- Joined
- Feb 19, 2011
- Location
- Germany
What about the real Bible vs Bible? I mean, the American churches split over and over in the decades before ... for sure there were more versions than just a universal King James Bible available?
For at least 1,500 years, religion sided with slavery for the most part. Southerners didn't have to 'invent' or 'force' any interpretation, however, the abolitionists were the ones that had to 'force' a new interpretation.
What then would you call slavery in Ethiopia, brown people deciding what was best for society in disregard of the darker brown people?
I believe I've already stated that I believe the New Testament is a product of the early Greek philosophers and their beliefs in justice, virtue, etc. Paul was educated in Greek philosophy.
Doesn't the below sound familiar?
http://blogs.loc.gov/law/2012/02/abolition-of-slavery-in-ethiopia/
Emperor Haile Selassie had a twofold diagnosis as to why his predecessors' efforts to curb or end slavery had failed: a combination of failure to put in place enforcement mechanisms to accompany numerous laws issued over the years, and the enormity of the problem due to the fact that slavery was "deeply rooted in tradition" (Haille Sellassie, Vol. I, p. 80; Vol. II, P. 175). He was convinced that "it was impossible to uproot such an ancient institution simply by writing laws." He also feared that a sudden end to slavery would create an influx of a large underclass with no means to support itself; that would have created two million destitute people overnight (Pankhurst, 1968, p. 118; Comyn-Platt p. 164).
Same source. This also sounds familiar.
Ethiopia also needed to show results in its fight to end slavery so as to deny European powers an excuse they could use to take it over, particularly Britain, France and Italy, whose colonies at the time surrounded it.
This was particularly true for Britain, whose opposition to slavery in Ethiopia was "based primarily on imperialist and strategic designs,"
As far as I know, the King James Version was the one used by almost all churches, other than those who used non-English translations.What about the real Bible vs Bible? I mean, the American churches split over and over in the decades before ... for sure there were more versions than just a universal King James Bible available?
Fluff. The Gospel had nothing to do with slavery in America. The words can be interpreted to mean anything one likes to believe. Pray with venomous snakes? Sure. Peyote? OK. Polygamy? Why not? James Jones? Could he have had a good idea?
One tends to find in the Bible whatever one's justification needs.
You put your finger on a contradiction they realized...if slavery was a good thing,.,why not open the slave trade? One preacher went so far as to say that God led the Negros to the west coast of Africa to await passage to the New World where they could learn the blessings of Christianity! Yes that is what he said!OK, I get it, I think.
It was a sin to bring slaves to America and use them as slave laborers.
But it was not a sin to keep the descendants of those stolen in slavery. In fact, "religion" had nothing to do with it, it was a matter of whites determining how best society should be, for themselves.
- Alan
All men are by nature equal, made all of the same earth by one Workman... Plato
Yet if one reads Plato's Republic, they'll understand he meant equal before the Creator only. IMO, the New Testament is more of an offshoot of Plato and the early Greek philosophers than the Old Testament or Judaism.
OK, I get it, I think.
It was a sin to bring slaves to America and use them as slave laborers.
But it was not a sin to keep the descendants of those stolen in slavery. In fact, "religion" had nothing to do with it, it was a matter of whites determining how best society should be, for themselves.
- Alan
What does Ethiopia have to do with a discussion of slavey in the US? Are you saying that Ethiopia was a role model for US slavery... or what?
- Alan
Catholics did not use the King James.As far as I know, the King James Version was the one used by almost all churches, other than those who used non-English translations.
Thank you, Alan, for tying this talk about members' views on religion and theology into the Civil War, where it should be.I have not read this book from cover to cover, but I own it and use it as a reference. Very interesting and comprehensive. It should be available at large libraries.
God's Almost Chosen Peoples: A Religious History of the American Civil War - George Rable
Throughout the Civil War, soldiers and civilians on both sides of the conflict saw the hand of God in the terrible events of the day, but the standard narratives of the period pay scant attention to religion. Now, in God's Almost Chosen Peoples, Lincoln Prize-winning historian George C. Rable offers a groundbreaking account of how Americans of all political and religious persuasions used faith to interpret the course of the war.
Examining a wide range of published and unpublished documents--including sermons, official statements from various churches, denominational papers and periodicals, and letters, diaries, and newspaper articles--Rable illuminates the broad role of religion during the Civil War, giving attention to often-neglected groups such as Mormons, Catholics, blacks, and people from the Trans-Mississippi region. The book underscores religion's presence in the everyday lives of Americans north and south struggling to understand the meaning of the conflict, from the tragedy of individual death to victory and defeat in battle and even the ultimate outcome of the war. Rable shows that themes of providence, sin, and judgment pervaded both public and private writings about the conflict. Perhaps most important, this volume--the only comprehensive religious history of the war--highlights the resilience of religious faith in the face of political and military storms the likes of which Americans had never before endured. George Rable
![]()
- Alan
Nevertheless, most Baptists at the time were not inclined to support any revision of the KJV. At the meeting of the Society held in 1850, many members strongly objected to the project. A report of the meeting records that one member (Mr. Turnbull of Hartford, Conn.) protested that "He must confess that his reverence for the Bible had been greatly wounded by the language which had been used in regard to the imperfections of the present version. He did not like to hear it said that it contained 20,000 errors. Dr. Blaney had said the same thing of the Greek original from which the translation was made, but upon examination they proved of a very insignificant character. He hoped that these trivial imperfections, whether in a Greek manuscript or in the English version, would not be forced into a magnitude which did not belong to them." Another member (the Rev. Dr. Ide) waxed eloquent with the following words: "We have learned this English Bible at our mother's knee. Ought we to shake the confidence of the people? Can you put any stop to the course of the Infidel, if you thus shake the confidence of the community in the Bible? Whatever differences there may be between the various denominations of Christians, while we have that good old English Bible, there is a broad golden band that unites us all together—that still makes us one family and household of faith. If we have a new Bible, this band will be sundered. We shall be the Ishmaelites of Christendom. Even if we voted for a new version, it would be impossible to carry it into effect. You may appoint a congress of theologians; but think you that the associations of two hundred and forty years can thus be erased? Think you that Christians who have learned to lisp their Saviour's name from this book, can thrust it aside and take up with a new version? Dear old English Bible! we will not forsake thee ... " 3 Near the end of this emotional assembly, Cone expressed his disappointment: