his job, not Parliament's.
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Kings are God's representatives on earth and should not be challenged.