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Let My People Go: The Catholic Church and Slavery
http://www.catholiceducation.org/articles/facts/fm0006.html ^ | July/August 1999 | MARK BRUMLEY

Posted on 08/31/2014 6:04:39 AM PDT by NKP_Vet

“How many divisions does the Pope have?” Joseph Stalin once ironically asked the official warning him of the Vatican's “power.” Decades later, totalitarian regimes have all but vanished, while the Catholic Church, founded strictly on an evangelical message of love, has continued to grow.

“I’d like to buy your argument,” replied the professor, “but the facts are other than you assert. How is it that Catholic countries such as Spain and Portugal promoted the slave trade in America, if, as you claim, the Catholic Church actually brought the end of slavery? How do you explain certain bishops of the American South defending the practice?”

My zealous Catholic classmate’s argument only served to provoke our European history professor, a middle-aged lapsed Catholic, who now lobbed at my friend what even I — a fellow Catholic and therefore a sympathetic observer — took to be the obvious, crushing rejoinder. My friend gave no reply, except to mutter a few irrelevant observations about Anglo-American Evangelicals and abolitionism. The subject, the professor reminded us, was the Catholic Church and slavery, not Evangelicalism. The Catholics left that undergraduate history class thoroughly trounced.

I said nothing the whole time, vowing to look into the subject when I could. That turned out to be a decade or so later. The matter, I discovered, was more complicated than either my friend or our professor had let on. The Catholic Church’s record on slavery is not the wicked thing the professor suggested. More interesting, though, was the use to which that record was put by many dissenting Catholics to lobby for changes in Catholic moral teaching.

Therein lies a tale. But before we consider it, we should be clear about what we mean by slavery and the real story of the Catholic Church’s position on it. As used here, “slavery” is the condition of involuntary servitude in which a human being is regarded as no more than the property of another, as being without basic human rights; in other words, as a thing rather than a person. Under this definition, slavery is intrinsically evil, since no person may legitimately be regarded or treated as a mere thing or object. This form of slavery can be called “chattel slavery.” (There are other ways in which the term can be used, such as in reference to the slavery discussed in the Old Testament, where slaves were regarded as property but nonetheless as bearers of human rights.)

However, there are circumstances in which a person can justly be compelled to servitude against his will. Prisoners of war or criminals, for example, can justly lose their circumstantial freedom and be forced into servitude, within certain limits. Moreover, people can also “sell” their labor for a period of time (indentured servitude).

These forms of servitude or slavery differ in kind from what we are calling chattel slavery. While prisoners of war and criminals can lose their freedom against their will, they do not become mere property of their captors, even when such imprisonment is just. They still possess basic, inalienable human rights and may not justly be subjected to certain forms of punishment — torture, for example. Similarly, indentured servants “sell” their labor, not their inalienable rights, and may not contract to provide services which are immoral. Moreover, they freely agree to exchange their labor for some benefit such as transportation, food, lodging, et cetera. Consequently, their servitude is not involuntary.

The Second Vatican Council condemned slavery (i.e., chattel slavery): “Whatever insults human dignity, such as subhuman living conditions, arbitrary imprisonment, deportation, slavery . . . the selling of women and children; as well as disgraceful working conditions, where men are treated as mere tools for profit, rather than as free and responsible persons; all these things and others of their like are infamies indeed . . . they are a supreme dishonor to the Creator” (Gaudium et spes 27; cf. no 29). Unfortunately, what Vatican II said about slavery is of little interest to opponents of Catholicism and Catholic dissenters, except insofar as they think it useful to demonstrate Catholic hypocrisy.

The essential anti-Catholic argument is this: “Catholicism must be false because it once endorsed slavery. The early Church approved slavery, as seen by St. Paul’s command for slaves to obey their masters (Col. 3:22-25; Eph. 6:5-8). Furthermore, the Catholic Church didn’t get around to repudiating slavery until the 1890s and prior to that actually supported it. That the Church no longer does is fine. But this only proves the maleability of Catholic doctrine. Furthermore, if Catholicism can flip-flop on such an important moral issue as slavery, why not on others of its supposedly unchangeable doctrines, such as the immorality of contraception or abortion?”

Slavery and the first Christians

But did the early Church endorse slavery? Certainly, the early Christians more or less tolerated the slavery of their day, as seen from the New Testament itself and the fact that after Christianity became the religion of the Roman Empire, slavery was not immediately outlawed. Even so, this doesn’t mean Christianity was compatible with Roman slavery or that the early Church did not contribute to its demise. In that regard, there are a number of important points to be kept in mind.

