FREE BOOKS

Author's List




PREV.   NEXT  
|<   2210   2211   2212   2213   2214   2215   2216   2217   2218   2219   2220   2221   2222   2223   2224   2225   2226   2227   2228   2229   2230   2231   2232   2233   2234  
2235   2236   2237   2238   2239   2240   2241   2242   2243   2244   2245   2246   2247   2248   2249   2250   2251   2252   2253   2254   2255   2256   2257   2258   2259   >>   >|  
abors, or marked by features offensive to the taste of the artificial and capricious, are to be excluded from those refreshing and elevating influences which intelligence and refinement may be expected to exert; that thus they are to constitute a class by themselves, and to be made to know and keep their place at the very bottom of society? Or, what if we should think and speak of the primitive Christians, as if they had the same pecuniary resources as Heaven has lavished upon the American churches?--as if they were as remarkable for affluence, elegance, and splendor? Or, as if they had as high a position and as extensive an influence in politics and literature?--having directly or indirectly, the control over the high places of learning and of power? If we should pursue our studies and arrange our arguments--if we should explain words and interpret language--under such a bias, what must inevitably be the results? What would be the worth of our conclusions? What confidence could be reposed in any instruction we might undertake to furnish? And is not this the way in which the advocates and apologists of slavery dispose of the bearing which primitive Christianity has upon it? They first ascribe, unwittingly, perhaps, to the primitive churches; the character, relations, and condition of American Christianity, and amidst the deep darkness and strange confusion thus produced, set about interpreting the language and explaining the usages of the New Testament! "SO THAT YE ARE WITHOUT EXCUSE." Among the lessons of instruction which our Savior imparted, having a general bearing on the subject of slavery, that in which he sets up the _true standard of greatness_, deserves particular attention. In repressing the ambition of his disciples, he held up before them the methods by which alone healthful aspirations for eminence could be gratified, and thus set the elements of true greatness in the clearest light. "Ye know, that they which are accounted to rule over the Gentiles, exercise lordship over them; and their great ones exercise authority upon them. But so shall it not be among you; but whosoever will be great among you, shall be your minister; _and whosoever of you will be the chiefest, shall be servant of all_." In other words, through the selfishness and pride of mankind, the maxim widely prevails in the world, that it is the privilege, prerogative, and mark of greatness, TO EXACT SERVICE; that our s
PREV.   NEXT  
|<   2210   2211   2212   2213   2214   2215   2216   2217   2218   2219   2220   2221   2222   2223   2224   2225   2226   2227   2228   2229   2230   2231   2232   2233   2234  
2235   2236   2237   2238   2239   2240   2241   2242   2243   2244   2245   2246   2247   2248   2249   2250   2251   2252   2253   2254   2255   2256   2257   2258   2259   >>   >|  



Top keywords:

primitive

 
greatness
 

exercise

 

American

 

churches

 

slavery

 

bearing

 

Christianity

 

instruction

 

language


whosoever

 

EXCUSE

 

WITHOUT

 

privilege

 

lessons

 

prevails

 

widely

 

general

 

subject

 

imparted


Savior

 

interpreting

 

produced

 

confusion

 

darkness

 

strange

 

SERVICE

 

Testament

 
mankind
 

usages


explaining

 

prerogative

 
deserves
 

elements

 

clearest

 

gratified

 

eminence

 

healthful

 

aspirations

 

amidst


lordship

 

Gentiles

 
accounted
 

methods

 

attention

 
authority
 

standard

 

selfishness

 

repressing

 
ambition