
By: Jim Taylor
It’s commonly claimed that the world changed September
11, 2001, when hijackers plunged two airliners into the World Trade Center.
Or on
Or on
All of those were dramatic
events, I agree. But they didn’t change anything. Mostly, they confirmed the
existing order, or lack of it.
For a date that really changed
the world, try
For 16 years, William
Wilberforce had relentlessly introduced his bills against slavery. And for 15
years, each one failed. Finally, in February 1807, parliament passed his
motion. One month later, 200 years ago today, the Queen granted royal assent.
Wilberforce’s Act didn’t
actually end slavery. Britons could, and did, own slaves. It merely ended the
trans-Atlantic trade.
But it began an irresistible
momentum.
All slaves in the
Slavery still persists
Not that slavery was eliminated – not even today.
Canadian churches have raised
funds to redeem slaves snared by the civil war in
Slavery has existed at least as
long as prostitution, the so-called “oldest profession.”
Ancient civilizations depended
on slave labour. In Jesus’ time, half the population of the
Some societies treated slaves
reasonably well. The Hebrew scriptures contained a
“Bill of Rights” for slaves that defined how they could be treated and when
they must be set free.
Others treated their slaves the
way some people today treat their dogs. Or worse.
As late as the 18th3”>
century, an Ethiopian ruler put out the eyes of a dozen slaves as after-dinner
entertainment.
In the western world, we hear
mainly of slavery in the American context. In fact, probably less than ten per
cent of slaves came to continental
The Portuguese started shipping
slaves from
The French imported slaves to
their
Limited survival
Slaves were shipped across the
Insurance companies paid
nothing for slaves who died en route. But they reimbursed owners if cargo had
to be jettisoned to save the ship. Dead, dying, and sick slaves often went over
the side, still chained together.
On the British ship Zong, Captain Luke Collingwood had 133 men and
women, weakened by transit, thrown overboard.
One out of five slaves perished
on the voyage across the
Of those who lived long enough
to be bought, half died in their first year of labour.
In other words, four out of
five slaves perished before spending the rest of their lives as someone’s
property.
We can’t blame the slave trade
entirely on what Michael Moore calls “stupid white men.” Arab dhows conducted
slave raids into
White traders rarely ranged far
inland. The slave trade depended on Arab intermediaries and African despots who
sold their enemies, or their own people, for personal gain.
Ancient castles dot the
spectacular coast of
Growing outrage
Explorer David Livingstone personally witnesses the massacre of
several hundred Africans by Arab slave traders on the
Back home, William Wilberforce
and Thomas Clarkson amassed abundant evidence of these atrocities and
inhumanities.
They were, of course, countered
by those who argued that slavery had biblical authority.
The Oxford Companion to the
Bible lists 16 passages that supported slavery, in both Old and New
Testaments. Jesus, as far as we know, never condemned slavery. The apostle Paul
describes himself as “a slave for Christ”; several of his letters treat slavery
as normal.
Against those views, Samuel
Wesley and George Whitefield (the founders of Methodism), Quakers, and
evangelical Anglicans quoted their own verses opposing slavery. From the
beginning, they argued, Christian churches freed slaves. Paul’s letters
instructed the churches in Galatia and Colossae that “there is neither Jew nor
Greek, neither slave nor free, neither male nor female, for you are all one in
Christ…”
The debate, says the Oxford
Companion, provoked “the hitherto unthinkable idea that the Bible could be
divided against itself.”
The abolition of slavery was
the opening movement of a symphony of change that is still going on. Its vision
led directly to the civil rights marches of the 1960, the
The world has never been the
same since
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Copyright © 2007 by Jim Taylor. Non-profit use in congregations and study
groups permitted; all other rights reserved.
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