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EphelDuath
Guest
How should Catholics view people like Spartacus?
If Spartacus did not have the right to revolt against his masters, then what right did Moses have to lead his people out of slavery?How should Catholics view people like Spartacus?
Heros.How should Catholics view people like Spartacus?
Moses had the right because God asked him to lead his people out of slavery.If Spartacus did not have the right to revolt against his masters, then what right did Moses have to lead his people out of slavery?
Don’t you think slavery being wrong had something to do with God asking Moses to lead his people out of slavery?Moses had the right because God asked him to lead his people out of slavery.
I haven’t heard that God spoke to Sparticus!
slavery in the ancient world was magnitudes different than slavery in Haiti, location of a successful slave revolt, or the American ante-bellum South (or the functional equivalent post Civil War). I don’t know what Paul would have said about slavery in the modern world, but I sure wouldn’t counsel anyone to return to the plantation.How about the story of Onesime, the slave who ran away from Philemon? He was told to return in the New Testament.
slaves in St. Paul’s time were valued members of a household, could own property (even other slaves), were often trusted managers and agents, could possibly buy their freedom. life on a deep South plantation in 1859 was unspeakable and degrading.And it depends on the effect afterwards.
Injustice but with order is superior to Justice with chaos.
If it is convinient to remain a slave, then the person must.
St. Paul is even clear on that.
that’s a non-sequitur.The Civil War was more about other things than slavery.
uh… ok. yeah.The South still had aristocratic, organic and even a Catholic way of life that opposed to industrial,egalitarian. athiest North.
either slavery was an evil that should have been ended or it was not. you don’t seem to think it was all that bad, an astonishing conclusion. slavery and all of its attendant evils was not going to end by any process short of war, in fact, recent agricultural inventions gave it new life in the mid-19th century.So they burned them to the grown. For slavery to stop is a natural process. The indians were not expected to clothe themselves the day they were baptized. Nor are entire milenia of slavery to change in a couple of years.
here, enjoy reading about slave revolts in the new world, notice how many were in nominally Catholic countries by the way it was the protestant brits who ended the slave trade by naval interdiction.And it was only in protestant countries that slaves were treated like dogs. In Catholic countries most slaves stayed after they were free because they were treated well.
the war ended in 1865. that was over 143 years ago. what is there to be against?I am not for slavery. I am against the Civil War.
correcting this would take days. regardless, it was the protestant English who ended the transatlantic slave trade.And the English were the ones who treated indians and blacks like trash.
slave revolts in Latin America, from the same source just cited and which you did not bother reading:In Latin America things were different.
It seems plausible to me. Although one would have to somehow equate “the nation or community of nations” below with the rebelling slaves. If that’s possible, all 4 criteria for “legitimate defense…” must “at one and the same time” be satisfied.…I’m sure someone here could justify a slave rebellion under the just war doctrine…
If it is voluntary then is it really slavery?There are only two ways slavery is legit.
The first is voluntary.
The second is a war situation. If an enemy combatant is captured and his life is spared (considering it is just war, though at the the thought, just by Natural Law too I think) then the one who spares it has rights over him.
Pro Domina, it says you are writing from Rome, so I assume you are Italian. As an American let me tell you that the Civil War was 100% about slavery. The South seceded from the Union because Southerners were extremely racist and were terrified at the thought of having their black slaves as equal citizens who might want to marry with their daughters. Yes, the fear of black and white interracial marriage was at the heard of the slaveowners fears. Many historical writings attest to this.The Civil War was more about other things than slavery.
The South still had aristocratic, organic and even a Catholic way of life that opposed to industrial,egalitarian. athiest North.
So they burned them to the grown. For slavery to stop is a natural process. The indians were not expected to clothe themselves the day they were baptized. Nor are entire milenia of slavery to change in a couple of years.
And it was only in protestant countries that slaves were treated like dogs. In Catholic countries most slaves stayed after they were free because they were treated well.
Yes. Saint Paul tells slaves to be obedient to their masters out of love and in the same breath he tells masters to treat their slaves as they would their own brothers. True freedom is in Christ, so we should not be the slaves of one another but of the Lord our God.How should Catholics view people like Spartacus?