<!DOCTYPE TEI.2 SYSTEM "http://docsouth.unc.edu/dtds/teixlite.dtd" [
<!ENTITY wilson5 SYSTEM "wilson5.jpg" NDATA jpeg>
<!ENTITY wilsoncv SYSTEM "wilsoncv.jpg" NDATA jpeg>
<!ENTITY wilson6ii SYSTEM "wilson6ii.jpg" NDATA jpeg>
<!ENTITY wilson6i SYSTEM "wilson6i.jpg" NDATA jpeg>
<!ENTITY wilson6iii SYSTEM "wilson6iii.jpg" NDATA jpeg>
]>
<TEI.2>
  <teiHeader type="" status="new">
    <fileDesc>
      <titleStmt>
        <title><emph>Mutual Relation of Masters and Slaves as Taught in the Bible. </emph><emph>A  Discourse Preached in the First Presbyterian  Church, Augusta, 
Georgia, on Sabbath Morning, Jan. 6, 1861:</emph>
Electronic Edition.</title>
        <author>Wilson, Joseph R. (Joseph Ruggles),  1835-1903</author>
        <funder>Funding from the Institute of Museum and Library
 Services supported the electronic publication of this title.</funder>
        <respStmt>
          <resp>Text scanned (OCR) by</resp>
          <name>Christie Mawhinney</name>
        </respStmt>
        <respStmt>
          <resp>Images scanned by</resp>
          <name>Jeanine Cali</name>
        </respStmt>
        <respStmt>
          <resp>Text encoded by </resp>
          <name id="ns">Jeanine Cali  and Natalia Smith</name>
        </respStmt>
      </titleStmt>
      <editionStmt>
        <edition>First edition, <date>1999</date></edition>
      </editionStmt>
      <extent>ca.     40K</extent>
      <publicationStmt>
        <publisher>Academic Affairs Library, UNC-CH</publisher>
        <pubPlace>University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, </pubPlace>
        <date>1999.</date>
        <availability status="unknown">
          <p>© This work is the property of the University of North Carolina 
at Chapel Hill. It may be used freely by individuals for research, 
teaching and personal use as long as this statement of availability 
is included in the text.</p>
        </availability>
      </publicationStmt>
      <notesStmt>
        <note anchored="yes">Call number 2898 Conf.         
(Rare Book Collection, UNC-CH)</note>
      </notesStmt>
      <sourceDesc>
        <bibl>
          <title>Mutual relation of masters and slaves as taught in the Bible. 
A discourse preached in the First Presbyterian Church, Augusta, Georgia, 
on Sabbath morning, Jan. 6, 1861</title>
          <author>Joseph R. 
Wilson</author>
          <imprint>
            <pubPlace>Augusta, Georgia</pubPlace>
            <publisher>Steam Press of Chronicle &amp; 
Sentinel</publisher>
            <date>1861</date>
          </imprint>
        </bibl>
      </sourceDesc>
    </fileDesc>
    <encodingDesc>
      <projectDesc>
        <p>The electronic edition is a part of the UNC-CH
digitization project, <hi rend="italics">Documenting the American South.</hi></p>
      </projectDesc>
      <editorialDecl>
        <p>Any hyphens occurring in line breaks have been 
removed, and the trailing part of a word has been joined to 
the preceding line.</p>
        <p>All quotation marks, em dashes and ampersand have been transcribed as
entity references.</p>
        <p>All double right and left quotation marks are encoded as ” and “
respectively.</p>
        <p>All single right and left quotation marks are encoded as ’ 
and ‘ respectively.</p>
        <p>All em dashes are encoded as —</p>
        <p>Indentation in lines has not been preserved.</p>
        <p>Running titles have not been preserved.</p>
        <p>Spell-check and verification made against printed text using 
Author/Editor (SoftQuad) and Microsoft Word spell check programs.</p>
      </editorialDecl>
      <classDecl>
        <taxonomy id="lcsh">
          <bibl>
            <title>Library of Congress Subject Headings, </title>
            <edition>21st edition, 1998</edition>
          </bibl>
        </taxonomy>
      </classDecl>
    </encodingDesc>
    <profileDesc>
      <langUsage>
        <language id="gre">Greek</language>
      </langUsage>
      <textClass>
        <keywords scheme="lcsh">
          <list type="simple">
            <item>Slavery in the Bible -- Sermons.</item>
            <item>Slavery -- Southern States -- Justification -- Sermons.</item>
