R
Reepicheep
Guest
God did not give HIs people the green light. God did not say it was okay to rape, kill or blackmail slaves. God knew His people were going to do this no matter what He said.The fact that God gives his people the green light to purchase slaves from neighboring nations; the fact that he said slaves could be raped, manslaughtered, and blackmailed; the fact that God multiple times calls slaves property, these facts should dispel the fiction of chattel slavery versus Biblical slavery. Slavery is cruel in the Bible and outside of it.
What God did was put at least some limit on it, to reduce the cruelty involved. Consider that when God brought them out of Egypt they wailed about how hungry they were and talked about all the good food they’d had in Egypt. Exodus 16. (Which was nonsense. They had been slaves in Egypt and their babies were being murdered to keep their numbers down.) Then when God gave them manna–* literally *food falling out of the sky for them to gather-- many of them disobeyed His simple order not to keep any overnight because God would give them more each morning. Then they disobeyed the order not to gather any on one day out of the week, even though they were shown that what they gathered on the sixth day would remain fresh for the seventh day.
If they wouldn’t obey over such a simple thing how could they be trusted to obey when God told them not to take slaves from among those they defeated in war?
They would not have obeyed. But God commanded that at least they show some measure of mercy to the slaves, and that command they (usually) respected.
Consider again that Christ told the Pharisees that Moses accepted the practice of divorce *because the hearts of the Israelites were hard. * Mark 10. They would have done it no matter what. So Moses required that they at least give the divorced woman a document to prove she had been properly married in the first place. Moses was not condoning divorce, he was conceding it would happen anyway. (“But in the beginning it was not so.”)
He gave detail on *reducing * the misery and cruelty upon slaves.If God were silent on the matter of slavery it would have been better than what it’s claimed he did say. He approved of its use and gave great detail on how to invoke misery and cruelty upon slaves. There is no conflict between proclaiming the Gospel and not telling people that it’s ok to own and harm slaves.
Here’s an example. Deuteronomy 21: 10-14. If you want that captive woman for your bed, first you’ve got to marry her. Also you give her a full month to prepare so she’s not just being grabbed out of the prisoner pool and forced into bed. And you can’t sell her off like any other slave if you get tired of her.
This is barbaric by our (21st century North American) standards, but it’s head and shoulders above the normal practice in all the other nations that surrounded Israel. And again it was not a choice between having slavery and not having slavery; the Israelites wouldn’t give up divorce because their hearts were hardened. What chance was there that they would give up slavery?