Posted by:
ThinkingOutLoud
(
)
Date: September 27, 2013 01:44PM
Yes you can covenant, you can contract you can trow and you can plight.
How it's worded and where the comma falls doesn't matter in this case (though that is not the case in the real world of contract law, or any area of law, really).
But if you take an idea of contract law and expound: isn't that contract null and void on its face?
You did not see God, nor those Angels, they did not shake your hand, and they didn't sign off on the register/license or official record, plus no one checked their ID to see if they qualify as legal witnesses in the state in which this contract was made. So, your alleged oral contract with them is not breached if you change your mind later and choose not to do what you said you would, or were unable to perform what was asked of you.
Their promises held out to you have not come to pass, and there is no credible evidence of their intention to meet those promises made to you, now or ever.
You did, however, pay for their promises to be upheld and their work on your behalf to be completed, with full benefits of same accruing to you. That did not happen. There is no evidence it is likely to happen, either. Now or Ever.
The agreement to uphold the terms of this contract on your part, therefore does not exist and the contract, entered into with some duress, under false pretenses and promise, facing loss of your eternal soul (as you so were led to believe at the time), is itself null and void.
Their part of the contract and its promises are not provable. You win.
Tell that to whoever asks you why you are supposedly "breaking your promises to the church" (or to your spouse/forever family, etc).
And no, I am not a lawyer; housewife who likes to believe she's Perry Mason, here.