First, while Paul told slaves to obey their masters, he made no general defense of slavery, anymore than he made a general defense of the pagan government of Rome, which Christians were also instructed to obey despite its injustices (cf. Rom. 13:1-7). He seems simply to have regarded slavery as an intractable part of the social order, an order that he may well have thought would pass away shortly (1 Cor. 7:29-31).

Second, Paul told masters to treat their slaves justly and kindly (Eph 6:9; Col 4:1), implying that slaves are not mere property for masters to do with as they please.

Third, Paul implied that the brotherhood shared by Christians is ultimately incompatible with chattel slavery. In the case of the runaway slave Onesimus, Paul wrote to Philemon, the slave’s master, instructing him to receive Onesimus back “no longer as a slave but more than a slave, a brother” (Philem. 6). With respect to salvation in Christ, Paul insisted that “there is neither slave nor free . . . you are all one in Christ Jesus” (Gal. 3:27-28).

Fourth, the Christian principles of charity (“love your neighbor as yourself) and the Golden Rule (“Do unto others as you would have them to do unto you”) espoused by the New Testament writers are ultimately incompatible with chattel slavery, even if, because of its deeply established role as a social institution, this point was not clearly understood by all at the time.

Fifth, while the Christian Empire didn’t immediately outlaw slavery, some Church fathers (such as Gregory of Nyssa and John Chrysostom) strongly denounced it. But then, the state has often failed to enact a just social order in accordance with Church teachings.

Sixth, some early Christians liberated their slaves, while some churches redeemed slaves using the congregation’s common means. Other Christians even sacrificially sold themselves into slavery to emancipate others.

Seventh, even where slavery was not altogether repudiated, slaves and free men had equal access to the sacraments, and many clerics were from slave backgrounds, including two popes (Pius I and Callistus). This implies a fundamental equality incompatible with slavery.

Eighth, the Church ameliorated the harsher aspects of slavery in the Empire, even trying to protect slaves by law, until slavery all but disappeared in the West. It was, of course, to re-emerge during the Renaissance, as Europeans encountered Muslim slave traders and the indigenous peoples of the Americas.

The Catholic Church and slavery

What about the charge that the Catholic Church did not condemn slavery until the 1890s and actually approved of it before then? In fact, the popes vigorously condemned African and Indian thralldom three and four centuries earlier — a fact amply documented by Fr. Joel Panzer in his book, The Popes and Slavery. The argument that follows is largely based on his study.

Sixty years before Columbus “discovered” the New World, Pope Eugene IV condemned the enslavement of peoples in the newly colonized Canary Islands. His bull Sicut Dudum (1435) rebuked European enslavers and commanded that “all and each of the faithful of each sex, within the space of fifteen days of the publication of these letters in the place where they live, that they restore to their earlier liberty all and each person of either sex who were once residents of [the] Canary Islands . . . who have been made subject to slavery. These people are to be totally and perpetually free and are to be let go without the exaction or reception of any money.”

A century later, Pope Paul III applied the same principle to the newly encountered inhabitants of the West and South Indies in the bull Sublimis Deus (1537). Therein he described the enslavers as allies of the devil and declared attempts to justify such slavery “null and void.” Accompanying the bull was another document, Pastorale Officium, which attached a latae sententiae excommunication remittable only by the pope himself for those who attempted to enslave the Indians or steal their goods.

When Europeans began enslaving Africans as a cheap source of labor, the Holy Office of the Inquisition was asked about the morality of enslaving innocent blacks (Response of the Congregation of the Holy Office, 230, March 20, 1686). The practice was rejected, as was trading such slaves. Slaveholders, the Holy Office declared, were obliged to emancipate and even compensate blacks unjustly enslaved.

Papal condemnation of slavery persisted throughout the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries. Pope Gregory XVI’s 1839 bull, In Supremo, for instance, reiterated papal opposition to enslaving “Indians, blacks, or other such people” and forbade “any ecclesiastic or lay person from presuming to defend as permissible this trade in blacks under no matter what pretext or excuse.” In 1888 and again in 1890, Pope Leo XIII forcefully condemned slavery and sought its elimination where it persisted in parts of South America and Africa.

