To: Eagle Eye
Re: "You call slavery unspeakably evil, yet the Bible doesn't go that far. The Bible clearly condemns witchcraft and homosexuality, but then tells masters to be good to their slaves."
The Bible has a message about slavery that is hard to grasp. I am not sure I fully understand it but here is a stab at it.
The Hebrews just got out of bondage and one of the first things they do is legalize slavery? Go figure. Well keep in mind the slavery they practiced was a form of bankruptcy. If you got into trouble you could be sold into slavery to pay debts. Remember they were living a little closer to the bone then 19th century planters. If you couldn't pay a debt you may be putting your creditor and his family in mortal danger as well as yourself.
The Hebrews also had something called a Jubilee year. It came every 50 years and all Hebrew slaves and debts were considered forgiven. I don't remember but I do not think this applied to slaves of foreign extraction. So what does this say about slavery? I'm not sure.
However the Catholic Church teaches (or used to teach) about the value of suffering in the salvation of man. Not just Christ's suffering but our own as well. I light of this I think it is possible to consider the danger of slavery was more serious to the slave master than it was to the slave. I am talking about spiritual matters which is the main focus of the Bible anyway. This does not go down well in a Protestant country where most people want to see God as the loudest singer of kumbyya, all love and no punishment, hell exist but is empty.
I hope I haven't changed the subject I am just trying to related what this says about slavery.
186 posted on
12/13/2004 1:07:50 PM PST by
Mark in the Old South
(Note to GOP "Deliver or perish" Re: Specter I guess the GOP "chooses" to perish)
To: Mark in the Old South
I'm very familiar with the Biblical concept of slavery.
That is why in the NT the idea of a believer being a 'bond servant' (doulos) is so powerful. Then remember that the master was to take care of the slave partially because the condition of the slave reflected the standing of the master. The implications certainly are there that Christ the Lord should really take care of His servants, right?
But even in OT times, slavery was not thought to be a sin, however the slave trade was considered at least very distasteful.
So why do so many call slavery things like unspeakable evil when the Bible doesn't?
IMO, some of that is ultra PC for conservatives. It somehow demonstrates how non-bigoted they are.
What truly amazed me is how that no one has yet jumped on me to accuse me of defending slavery! That is what normall happens.
Defending slavery is like defending cancer. Both are part of the human condition.
218 posted on
12/13/2004 7:54:00 PM PST by
Eagle Eye
(Some say the glass is half empty; some it's half full. I say, "Are you going to finish that?")
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