Jok
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- Jul 9, 2019
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I’m of the opinion that a command to end slavery would not have gotten off of the ground because it would have been too much too soon to throw at a world that would have laughed in the face at such a demand. Fast forward 1700 years post NT and it slowly but surely became a serious consideration of possibility in the world. But I think the major disconnect between Christians and non-Christians on this view is that the Christian says the world was far from being primed enough back then for such a push to take root, for such a push to gain serious consideration back then. Whereas the non-Christian is saying no you could have set the trend in motion back then.I has nothing to do with human nature, but on what the God of the Old Testament commanded. He literally commanded slavery through his laws.
So if you are God (and if my analysis is accurate) then an attempt to prematurely eradicate the practice of slavery would not only fail, but it would also completely overshadow the theological message of the Bible.
If anything, I would actually expect a NT push for abolishing slavery to be more of a practical possibility than the OT making a push for it. In the OT the Hebrews were merely trying to carve out their existence in a tiny slab of land, and they were merely trying to not trip over their own feet at worshiping neighboring gods (which they failed at). At least by the time of Jesus you had the pieces set up to where the worldview of Christianity was about to spread throughout the entire world. I know some would find it ironic because the anger is always geared towards the OT slavery laws, but I would actually expect it to be more likely that people complain about the NT not trying to speak out about slavery. However, IMO the undertow of slavery being written into the fabric of reality was still far too strongly entrenched even for a realistic push to be made against it in the 1st century.
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