Friday, May 15, 2020
William Patton, An Abolitionist And Reverend - 937 Words
William Patton, an abolitionist and reverend, had a two-fold argument against the idea of Christianity supporting slavery which he laid out in his 1846 book ââ¬Å"Slavery, the Bible, Infidelityâ⬠. His first argument, was that God could never support because, in simple terms, ââ¬Å"God is just, and that slaveholding is unjustâ⬠(Patton, 6). Supporting this idea, Patton quotes Thomas Jefferson in saying in response of proslavery rhetoric, that ââ¬Å"If your interpretation of the Bible be correct,it cannot be the word of Godââ¬âfor it gives him a character the very reverse of that which reason and conscience affirm.â⬠(Patton, 6) Pattonââ¬â¢s second argument, is that by holding proslavery views, these subsets of the church create infidelity (people of other faith) among both slaves and freedmen. To prove this, Patton quotes former slave-owner Reverend J.D. Paxton, who said that ââ¬Å"It is often saidâ⬠¦ that there is a growing indisposition among slaves to w orship with their masters and attend on the preaching of whites. Now that this prejudice in slaves, against worshipping with the whites, may be traced mainly to the system of slavery is to me most certainâ⬠(Patton, 10). Patton then quotes a letter written to the popular abolitionist newspaper, The Emancipator, where the writer was discussing religion with an infidel, and he writes that ââ¬Å"The first argument he brought against the Scriptures was the assertion that they sanctioned slavery; and to prove it, quoted Gov. Hammond, and prominent Doctors of Divinity,
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