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Moses deus Aaronis, sive potestas atque officium principium in sacris
No prior complete English translation of this text has been found.
Albertus Riperus (Albert Riper) was an obscure 18th-century Dutch jurist, and his Latin treatise 'Moses Deus Aaronis' (1717) is a specialized work of political theology. No English translations were found in any major scholarly catalogs, including UNESCO Index Translationum, Open Library, or local translation databases, confirming that this text has never been published in English.
Verified Mar 8, 2026 via local catalogs, local catalogs, ustc, google books, google books, open library, google books, ustc, local catalogs · methodology
Who truly holds the keys to the kingdom—the pulpit or the throne? Albert Riper’s provocative treatise reimagines the Prince as a 'God to Aaron,' wielding supreme authority over the church to ensure public peace while leaving the sanctuary of the human conscience untouched. This text offers a radical blueprint for the Christian Commonwealth, where the Sovereign is the ultimate arbiter of doctrine and the clergy are servants, not masters.
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