Did popes owned slaves?

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“The Spirit of the Lord is on me,
because he has anointed me
to proclaim good news to the poor.
He has sent me to proclaim freedom for the prisoners
and recovery of sight for the blind,
to set the oppressed free,
to proclaim the year of the Lord’s favor.”
This mission statement can be understood to refer to both the oppressed of the Roman slave state, and the spiritual slavery of Satan.
A usual interpretation is that He was comparing the state of His (entire) audience with the Babylonian Captivity, in terms of spiritual dominion.

I’ve never seen anyone say He was referring to the physically enslaved or that the Spirit had anointed Him for a political mission to set them free. Can you cite a commentary which makes that interpretation?

I’m never sure which commentaries Catholics use, those I’d turn to are at biblestudytools.com/commentaries/
 
This is not to argue that “other people did worse,” but to understand the historical context and to understand gradations of moral behavior. Some forms of control of humans by other humans have always existed, and probably always will, I regret to say, as long as man rules this earth. I don’t doubt your sincerity or your essential goodness, Mike, but both of us have benefitted from a world where people work in slave-like conditions to provide us with cheap merchandise and food. Who are you or I to point a finger at the Israelites?
I agree that being citizen of the first world brings with it untold benefits, many of which have come from the work and strain of others. In those instances where I speak out against pain, suffering, and injustice yet do things that either don’t alleviate them or generate even more of them – well in those cases I am a hypocrite. Yet even when I am a hypocrite there is power in speaking out against it. Who are we to point the finger at the Israelites? Fallible men who speak to truth even when we at times ignore the truth of others pointing to us. But really my quarrel isn’t with the Israelites, or the Romans, or the Americans interning their own citizens. It’s against a collection of words which purports to speak not of truth but of “Truth”. It suggests a being far beyond our comprehension, who is not limited by the frailities of humanity yet many times speaks as a sinister fool. Whenever people on CAF talk about slavery and try to brush it aside, I’m not opposing a person or an ancient people but a concept that confuses evil for good and torture with mercy.
Much of what the Israelites did was wrong, to our eyes and our culture, but in the Christian worldview, God works to change us incrementally, through history, because as humans, we are fundamentally fallen and resistant to change for the good. I realize this is a viewpoint you probably don’t hold, but we have different starting premises. More on this in a bit.
Not just on this topic, but in practically any topic where it could be argued that the character of God is not good, I find that apologists more so than non-Christians limit the power of God. Without going too far afield, when there is a discussion as to the passage which says that a rape victim must marry her rapists I often hear how God demanded this due to the nature of Hebrew society with regards to virginity – that there is no other recourse. Yet God is God. Truly a God with such power and who can demand that no work be done on the Sabbath and demand a brother must marry his brother’s widow can state that one is to ignore the loss of virginity caused by a rapist.

Take it another way. As children we are taught some things rapidly and with no leeway, and other things that we are incrementally taught. We are taught early not to hit another. We are taught to not steal. When it comes to responsibilites we are taught incrementally, to do that which is expected of us at the appropriate ages. I think it is safe to say that something as reprehensible as slavery can not be something to be weened off of. Thou shalt not murder. Thou shalt not steal. Thou shalt not enslave.
 
If we look at what we Christians regard as the ultimate moral authority - the teachings of Christ and his apostles - then, yes, the New Testament clearly says to treat slaves decently. That really can’t be denied.
Except Jesus said he did not come to abolish the law which allowed most beatings without penalty.
What many secularists take issue with is why Jesus supposedly didn’t “explicitly” abolish or condemn slavery.
Again, not only did he not condemn it he gave instructions that demanded slaves do what is required to continue the practice.

Imagine a scenario where you tell me about the troubles you are having with your wife. I give you instruction on how to chain her up in your basement so that you won’t get caught. When you try this she runs to the police, the police go to you, and you send them to me. Can I with a straight face claim that I wasn’t explicitly advocating chaining up a woman in a basement?
This brings up a question I have never heard adequately answered - if you think Jesus had authority as a moral teacher (whether you believe He was Divine or not), why weren’t you at Mass with me this Sunday, partaking of the Eucharist?
That doesn’t make any sense. A person can think Jesus is a moral teacher without thinking that he is a) a god, and b) transubstantiated in wafer.
Clearly, Jesus commanded many things… Do you (or anyone you know) do all those things?
I come from a large Roman Catholic family and I have a few relatives who do treat women with respect, follow the Commandments, work with the poor, and go to church regularly. I think it’s ok to say that Jesus was smart in commanding that people be good to each other without making the leap that he spoke to the devil in the desert and got a retribution against a stingy fig tree.
(I’m not saying I do consistently, by the way, or that I am any better than you - I’m a sinner, as are we all.)
Even if we set aside all those other messy teachings about His Body and the Blood which you probably don’t believe - if you, or anyone else, occupying a position of, as you said, “love, compassion, sympathy and honesty” can’t consistently do all those things…what makes you think everyone would obey His rule regarding slavery?
This is another common argument I hear that doesn’t make a lot of sense. Since some people will probably ignore the command, why bother saying it? Some people are still going to murder, why command against it? Obey the Sabbath? Not if the Giants are trying to get back in the playoff hunt.
In the Bible, God has no qualms of making many demands of us, some great and some small. The idea that he would decide not to make one of the most crucial demands because at least some people might not abide doesn’t wash in the slightest.
This is often a fundamental failing in the arguments of some (not all) atheists - the belief that to know is all we need to do. That all we need is to have the right path pointed out to us, and we will choose it and then become better persons. St. Paul was a far better judge of human nature - he recognized that we know the right thing to do, but still fail to do it: “For that which I do I know not: for not what I would, that do I practise; but what I hate, that I do.”
I definitely don’t believe that a set of rules will cause people to follow them. Just look above where I talked about murder. This really all comes down to showing the faults into one of the greatest ideas in christianity, that God is good.

