How many times do you need me to repeat the same thing? No, the bible does not condemn slavery - do you want me to repeat that in 10 different ways or something?
I'm just hoping the significance of it will dawn on you if we discuss it often enough. Once you see why it's important that the Bible does
not condemn slavery and
does say good things about it, you'll be able to see that the Bible has a pro-slavery position. I mean, I'm amazed anyone needs it explained to them that a book that says "you can take slaves like this, you're allowed to beat them as much as you like because they belong to you, you shall keep them for life, and (speaking to the slaves) it is good and right for you to obey your masters even if they are cruel to you..."
...
I'm amazed anyone can read that and not see it as what it is: a pro-slavery position.
1) You were born in a period when slavery is no longer practised, primarily due to economics. As you are no longer required to do anything about it, you can happily accept slavery in your own time and look back and condemn those in the past who practised it directly. Do you understand? We look back into the past and based on how we think now, we make judgements about what other people did then.
What an absurd argument. So the people who were born when slavery was extensively practised - say, the nineteenth century - they should not have objected to it? They should have accepted that it was "just the way things were"?
The more you try to defend the Bible, the closer you get the the arguments of those Christians - like Pastor Warren - who defended slavery. You claim to despise him, but you and he are on the same side, with some very similar sentiments.
2) People living thousands of years ago had very different ethical concerns about a number of things, things that mean little or nothing to you or I now: why? BECAUSE OF WHEN AND WHERE WE WERE BORN. Capisch? What we think now means something to us, WHAT WE THINK NOW MEANS NOTHING TO SOMEONE WHO LIVED 3000 YEARS AGO. Do you understand, or not? If not, what don’t you understand?
OF course I understand. It's extremely simple. People lived in different times and thought different things. Now do you understand that they were wrong to enslave others? That taking people against their will and forcing you to serve them on pain of punishment or execution os a bad thing to do, no matter what period in history you are living in? Or do you not agree? Do you think that the slavers in Biblical times were acting in a morally acceptable manner?
Like people in the OT and NT times, you accept that slavery is practised, the only difference being it is not practiced on your doorstep. Unlike the people portrayed in the NT, you actually fund slavery. In what way is your acceptance of slavery any different to theirs? In what way is your funding of slavery not ‘pro-slavery’? Careful - this requires actual intellectual honesty.
I'm fine with intellectual honesty, thank you. To answer your question, my acceptance of the "slavery" practised in our times is different to theirs in that I recognise that slavery is wrong, even if I am not in a position to do anything about it. Why, isn't that the way you see things too?
Well, those aren’t political/social issues as slavery was, so that is a little disappointing. But if that is what you have, it’s a starting point - why does the bible condemn those things, and not slavery? Please think it through and have a stab at an answer based on real factors rather than abstract notions.
I imagine the Bible condemns avarice, lust, murder and theft because these are things that directly threaten the group itself, whereas slavery is a more abstract practice, only hurting "other" people not inside the society. Why, do you have a different answer? And for that matter, do you now get the point, that the Bible often condemns things as sinful without necessarily having to eradicate them from society?
You seem to think that I am asking why nowhere in the Bible did people not take the step of wiping out slavery. What backward thinking! I'm asking why nobody in the Bible criticised slavery. The answer, of course, is that they saw it as a good thing.
Sure, I see it as wrong BECAUSE I WAS BORN IN THE 20th CENTURY. Do you understand? Based on what I think now, I look back and think ‘oh, that was wrong’. THIS BEARS NO RELATION WHATSOEVER TO WHAT PEOPLE THOUGHT 3000 years ago. If you don’t understand this, please explain why.
Of course I understand. What I don't understand is what you think of the people who lived three thousand years ago. You say that kidnapping, enslaving and torturing people is wrong. Good for you! Does that mean that you think the people who did this three thousand years ago were acting immorally?
So what would be the literal negation - ‘I can’t possibly inconvenience myself in order to take any sort of action whatsoever against slavery, but believe me, I really am anti-slavery in spirit’? I’m sure that kids working in a cadmium mine would greatly appreciate your generous feelings.
Dramatic flourishes aside, I'm glad you've now grasped the point: that one can be opposed to something even though unable to take direct action against it. I ask, then: were the writers of the Bible / God / Jesus opposed to slavery, even though they did not see it as their mission to wipe it out? You've said that the Bible does not condemn slavery (and
not saying "kidnapping and torturing people into service is bad" is bad enough!) but do you think they saw it as a bad thing, whether they actively opposed it or not?