M
Mmarco
Guest
Again, I see no relevant points; there are no mutual exclusive concepts. God allowed certain practices because the Hebrews was not ready to accept the perfect moral laws because of the hardness of their heart. It is very simple; we are talking about ancient peoples, and slavery was considered logical in their underdevelopped cultures.I’ll simplify it. …God saying slavery is immoral and God telling people how to buy, breed, blackmail, harm, and kill slaves are two mutually exclusive concepts.
I have already explained this; the Hebrews would have considered absurd and inacceptable such teaching and they would have rejected Moses as their leader.More importantly, why did God put his foot down on some things (like working the Sabbath. murder, rape. and celebrating the three yearly festivals) and not slavery?
No, you are wrong; a law against slavery would have never been accepted; such a law would have caused the failure of Moses’ mission.You are wrong to suggest that they were bound to own slaves in the future. If God had added an eleventh command to not own slaves then the Hebrews as a whole would not do so.
No, you are wrong; we live in a totally different society; you cannot compare our moral standards to the moral standards of ancient peoples. This is simply ridiculous.We don’t teach our children that it’s okay to hit others then expect them not to hit others as an adult. If you’re saying the Hebrew were not ready then they needed the law made clear that it’s wrong from the very start.
Certainly God teaches us what is is right and wrong; what I meant is that we remain free to choose whether obey or not.Are you serious? Are you saying God did not tell people what is right and wrong?God has created man with a free will and He respects our free will; therefore He does not “impose instructions” on us.
Au contraire; some of the Hebrews rebelled against laws that were less inacceptable than a law against slavery for their culture.They did rebel when they were told not to store excess mana.They rebelled when they were told not to make false idols, and many were killed as a result. God imposed multiple rules on his people, and those who didn’t follow were severely punished. There’s no reason whatsoever not to add slavery to that list.
A law against slavery would have not been accepted by almost the totality of the Hebrews and therefore Moses would have been rejected as a leader.
I see no relevance with the present issue.Leviticus 18:3
You must not follow the practices of the land of Egypt, where you used to live, and you must not follow the practices of the land of Canaan, into which I am bringing you. You must not walk in their customs.
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