Despite this evidence, critics still insist the Magisterium did too little too late regarding slavery. Why? One reason is the critics’ failure to distinguish between just and unjust forms of servitude. The Magisterium condemned unjust enslavement early on, but it also recognized what is known as “just title slavery.” That included forced servitude of prisoners of war and criminals, and voluntary servitude of indentured servants, forms of servitude mentioned at the outset of this article. But chattel slavery as practiced in the United States and elsewhere differed in kind, not merely degree, from just tide slavery. For it made a claim on the slave as property and enslaved people who were not criminals or prisoners of war. By focusing on just title servitude, critics unfairly neglect the vigorous papal denunciations of chattel slavery.

The matter is further muddled by certain nineteenth century American clergy — including some bishops and theologians — who tried to defend the American slave system. They contended that the long-standing papal condemnations of slavery didn’t apply to the United States. The slave trade, some argued, had been condemned by Pope Gregory XVI, but not slavery itself.

Historians critical of the papacy on this matter often make that same argument. But papal teaching condemned both the slave trade and chattel slavery itself (leaving aside “just tide” servitude, which wasn’t at issue). It was certain members of the American hierarchy of the time who “explained away” that teaching. “Thus,” according to Fr. Panzer, “we can look to the practice of non-compliance with the teachings of the papal Magisterium as a key reason why slavery was not directly opposed by the Church in the United States.”

Another reason may have been the precarious position of the Catholic Church in America before the twentieth century. Catholics were a small and much-despised minority. They were subject to repeated, sometimes violent attacks by Protestant “Nativists.” In many ways, the American hierarchy of the day was trying to protect the Catholics immigrating to the U.S. and did not regard itself as in a position to be the leader in a major social crusade.

Does development justify every change?

For many Catholics today the key question is: Does previous Catholic practice regarding slavery amount to a change of doctrine such as would allow Catholic teaching on other subjects — such as contraception and abortion — to change as well?

The answer: In no way. The Church’s teaching about the dignity and basic equality of all human beings has been clarified to such a degree that any earlier ambiguity about the tolerance of chattel slavery has been eradicated. The Church’s teaching regarding contraception and abortion can also be said to have developed, but not in the direction of approving those practices.

While the Church has never allowed or tolerated contraception, the discovery of the female fertility cycle and birth control pill have led the Church to consider what her traditional teaching has to say about such things. Popes Paul VI and John Paul II have declared that contraception is intrinsically evil and have articulated personalist explanations of the Church’s traditional teaching. They have also reaffirmed the teaching of their predecessors Pius XI and Pius XII that a couple can licitly have recourse to infertile times in a woman’s cycle to avoid pregnancy for legitimate reasons. As a result, Natural Family Planning has developed as a moral means of family planning without altering in the slightest the Church’s stand against contraception.

Regarding abortion, the Church has always taught that it is gravely evil at any stage of pregnancy. Since recent advances in science have shown that human life begins at conception, medieval arguments about delayed animation and hominization advocated by some theologians (though never by the Magisterium, and that were never thought to justify abortion) must now be rejected. Killing an early embryo is killing a young human being, not an undeveloped, pre-human entity. Because of modern developments, the Church’s perennial opposition to abortion is on firmer, not weaker, ground.

Moreover, a development of Church teaching in one area that would now forbid what was once tolerated (chattel slavery) doesn’t imply or require a development in Church teaching in another area (sexual morality) that would allow what has always been forbidden (contraception and abortion). To argue that it does is a non sequitur.

Does all of this let individual Catholics “off the hook” when it comes to slavery? Certainly not. Those who in invincible ignorance owned slaves and regarded them as mere property did what is objectively evil, regardless of their subjective inculpability. Certainly their slaves suffered even if their masters somehow lacked full culpability due to invincible ignorance. And, of course, those who were deliberately cruel to their slaves committed grave sins that stand under God’s judgment.

At the same time, Christianity in general — and Catholicism in particular — contributed greatly to the abolition of slavery and the emergence of a common appreciation for fundamental human rights. Catholics, not Protestants, worked for the abolition of slavery in Latin American countries like Brazil. The Catholic appreciation of natural law — as opposed to the Protestant principle of sola scriptura (when Scripture tells slaves to obey their masters) — has always made slavery less reconcilable with Catholicism than Protestantism. The Church’s consistent teaching that all men are made in God’s image and are called to redemption in Christ has helped give rise to the modern notion of human rights and equality — ideas diametrically opposed to chattel slavery and that have led to a great diminishment in its practice.

So my eager Catholic college chum wasn’t entirely wrong, though having some facts in hand would have helped him make his case. If he had, it probably wouldn’t have convinced our erstwhile Catholic professor. But surely it would have given the other Catholics in the class more confidence in their Church.


