The Office of the King (HaMelekh)
The King is defined in the governing charter as head of state and government, charged with overseeing the executive branch and ensuring the execution of law. In the household protocols, the King is likewise defined as head of the household and ultimate authority for major determinations. This page therefore presents the office in both dimensions: national governance and dynastic household administration.
Constitutional Standing
Under Article 3, Section 2 of the Protocols of Governance, the King (HaMelekh) leads the Executive House of the Monarchy. This office carries direct responsibility for implementation of law, strategic direction of executive institutions, and command-level integration across chambers, offices, and agencies.
Under Article 1 and Article 5, governance instruments are subordinate to Torah, and executive authority must remain aligned with Torah standards at all times.
Household Standing
Article I, Section 1 of the Protocols of the Dynastic Royal House defines the King as head of the household and ultimate authority in household management. The section states core duties including oversight of the institution, final decision authority on major issues, maintenance of royal standards, and leadership of family and educational continuity.
Command Architecture and Cabinet Leadership
Article 3, Section 2.1 of the governance charter describes the Royal Cabinet structure through which the King receives domain advice and directs execution. Cabinet chambers and offices are expected to report status, challenges, and results to the King, and to implement directives in accordance with Torah principles and enacted governance controls.
Royal Court and Final Review Authority
The governance charter recognizes the Royal Court framework for sub-governance and princely administration. In difficult judicial matters, Article 4, Section 10 recognizes a final review authority vested in the King when matters exceed ordinary court resolution, with advisory consultation mechanisms preserved.
Family, Stewardship, and Continuity
The dynastic protocols emphasize not only command authority but stewardship obligations: the King must maintain institutional standards while investing direct leadership in family order, education pathways, and continuity structures. This produces an office model that combines sovereign authority with sustained household governance responsibility.
Operational Summary
The King’s office is therefore not symbolic administration. It is the integrating authority for executive governance, household command order, cabinet direction, and continuity oversight, exercised under Torah supremacy and documented protocol hierarchy.