            <item>Slavery and the Church -- Presbyterian Church.</item>
            <item>Georgia -- History -- Civil War, 1861-1865 -- Sermons.</item>
            <item>United States -- History -- Civil War, 1861-1865 --
Sermons.</item>
            <item>Georgia -- History -- Civil War, 1861-1865 -- Religious
aspects.</item>
            <item>United States -- History -- Civil War, 1861-1865 -- Religious
aspects.</item>
            <item>First Presbyterian Church (Augusta, Ga.)</item>
            <item>Augusta (Ga.) -- Church history -- 19th century.</item>
            <item>Sermons, American -- Georgia.</item>
          </list>
        </keywords>
      </textClass>
    </profileDesc>
    <revisionDesc>
      <change>
        <date>1999-09-14, </date>
        <respStmt>
          <name>Celine Noel and Wanda Gunther </name>
          <resp/>
        </respStmt>
        <item> revised TEIHeader and created catalog 
record for the electronic edition.</item>
      </change>
      <change>
        <date>1999-06-30, </date>
        <respStmt>
          <name>Natalia 
Smith, </name>
          <resp>project manager, </resp>
        </respStmt>
        <item>finished TEI-conformant encoding and final proofing.</item>
      </change>
      <change>
        <date>1999-06-30, </date>
        <respStmt>
          <name>Jeanine Cali</name>
          <resp/>
        </respStmt>
        <item> finished TEI/SGML encoding</item>
      </change>
      <change>
        <date>1999-06-17, </date>
        <respStmt>
          <name>Christie Mawhinney</name>
          <resp/>
        </respStmt>
        <item> finished scanning (OCR) and proofing.</item>
      </change>
    </revisionDesc>
  </teiHeader>
  <text>
    <front>
      <div1 type="cover">
        <p>
          <figure id="cover" entity="wilsoncv">
            <p>[Cover Image]</p>
          </figure>
        </p>
      </div1>
      <titlePage>
        <docTitle>
          <titlePart type="main">MUTUAL RELATION OF MASTERS AND
<lb/>
SLAVES AS TAUGHT IN THE BIBLE.</titlePart>
          <titlePart type="subtitle">A DISCOURSE<lb/>
PREACHED IN THE<lb/>
FIRST PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH,<lb/>
AUGUSTA, GEORGIA,<lb/>
On Sabbath Morning, Jan. 6, 1861,
</titlePart>
        </docTitle>
        <byline>BY</byline>
        <docAuthor>JOSEPH R. WILSON, D. D., PASTOR.</docAuthor>
        <docEdition>Published by Request.</docEdition>
        <docImprint><pubPlace>AUGUSTA, GA</pubPlace>
<publisher>STEAM PRESS OF CHRONICLE  &amp;  
SENTINEL,</publisher><docDate>1861.</docDate></docImprint>
      </titlePage>
      <div1 type="front correspondence section">
        <pb id="wilson3" n="3"/>
        <head>
          <emph rend="bold">CORRESPONDENCE.</emph>
        </head>
        <div2 type="letter">
          <opener><dateline>AUGUSTA, January 7th, 1861.</dateline>
<salute>TO THE REV. DR. WILSON:—</salute></opener>
          <p>Rev. and Dear Sir:—Having heard your sermon on yesterday, and believing
it to be of such a character that its free circulation may bring
about great good, and a better understanding of the basis upon which
the relation of Master and Slave, as it exists in the Southern States, rests;
and that, to sustain us in our position, we have both “the law and the
testimony,” we earnestly ask a copy of it for publication.</p>
          <closer><salute>With sentiments of the highest esteem, we are yours,  &amp;c.,</salute>
<signed>GEO. T. JACKSON, <lb/>
ALFRED BAKER, <lb/>
J. S. WILCOX,<lb/>
J. A. ANSLEY,<lb/>
M. WILKINSON,<lb/>
W. W. ALEXANDER,<lb/>
JOHN K. JACKSON,<lb/>
C. A. ROWLAND,<lb/>
D. H. ANSLEY,<lb/>
J. W. BONES,<lb/>
T. W. CHICHESTER.</signed></closer>
        </div2>
        <div2 type="letter">
          <opener><dateline>AUGUSTA, January 8th, 1861.</dateline>
</opener>
          <p>Gentlemen:—I confess to an honest reluctance in allowing the publication
of the sermon, a copy of which you politely request. It was not
written with a view to wide circulation, nor was it prepared with 
<hi rend="italics">exclusive</hi>
reference to the present unhappy agitations of the popular mind.
