- Apr 30, 2013
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You could also make the argument that abolitionists also were searching the bible to look for justification of their position, which is why I was interested in the actual biblically based arguments of the time. Both sides were utterly convinced they were right, and it would be interesting to see their reasoning.
You are right, it wasn't the most strict "biblicist" approach- abolitionists appealed to the brutality of slavery and the humanity of enslaved peoples. I think that's part of the point. It goes back to the notion that one must use reason and experience to read the Bible as well, something Methodists and mainline Protestants agree on. Bigoted, racist southern white Christians appealed to gotcha passages and clobber verses lifted out of any sense of context.
It's one reason conservative Evangelicals resisted using the word "slave" in their ESV translation. So much of the modern project of Neo-Fundamentalism/Evangelicalism rests on obscuring the cultural context the Bible was written within.
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