Key to Uncle Tom's Cabin

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by Harriet Beecher Stowe


  sense of Roman law.

  When, therefore, the question is asked, why did not the

  apostles seek the abolition of slavery? we answer, they did

  seek it. They sought it by the safest, shortest, and most direct

  course which could possibly have been adopted.

  * See Adams' Roman Antiquities.

  † Dionys. Hal. ii. 25.

  CHAPTER VII.

  But did Christianity abolish slavery as a matter of fact? We

  answer, it did.

  Let us look at these acknowledged facts. At the time of the

  coming of Christ, slavery extended over the whole civilised

  world. Captives in war were uniformly made slaves, and, as

  wars were of constant occurrence, the ranks of slavery were

  continually being reinforced; and, as slavery was hereditary and

  perpetual, there was every reason to suppose that the number

  would have gone on increasing indefinitely had not some in-

  fluence operated to stop it. This is one fact.

  Let us now look at another. At the time of the Reformation,

  chattel-slavery had entirely ceased throughout all the civilised

  countries of the world; by no particular edict--by no special

  law of emancipation--but by the steady influence of some gra-

  dual, unseen power, this whole vast system had dissolved away,

  like the snow-banks of winter.

  These two facts being conceded, the inquiry arises, What

  caused this change? If, now, we find that the most powerful

  organisation in the civilised world at that time did pursue a

  system of measures which had a direct tendency to bring about

  such a result, we shall very naturally ascribe it to that

  organisation.

  The Spanish writer, Balmes, in his work entitled “Protes-

  tantism compared with Catholicity,” has one chapter devoted to

  the anti-slavery course of the Church, in which he sets forth the

  whole system of measures which the Church pursued in reference

  to this subject, and quotes, in their order, all the decrees of

  councils. The decrees themselves are given in an Appendix at

  length, in the original Latin. We cannot but sympathise deeply

  in the noble and generous spirit in which these chapters are

  written, and the enlarged and vigorous ideas which they give of

  the magnanimous and honourable nature of Christianity. They

  are evidently conceived by a large and noble soul, capable of

  understanding such views--a soul, grave, earnest, deeply reli-

  gious, though evidently penetrated and imbued with the most

  profound conviction of the truth of his own peculiar faith.

  We shall give a short abstract from M. Balmes of the early

  course of the Church. In contemplating the course which the

  Church took in this period, certain things are to be borne in

  mind respecting the character of the times.

  The process was carried on during that stormy and convulsed

  period of society which succeeded the breaking up of the Roman

  empire. At this time all the customs of society were rude and

  barbarous. Though Christianity, as a system, had been nominally

  very extensively embraced, yet it had not, as in the case of its

  first converts, penetrated to the heart, and regenerated the whole

  nature. Force and violence was the order of the day, and the

  Christianity of the savage Northern tribes, who at this time

  became masters of Europe, was mingled with the barbarities of

  their ancient heathenism. To root the institution of slavery out

  of such a state of society required, of course, a very different

  process from what would be necessary under the enlightened

  organisation of modern times.

  No power but one of the peculiar kind which the Christian

  Church then possessed could have effected anything in this way.

  The Christian Church at this time, far from being in the outcast

  and outlawed state in which it existed in the time of the apos-

  tles, was now an organisation of great power, and of a kind of

  power peculiarly adapted to that rude and uncultured age. It

  laid hold of all those elements of fear, and mystery, and super-

  stition, which are strongest in barbarous ages, as with barbarous

  individuals, and it visited the violations of its commands with

  penalties the more dreaded that they related to some awful

  future, dimly perceived and imperfectly comprehended.

  In dealing with slavery, the Church did not commence with a

  proclamation of universal emancipation, because, such was the

  bardarous and unsettled nature of the times, so fierce the grasp

  of violence, and so many the causes of discord, that she avoided

  adding to the confusion by infusing into it this element; nay, a

  certain council of the Church forbade, on pain of ecclesiastical

  censure, those who preached that slaves ought immediately to

  leave their masters.

  The course was commenced first by restricting the power of

  the master, and granting protection to the slave. The Council

  of Orleans, in 549, gave to a slave threatened with punishment

  the privilege of taking sanctuary in a church, and forbade his

  master to withdraw him thence without taking a solemn oath

  that he would do him no harm; and if he violated the spirit of

  this oath, he was to be suspended from the Church and the

  a degree of superstitious awe that the most barbarous would

  scarcely dare to incur it. The custom was afterwards introduced

  of requiring an oath on such occasions, not only that the slave

  should be free from corporeal infliction, but that he should not

  be punished by an extra imposition of labour, or by any badge

  of disgrace. When this was complained of, as being altogether

  too great a concession on the side of the slave, the utmost that

  could be extorted from the Church, by way of retraction, was

  this--that in cases of very heinous offence the master should not

  be required to make the two latter promises.