You are aware that it is the closing discourse of a series upon “Family
Government,” intended for my own church, and for immediate effect at
home. But, still, its discussion may be the means of doing a service to
my slaveholding brethren throughout the State, by promoting intelligence
upon a momentous subject of practical interest to them and the whole
world. It is surely high time that the Bible view of slavery should be
examined, and that we should begin to meet the infidel fanaticism of our
infatuated enemies upon the elevated ground of a divine warrant for the
institution we are resolved to cherish. My sermon is, therefore, placed
at your disposal.</p>
          <closer><salute>Your sincere friend and servant
for Christ's sake,</salute>
<signed>JOSEPH R. WILSON.</signed>
<salute>To Messrs. Jackson, Alexander, Baker and others.</salute></closer>
        </div2>
      </div1>
    </front>
    <body>
      <div1 type="text">
        <pb id="wilson5" n="5"/>
        <head>
          <emph rend="bold">DISCOURSE.</emph>
        </head>
        <epigraph>
          <bibl>EPHESIANS, VI: 5-9:—</bibl>
          <q direct="unspecified">“Servants, be obedient to them that are your
masters according to the flesh, with fear and trembling, in singleness
of your heart, as unto Christ; not with eye-service as men-pleasers,
but as the servants of Christ, doing the will of God from the heart;
with good-will doing service, as to the Lord and not to men; knowing
that whatsoever good thing any man doeth, the same shall he receive
of the Lord, whether he be bond or free. And, ye masters,
do the same things unto them, forbearing threatening, knowing that
your Master also is in Heaven; neither is there respect of persons
with him.”</q>
        </epigraph>
        <div2 type="chapter">
          <head>I.</head>
          <p>Our attention is forcibly arrested by the very first word
of this text; “<hi rend="italics">servants</hi>.” There is no difficulty in ascertaining
its true meaning, in the original Greek. It distinctly
and unequivocally signifies “<hi rend="italics">slaves</hi>,” springing as it
does in this its substantive form from a verbal root, which
means to bind. There are several words, conveying different
shades of thought, which Grecians were accustomed to
employ in speaking of servants, inasmuch as there are
several kinds and degrees of servitude. But no one of
them does so emphatically set forth the true and simple
idea of domestic slavery as understood in these Southern
States, as the word “<foreign lang="gre"><figure id="ill1" entity="wilson5"><p>[Word in Greek]</p></figure></foreign>”—the word whose plural form
opens our text. It refers us to a man who is in the relation
of permanent and legal bondage to another: this other
having in him and his labor the strictest rights of <hi rend="italics">property</hi>.
The word is never employed to indicate the condition of a
<pb id="wilson6" n="6"/>
mere hireling. It points out a dependent who is solely under
the authority of a <hi rend="italics">master</hi>: that master being the head
of a household and wielding over his slaves the commission
of a despot, whose acts are to be determined only by the
restraining laws of Christianity and by general considerations
of his own and their welfare: a despot responsible to
God, a good conscience, and the well-being of society. I
use this word “despot” advisedly. It is the scriptural opposite
of “slave,” as in the passage from the 1st Epistle to
Timothy: “Let as many servants (<foreign lang="gre"><figure id="ill2" entity="wilson6i"><p>[Word in Greek]</p></figure></foreign>) as are under the
yoke count their own masters (<foreign lang="gre">
<figure id="ill3" entity="wilson6ii"><p>[Word in Greek]</p></figure></foreign>) worthy of all honor;”
and as in the words taken from the Epistle to Titus: “Exhort
servants to be obedient to their own masters”—<hi rend="italics">slaves</hi>
to be obedient to their <hi rend="italics">despots</hi>. In the passage immediately under discussion, the word “servants” has for its antithesis the word which may be rendered “lords,” and which, in its lowest signification, means “possessors,” “owners,” “masters”
in a sense sufficiently absolute. As a freedman, in
the New Testament sense, is one who is at liberty to go
and act and be what he pleases, so a slave is one who goes
and acts and is controlled by a superior will. And not only
do the<hi rend="italics"> New Testament</hi> writers use the word <foreign lang="gre"><figure id="ill4" entity="wilson6iii"><p>[Word in Greek]</p></figure></foreign>, to express
the meaning I have shown it to have; this meaning is likewise
common to all the ancient authors, whose works in
the Greek language are considered classic; men who wrote
with strict attention to verbal accuracy, and whose compositions
came from their pens at a time when domestic slavery
was a universal institution. I have been thus particular
in establishing the true import of this word, for a purpose.