TOPICS: Apologetics; History; Moral Issues; Religion & Culture
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1 posted on 08/31/2014 6:04:39 AM PDT by NKP_Vet
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To: NKP_Vet
Decades later, totalitarian regimes have all but vanished

What planet is this person living on?

2 posted on 08/31/2014 6:11:03 AM PDT by xp38
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To: NKP_Vet
Two points:

The predominately Roman Catholic state of Maryland was a pro slavery state.

Roger B. Taney was a Roman Catholic from Maryland, Chief Justice of the United States, and author of the Dred Scott Decision as well as other militantly pro slavery decisions.

3 posted on 08/31/2014 6:24:55 AM PDT by reg45 (Barack 0bama: Implementing class warfare by having no class.)
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To: NKP_Vet
Isn't this argument like the reparations argument...centuries old and irrelevant to our modern society...

The only current religion that promotes and advances slavery is Islam...

4 posted on 08/31/2014 6:34:08 AM PDT by Popman (Jesus Christ Alone: My Cornerstone...)
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To: NKP_Vet

Remember Religions are a God thing. Politics are a man thing. Don’t confuse the two.


5 posted on 08/31/2014 6:38:44 AM PDT by Don Corleone ("Oil the gun..eat the cannoli. Take it to the Mattress.")
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To: reg45

More facts. Slavery ended in Brazil (Catholic monarchy) in 1872 and in Cuba in 1886 (Spanish Catholic monarchy). Both after it ended in the US. Austria did not have any possessions outside of Europe, so who knows how they would acted. The only Catholic country to end it much earlier was France, but it was ended by the anti-clerical revolutionaries, not the church.


6 posted on 08/31/2014 6:43:16 AM PDT by gusty
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To: gusty

1315: Roman Catholic Louis X, king of France, publishes a decree proclaiming that “France signifies freedom” and that any slave setting foot on the French ground should be freed.
1435: Papal Encyclical – Sicut Dudum – of Pope Eugene IV banning enslavement on pain of excommunication.
1537: Pope Paul III forbids slavery of the indigenous peoples of the Americas as well as of any other new population that would be discovered, indicating their right to freedom and property. However, only Catholic countries apply it, and state that they cannot possibly enforce what happens in the distant colonies (Sublimus Dei).


7 posted on 08/31/2014 7:28:50 AM PDT by NKP_Vet
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To: NKP_Vet

I guess when the New World was discovered all those proclamations and decrees went out the window.

“1435: Papal Encyclical – Sicut Dudum – of Pope Eugene IV banning enslavement on pain of excommunication.”

Please name for me anyone, in a position to matter, who was excommunicated for slavery between the years 1492-1886. As they say, talk is cheap.


8 posted on 08/31/2014 7:44:11 AM PDT by gusty
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To: gusty

You’re right. Your Catholic ancestors were sure bad Christians.


9 posted on 08/31/2014 8:05:50 AM PDT by NKP_Vet
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To: NKP_Vet

“How many divisions does the Pope have?”

It is not unreasonable to suggest that the Pope *should* have at least a division, if not a military division. And while this division should have arms available to it, that their purpose be solely to defend innocent life.

To start with, there is a multitude of Catholic military veterans, and there are many very wealthy Catholics. So manning and funding are not really at issue.

Their status would not be as soldiers, but oddly enough, as “Marines”, in that Marines are the one form of soldier authorized by old treaties to protect embassies and diplomats, even for countries that have no navies. And yes, these Marines would have diplomatic immunity granted by the Vatican, and possibly Italy as well.

All around the world, there are Christians in minority that face persecution from a repulsive majority, or minority that seeks to destroy them. When granted diplomatic access, part of this Division could travel to one of these communities and *teach* them to help themselves.

And, incidentally, woe be to any oppressor that thought to attack them when the Marines were present.

Such a Division could assess the situation, provide common sense training and protective measures, from concertina wire to a trench, any number of other things, as well as suggested economic and social improvements.


10 posted on 08/31/2014 8:27:38 AM PDT by yefragetuwrabrumuy ("Don't compare me to the almighty, compare me to the alternative." -Obama, 09-24-11)
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To: reg45

Chief Justice Taney was a states rights man if there ever was one. Antonin Scalia called him a great chief justice. I agree.


11 posted on 08/31/2014 8:34:48 AM PDT by NKP_Vet
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To: gusty
I guess when the New World was discovered all those proclamations and decrees went out the window....Please name for me anyone, in a position to matter, who was excommunicated for slavery between the years 1492-1886. As they say, talk is cheap.

