Donald asks what makes slavery wrong and why it's so offensive that everyone should recognize how horrific it is simply by thinking about it. I say that there's nothing that makes slavery itself wrong, nothing that should make people so horrified that they should think slavery itself is wrong. People are often rightly horrified about some of the practices of slavery that the world has seen. What's horrific about those cases is not the slavery itself, though. It's other factors.
Donald actually gives a hint of movement in the direction I'm thinking when he acknowledges that a serf's role in the socioeconomic system of the middle ages wasn't much better than that of a slave, and an indentured servant is a little more autonomous than that. I don't think that's the right way to look at it, but that's a good start. What's more accurate, I would say, is that there's a scale from those most enslaved to those least enslaved, and each case of enslavement is thus a matter of degree. I'm a slave to my employers. They don't have as much control over me as slaveowners in the 19th century U.S. South did, but they have enough control over me that it's not entirely inaccurate to describe me as a waged slave working under their authority and serving their needs. In exchange, they give me some money. 19th century U.S. plantation slaves didn't get money in exchange, but they did get food and shelter out of the deal. The conditions they lived under were terrible, but the difference between them and me is really only a matter of degree. It's a great degree of difference, but there's a whole continuum between the two cases.
I think that Parableman may be using the definition of slavery broader than is usually meant when people talk about it. As it's commonly used, slavery implies a relationship of absolute control. That definition, however, would probably exclude slavery as it is described in the Torah, and the translations don't really make the distinction. In his next post, Jeremy then defends slavery to Christ, which is undeniably an aspect of our relationship to him:
He asked me if I thought there was any biblical support for the view that slavery is always wrong in itself, and I thought for a few seconds before responding that the Bible tells us that we're all slaves. He then knew that I was thinking along the same lines he was, and we proceeded to work through some of the things the Bible says about slavery. The first and most obvious is that everyone is a slave. That's just all too clear, even in the translations that hide the slave language and make it come out as servant language. There's enough slave language there to see it. We're slaves to sin in our fallen state, and Christians are made slaves to Christ. Now Paul also says when he uses such terminology that only the slave to Christ is truly free, but the point is that we are slaves, one way or the other. It's just a fact that the Bible says that. Christians can't dance around it and pretend slavery is inherently wrong if it's right for us to be in a master-slave relationship with Christ. That was the starting point for me and Wink in our truly radical (but I think biblical) view that slavery is not in itself wrong.
The second observation to draw, once you see that it can be morally ok to be in a master-slave relationship, even for the master, is that slavery is not just ok for Paul. To be a slave to the perfect master is actually freeing. We have more freedom in not being bound to sin and death when we are slaves of the perfect master. What this means is that slavery doesn't just exist on a continuum between absolute control and absolute license. There's at least a third dimension, one not of how much control (or lack thereof) the master exercises but of how righteous the master is. A truly righteous master will seek the good of the slave. No mere human being can do this perfectly, of course, but the principle of the good master freeing the slave not by abandoning the master-slave relationship but by making it a righteous relationship is not just a theoretical device I'm using to make a point. It's what the Bible says the Christian's relationship with God truly is.
I agree that a relationship of absolute power over us is perfectly okay for God, because God has that right. I would argue that for any mere mortal to have that sort of absolute control is not right, primarily because for him to have it would be to claim authority which is rightfully God's. This is what Jeremy points out is the Lockean argument for human rights. And I think that for a human to have this sort of control is wrong no matter what it's called, whether it's the power of the Roman Emperor over a citizen, a king over his knight, a master over his slave, or a father over his son. In fact, in Roman law, the distinction between son and slave in this matter was razor thin. The patriarch of the household had patria potestas, absolute authority over his wife, sons, daughters, and slaves. Everything they owned, including their own lives, belonged to him, and he could do as he pleased. Fortunately, custom, and eventually law, frowned upon capricious use of the patriarch's authority.
I think that Jeremy and I do largely agree on this matter, except for definitions, but for that we can blame dictionaries (to which I lend less weight than to the common usage and sense of the word) and the failure of the English language to distinguish between American slavery, Roman slavery, and Torah slavery.
Related Posts (on one page):
- Parableman on Slavery
- Slavery and Christianity, Part 2
- Slavery and Christianity, Part 1