The time has fully come when all who are interested personally
in the subject of Southern institutions—whether
<pb id="wilson7" n="7"/>
masters or servants—should comprehend their <hi rend="italics">scriptural</hi> relation
to them—should know whether or not the holiness
of God receives or rejects them—and whether in all our
possible contentions for their maintenance we are to have
only men for our enemies or, in addition, our Sovereign
Ruler also. Now, we have already seen that the Holy
Spirit employs words which He has intended to be understood
as distinctly enunciating the existence of domestic
servitude—that He has sent to all the world a volume of
truth, which is indisputably addressed to men who hold
slaves and to the slaves who possess masters—and that,
from the connections in which these highly suggestive
words occur, He has included slavery as an organizing element
in that family order which lies at the very foundation
of Church and State. A study of such words is, therefore,
a first and an important step in ascertaining the will of God
with respect to an institution which short sighted men have
indiscriminately and violently denounced, and which wicked
men have declared unworthy of the countenance of a Christianity
whose peaceful and conservative spirit, as applied to
society, they neither respect nor understand.</p>
        </div2>
        <div2 type="chapter">
          <head>II.</head>
          <p>I am sure that you will bear with me while I take another
step in this great argument, and show how completely
the Bible brings human slavery underneath the sanction of
divine authority, upon other and stronger grounds. Indeed,
my text <hi rend="italics">compels</hi> me to take this course—for, if <hi rend="italics">our</hi>
domestic servitude be <hi rend="italics">essentially</hi> different from that to which
the Apostle's exhortations refer, we do but beat the air
with empty sounds when we endeavor to apply them to the
<pb id="wilson8" n="8"/>
masters and servants who compose the christian congregations
of this section of our country. If Paul, or rather the
great God, speaking by his inspired lips, meant to confine
his evangelical teachings to a state of things wholly unlike
that under which we live, then this portion of Scripture is
to us a dead letter, and can have no influence upon our consciences
or conduct. If we preach from it at all, therefore,
it must be employed for the practical benefit of hearers<hi rend="italics"> now</hi>
as much as when the<hi rend="italics"> Ephesian</hi> church opened their ears and
hearts to its reception. And, in truth, in the suggestions
of this very thought, there is a remote scriptural plea to be
found for the divine sanction of slavery. It would seem,
that, inasmuch as the Bible was intended for all times and
all ages, and not for one period and a single country, the
fact that it gives directions as plain and full and forcible
for the regulation of domestic service as it does for defining
and limiting the marital, parental and filial relations in
families, furnishes an inferential proof of the proposition
that, everywhere, such <hi rend="italics">service</hi> ought to be as universal as
such higher and tenderer relations: that no household is
perfect under the gospel which does not contain all the
grades of authority and obedience, from that of husband
and wife, down through that of father and son, to that of
master and servant. Accordingly, we do find, as a matter
of historical fact, that, among all people, during all the periods
of time, there have been those, in every family, whom
the very law of necessity itself has made servants to the
others; servants, if not always in the rigid sense which
slavery seems to imply, yet in a sense sufficiently obvious
and strict. Go where you will—visit what family you may,
and you will find members of the household, under some
<pb id="wilson9" n="9"/>
law which requires them more than the others, to perform
menial services for all the little community. The hireling,
the wife, the eldest child, the dependent stranger, may be
the voluntary or involuntary doer of offices which must fall
to the lot of <hi rend="italics">some one</hi>. I need not point you to the manifold
illustrations of this idea, which appears in all conditions
of human society—even in those which are most favored—
even in those from which come the most heated
denunciations of a slavery which, existing among us, differs
at best from their own more in degree and form than in
essential qualities. There <hi rend="italics">must</hi> be such inequalities in
society; and whenever an attempt has been made to remove
them—whenever radicalism has proposed to smooth down
all individuals in the family or other community to a common
level—as in the experiments of Fourierism, which
once excited so much attention in the world,—it was found
that a fundamental law had been transgressed, and failure
inevitably attended such unscriptural and disorganizing
attempts. God has evidently made one to serve another.
The simple question is, what must be the<hi rend="italics"> nature</hi> of this
service? The answer is, that its nature depends upon circumstances.