As I’ve mentioned, my focus isn’t on the actions of the people who follow what is said to be God’s word, but the words themselves.

As a non-christian I’ll hear various arguments which revolve around the concept of God being good and perfect. They’ll ask where I get my morals from and why I wouldn’t want to get them from God Almighty. The answer comes from the Bible itself. I’m not here trying to make people give up their christianity, but when a person has a question such as like the OP did I find it vitally important that they don’t brush it aside. I know from your posts that you’ve tackled these types of questions head-on (and let me apologize for not delving into your wonderful post about the different types of slavery in history which weren’t labeled as such). My brother is like you in that way. What irks to me no end is when people try to blow it off by adding to or taking away from the words themselves. “If he survives a day or two” is not something to be taken lightly.or misinterpeted.
(The same failing to understand human nature occurs in the atheist argument that “If God wanted us to be good, why doesn’t he just appear over Times Square?”, or “If God wanted all people to follow him, why did he appear in bronze age Jerusalem instead of in modern times?” Again, we have shown no propensity as a species to consistently act with love, compassion, sympathy, and honesty…even when we know we should. What difference would a divine light show over Times Square make?)
That’s a topic for another time, I think! 😃
Clearly, Jesus disliked slavery.
One of the few things we can agree on is how we disagree with that sentence.
Clearly also, he did explicitly condemn it.
Clearly also, his padawans condemned it. Both St. Paul and St. John did explicitly condemn it, and they weren’t known for freelancing their ideas. The times Jesus spent before his death and after it were obviously spent discussing Important Things, and the fact that both these key figures condemned slavery (although neither were themselves slaves) is the best evidence that an anti-slavery position was part of the Deposit of Faith left to His followers.
Whether the saints did or not isn’t my main thurst here, but if they did it was in opposition of what the Old Testament says.
 
Nowhere did Jesus actually condemn slavery and no evidence can be found for that.
I wonder why slavery was even abolished then?

It has been said our society in general looked to the 10 commandments when first creating basic laws for a civilized society, if this is accurate, then it makes me wonder why we went the opposite direction when it came to slavery?

It is wrong in mans eyes and I think most would agree, but maybe we dont stop to think that God may have a different opinion, and that opinion will always trump mans opinion.

Could this be an example of how the world has ‘cherry picked’ what it thought about God and what laws we should obey and other parts we should just forget about?
 
“Although some Catholic clergy, religious orders and Popes owned slaves, and the naval galleys of the Papal States were to use captured Muslim galley slaves,[4] Roman Catholic teaching began to turn more strongly against “unjust” forms of slavery in general, beginning in 1435, prohibiting the enslavement of the recently baptised,[5] culminating in pronouncements by Pope Paul III in 1537.”

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Catholic_Church_and_slavery

Is this true?
Yet another baseless slander from the internet and it took 17 post on a Catholic Answers forum for someone to print the truth that the Church has never condoned the ownership or trade in slaves. As soon as the African slave trade began in the 1400s it was immediately condemned. As for books supposedly written by a Catholic priest, Catholic priest have written all kinds of garbage about the Church that is later proven to be incorrect. The prohibition on slavery was never based on the belief system of the people either as the quotes in post 17 correctly point out.
 
mikekle #63
It has been said our society in general looked to the 10 commandments when first creating basic laws for a civilized society, if this is accurate, then it makes me wonder why we went the opposite direction when it came to slavery? Could this be an example of how the world has ‘cherry picked’ what it thought about God and what laws we should obey and other parts we should just forget about?
“Our society” and “the world” are not the Catholic Church nor Her Sacred Scriptures.

Just as Jesus explains that Moses permitted divorce because of the “hardness of your hearts” so did wayward mankind commit all sorts of atrocities which included forms of slavery – and since Christ, His Church with St Paul began to form minds and hearts to expose that evil, as with all other evils which continue to afflict mankind.

As should be obvious, mankind has continued to go in “the opposite direction” to embrace evil with remarriage after divorce, abortion, fornication, adultery, contraception, child abuse and pornography, euthanasia, IVF, sodomy – even to homosexual/lesbian “marriage”, and the slavery of passions and self-will.

It is time to face reality.
 
Even if a there was ever a Pope that owned a “slave”, is being a “slave” such a bad deal if a “slave” is treated justly and fairly? “Masters, treat your slaves justly and fairly, knowing that you also have a Master in heaven.” (Colossians 4:1)
The problem here is that the word “slave” is inflammatory. “Slave” could mean anything from disposable property, to “child.”

Christians who kept slaves were admonished to treat them in manner more similar to beloved, adopted children.
 
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