  There was a certain punishment among the Goths which was

  more dreaded than death. It was the shaving of the hair. This

  was considered as inflicting a lasting disgrace. If a Goth once

  had his hair shaved, it was all over with him. The fifteenth

  canon of the Council of Merida, in 666, forbade ecclesiastics to

  inflict this punishment upon their slaves, as also all other kind of

  violence; and ordained that, if a slave committed an offence, he

  should not be subject to private vengeance, but be delivered up

  to the secular tribunal, and that the bishops should use their

  power only to procure a moderation of the sentence. This was

  substituting public justice for personal vengeance--a most im-

  portant step. The Church further enacted, by two councils, that

  the master who, of his own authority, should take the life of his

  slave, should be cut off for two years from the communion of the

  Church--a condition, in the view of those times, implying the

  most awful spiritual risk, separating the man in the eye of society

  from all that was sacred, and teaching him to regard himself,

  and others to regard him, as a being loaded with the weight of

  a most tremendous sin.

  Besides the prote
ction given to life and limb, the Church threw

  her shield over the family condition of the slave. By old Roman

  law, the slave could not contract a legal, inviolable marriage.

  The Church of that age availed itself of the Catholic idea of the

  sacramental nature of marriage to conflict with this heathenish

  doctrine. Pope Adrian I. said, “According to the words of the

  Apostle, as in Jesus Christ we ought not to deprive either slaves

  or freemen of the sacraments of the Church, so it is not allowed

  in any way to prevent the marriage of slaves; and if their mar-

  riages have been contracted in spite of the opposition and repug-

  nance of their masters, nevertheless they ought not to be dissolved.”

  St. Thomas was of the same opinion, for he openly maintains

  that, with respect to contracting marriage, “slaves are not obliged

  to obey their masters.”

  It can easily be seen what an effect was produced when the

  personal safety and family ties of the slaves were thus pro-

  claimed sacred by an authority which no man living dared

  dispute. It elevated the slave in the eyes of his master, and

  awoke hope and self-respect in his own bosom, and powerfully

  tended to fit him for the reception of that liberty to which the

  Church by many avenues was constantly seeking to conduct

  him.

  Another means which the Church used to procure emancipa-

  tion was a jealous care of the freedom of those already free.

  Everyone knows how in our Southern States the boundaries of

  slavery are continually increasing, for want of some power there

  to perform the same kind office. The liberated slave, travelling

  without his papers, is continually in danger of being taken up,

  thrown into jail, and sold to pay his jail-fees. He has no bishop

  to help him out of his troubles. In no church can he take sanc-

  tuary. Hundreds and thousands of helpless men and women

  are every year engulfed in slavery in this manner.

  The Church, at this time, took all enfranchised slaves under

  her particular protection. The act of enfranchisement was

  made a religious service, and was solemnly performed in the

  Church; and then the Church received the newly-made freeman

  to her protecting arms, and guarded his newly-acquired rights

  by her spiritual power. The first Council of Orange, held in

  441, ordained in its seventh canon that the Church should check

  by ecclesiastical censures whoever desired to reduce to any kind

  of servitude slaves who had been emancipated within the inclosure

  of the Church. A century later, the same prohibition was

  repeated in the seventh canon of the fifth Council of Orleans,

  held in 549. The protection given by the Church to freed

  slaves was so manifest and known to all that the custom was

  introduced of especially recommending them to her, either in

  lifetime or by will. The Council of Agde, in Languedoc, passed

  a resolution commanding the Church, in all cases of necessity,

  to undertake the defence of those to whom their masters had,

  in a lawful way, given liberty.

