Misplaced Pages

Dominion of Melchizedek: Difference between revisions

Article snapshot taken from Wikipedia with creative commons attribution-sharealike license. Give it a read and then ask your questions in the chat. We can research this topic together.
Browse history interactively← Previous editNext edit →Content deleted Content addedVisualWikitext
Revision as of 02:02, 3 February 2006 editKingboyk (talk | contribs)Extended confirmed users57,425 edits Merge the content of Melchizedek Bible, not wrtten by me← Previous edit Revision as of 02:03, 3 February 2006 edit undoKingboyk (talk | contribs)Extended confirmed users57,425 editsm Melchizedek Bible: link removal (links to here, or repeated links). punctuation.Next edit →
Line 76: Line 76:


==Melchizedek Bible== ==Melchizedek Bible==
The '''Melchizedek Bible''' is an interpretative ] translated by "students of ontology", including ] and his son, Ben David Pedley. Ben David Pedley uses a number of pseudonyms, including "Branch Vinedresser" which is a translation of his legal, Hebrew name, "Tzemach David Neter Korem" . The "]" web site states that its ] is based on the principles of the Melchizedek Bible. The '''Melchizedek Bible''' is an interpretative ] translated by "students of ontology", including Evan David Pedley and his son, Ben David Pedley. Ben David Pedley uses a number of pseudonyms, including "Branch Vinedresser" which is a translation of his legal, Hebrew name, "Tzemach David Neter Korem" . The "Dominion of Melchizedek" web site states that its ] is based on the principles of the Melchizedek Bible.


According to its preface, The ''Melchizedek Bible'' combines an interpretation of metaphor with the ] which claims to "guide students to the hidden treasure of Holy Writ", and was first published in 1986. According to its preface, The ''Melchizedek Bible'' combines an interpretation of metaphor with the ] which claims to "guide students to the hidden treasure of Holy Writ", and was first published in 1986.
Line 93: Line 93:
Verse 4: Verse 4:
:KJV: And God saw the light, that it was good: and God divided the light from the darkness. :KJV: And God saw the light, that it was good: and God divided the light from the darkness.
:MB: God beholds the enlightenment, that it is good; and God separates the enlightenment from ignorance; :MB: God beholds the enlightenment, that it is good; and God separates the enlightenment from ignorance.


==See also== ==See also==

Revision as of 02:03, 3 February 2006

Dominion of Melchizedek
Seal
Motto: Monotheistic, unity, peace
Musical Anthem: tba
Type of entity: Micronation
Location: Various Pacific Ocean islands and part of Antarctica
Area: n/a
Membership: < 50
Date of foundation: 1986
Leadership: President Richard James McDonald (23 July, 2003- )
Purported organisational structure: Ecclesiastical state
Language: English
Purported currency: Dominion Dollar

The Dominion of Melchizedek (DoM) is a micronation that has been accused of being linked to large scale banking fraud in many parts of the world.

Origin and Status

The DoM was created in 1986 by Evan David Pedley and his son, Mark Logan Pedley. The latter also uses a number of pseudonyms, including "Tzemach Ben David Netzer Korem" and "Branch Vinedresser" (which is a rough English translation of the Hebrew). The Pedleys have published a translation of the Bible known as the Melchizedek Bible (see below). During the 1980s the Pedleys were convicted and imprisoned for multiple various land and share-related frauds.

Supporters of DoM assert that it is an "ecclesiastical sovereignty," similar to Vatican City. While its flag incorporates Christian, Jewish and Islamic symbols, DoM has no established church or formally constituted religion, and most external observers reject the assertion of ecclesiastical sovereignty.

DoM also claims Jerusalem as its "homeland." The claim is based on the Biblical legend of Melchizedek, who is said to have been priest-king of Salem. However, as no person associated with DoM is known to reside in Jerusalem, and as the DoM apparently has no recognized means of enforcing its claim, this claim is also generally rejected.

During the 1990s DoM began to claim sovereignty over a number of Pacific islands, all of which were already the possessions of recognized states. DoM's claims include Taongi Atoll (an uninhabited possession of the Marshall Islands); Malpelo Island (a possession of Colombia, inhabited by a military garrison); Karitane Shoal (a reef submerged under 9 metres of water); Solkope Island (part of Fiji); and Clipperton Island (a possession of France). DoM also claims a large section of Antarctica. None of these claims is recognized by any established government.

The Dominion of Melchizedek website claims that it is a recognized sovereign entity. However, mainstream media outlets, including Forbes magazine and The Washington Post, have characterized it as a "ruse," and it has been described as "non-existent" by the United States Securities and Exchange Commission.

Recognition

An article in the Washington Post reported that DoM was "diplomatically recognized" by the Central African Republic, in 1993, but stated, "...you get the feeling that the Central African Republic would recognize the State of Denial if it had a letterhead." An article in the Quatloos online anti-fraud site noted that "Melchizedek has apparently obtained some sort of recognition from some smaller states ... all of which are notable for their corruption. Claims that the DoM has received recognition from any major government are purely lies."