And out of this answer springs the interrogation,
has God ever shown us that there are circumstances
under which <hi rend="italics">involuntary </hi>service may be required and yielded
on the part of masters and slaves? Has He ever declared
this kind of service to be right, and lifted its existence
entirely above the charge of sinfulness? Are we at
full liberty to carry to Him upon the arms of our faith, our
households, and as confidently ask Him to bless our servants
as our children? Does this great, beneficial, civilizing
institution of slavery live beneath the light of His face,
<pb id="wilson10" n="10"/>
with no fault to be found with it upon the part of His infinite
holiness, except when and wherein it may suffer abuse
at the hands of the parties concerned? Surely the Bible is
clear enough upon this point to satisfy the most sensitive
conscience. Light cannot shine with greater brightness
than does the doctrine of the sinlessness—nay, than does
the doctrine of the righteousness—of an institution, which,
besides being sustained and promoted by a long course of
favorable providences, besides being recognized as a prime
conservator of the civilization of the world, besides being
one of the colored man's foremost sources of blessing, is
likewise directly sanctioned by both the utterance and
silence of Scripture.</p>
        </div2>
        <div2 type="chapter">
          <head>III.</head>
          <p>Look, first, at the most instructive <hi rend="italics">silence</hi> of Scripture
upon this subject. An obvious feature of the sacred word,
whose office, in the hands of the Spirit, is to convince of
sin and conduct to righteousness, is this: it never mentions
a grave offence against God without denouncing it directly
or impliedly: denouncing it, too, in the face of every
human policy for maintaining its existence: denouncing it,
that is, without the least regard to present consequences.
The Bible<hi rend="italics"> could not</hi> wink at prevailing error, much less at
prevailing crime, least of all at prevailing ungodliness,
through any fear of arousing angry opposition against
Christianity on the part of such as might hold the civil
power, or of such as might direct the sneer of hatred.
Christianity came, rather, as necessarily it must have come,
as a “sword,” to set men at “variance” on the field of a
great fight between evil and good. Wherever, therefore,
<pb id="wilson11" n="11"/>
it went in the early ages, it dealt incessant blows at idolatry,
for example; blows which are now being repeated
throughout the pagan world by an army of missionaries,
whom no danger is sufficient to <sic corr="appall">appal</sic>. Under all circumstances,
too, falsehood comes under the frown of Scripture
truth; so do theft, drunkenness, violence, murder, and a
multitude of smaller offenses. In fact, on the deeply colored
canvass of God's word, you find such a faithful representation
of human guilt through all the turns and <sic corr="pretenses">pretences</sic>
and developments of the sinful heart, as leaves nothing
wanting to complete the portraiture of that manifold
criminality against which divine wrath breathes one constant
stream of fiery condemnation. God will not, must
not, cannot tamper with sin, in any of its forms, so long as
He remains true to Himself and to His holy magistracy.
He can neither connive at it by silence, nor perpetuate it
by giving laws for its regulation, nor excuse it by letting
down to its weakness His relaxed law. Sin is wrong absolutely—
a deep curse to the universe, in<hi rend="italics"> itself</hi>—and when
discovered by the searches of divine truth, whether in the
individual heart or in the common practices of societies,
must meet with the instant, the spontaneous, the overwhelming
displeasure of Jehovah.</p>
          <p>Now, in the face of such reflections, it is remarkable, to
say the least, that the institution of compulsory slavery, as
it existed throughout the Roman Empire, although often
referred to in the New Testament, is never once condemned,
never once even discountenanced. On the contrary, provision
is made for its perpetuation, by means of the rules
which are given for its regulation and improvement. So
far from Scripture appearing as the destroyer, it appears as
<pb id="wilson12" n="12"/>
the upholder, of an institution, which, <hi rend="italics">under proper management,
by christian people</hi>, is represented as an element in domestic
completeness, whose presence is a benefit and a blessing.
If it be a wrong, it is not so<hi rend="italics"> in itself</hi>; it can become
so only when masters and servants misconceive and abuse
their relationship to each other. We are led to understand
that if the salt of <hi rend="italics">grace</hi> be thrown into <hi rend="italics">this </hi>branch of the
family union, it will prove an auxiliary to the church and
society only second to the parental and filial relationship.