  Another anti-slavery measure which the Church pursued with

  distinguished zeal had the same end in view, that is, the pre-

  vention of the increase of slavery. It was the ransoming of

  captives. As at that time it was customary for captives in war

  to be made slaves of, unless ransomed, and as, owing to the

  unsettled state of society, wars were frequent, slavery might

  have been indefinitely prolonged, had not the Church made the

  greatest efforts in this way. The ransoming of slaves in those

  days held the same place in the affections of pious and devoted

  members of the Church that the enterprise of converting the

  heathen now does. Many of the most eminent Christians, in

  their excess of zeal, even sold themselves into captivity that they

  might redeem distressed families. Chateaubriand describes a

  Christian priest in France who voluntarily devoted himself to

  slavery for the ransom of a Christian soldier, and thus restored

  a husband to his desolate wife, and a father to three unfortu-

  nate children. Such were the deeds which secured to men in

  those days the honour of saintship. Such was the history of

  St. Zachary, whose story drew tears from many eyes, and excited

  many hearts to imitate so sublime a charity. In this they did

  but imitate the spirit of the early Christians; for the apostolic

  Clement says, “We know how many among ourselves have

  given up themselves unto bonds, that thereby they might free

  others from them.” (1st Letter to the Corinthians, sect. 55; or

  chap. xxi., verse 20.) One of the most distinguished of the

  Frankish bishops was St. Eloy. He was originally a goldsmith

  of remarkable skill in his art, and by his integrity and trust-

  worthiness won the particular esteem and confidence of King

  Clotaire I., and stood high in his court. Of him Neander

  speaks as follows:--“The cause of the gospel was to him the

  dearest interest, to which everything else was made subservient.

  While working at his art, he always had a Bible open before him.

  The abundant income of his labours he devoted to religious ob-

  jects and deeds of charity. Whenever he heard of captives, who

  in these days were often dragged off in troops as slaves that were

  to be sold at auction, he hastened to the spot and paid down

  their price.” Alas for our slave-coffles! there are no such

  bishops now! “Sometimes, by his means, a hundred at once,

  men and women, thus obtained their liberty. He then left it

  to their choice, either to return home, or to remain with him as

  free Christian brethren, or to become monks. In the first case,

  he gave them money for their journey; in the last, which

  pleased him most, he took pains to procure them a handsome

  reception into some monastery.”

  So great was the zeal of the Church for the ransom of un-

  happy captives that even the ornaments and sacred vessels of

  the Church were sold for their ransom. By the fifth canon of

  the Council of Macon, held in 585, it appears that the priests

  devoted Church property to this purpose. The Council of

  Rheims, held in 625, orders the punishment of suspension on the

  bishop who shall destroy the sacred vessels FOR ANY OTHER

  MOTIVE THAN THE RANSOM OF CAPTIVES; and in the twelfth

  canon of the Council of Verneuil, held in 844, we find that the

  property of the Church was still used for this benevolent

  purpose.

  When the Church had thus redeemed the captive, she still

  continued him under her special protection, giving him letters of

  recommendation which should render his liberty safe in the eyes

  of all men. The Council of Lyons, held in 583, enacts that

  bishops shall state, in the letters of recommendation which they

  give to redeemed slaves, the date and price of their ransom.

  The zeal for this work was so ardent that some of the clergy even

  went so far as to induce captives to run away. A council called

  that of St. Patrick, held in Ireland, condemns this practice, and

&nb
sp; says that the clergyman who desires to ransom captives must do

  so with his own money; for to induce them to run away was to

  expose the clergy to be considered as robbers, which was a dis-

  honour to the Church. The disinterestedness of the Church in

  this work appears from the fact that, when she had employed her

  funds for the ransom of captives, she never exacted from them any

  recompense, even when they had it in their power to discharge

  the debt. In the letters of St. Gregory, he re-assures some per-

  sons who had been freed by the Church, and who feared that they

  should be called upon to refund the money which had been

  expended on them. The Pope orders that no one, at any time,

  shall venture to disturb them or their heirs, because the sacred

  canons allow the employment of the goods of the Church for the

  ransom of captives. (L. 7, Ep. 14.) Still further to guard

  against the increase of the number of slaves, the Council of

  Lyons, in 566, excommunicated those who unjustly retained free

  persons in slavery.

  If there were any such laws in the Southern States, and all

  were excommunicated who are doing this, there would be quite

  a sensation, as some recent discoveries show.

  In 625, the Council of Rheims decreed excommunication to all

  those who pursue free persons in order to reduce them to slavery.

  The twenty-seventh canon of the Council of London, held 1102,

  forbade the barbarous custom of trading in men, like animals;

  and the seventh canon of the Council of Coblentz, held 922,

  declares that he who takes away a Christian to sell him is guilty

  of homicide. A French council, held in Verneuil in 616, esta-

  blished the law that all persons who had been sold into slavery

  on account of poverty or debt should receive back their liberty by

  the restoration of the price which had been paid. It will readily

  be seen that this opened a wide field for restoration to liberty in

  an age where so great a Christian zeal had been awakened for

  the redeeming of slaves, since it afforded opportunity for

  Christians to interest themselves in raising the necessary ran-

  som. At this time the Jews occupied a very peculiar place among

  the nations. The spirit of trade and commerce was almost

  entirely confined to them, and the great proportion of the wealth

  was in their hands, and, of course, many slaves. The regulations

 

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