What was the Constitution’s Purpose…?

What was the Constitution’s Purpose
and to whom was the Constitution’s Purpose directed:

To The People

The preamble declares the Purpose : “We the People of the United States, in Order to form a more perfect Union, establish Justice, insure domestic Tranquility, provide for the Common defence, promote the general Welfare, and secure the Blessings of Liberty to ourselves and our Posterity… .”

The Constitution’s principal purpose was toward the People.

FOR
The Government

The Constitution was ordained and Established for the United States of America to ratify and adopt.

The United States of America was a perpetual Union under certain Articles of Confederation created in 1777, and survived until March 4, 1789.

The Constitution allowed state and federal governments to be created, but restricted their Powers.

The Constitution created a more perfect Union than was the perpetual Union. Our Creator God, through the Constitution, gave man the right to repent for worshipping the man/king/government and left provision for turning back to Him and return to self government for the first time since the days of Solomon when men demanded to have a king instead of being led by their Creator God.

The Constitution was adopted March 4, 1789, after the required number of the State governments had ratified the same.

Unless the individual consents to be governed by a representative government, we are a nation of sovereign individual People vested with the powers of sovereignty, subject only to the Laws and customs of local, state and federal government as far as the Constitution allows and no further.

The Constitution is a reservation to the People themselves, as individuals, of all Powers not granted to State or federal government.

In all Cases, where the rights of an individual are concerned, the individual has a guaranteed Republican Form of Government of Law and not of men.

The Constitution is the final instrument of arbitration in which three sovereign Powers co-exist in the United States. The People, the States, and the United States are those sovereign Powers. Each one has its place and duties, with the People being the primary sovereign Power. The People are the fountain of all sovereignty under Our Creator God. The governments are subordinate to the People except for the powers specifically delegated to government by the Constitution. For Example: The individual cannot declare and commit the Union to war, nor regulate commerce with foreign nations between the several states, nor with Indian tribes. Article I, Section 8, clause 3 “To regulate Commerce with foreign Nations, and among the several States, and with the Indian tribes.”

The private individual, in a private Case, can interpret the Constitution, which contains the above mentioned Commerce Clause, Laws of the United States and Treaties made or which shall be made to all Cases of admiralty or maritime Jurisdiction, to all Cases affecting Ambassadors, other public Ministers, and Consuls, and to all Cases in which a State shall be a Party in respect to himself, affecting only the parties to the private Case made pursuant to the supreme judicial Power of the individual’s one supreme Court. The Decision is final in the said Case and it becomes a new part of the supreme Law of the Land, in respect to the private individual parties involved in the Case, thereby binding both State and Federal judges and prohibiting any Thing in the State Constitution(s), or Laws of any State, to the contrary notwithstanding.
[Notwithstanding means opposition cannot be brought against the Decision.]