Are you REALLY interested in understanding this complex subject? Or is this just an easy talking point?
If the former, it’s all covered here:
Paul Copan: Did God Sanction Slavery in the Old Testament?
youtube.com/watch?v=CyLpygp4eSE
I’ll get to everyone else’s responses later but here’s my reaction to that 45 minute video. The parts outside of parentheses are the gists of each section. The parts in parentheses are my responses.
2:08 - People when they see slavery in the Bible they associate it with slavery in Antebellum South.
2:39 - Harriet Beecher Stowe said there was no protection for the slave’s life.
3:02 - Sam Harris said that the Old Testament considers slaves as farm equipment.
3:58 - In the Old Testament slavery is more like indentured servitude where it’s a contractual arrangement.
5:00 - The maximum term was seven years (He specifically ignores women, children, and those bought or born into slavery).
5:17 - Don’t be confused by terms “bought” and “sold” It means contractual terms, and once you were done you were free. (Again, when the Bible mentions slaves being bought and sold it is for those from neighboring nations – who were served until they died).
5:56 - He compares slaves to professional athletes (Once again he neglects even the most basic critical thinking, because athletes can retire at any time. Try and see if a slave can retire. Also let’s see the owner of the Cavs try and beat LeBron James with a staff.)
6:47 - “Servitude in ancient Israel was voluntary.” (HA! HA! HA! Note that there are no disclaimers, caveats, exemptions in his statement.)
7:34 - The family gets “parceled out” (which differs from indentured servitude, despite his earlier false contention that they were one and the same)
8:50 - He mentions that Israelite servants would eventually be released. (Good: This time he made the distinction between Israelite slave and non-Israelites slaves. Bad: It slipped his mind that this doesn’t count female Israelite slaves, children born of Isarelite slaves, and that a male Israelite slave would have to choose between freedom and any family gained during his servitude.)
9:08 - The male Israelite slave would be free after 7 years “unless he wants to attach himself to that household and remain with it for the rest of his life.” (He again skips over the fact that the reason why someone would choose not to be set free was due to blackmail – as arranged and approved by God – where a man choose his family over freedom.)
10:00 - “Servitude was not imposed by someone from the outside” (Again, HA!)
10:57 - The dignity of servants in Israel is kept because those who were freed became full citizens (To that I say, big deal. While slaves they have NO dignity. God himself calls them property.)
11:53 - Gleening (sp?) laws meant leaving the corners of the land uncut for the poor to feed from. (That’s great. Too bad it didn’t help those enslaved.)
12:29 - There were laws against charging interest. (Too bad it didn’t help those enslaved.)
13:00 - Poorer people were allowed to make lower-end animal sacrifices (Too bad it didn’t help those enslaved.)
13:22 - Debts could be cancelled every 7 years (Too bad it didn’t help those enslaved.)
13:46 - He says that Mosaic Law isn’t necessarily God’s intention. (He clearly hasn’t read his Bible, since the rules regarding slaves in the Old Testament come directly from God.)
14:22 - Ankura (sp?) Bible Dictionary said the Bible is the first instance of treating slaves as human beings (This despite God calling slaves property and the allowing of heinous things that one normally can not due to a person. Besides all that it’s yet another case of
moral relativism.)
14:40 - “Three remarkable provisions in Israel” If southerners in the United States had taken in the following provisions, and used the Old Testament as a model, slavery would not have been a problem: #1. Anti-harm laws, i.e. set free if one loses an eye or tooth. (I’m curious to see if he mentions Exodus 21:20-21, since that allows for beatings and for manslaughter.) He also mentions that no such laws existed in the antebellum South. (That’s not entirely true. Not IN ANYWAY to defend slavery then, but there were a few “southern codes” that made it against the law for masters to be cruel to their slaves. #2. Laws that didn’t require runaway slaves to be returned to their masters (Shouldn’t thefact that there were runaway slaves show that often being a slave was harsh and cruel?) #3. Anti-kidnapping laws (Here he’s ignore the fact that God told his people he could purchase slaves from neighboring nations. So it’s not ok to kidnap someone but it was ok to
purchase from another someone who was kidnapped.)
18:00 - No other nation held the master to account for his own slaves. (Again that’s not entirely true. Besides looking at the Bible shows such a threshold to be embarrassingly low. And once again we are neck-deep in
moral relativism.)