Cases in point:
Abp. Dolan: American Catholic Leadership against Abortion Redeems Laxity against Slavery
Statue of first Catholic Supreme Court justice may go [Chief Justice Taney/"Dred Scott" decision]
Black History: The Slave Coast
The Jesuits’ Slaves

12 posted on 08/31/2014 9:28:03 AM PDT by Alex Murphy ("the defacto Leader of the FR Calvinist Protestant Brigades")
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To: NKP_Vet

They probably were. Unlike you who live in fantasyland, I understand that humans will act like humans. All, and I mean all, human institutions are corrupt in small and big ways. Has been since the beginning of time. To believe that ones own institutions are saintly and infallible denotes a bit of immaturity.


13 posted on 08/31/2014 9:38:33 AM PDT by gusty
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To: gusty

My Aunt Lucy was excommunicated in 1493. So there!


14 posted on 08/31/2014 11:07:37 AM PDT by miss marmelstein (Richard III: Loyalty Binds Me)
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To: gusty
Accompanying the bull was another document, Pastorale Officium, which attached a latae sententiae excommunication remittable only by the pope himself for those who attempted to enslave the Indians or steal their goods.

You understand what latae sententiae excommunication is, right? That it's automatic and requires no decree or other notice by church authority?

15 posted on 08/31/2014 11:36:13 AM PDT by Campion
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To: gusty
They probably were. Unlike you who live in fantasyland, I understand that humans will act like humans. All, and I mean all, human institutions are corrupt in small and big ways. Has been since the beginning of time. To believe that ones own institutions are saintly and infallible denotes a bit of immaturity.

Immaturity? You are too nice.
I would say: stupidity.

16 posted on 08/31/2014 12:35:45 PM PDT by cloudmountain
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To: gusty

“To believe that ones own institutions are saintly and infallible denotes a bit of immaturity”

I never said that Tonto. I posted an article about the Catholic Church and slavery. The Catholic Church is made up of men, and as such made mistakes like anyone else. No one is perfect, but you want to tar and feather the Catholic Church for all the sins of the world.


17 posted on 08/31/2014 12:53:38 PM PDT by NKP_Vet
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To: Alex Murphy

Didn’t most slaves go to Catholic countries?


18 posted on 08/31/2014 1:12:30 PM PDT by ansel12 (LEGAL immigrants, 30 million 1980-2012, continues to remake the nation's electorate for democrats)
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To: reg45

“The predominately Roman Catholic state of Maryland was a pro slavery state.”

Predominantly Roman Catholic? Are you sure? Maybe right before the Civil War: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Maryland#Resurgence_of_Catholic_population

Honestly I don’t know. See below:

“As far as Catholicism goes, the Church has been the largest denomination in the United States since 1850 because of the massive waves of Irish—and then German, Italian, Polish, Hungarian, and Latin American—immigration that began hitting the shores of New York and Massachusetts in the 1830s. Indeed, between 1830 and 1860, the Catholic population in the United States grew by more than 900 percent, and by the outbreak of hostilities between the North and the South in April 1861, there were more Catholics living in the Diocese of Boston alone than there were in all eleven states that would ultimately secede from the Union, plus Maryland—the state that was home to the oldest diocese in the United States and had been the epicenter of English-speaking American Catholicism for more than 200 years.” (http://jsr.fsu.edu/issues/vol14/farrelly.html relying on Dolan, American Catholicism, 58; and Benjamin J. Blied, Catholics and the Civil War (Milwaukee: n.p., 1945), 53.)

Notice where this was read?: http://www.ewtn.com/library/papaldoc/g16sup.htm


19 posted on 08/31/2014 2:21:27 PM PDT by vladimir998
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To: NKP_Vet
I'd suggest admitting that you're human and fallible just as we all are. Some of the largest slaveholders in the south were Catholic, in Louisiana. There were Catholic Confederates numbering in the thousands. Bishop Lynch of Charleston, SC celebrated Ft. Sumter with a Te Deum.

The delusion that your hands were clean arose due to the majority of your current number, who were late-arriving immigrants presuming themselves removed from the whole matter. They were woefully ignorant of the histories of both the Palatinate Of Maryland and the Louisiana Territory, not to mention pockets of Catholicism scattered across the south dating in some instances to the seventeenth century. Most modern Catholics in the US still are. Thus, we get ridiculous hand-wringing articles such as this.

20 posted on 08/31/2014 2:31:35 PM PDT by RegulatorCountry
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