And, lest any should imagine that because the slavery of
the Roman Empire was essentially different from that which
we cherish, the Bible smiled upon that when it could not
upon this, we have the amplest testimony of history to show
that the two systems exhibited entire agreement in<hi rend="italics">principle</hi>,
and that they differ only in their circumstances. It is
certain that our servile laws are indefinitely milder—every
way more humane—than were those which existed when
the Savior preached and the Apostles wrote. It is certain,
too, that the institution in that ancient empire was far more
extensive—more thoroughly domesticated—more perfectly
inwrought into the very structure of society—than is the
similar institution in this modern republic—and, therefore,
was of such an amazing magnitude of proportions as that,
if involuntary servitude were in itself an evil thing,<hi rend="italics"> then</hi>
was presented the very best opportunity to strike it down
forever with a blow from the hammer of the Spirit. A sin
which overshadowed the land, which darkened every household,
which hampered the church—surely a sin of such
enormity would have been visited with the utmost severity
of heaven's fury. But no: that fury nowhere appears in
the threats or expostulations of Scripture. Instead, we 
<pb id="wilson13" n="13"/>
find a distinct law of permission, and an unequivocal note
of favor, extended to it. The Bible would control and
sanctify, but not destroy it.</p>
          <p>In the days of the Apostles, it is proper for me to remind
you, there was a party, whose numbers were scattered
throughout the empire, which constituted the “abolition
party” of that period. It is known that the Pharisees gave
a special prominence to political freedom; joined with them
were the Essenes; and binding together the whole, were
certain philosophers who inculcated unattainable notions of
universal liberty. These persons were in the habit of condemning
Roman masters as unjust, impious, and destroyers
of a law of nature. They inculcated the same abstract doctrines
as those which have proceeded from mistaken philanthropy
in our own distracted country, and which, at the
time when Paul wrote to the Ephesians, were threatening
the world with discord and bloodshed, as now, by the permissive
wrath of God again they threaten. It was, therefore,
to meet the unholy recklessness of such a destructive
spirit, that the Apostles were careful to enjoin the conservation
of an institution, which, though, like all other earthly
institutions, attended by many circumstantial evils arising
from the corruption of the human heart, was nevertheless
no more wrong in its essential principles than the relation
of husband and wife or father and child. And Paul was
not a mere theoretical teacher upon this subject. He practised
the righteousness which he enjoined. He once, at
least, had it in his power to display the true spirit of christian
love in his treatment of slaveholders. I refer you to
his conduct with respect to Onesimus, a runaway slave belonging
to that believer in Christ., Philemon. This servant
<pb id="wilson14" n="14"/>
coming providentially under the influence of Paul's preaching,
was happily converted. Being converted, what was
his duty to his defrauded master? The spirit of christianity,
which now resided in his heart, informed his conscience
of the fact that he was the<hi rend="italics"> property</hi> of Philemon, and that
while he remained away from his owner's home and authority,
he was committing the sin of robbery. He consulted
the Apostle. What was<hi rend="italics"> his</hi> advice ? He did not
hesitate to urge Onesimus to go at once to his master, confess
at his feet the <sic corr="grievous">grevious</sic> fault he had committed, and
beg to be received once more among the number of his
slaves. And that the reconciliation between master and
servant might be hastened, Paul wrote, (and wrote under
the inspiration of God,) a letter of beseeching tenderness
to the offended owner, asking him to pardon the faithful
fugitive and give him a place in his confidence, and telling
him that he would now, with grace in his heart, be a far
better servant than ever.</p>
          <p>Such reasoning, from the implied allowance of slavery
by inspired Scripture, is, my friends, conclusive enough
upon the point in question. Let neither master nor servant
dispute the righteousness, doubt the wisdom, or fear the
reproach of the relation which they sustain towards each
other. It is not sinful. It is not inexpedient. It is not
degradatory.</p>
        </div2>
        <div2 type="chapter">
          <head>IV.</head>
          <p>But look at God's direct and positive <hi rend="italics">utterances</hi> in
the premises. I need only <hi rend="italics">point</hi> you to them, so clearly
do they establish the fact that this part of family order
was always familiar to the divine mind in its plans of
<pb id="wilson15" n="15"/>
human government. Domestic slavery is twice clearly acknowledged
in the brief law of the Ten Commandments.
In the 4th law, with regard to the proper observance of the
Sabbath, the rule of righteousness is laid down, which provides
for the periodical rest, during holy time, of the
“man-servant and the maid-servant,” who, together with
the other<hi rend="italics"> animate property</hi> of the household, must suspend
labor; and who, together with the other <hi rend="italics">rational members</hi> of
the family must expend their thoughts in glorifying God.
