On December 12 my
alma mater, the Southern Baptist Theological Seminary in Louisville, Kentucky,
released a report entitled
“Report on Slavery and Racism in the History of the Southern Baptist
Theological Seminary.” It follows up on a 1995 resolution passed by the
Southern Baptist Convention, which admitted the sins of Southern Baptists in their
support of slavery and racism in the United States.
I am not going to criticize the report. Personally I am
impressed that it happened at all. It is a step in the right direction, but it
is only a first step. I hope that steps will be taken by the seminary to follow
up on the report.
I am thinking specifically of renaming buildings, which
presently bear the names of the seminary’s founding faculty, whom seminary president
Albert Mohler says “were deeply involved in slavery and deeply complicit in the
defense of slavery.” At a time when Confederate memorials are coming down, it
seems only right that names of slaveholders should come down from buildings at an
institution that trains Southern Baptist leaders.
My main concern about the SBTS report is what it doesn’t
say. It doesn’t address the underlying issue. It doesn’t ask the question
“Why?” Why did these devout Southern Baptists support and defend slavery? And
why has it taken until 2018 to clarify Southern Seminary’s position on this
issue.
The answer is the Bible. Southerners’ support for slavery was rooted in
the Bible as much as in Southern economy and culture. Southern Baptist support
for slavery was not an aberrant 19th century interpretation of the
Bible, but an accurate understanding of the stance of the Scriptures on the
subject. The founders of the seminary were biblically literate Christians who correctly
assessed the Bible’s support for slavery.
The harsh truth is that the Bible condones and supports
slavery from beginning to end. One can’t deny that reality without being dishonest
with the biblical text and one’s own conscience. No amount of prooftexting and creative
eisegesis can ever turn the Bible into an abolitionist manifesto.
Abraham – the father of faith – was a slaveholder. His
decision to have children with his Egyptian slave girl Hagar was nothing less than sex
slavery. There was no way for Hagar to say “No” to Abe’s advances. There was no
#MeToo movement for Hagar to appeal to.
When we move on to Moses we find slavery institutionalized and
regulated in God’s Law given at Sinai. Slavery is accepted even in the Ten
Commandments, which many Christians insist on erecting on public property. In the
tenth commandment not to covet anything that is our neighbor’s, slaves are
included in the list of covetable property… along with wives, donkeys and oxen.
I could give many other examples from the Old Testament, but
let’s move on to the New Testament. The apostles Paul and Peter command slaves
to be obedient to their masters as to the Lord, even if they mistreat them. When
addressing slaveholders, Paul does not tell then to release their slaves; he
tells them to treat their slaves well. True, Paul tells Christian slaves that
if they have a chance to be free, they should take it, but he never condemns
slavery as wrong or unchristian.
In fact Paul returns the runaway slave Onesimus to his
Christian master Philemon! It is true he recommends that the slaveholder
receive him as a Christian brother rather than a slave. But he adds that the
decision is entirely up to Philemon, and he should not feel under compulsion to
do so.
Paul goes so far as to use the term “slave” as a positive metaphor
of a Christian’s relationship to Christ. Paul often begins his letters
describing himself as a slave of Christ, which would make Christ into a
slaveholder. Is it any wonder that Southern Christians would imitate their Lord
in this matter?
How about Jesus? What was his word on slavery? Jesus often
uses slaves as characters in his parables, but he never advocates freeing
slaves. In fact he heals a centurion’s slave so that he could return to a life
of servitude. In the process he has a conversation with the centurion about
slavery, but never suggests that it might be the right thing to do to free his
slave.
The fact is that slavery was part of the worldview of the
Bible, just as it was part of the Christian worldview in the antebellum South.
It was assumed to be a social institution acceptable to God. That is what the
founding fathers of Southern Seminary believed, and that is what everyone in
the Bible believed. To suggest that any of the saints in the Bible were
actually secret abolitionists is historical revisionism.
The roots of slavery in Western civilization can be traced
to the Bible. Slavery was practiced by the Hebrew patriarchs, regulated by the
Mosiac Law, and condoned by Jesus and the apostles. Yes, there are deeper
principles in the Bible that eventually led Christian abolitionists to support
the elimination of slavery. Paul’s statement that “there is neither Jew nor
Gentile, neither slave nor free, nor is there male and female” comes to mind.
But the development of such verses into principles of universal
human equality, human dignity and inalienable human rights took millennia to work
out and apply to society. Southern
Baptists are still struggling with how to apply the “male and female” part of
that verse to their denomination today, much less the controversial issues of
sexual orientation and gender identity.
Slavery and racism are problems, not just for the Southern
Baptist Theological Seminary and the Southern Baptist Convention. They are
problems for all Christians who consider the Bible to be the authoritative Word
of God and their infallible guide for Christian faith and practice.
It is time that we admit that we have a problem. We have a
Bible problem. More specifically it is a problem with our understanding of the
authority and inspiration of the Bible. This is a problem that Southern
Baptists are nowhere near to admitting. In fact it was the denial of that
problem – and a retreat into a pre-critical view of the inerrancy of scripture
– which gave birth to the “conservative resurgence” which now controls the SBC.
It is not just that the Bible contains characters who were
sinners – a fact which Dr. Mohler admits in his introductory letter to the
report - but the Bible condones behaviors that are sins. Slavery is just one of
them. If Southern Baptists could admit that perhaps – just maybe – the biblical
writers got this one issue wrong, then it might open up a different way of
understanding the inspiration and authority of scripture.
That could lead to Baptists and other evangelicals to view
other social issues of our day from a new perspective. Then the Church might
regain a respected place at the table of public opinion. But that is probably
hoping for too much. Only when we admit that we have a scripture problem, can
we begin to solve the sin problem in the Southern Baptist denomination and
evangelical Christianity.
1 comment:
I wish that when I was a Christian I could have read this article.
Finally a real voice. Someone who wants to get real and not gloss over things and land in safe denial.
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