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as he pleased, he was not to be punished, if he destroyed it. Answer. Whether the servant died under the master's hand, or continued a day or two, he was _equally_ his master's property, and the objector admits that in the _first_ case the master is to be "surely punished" for destroying _his own property_! The other inference is, that since the continuance of a day or two, cleared the master of _intent to kill_, the loss of the slave would be a sufficient punishment for inflicting the injury which caused his death. This inference makes the Mosaic law false to its own principles. A _pecuniary loss_, constituted no part of the claims of the law, where a person took the _life_ of another. In such case, the law utterly spurned money, however large the sum. God would not so cheapen human life, as to balance it with such a weight. "_Ye shall take no satisfaction for the life of a murderer, but he shall surely be put to death_." See Numb. xxxv. 31. Even in excusable homicide, a case of death purely accidental, as where an axe slipped from the helve and killed a man, no sum of money availed to release from confinement in the city of refuge, until the death of the High Priest. Numbers xxxv. 32. The doctrine that the loss of the servant would be a penalty _adequate_ to the desert of the master, admits the master's _guilt_--his desert of _some_ punishment, and it prescribes a _kind_ of punishment, rejected by the law, in all cases where man took the life of man, whether with or without _intent_ to kill. In short, the objector annuls an integral part of the system--resolves himself into a legislature, with power in the premises, makes a _new_ law, and coolly metes out such penalty as he thinks fit, both in kind and quantity. Mosaic statutes amended, and Divine legislation revised and improved! The master who struck out the tooth of a servant, whether intentionally or not, was required to set him free for his tooth's sake. The _pecuniary loss_ to the master was the same as though the servant had _died_. Look at the two cases. A master beats his servant so severely, that after a day or two he dies of his wounds; another master accidentally strikes out his servant's tooth, and his servant is free--_the pecuniary loss of both masters is the same._ The objector contends that the loss of the slave's services in the first case is punishment sufficient for the crime of killing him; yet God commands the _same_ punishment for even the _ac
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