In the 10th law, again, which establishes those social relations
of mankind, whose integrity and purity must be maintained
<hi rend="italics">in heart</hi> if they would be productive of good <hi rend="italics">in fact</hi>,
and where, accordingly, the <hi rend="italics">desires</hi> of men are forbidden to
covet neighbor's blessings—in this law, it is made a fatal
sin to covet his “<hi rend="italics">man-servant</hi> or his <hi rend="italics">maid-servant</hi>,” just as it
is to covet any other of his possessions.</p>
          <p>This recognition of involuntary servitude is, we say, thus
found imbedded in the very heart of the <hi rend="italics">moral law</hi> itself—
that law which determines the principles of divine administration
over men—a law which constitutes, if I may so
speak, the very <hi rend="italics">constitution </hi>of that royal kingdom whose
regulations begin and end in the infinite holiness of Jehovah,
and whose spread through the universal heart of the
race is the aim of all Scripture.</p>
          <p>But, in addition, hear the express words of the Holy
Ghost in the Levitical law—words which embody an explicit
provision for the <hi rend="italics">future</hi> possession, by the Israelites,
of man in property which they did not have at the time
these words were spoken: a provision, then, not to regulate
what already existed, but to legalize what was, 40 years
afterwards, to become a distinct institution:</p>
          <pb id="wilson16" n="16"/>
          <p>“Both thy bondmen and thy bondwomen which thou
shalt have, shall be of the heathen that are round about
you; of them shall ye buy bondmen and bondmaids. And
ye shall take them as an inheritance for your children after
you to inherit them for a possession; they shall be your
bondmen forever.” No law can be plainer. No instruction
of truth could more convince the christian that he is
standing upon the surest and safest ground, whenever he
resists the imputation that he is a <hi rend="italics">sinner</hi> while upholding a
system of domestic servitude. He can triumphantly say:
“I direct you to the law and testimony!”</p>
        </div2>
        <div2 type="chapter">
          <head>V.</head>
          <p>But my hearers, if you wish for further conviction, carry
your belief of the essential rightness of slavery to the injunctions
of our text, which the Apostle publishes for its
<hi rend="italics">conservation and perfection</hi>. He as much as says, that it is
unnecessary to fear that this long-cherished institution will
first give way before the enemies who press upon it from
without. If slaveholders preserve it as an element of social
welfare, in the spirit of the christian religion, throwing into
it the full measure of gospel-salt allotted to it, and casting
around it the same guardianship with which they would
protect their family peace, if threatened on some other
ground—they need apprehend nothing but their own dereliction
in duty to themselves and their dependent servants.
I mean, simply, that while we ought to allow no malignant
interference from any quarter with the institution of which
we are God's appointed guardians, and while we ought to
be suitably alive to any threat of presumptuous violence
which may seek to wrest from us our heaven-given rights
in our heaven-allowed property—yet, after all, the wisdom
<pb id="wilson17" n="17"/>
which lies underneath the spirit of this sensitive watchfulness of our
political zeal, and which gives to that zeal its
purity and power, is the wisdom to be exercised in making
our domestic servitude all that it should become, so as to
render it <hi rend="italics">worth </hi>the expenditure of every energy of <sic corr="defense">defence</sic>.
We must see to it, that masters and servants understand
and appreciate their mutual relation, and that they maintain
it on both sides as christians. This is the object of the
apostolic exhortations before us, and upon which I will now
briefly comment: exhortations which, seeking to purify
domestic servitude, do thereby bring it completely within
gospel sanctions.</p>
          <p>There are certain vices which slavery is apt to engender,
in preference to all others. These are founded in indolence,
eye-service and hypocrisy. These evils appear in a
variety of forms, and are a constant source of irritation and
unhappiness. But, so far as the servant is concerned, they
are met by one simple injunction, the injunction of <hi rend="italics">obedience</hi>
to his master. If obedience be sincere, be consistent,
be from proper motives, it will remove every vice from the
servant's temper and conduct. The Apostle, therefore,
presents to the reader those noble qualities of servile allegiance
which will elevate it at once to the high point of
<hi rend="italics">christian</hi> compliance with rightful<sic corr="authority"> anthority</sic>; the only worthy
compliance. He exhorts servants to obey, 1st, with <sic corr="conscientious">conscientous</sic>
anxiety: expressed by “fear and trembling.”
