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To: Republican Wildcat
[Art.] The idea of a human being attempting to “own” another human being is abhorrent in a Christian view of humanity.

Not true, and ahistorical. Also, counter-Scriptural. When the Roman centurion asked Jesus to heal the centurion's servant, Jesus did not rebuke the man for owning the slave. Slavery was common as grass in the Roman Empire, and slaves' bones (as from Herculaneum) bore the same heavy-labor marks as those of the slaves exhumed and examined from 18th-century New York City cemeteries.

The writer may be some kind of Baptist, but he is a) not a Southerner and b) misrepresenting history, just as if he were a Left-wing scold.

13 posted on 06/20/2015 12:54:25 PM PDT by lentulusgracchus ("If America was a house , the Left would root for the termites." - Greg Gutfeld)
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To: lentulusgracchus

re: “The idea of a human being attempting to “own” another human being is abhorrent in a Christian view of humanity.”

“Not true, and ahistorical. Also, counter-Scriptural. When the Roman centurion asked Jesus to heal the centurion’s servant, Jesus did not rebuke the man for owning the slave. Slavery was common as grass in the Roman Empire, and slaves’ bones (as from Herculaneum) bore the same heavy-labor marks as those of the slaves exhumed and examined from 18th-century New York City cemeteries.”

I think Moore’s point was that the idea of “owning” another human being, like owning a car or a bike, has become abhorrent from a Christian perspective. When Paul said, “there is neither male, nor female, Greek nor Jew, slave or free, we are all one in Jesus Christ” - this theological view led to the eventual extinction of slavery in the Christian world. It took a while, but the abolition of slavery was based on that Christian world view.

It is quite true that slavery was common in the 1st century, and has been around almost as long as humanity itself. Yet, it is a bit disingenuous to say that Jesus was endorsing slavery as an institution simply because He didn’t rebuke the centurion because he owned a slave.

Jesus did not speak against crucifixion or the dictatorial Roman government either, yet I would not take that as an endorsement of those things. It wasn’t His mission to promote revolution against the Romans or their cruel methods. His mission was to die for guilty sinners, to provide salvation for us and to change us from the inside by His Spirit living within us.


44 posted on 06/20/2015 1:30:20 PM PDT by rusty schucklefurd
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