CR:Jefferson did not do any "rising" that I can see. Before he wrote his Declaration he had slaves and after he wrote his Declaration he had slaves. And so the only lesson that need be learned here is that you not project your own thoughts into Thomas Jefferson's head. All men. Didn't include his black slaves. Or so reports the circumstance of his life.
The next lesson to be learned is simply that you need to learn how to read documents. Ever hear of this thing that we call "context"? With context in mind, does the Torah say that its God requires that one must own a slave? No, the Torah says no such thing. And what period of time are we talking about here, is this the beginning of human history under discussion, or some later point in time? Later point in time. Query then, why is the subject matter of slavery being addressed? The subject matter of slavery is being addressed because humans, all on their very own and without any word or encouragement from the Torah's God, have made other humans their slaves [or so reports the Torah].
That's the singular point that you don't seem get [and you're not alone]. This word on slavery isn't being uttered in reference to acts and/or events that occurred at or near inception [as it were]. But if one goes there, as the Torah does report on acts and events at and near inception, well, in this regard the Torah says: And created God ha-adam in his own image, in the image of God he created him, male and female he created them. So, good examiner of documents that you are, what is the lesson of the Torah? The same as my Lord's: Because of the hardness of your hearts Moshe permitted you... And we say that because in the intervening period when the Torah's God gave no word, or so reports the Torah, humans had made other humans their slaves, and so slavery needed to be addressed. And so the question for the student of the Torah is, just who are you, claimed servant of the Torah's God, to despise the image of the Torah's God such that you would make that image your slave?
In other words, the Torah reports that its God gave the standard at inception, but that it was us, and Jefferson, who left us with the circumstance wherein just about every society of humans alive at that time had slaves. And so what was the Torah's God to do? Hold that thought, since we'll come back later to the question, how does one change the morality of a people.
Some soul here otherwise used the phrase "chattel slavery". The Torah does not, repeat, does not permit "chattel slavery". And, yes, I know, the text says that "he is your property", but problem with that is, when one finds lost property, one is supposed to return the lost property to its owner [see Article IV, Section 2 of the US Constitution]. But here, the slave fleeing into Israel is treated as free. So the slave is not chattel. We also do not "liberate" chattel [once every seven years for Jewish slaves]. And have you considered the notion that with the announcement of the ordinance reporting that every slave escaping into Israel is treated as free, that the Torah's God was inviting the slaves in other lands to flee to freedom in Israel? What does that say?
And have you considered the economic implications here? Presumably, one likes to have trade and travel between nations and peoples. How does that work here when the foreigner relies on slave labor, which may very well include personal attendants? Is he to bring his slaves into Israel so that they might run away and claim asylum? So whatever else that you might be inclined to think here, don't think that this "gawd"'s words on slavery were not without cost to the proponents of slavery. And maybe the other thought here is that humans, while emotional, are not always irrational and so maybe Mr. Slavemaster treats his slaves kindly so that they won't flee to Israel and freedom.
Another thought here is that we have two sets of rules, one for the foreign slave and one for the Jewish slave. And so there's tension in the air, or there ought to be, since the other ordinance reported by the Torah is: You shall have one law, both for the native son and the foreigner who lives among you.
And for more on, Be Kind To Slaves Week, have you read those words about what might happen if the Jewish slave loves his master and doesn't want to leave when his seven years are up? Now why wouldn't the slave want to leave? Because his master treated him better than anyone else ever did and so his needs were well cared for and so why go? And why would the Torah even mention this desire? I mean, free the Jewish slave at 7 years and if he wants to stay, well, it's his choice, and so he can stay if he wants to, what do I care? And so maybe it isn't even necessarily about the master being all that great, but maybe when compared to other prospects once free, well, the master does have the duty to care for his slave and so maybe the option is extended so as to give the slave
the llegal right to choose the better alternative? Ever consider that? What was life like for most people back then? Nasty, brutish, and short? But if it's true that the Torah's God gave the slave the legal right to choose in his best interest, well, then what does that say about the Torah's God in relation to both the slave and the institution of slavery itself?
And so you know, we have the Torah's God giving the Ten Words, then we have some instruction on how to build an altar, and then we have a break. Then we have the "ordinances". They start off with the Hebrew slave. But shouldn't the slave, as a class, be addressed last since slaves, as a class, are last on the human totem pole? Since you spoke of Christianity in relation to slavery, is addressing the slave first a hint of what my Lord meant when he said, the first shall be last and the last shall be first?
And so you in reading the document, any document, you might want to ponder the context and ask yourself some questions before you expound on the meaning of those documents [here, your claim that the Torah's God is some big fan of slavery]. And what was it again that you want me to own up to? I can't own up to your inability to consider history and context when reading a document, as that failing is all your own. I otherwise have no problem in admitting that any number of humans calling themselves "Christian", a rather large number, also failed to consider history and context in relation to their faith and so accomplished that abomination that we call holding persons in involuntary servitude. But that doesn't make the Torah bad, it makes those people bad. Or you might say that the Torah is witness against them.
The only remaining item here is your rather erroneous belief in this thing that you call, "progress". Sorry, CR, but you've been brainwashed by the US public education system. There is no such thing as "progress", unless by "progress" you simply and only mean to say that time moves inexorably forward, and without any consideration of "morality".
