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The Humanisation of Slavery in the Old Testament
With contributions by David L. Baker an John Warwick Montgomery
Das Buch vertritt die These, dass es sich bei der altestamentlichen Knechtschaft nicht um Sklaverei im Sinne der Antike oder Kolonialzeit gehandelt hat und dass sich aus dem starken Rechtsschutz der Sklaven im Alten Testament die Freiheit der Sklaven im Neuen Testament und der AntiSklavereikampf der Moderne entwickelt hat. …
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Artikelnummer:
540096000
EAN/ISBN:
9783862690961
Produktart:
Bücher
Einband:
Paperback
Maße:
14 x 20,7 cm
Umfang:
80 S.
Veröffentlichungsdatum:
31.03.2015
With a section on "The Role of Evangelicals in the Abolition of Slavery"
Das Buch vertritt die These, dass es sich bei der altestamentlichen Knechtschaft nicht um Sklaverei im Sinne der Antike oder Kolonialzeit gehandelt hat und dass sich aus dem starken Rechtsschutz der Sklaven im Alten Testament die Freiheit der Sklaven im Neuen Testament und der AntiSklavereikampf der Moderne entwickelt hat.
Three scholars discuss slavery in the Old Testament and a Christian view of slavery. They argue, that slavery in the OT had not much in common with Roman-Greek, Muslim or modern European slavery, as the slaves where protected by the legal system. They believe that there is a road from the humanization of slavery in the OT through the soft opposition against slavery in the New Testament to the abolition of slavery by Christians and in Christian nations.
The last essay contains a longer section on "The Role of Evangelicals in the Abolition of Slavery", that summarizes the research of the last decades showing that the uncurrupted oppositions by pious people and the power of the masses without direct political influence changed history, the first major human rights campaign of history.
Three scholars discuss slavery in the Old Testament and a Christian view of slavery. They argue, that slavery in the OT had not much in common with Roman-Greek, Muslim or modern European slavery, as the slaves where protected by the legal system. They believe that there is a road from the humanization of slavery in the OT through the soft opposition against slavery in the New Testament to the abolition of slavery by Christians and in Christian nations.
The last essay contains a longer section on "The Role of Evangelicals in the Abolition of Slavery", that summarizes the research of the last decades showing that the uncurrupted oppositions by pious people and the power of the masses without direct political influence changed history, the first major human rights campaign of history.