Not, however, so much the fear of man as a reverential
fear of God, is to be understood in these words. It is not
the servile dread of punishment. It is a careful and painstaking
solicitude<hi rend="italics"> to do right</hi> under all the circumstances of
their relation, because the eye of heaven rests upon them
<pb id="wilson18" n="18"/>
and will follow with its displeasure every act or course of
wrong-doing. Obedience must, 2dly be with “singleness
of mind:” not hypocritical, not deceitful, not inspired by
duplicity or cunning. There must be no double-mindedness,
but the giving to the business in hand all the simplicity
of an honest purpose. Service is to be yielded upon
principle, not with that attempt to please both self and the
master which ends in “<hi rend="italics">eye-service</hi>,” and then only seems
diligent and complete when he is present, but breaks down
into remissness when he is absent. And to this excellence
will obedience attain when, 3dly, it issues from the heart
which desires first of all to please <hi rend="italics">Christ</hi>. Obey “not as
men-pleasers” says the exhortation, “but as the servants of
Christ, doing the will of God” in your station, “from the
heart; with good-will, doing service, <hi rend="italics">as to the Lord</hi> and not
to men.” The servant is, like the child, to know that the
authority under which he has been placed is from above,
and that the master rules him as the agent of heaven. He
must, therefore, do his whole duty with his thoughts fixed
upon that divine <hi rend="italics">upper hand</hi> of which the lower one of his
owner is but the representative. Disobedience to his proprietor
on earth, is rebellion against the law of God, who
is the first and principal proprietor of all. And this consideration
is required in order to render the service good,
elevating and self-rewarding. To serve Him, who is infinitely
holy and infinitely great, while giving heed to his
temporal and imperfect master, throws into the servant's
obedience that element which makes it eminently saint-like,
and gives it a place in his christian experience. So
that he goes through his daily duties with this consolation,
singing its glad song to his labor: “<hi rend="italics">Whatever good thing</hi>
<pb id="wilson19" n="19"/>
<hi rend="italics">any man doeth, the same shall he receive of the Lord, whether he
be bond or free</hi>.”</p>
          <p>What a pleasing scene would the institution of slavery
exhibit, were all our servants to yield their obedience in
this spirit of the christian religion! It would commend
itself to true philanthropy as containing the best system of
labor which is allowable to fallen man. But alas! the
bondmen whom we own and employ, while occupying the
most favorable position for improvement and happiness
that is possible to them, are, as yet, far from being imbued
with that love to God, which alone can raise their lot to its
highest dignity. We thank God that so many of them are
pious—that from so many of their comfortable houses
comes the voice of prayer and praise—and that so many of
them are <sic corr="conscientious">conscientous</sic> servitors of man for Christ's sake.
But we ought to look forward to the time when they will
all be what the Bible would make them; a race whose love
for the Master above will spread through their rejoicing
millions a measure of sanctification which will convert their
services into the very first of home-blessings, and their piety
into a missionary influence for saving the black man everywhere
from the ruin of perdition.</p>
          <p>But to accomplish this, their earthly masters have something—
have much—to do. “<hi rend="italics">Ye masters, do the same things
unto them, forbearing threatening; knowing that your master also
is in heaven; neither is there respect of persons with Him</hi>.”
For masters to “<hi rend="italics">do the same things</hi>” which their servants are
required to do, is for them to “act towards the dependents
with the same regard to the will of God, the same recognition
of the authority of Christ, the same sincerity and good
feeling which has been enjoined upon the slaves them
<pb id="wilson20" n="20"/>
selves.“God concedes nothing to the master beyond what
the <hi rend="italics">law of love</hi> demands. He does not allow the reign of
injustice over this institution any more than over the other
departments of family order. Every dictate of humanity
does, indeed, render necessary the maintenance of a due
subordination of the servant to his proprietor: righteousness
in fulfilling the obligations of the relationship does not
ask for <hi rend="italics">equality</hi>, but rather repudiates it, seeing that the
best interests of all parties can be served only on the terms
which nature and providence and scripture have fixed—the
terms of mastery on the one side and servitude on the other.
But, notwithstanding the careful guardianship of the
principle of authority on the part of owners, yet must they
not forget that they are to give an account to God at last
for the right use of their exalted stewardship—the stewardship
over <hi rend="italics">souls of immortal men</hi>, placed directly underneath
their control. They are to endeavor to train up their servants
for heaven—as much bound to do this as they are
bound to attend to the religious instruction of their own
children. Masters are, for this end, even required to guard
their tempers, that they may be guiltless of unnecessary
severity in the treatment of their domestics; to “avoid
threatening:” but to administer a firm, consistent, orderly,
paternal government, which will suitably mingle the mercy
of punishment with the justice of reward. They must remember
to treat their servants as they will expect their own
Master in heaven to treat <hi rend="italics">them</hi>. They must not neglect
discipline, but it must always be the discipline which is dictated
by holy principle. In short, the master who would
do for his servants up to the full measurement of Bible requirements,
will find himself unequal to the task in all its
<pb id="wilson21" n="21"/>
length and breadth, unless he himself become a <hi rend="italics">christian</hi> in
heart and practice. To vital goodness alone belongs the
privilege of understanding and administering the whole
authority of a masterhood so responsible. And, oh, when
that welcome day shall dawn, whose light will reveal a
world covered with righteousness, not the least pleasing
sight will be the institution of domestic slavery, freed from
its stupid servility on the one side and its excesses of neglect
or severity on the other, and appearing to all mankind
as containing that scheme of politics and morals, which, by
saving a lower race from the destruction of heathenism,
has, under divine management, contributed to refine, exalt,
and enrich its superior race!</p>
        </div2>
      </div1>
    </body>
  </text>
</TEI.2>