The Anti-Slavery Examiner, Omnibus eBook

American Anti-Slavery Society
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 3,526 pages of information about The Anti-Slavery Examiner, Omnibus.

The Anti-Slavery Examiner, Omnibus eBook

American Anti-Slavery Society
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 3,526 pages of information about The Anti-Slavery Examiner, Omnibus.

The spirit of slavery never seeks shelter in the Bible, of its own accord.  It grasps the horns of the altar only in desperation—­rushing from the terror of the avenger’s arm.  Like other unclean spirits, it “hateth the light, neither cometh to the light, lest its deeds should be reproved.”  Goaded to phrenzy in its conflicts with conscience and common sense, denied all quarter, and hunted from every covert, it vaults over the sacred inclosure and courses up and down the Bible, “seeking rest, and finding none.”  THE LAW OF LOVE, glowing on every page, flashes around it an omnipresent anguish and despair.  It shrinks from the hated light, and howls under the consuming touch, as demons quailed before the Son of God, and shrieked, “Torment us not.”  At last, it slinks away under the types of the Mosaic system, and seeks to burrow out of sight among their shadows.  Vain hope!  Its asylum is its sepulchre; its city of refuge, the city of destruction.  It flies from light into the sun; from heat, into devouring fire; and from the voice of God into the thickest of His thunders.

DEFINITION OF SLAVERY.

If we would know whether the Bible sanctions slavery, we must determine what slavery is.  A constituent element, is one thing; a relation, another; an appendage, another.  Relations and appendages presuppose other things to which they belong.  To regard them as the things themselves, or as constituent parts of them, leads to endless fallacies.  A great variety of conditions, relations, and tenures, indispensable to the social state, are confounded with slavery; and thus slaveholding becomes quite harmless, if not virtuous.  We will specify some of these.

1. Privation of suffrage. Then minors are slaves.

2. Ineligibility to office. Then females are slaves.

3. Taxation without representation. Then slaveholders in the District of Columbia are slaves.

4. Privation of one’s oath in law. Then disbelievers in a future retribution are slaves.

5. Privation of trial by jury. Then all in France and Germany are slaves.

6. Being required to support a particular religion. Then the people of England are slaves. [To the preceding may be added all other disabilities, merely political.]

7. Cruelty and oppression. Wives, children, and hired domestics are often oppressed; but these forms of cruelty are not slavery.

8. Apprenticeship. The rights and duties of master and apprentice are correlative and reciprocal.  The claim of each upon the other results from his obligation to the other.  Apprenticeship is based on the principle of equivalent for value received.  The rights of the apprentice are secured, equally with those of the master.  Indeed, while the law is just to the master, it is benevolent to the apprentice.  Its main design is rather

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The Anti-Slavery Examiner, Omnibus from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.