The term judicial powers<span> refers to the </span>power<span> of the </span>Judicial<span> Branch of the United States government to hear cases and interpret, enforce or nullify laws and statutes in order to render verdicts.
</span>Courts are allowed to exercise judicial power in order to change or nullify laws that are not in line with others (such as state laws vs. federal laws or international laws) or if laws are not in line with the constitution. The Supreme Court is always considered the highest court in the United States of America. It is up to the Supreme Court to be able to sufficiently and effectively interpret constitutional law in the United States.<span>
Read more at http://examples.yourdictionary.com/examples-of-judicial-powers.html#UJTz4zbK8yJotbTu.99</span>
Mainly for religious freedom, they were being persecuted, ridiculed, ostracized, and penalized for there worship. They didn't have any freedom. (coming from an atheist)
The answer would be command economy if that is one of the options.
In the biblical Greek, the term refers to "that which awaits disclosure or interpretation". In the Catholic church the Latin term is mysterium fidei, "mystery of faith", defined in the Catechism of the Catholic Church (1997) to mean a mystery hidden in God, which can never be known unless revealed by God.