Your belief in progress otherwise makes you an exponent of American genocide, as in our case "progress" was summed in two words, Manifest Destiny. And since the indigenous peoples of this land were in the way of your progress, they had to either be extirpated or pushed aside. And now simply recall those words from the interview of professor James Loewen:
"I have to say that the task of puncturing myths was much harder for me in Vermont than in Mississippi. It's fairly easy for someone coming into Mississippi from outside to see what the white supremacists have gotten wrong about the state's past. But myths about Indians are national myths -- or lies. They are harder to detect, because almost all of us "know" things about Native Americans that are wrong. So it's harder for us, especially for non-Indians, to step outside our education and culture and realize when we are making the same kinds of mistakes.
This is particularly true because we have a national myth that we might even call an archetype -- the archetype of progress. It tells us that the U.S. started out great and that we've been getting better in every way ever since. I really do believe that is the underlying myth that provides the basic story line of American history as it is taught in most K-12 schools -- and certainly as taught in the textbooks that are presented K-12."Yeah, progress, a myth that brainwashed you holds dear. And also call yours an ideology of contradiction and fallacy. The one fallacy is your notion of progress and part of the contradiction is simply that here you are on AD saying that we are moving inexorably forward to some better state but yet you agree with the idea of global warming, won't deny a rather massive ecodestruction, and you otherwise wonder just which humans will have enough potable water to drink in the not so distant future. And so here you are, speaking of progress, when you believe in a global warming, ecodestruction, and a shortage of potable water that has us on the road to oblivion. In case you never got the word, there's nothing more moral than our mere survival. So please, rethink your notion of progress.
Moif:Let me interrupt my words to CR to address you directly and so please see:
http://www.papalencyclicals.net/Eugene04/eugene04sicut.htmhttp://www.papalencyclicals.net/Paul03/p3subli.htmAnd so you paint with too broad a brush respecting the Roman Catholic Church.
And like it or not, all of what you mentioned has as witness against it that collection of works that we Christians call the Old Testament and that collection of works that we Christians call the New Testament. Those works more or less define the faith. And so there is no delusional at all. You might otherwise just as well have said that if the US Congress declares war for entirely selfish and immoral reasons, that the US Constitution is somehow to blame for the sin since it authorizes Congress to declare war[s] [as that is exactly the premise that you have on offer here]. Simply because I say that I am Christian does not make my acts "Christian". And that not only applies to bad acts, it applies to good ones as well, I mean, for all you know, maybe my sacred books forbid all acts of charity. So read the book and examine the act [or omission], and if the act [or omission] matches the book, then you can say that the book is at fault as well. Lastly, though I rather dispute that there were only two, the rest makes the point for me:
"We have been unable to find anyone other than St. Augustine and Bartholomew De Las Casas, opposing the institution of slavery prior to this time. People considered it quite appropriate for one person to own another human being as a piece of property. Paul's comment in Galatians 3:28: "There is neither Jew nor Greek, there is neither bond nor free...for ye are all one in Christ Jesus." did not appear to have been followed, except perhaps spiritually. Neither were the statements by Jesus about treating one's fellow humans accepted and applied."And so it isn't Jesus and Paul who are to blame, but those who failed to apply themselves to the faith. So blame historic Christendom all you like, but Christianity is a whole other story.
CR:To ask the question again, how do you change the morality of a people? See those words....People considered it quite appropriate? Most humans for most of our history. So what does an outright prohibition accomplish? It's one small people in one small land. And even those people are described as a disobedient and rebellious people by the work in question, and at the very time in question. So how about making a haven for slaves instead of outright prohibition? And how about otherwise reporting that shortly after inception, before there's any word on just what any human has ever thought or done, And created God ha-adam in his image...male and female he created them? Recall what I said above about despising the image of God. So how do you change a peoples' morality? You not only have to change their mind, you also have to avoid a catastrophe. So you get the last, I doubt that Mao was bent on mass murder, but his forced collectivization effort resulted in the Great Chinese Famine that resulted in the deaths by starvation of more people than you and I can count in our two lifetimes. So given that we aren't starting on day one here, again, how do you change the morality of these people?
Latly, if you want the proverbial icing on the cake re the Torah's position on the purported "ownership" of one human by another human, well, simply get yourself a good Torah commentary and you'll likely find the explanation that God called to the light, day, to establish his ownership of the light. So with the principle in mind that naming implies ownership, now consider:
"Now out of the ground the Lord God had formed every beast of the field and every bird of the heavens and brought them to the man to see what he would call them."
"And the side that the Lord God had taken from the man he made into a woman and brought her to the man."See the
bold? That is the Torah's statement of the reason why the Torah's God brought every beast and every bird to ha'adam. And note here also that this act of naming agrees rather nicely with the Torah's prior report of its God giving humans dominion over the animal creation. Now note that this statement of purpose is omitted in relation to the woman. Now note that the Torah does not report that its God ever informed ha'adam as concerns the purpose[s] of the event[s]. Now recall that ha'adam names the woman.
So whose is at fault for slavery? Quite simply, your statement re the Torah and Christianity and slavery is absurd and preposterous when the words you find objectionable are considered in context. I am otherwise wondering what purportedly more moral you is doing to end the slavery that still exists today? You telling people that the slave is in God's image and so slavery is an abomination? Didn't think so. But here is the face of modern slavery:
http://usgovinfo.about.com/library/weekly/aa061202a.htmYou know what the Torah says regarding sex and the slave, yes? So much for the human sex slave trade.