Slaves, obey your owners, with fear and trembling, as though they were Christ. When you serve them, you are serving God.
The Torah isn't any better on the issue of slavery, of course. Abraham, for example, whom Jews, Christians and Muslims alike recognize as the first person to worship God and their patriarch of all of their faiths, had 318 slaves. Genesis 14:14. The Torah also explains that the children of a female slave belong to her master even if her master has allowed her to marry someone else. Exodus 21:4. It also provides that a man may sell his daughter into slavery and if she doesn't please her new master she should be sold again to a foreign land. Exodus 21:7-8. Similarly, Biblical law set forth in the Torah provides that if a man beats his slave so badly that the slave dies after a day or two, this should be punished because his slave is his property. Exodus 21:20-21.
The post-Jesus part of the Bible certainly isn't a fan of gender equality in marriage (or outside of marriage, for that matter) either.
Consider, for example, Ephesians 5:22-24 and 5:33 (part), which I was reading today to provide context for one of my Christian friend's Bible citation from the same New Testament epistle, which states:
Wives, submit to you husbands, as you would to God. Because the husband is the head of the wife, as Christ is the head of the church. So wives must obey their husbands in everything. . . . let every woman revere her husband.
The Torah's take on marriage itself, of course, is also more than a little bit off.
Consider, for example, the marriage of Abraham and Sarah, his half-sister, which God blesses, even though God later condemns incestuous marriages, which is discussed, for example, in Genesis 12:13, 16:1-6, 17:15-16, 21:10-14. Sarah can't manage to get pregnant, so she tells her husband to have sex with her handmaid, Hagar, whenever he wants and to have children through her, which he successfully does. Sarah, however, gets jealous when Abraham does what his wife told him to do, causing Sarah to treat Hagar so harshly that Hagar flees their home. Once Sarah manages to give birth to Isaac on her own, however, Sarah cast out Hagar (now described as a "bondwoman") and Abraham's eldest son with Hagar, Ishmael, so Abraham takes them into the wilderness to die.
Four decades or so later, I am led to the same conclusions and wonder why more people don't react the same way. Indeed, the further away you get from being a church goer who hears these passages and the doctrines woven from them on a weekly basis, the more absurd they seem.
The Disconnect Between Scripture And Lived Culture
One of the wonders of the fact that the Bible is a written document is that practices from the Iron Age and Antiquity are frozen in time, with God's sacred stamp of approval. And, one of the wonders of lived religion is how billions of people have no problem collectively and selectively ignore these facts, and yet claim that their scriptures are a source of absolute unchanging truth.
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