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I believe you are speaking about "indentured servitude."Slavery as it was practiced then was not moraly wrong. It was a voluntary contract that was based on debt, not the rascist, oppression that was forced on Africans.
Hey, I tell my husband to jump, and he says how high, how fast and how far!I own my whole family & they own me. nothing at all immoral about it.
You have been seriously confused.
I own my whole family & they own me. nothing at all immoral about it.
You have been seriously confused.
Don't be. It's beautiful !I am so much happier in this marriage...I truly know it will be til death do us part, because I can't imagine my life not being married to him.
Sorry to get all mooshy.
and you have continued to miss the point people in this thread are making...and ignore that Scripture tells how slaves and masters are supposed to act as opposed to denouncing your idea of what those terms mean.You are confused to believe it's morally acceptable to own another human being-you are wrong. Period.
and you have continued to miss the point people in this thread are making...and ignore that Scripture tells how slaves and masters are supposed to act as opposed to denouncing your idea of what those terms mean.
I'm just telling you it's in the Bible. Perhaps you should start another thread to discuss what those concepts actually mean as opposed to working with pre-concieved ideas.Why would God tell people how to act inside an absolutely immoral institution such as slavery?
My family didnt worry.All the experiences I have had where a Catholic wanted to date a protestant the protestant family was concerned but not overly worried while the Catholic families had hissy fits. My ex's family did not like me one bit, and they took every opportunity to tell me as such. My ex said this would stop once I became Catholic.
And, given what else I've experienced with Catholics dating protestants, I can't really blame them. In ALL cases where they ended up getting married, the Catholic was the one who switched to the other faith.
And when you think about the divorce rate in this country to begin with, why put added stress into an already stressful relationship?
I dated other people who weren't WELS and were other denoms like Presbyterian and Methodist. I was engaged to a man who was a Pentecostal/AOG mix of something. We had doctrinal issues, and we were young and we really thought we'd be able to work through them. We probably would've been faced with some very similar issues as a C & P couple would.
So this actually could be argued beyond the C & P perspective of things.
Must be bad Karma-now that I have my children I refuse to even think of men,<---(dramatic dramatization but you get the picture)not until they are grown.
Well, it really depends on the couple.I'm judging only what I see here Angel.
I see hate one for another.
That's why I dont care for religion
but rather relationship.
The kids are all fighting, yet they
are spose to all have the same daddy,
and take after the big Brother.
![]()
My concern isnt that he'll join the CC.
It's the compatibility issue.
He has, praise His Holy Name!
And I didnt even ask for one.![]()
Mont if a girl is Protestant and marries a Catholic, do you still think that she should submit to his lead? If both are convinced that the faith tradition that they are in is the right one, how can either give it up for the other? I know that I could not give up the Catholic Faith for even my husband if he had been non-Catholic. I'm still not saying that a good marriage cannot exist, but it is more difficult.
God Bless,
Nancy
The Bible is clear on the God ordained leadership of men and you have admitted to a (theoretical) willingness to sin.
My sister, who attends the same church I do, is married to a non-practicing rc. She still submits to him while praying for his salvation.
Why would God tell people how to act inside an absolutely immoral institution such as slavery?
Well, it really depends on the couple.
If they genuinely love one another, then dont worry.
Besides...there is something about being a practicing Catholic that helps a marriage to last.
When i say practicing, i mean really Catholic.
Most Catholics will bend over backwards to keep the marriage going.
Well, of course you are relating what 'you' think slavery is compared to what it really was.
Slavery was a means to be fed and taken care of [usually the poor indebted themselves to the wealthier families]
Its alot like what we call 'working for a living'...except they got meals, board and whatever they needed.
Edit: Just so I am not misunderstood, there are some marriages that should never have existed in the first place, domestic violence for example, and in those cases, I see nothing wrong with divorce.
It was an alternative to starvation and criminal pursuit to survive. I'm glad we were able to disabuse you of the notion it was like what happened to the Africans much later.So you wouldn't mind if your family was owned by someone else? Your husband and children etc?
They weren't owned...Yep-two of those-and of course I held on hoping it would get better, it does not.
They weren't owned...
they were indebted for being taken care of.
BTW, slaves were [supposed to be] treated like family.
What you are equating is the more recent understanding of slavery.
Back then, the poor had to 'work' but also, they 'worked' by having everything, including living and food, for them.
So the 'agreement' was...
You work for nothing, but me taking care of you.
And someone in poverty usually wanted this.
I dont think they were mistreated, [but in some cases, as with any nasty boss you ever worked for], would help you remember that sometimes 'masters' were mean.
BUT for the most part... the person who had money could afford to house and feed someone if they in turn worked for free.
It basically wasnt like the 'whips' and being mistreated you are probably thinking about.
It was a way for them to make a living...
Some would call this similar to a groundskeeper, except in modern days, they get paid besides living there.
They weren't owned...
they were indebted for being taken care of.
BTW, slaves were [supposed to be] treated like family.
What you are equating is the more recent understanding of slavery.
Back then, the poor had to 'work' but also, they 'worked' by having everything, including living and food, for them.
So the 'agreement' was...
You work for nothing, but me taking care of you.
And someone in poverty usually wanted this.
I dont think they were mistreated, [but in some cases, as with any nasty boss you ever worked for], would help you remember that sometimes 'masters' were mean.
BUT for the most part... the person who had money could afford to house and feed someone if they in turn worked for free.
It basically wasnt like the 'whips' and being mistreated you are probably thinking about.
It was a way for them to make a living...
Some would call this similar to a groundskeeper, except in modern days, they get paid besides living there.
In the OT, there was both chattel slavery of women and foreigners and debt slavery of male ciizens. The rules for each were different. Chattel slavery of one's (male) fellow-citizen was not allowed. But having different classes of slavery for foreigners and citizen-debtors was not unknown in earlier ANE societies.They weren't owned...
they were indebted for being taken care of.
BTW, slaves were [supposed to be] treated like family.
What you are equating is the more recent understanding of slavery.
Back then, the poor had to 'work' but also, they 'worked' by having everything, including living and food, for them.
So the 'agreement' was...
You work for nothing, but me taking care of you.
And someone in poverty usually wanted this.
I dont think they were mistreated, [but in some cases, as with any nasty boss you ever worked for], would help you remember that sometimes 'masters' were mean.
BUT for the most part... the person who had money could afford to house and feed someone if they in turn worked for free.
It basically wasnt like the 'whips' and being mistreated you are probably thinking about.
It was a way for them to make a living...
Some would call this similar to a groundskeeper, except in modern days, they get paid besides living there.
There is OT law, regarding slaves who could choose to stay with their masters. They were to be set free manditorily after a number of years, but they had an option to stay for life. There would be no need for this law, if they were all chaffing to escape. The assesment that slavery was not the same, as what you are thinking I.E. slavery in America, is correct.The poor work now, they work two or three jobs to survive but they are not owned.
Sorry, but the Mosaic law put such slaves to a dilemma. They could leave, without their wives and children, or remain a slave.There is OT law, regarding slaves who could choose to stay with their masters. They were to be set free manditorily after a number of years, but they had an option to stay for life. There would be no need for this law, if they were all chaffing to escape. The assesment that slavery was not the same, as what you are thinking I.E. slavery in America, is correct.
does the whips and chains type of slavery sound to you like it would need to have a law for the slaves that wanted to stay? no? then there is predictably a difference.