As far as is known, DoM does not maintain a diplomatic mission or any other form of representation in the Central African Republic, nor is there evidence confirming the existence of a formal bilateral relationship of any substance. DoM's web site claims that it has since been "recognised" by several other African nations, including Burkina Faso.

Marshall Islands statement

In response to one of DoM's territorial claims, the government of the Republic of the Marshall Islands issued the following statement:

The Government of the Republic of the Marshall Islands condemns the claims and activities asserted by (alleged) representatives of the "Kingdom of EnenKio" and the "Dominion of Melchizedek". The representatives making claims of separate sovereignty are not citizens of the Republic of the Marshall Islands and have no right to make claims on behalf of Marshallese landowners. Furthermore, these representatives are making fraudulent assertions that violate the Republic of the Marshall Islands's constitution. The area of land and ocean which the "Kingdom of EnenKio" asserts as a sovereign nation separate from the Marshall Islands and (some of) the area of land and ocean which the "Dominion of Melchizedek" is asserting control over are areas within the geographical and political boundaries of the Republic of the Marshall Islands.

The Marshall Islands has issued a diplomatic note to other nations, urging nations friendly to it not to recognize claims of DoM in the Marshall Islands. The recognized Iroijlaplap (chief) of Taongi was later quoted on an Australian television current affairs programme as saying he had granted DoM a 50-year "sovereign lease" over Taongi Atoll. However, as sovereignty over the atoll (as opposed to land title) belongs to the Marshall Islands and not to private citizens, the Iroijlaplap's action is generally considered to be a nullity.

Frauds linked to the Dominion of Melchizedek

Over 300 investors in various parts of the world have lost money in purported investment, passport and employment scams run by several "banks" licensed by Melchizedek, including one operated by a supposed "diplomatic representative".

Apologists have suggested that there is no link between Melchizedek and the illegal activities conducted by "banks" it has "licensed", however this is untrue; in an address to the 4th International Financial Fraud Convention in London, 27 May 1999, John Shockey, a former special assistant in the office of the U.S. Comptroller of the Currency, stated:

"Melchizedek first came to my attention in June 1990, a few months after Mark Pedley was paroled from a 1986 conviction. Inquiries were received concerning bank names: Banco de Asia, Guardian Savings & Guaranty and Express Bank among others. Investigations that these entities had bank charters from the DOM and obtained through an entity named Consortium Finance Corporation headquartered in Lake Tahoe, California. Further investigation disclosed a principal alternately named John Hayden and Branch Vinedresser. Shortly thereafter the FBI took Branch Vinedresser into custody and revealed that he was Mark Pedley, who then was charged with violations of his parole."

In the same address Stockey also stated that: "The Dominion of Melchizedek is a fraud, a major fraud, and not a legitimate sovereign entity. Persons associated with the Dominion of Melchizedek have been indicted and convicted of a variety of crimes."

At one stage in the early 2000s, DoM maintained a post office box address in Canberra, the capital of Australia. Coincidentally, one of the individuals identified by Philippine authorities in November 1998 as the ringleader of a series of frauds perpetrated in the name of DoM was John Gillespie, a former Australian felon who was convicted on the basis of his involvement in the Fine Cotton horse substitution racket during the 1980s. According to a media report originally published in The Nation (Bangkok) on 30 May 1999, "hundreds of Filipinos, Chinese and Bangladeshis paid up to US$3,500 to Gillespie's gang for worthless Melchizedek travel documents," and some had also paid significant amounts of money to obtain "government jobs" on one of the uninhabited Pacific islands claimed by DoM. The total amount defrauded was estimated at one million dollars. While the other gang members were arrested, Gillespie himself eluded capture.

Melchizedek Bible

The Melchizedek Bible is an interpretative Bible translated by "students of ontology", including Evan David Pedley and his son, Ben David Pedley. Ben David Pedley uses a number of pseudonyms, including "Branch Vinedresser" which is a translation of his legal, Hebrew name, "Tzemach David Neter Korem" . The "Dominion of Melchizedek" web site states that its ecclesiastical government is based on the principles of the Melchizedek Bible.

According to its preface, The Melchizedek Bible combines an interpretation of metaphor with the King James Version which claims to "guide students to the hidden treasure of Holy Writ", and was first published in 1986.

The opening verses of the Melchizedek Bible give an idea of how the entire work reads, for example,

Genesis Chapter I verse 1:

KJV: In the beginning God created the heaven and the earth.
MB: Only God reveals noumenon and phenomenon

Verse 2:

KJV: And the earth was without form, and void; and darkness was upon the face of the deep. And the Spirit of God moved upon the face of the waters.
MB: And phenomenon is without form and void, with ignorance "upon the face of error," yet divine thoughts move upon the visage of God's elements,

Verse 3:

KJV: And God said, Let there be light: and there was light.
MB: Declaring, "Let there be enlightenment; and there is enlightenment."

Verse 4:

KJV: And God saw the light, that it was good: and God divided the light from the darkness.
MB: God beholds the enlightenment, that it is good; and God separates the enlightenment from ignorance.

See also

External links

Categories: