Buttons*
Glass half Panda'd
This comes from the thread "Sarah Palin and Religion" : http://www.religiousforums.com/forum/general-religious-debates/78431-sarah-palin-religion-4.html
It begins on post #16 with Kathryn.
Some of us got off topic, and we deserve a new thread. I'm not sure if this topic has been explored before. But if it has, I'm sorry!
Anyway, to shortly give a brief of the argument:
Kathryn's position is that slavery is not considered OK in the New Testament of the Bible, thus, the United States is being punished by God because of their history with slavery. Whenever slavery is mentioned in the NKJ version of the New Testament, it only means "indentured servant" or "field hand" but never "slave." She sites the passage "Do unto others as you would have them do unto you" as evidence that Jesus would never have been OK with one group of people having slaves. (Please let me know if this is wrong Kathryn, that way I can ask the mods to change it. )
Buttons*' position is that slavery has always been a part of humanity save for the last 200-300 years. Jews owned slaves, as did any other sociological group in history. Further, Christians owned slaves up until 200-300 years ago also. There is evidence for this fact. I argue that God would not punish us for this evil, because while the New Testament doesnt' encourage slavery, it also doesn't see it as "evil" or "bad." If God had seen slavery as wrong or bad, he would have not given the OK for Jews to have slaves in the first place.
If we accept Kathryn's opinion, this could imply that the Jews are still paying for their "crime" of slavery as well!
I also argue that while Jesus doesn't mention slavery directly, he also fails to mention homosexuality, the problem of evil, and other ontological arguments - he jsut doesn't mention these things. If Jesus does mean to treat people well, that could mean that slavery is still OK as long as they are treated humanely. I feel that if Jesus had been wealthy, he would have owned slaves. Similarly, if we look at the forefathers of the United States, we see that all the men who wrote the Declaration of Independance and the Constitiution of the United States also felt slavery was OK, even though they claimed that all men are created equal.
It begins on post #16 with Kathryn.
Some of us got off topic, and we deserve a new thread. I'm not sure if this topic has been explored before. But if it has, I'm sorry!
Anyway, to shortly give a brief of the argument:
Kathryn's position is that slavery is not considered OK in the New Testament of the Bible, thus, the United States is being punished by God because of their history with slavery. Whenever slavery is mentioned in the NKJ version of the New Testament, it only means "indentured servant" or "field hand" but never "slave." She sites the passage "Do unto others as you would have them do unto you" as evidence that Jesus would never have been OK with one group of people having slaves. (Please let me know if this is wrong Kathryn, that way I can ask the mods to change it. )
Buttons*' position is that slavery has always been a part of humanity save for the last 200-300 years. Jews owned slaves, as did any other sociological group in history. Further, Christians owned slaves up until 200-300 years ago also. There is evidence for this fact. I argue that God would not punish us for this evil, because while the New Testament doesnt' encourage slavery, it also doesn't see it as "evil" or "bad." If God had seen slavery as wrong or bad, he would have not given the OK for Jews to have slaves in the first place.
If we accept Kathryn's opinion, this could imply that the Jews are still paying for their "crime" of slavery as well!
I also argue that while Jesus doesn't mention slavery directly, he also fails to mention homosexuality, the problem of evil, and other ontological arguments - he jsut doesn't mention these things. If Jesus does mean to treat people well, that could mean that slavery is still OK as long as they are treated humanely. I feel that if Jesus had been wealthy, he would have owned slaves. Similarly, if we look at the forefathers of the United States, we see that all the men who wrote the Declaration of Independance and the Constitiution of the United States also felt slavery was OK, even though they claimed that all men are created equal.