The Bible has various professions that still exist today and are described in a historical context such as Doctor, Lawyer, Author, Writer, Business Person, Tax Collector, Government Worker, Religious Venue Administrator or Manager, Judge, Government Administrator, Farmer, Merchant, and various other contexts of employment within the constructs of society.
This allows going through various hypotheticals with children regarding expected conduct in society, and dealing with issues that may arise throughout life; many of these are taught in the first few books of the Bible which deal with legal agreements, human interactions, and court proceedings. The context is not very complex at a young age of 4 to 6 years old.
Usually, with most parents, the stories are not meant for young students to read on their own; but rather for the parent to talk about with their children over 30 to 45 minutes and if needed, desired, or required to form a lesson plan that is representative of the teachings in the Bible, the family lifestyle and values, as well as constructs of society.
The bible doesn’t work well for all families but many people are able to use the bible as a public access book that is in part approximately or over 6,000 years old and at least 2,000 years old. This has various implications for translators, and context editors who have spent a significant amount of time updating public domain works but has overall not been a problem recently.
The culmination of studying from about 4-6 years old, all the way up to 15/16 years of age is being aware of social constructs, behaviors, consequences; and for some of the students, jobs within the church or surrounding community can lead to careers, government administration, or professional jobs such as an attorney, lawyer, doctor, author, writer, scholar, horticulturalist, landscaper, or business person.
With the attorney or lawyer preparation, the church based training, examination, and hearings are based on the life of an apostle. The Apostles wrote Epistles and were considered evangelists, the went around from church to church learning about their ways of life, their standards or practices in church administration, and talked about some of the behaviors and conduct that were prevalent or non-existent in the areas where their churches were setup. There is a lot of consideration towards the law of Moses, the acts of Jesus, the Judges of the old Testament, discussion of the trial before Pilot, King of the Earth; and the disciples job in contacting the churches in the area where Jesus had faced his ultimate punishment.
In addition there are stories such as the acts of the Prophets, for consideration are the flying chariot, the sheeps wool, the never ending supply of oil and flour, and also the requirements of participation or non-participation in nearby conflict. All of this is examined in a legal context and many children gravitate towards prophets, girls often ask of prophetesses, or towards the Apostles with girls asking about housewives and being a princess or a church administrator.
Church teachings are often updated to prevent insult and injury with the local time era if it is possible to do so without violating the constructs of religious society.
The 1961 Hague Convention refers to Apostilles which has a context. Many church teachings originate in Spanish, Italian, or Latin but can also be Russian, Far Eastern, or Greek, and various English’s are most recent; usually Anglican, Baptist, or Presbytarian. There are various denominations, over 75 main denominations, and it would be impossible to outline all of their differences in a brief. These 3 are representative of a majority of teachings even if there are differences or discrepancies in other denominations that are predominently English speaking.
Apostille is often pronounced apos style, ah pahst stile, or ap ohs tile to list a few pronounciated spellings. In Spanish, the word is often talked about as apostillo or apostilla which means my little apostle. This is often considered funny when the parents are older and the young adults are in their twenties or early thirties and the parents did not grow up with church teachings or reading the bible or are not aware of the context of Spanish. Its also endearing for church followers who observe young children pick the favorite profession, often before the age of ten, and to hear people utter; these are our new apostilles.
In either case, it turns out the Apostille is an actual and valid credential that teaches lots of professionalism, maturity, good work habits, and both analytical and observational skills. For a person in their twenties, it takes much less time than 9 to 12 years of studying. Usually, a few years to be able to work in a church administration office, or helping with issues that are considered humanitarian aid in a modern context.
Nearly the entire Bible can be studied in a legal context, but there is background information and historical data that is not necessarily included in the Bible. These can be correlated through evidentiary processes. On its own, a lot of legal contexts can be studied that can likely be used as an introductory to law.
Many legal contexts are written in older documents, and often, different translations of the bible are used simultaneously to study the same information in modern vocabulary and comparing it to archival grammar.
In a modern sense of Apostille training, a suggestion has been to keep things as is, but to add legal document preparation, and legislative database analysis to the church based work training.
Posts published on this website, will be categorized as Law and Legality when they would definitely be reviewed primarily as part of an Apostille study. Other posts that can be viewed in multiple contexts, will be categorized as appropriate based on the primary context of that story or passage, which may vary amongst different denominations. Hopefully this turns out well.