Dave Ellis
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- Dec 27, 2011
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Thanks. I overlooked these two verses.
But you mis-interpreted the message. These two verses suggest the master CAN punish his slave. But you made it to: A master "wants to" abuse his slave. To punish without a good reason is to abuse. These two verses may apply exactly the same to parents-child relationship.
If I did not do anything wrong, why would you want to beat me? Just because you pay a price for me? If I made a serious mistake, so you beat me. What can I say beyond accept the punishment? If you hurt me in the punishment, then you SHOULD try to heal me after the punishment. If your effort of healing is not effective and I died of the injury, then according to God, it is OK.
This rule warns slaves: Do not make mistake. Do what a slave should do. It also warns the master: Do not over-do the punishment if the slave made mistakes.
I don't see anything wrong in this issue.
The thing is however there's no rules against abusing your slave. The master can choose to beat the slave for whatever reason he wants to.
Lots of men beat their wives or children for little to no reason at all even in modern day society. Anger issues, etc could be the cause of that.
Except in the modern day, we have laws against those things. Your god however does not, the abusive master is free to beat his slave as long as the injuries aren't severe enough to be fatal within two days.
If you don't see why there's something wrong with a legal system like that, I don't know what to say to you.
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