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Guest
Well Mike, I went through your questions and decided not to post my answers (not all of which would have been to your expectations - including to #1, which I don’t think is clear at all). There are more basic issues… Like the spectrum of slavery, which you have most certainly not dismantled. In fact, it is so evident that there is indeed such a spectrum that I think it is incumbent upon you to prove that Biblical slavery (as commanded through law) IS chattel slavery - the only kind which is intrinsically evil… By the way, even though not necessarily for chattel slavery as a destination, the good old-fashioned capture-and-sell slavery we are all used to is punishable by death (Exodus 21:16)… I don’t see you talking about that.We’ve been over this. I’ve shown the many similarities between slavery as described in the Bible and more modern slavery. The idea of chattel slavery versus Biblical slavery is a fiction touted by pro-slavery Christians that is never proven or even demonstrated.
We’ve been through this as well. We don’t tell people that it’s ok to wrong if we think some of them will do it anyway. Some people are going to murder, or rape, or steal; but we tell them it’s wrong because we want to encourage that which is right.
There is no delineation in the Bible as to which types of slaves can be beaten to death with a rod. The Bible says his people can purchase slaves, which means they were not combatants against his people.
I’ve talked at length about God both setting up the social structure of the Hebrews as well as the fact that God would know of every possible social structure past, present, future, real or imagined. Lack of knowledge of a slaveless society is not a consideration when questioning why God gave specific instructions on allowing then increasing the practice of slavery among his people.
Paterfamilias is not in any way relevant to slavery. There have been many cultures for some time (even today) where the oldest male is the head of the household – all without a whiff of slavery. There’s no correlation between the two concepts.
Personally, I’ve put in a great deal of work on this matter. I’ve made specific claims and organized a series of points defending my position. The responses to what I’ve given have been vague and nebulous, unwilling or unable to address those very same points.
If you have another thought, perhaps you’d like to tackle that series of questions I gave a few posts ago. I think it will truly get to the heart of the matter and will be far more concrete than a series of potshots.
We don’t forbid every bad or immoral thing through law. For example, chain smoking is immoral - and yet do we make it illegal? No - we just make sure that smoking is not done in certain places to minimize damage to others, that nothing particularly deadly goes into cigarettes, etc. Moses allowed for a bill of divorce (and then remarriage) - this action is evil in God’s mind, but it was better to allow the people to sin in this way than to destroy their will to follow the law at all - which God will not force people to follow but will leave them to their own choices. In this way, there is a progression… The New Covenant does not have such exceptions.
I’m disappointed that you can’t see how the paterfamilias concept would be relevant. It seems a rather simple connection to make - the delegation of the administration of penal justice to the head of a household. Do you really see no relevance? Further - you seem to be assuming corporal punishment is always wrong… Is that right? Do you believe capital punishment is wrong?
The responses to all your “points” have been “vague and nebulous” at least in part because, for all the zeal to interpret a text, we have still not actually chosen a specific piece of that text to analyze! How can this be a serious Biblical criticism thread when we are not even giving anything particular to analyze!? What precise words are being used (that might be ruined by modern English)? What is the fuller context of the passage? Who precisely is speaking? What is the purpose of that speaker? What is the circumstance outside the text to which it is responding? Etc. I will return to contributing if and when someone decides to pick a particular verse to examine - unless the forum changes come before then, in which case you will not see me anymore!
In the meantime, for a whirlwind tour of slavery in Scripture, see:
biblehub.com/topical/s/slave.htm