Evangelical Christians in the nineteenth century led the campaign for the abolition of the slave trade, and then of slavery, throughout the British Empire. Yet their opponents argued that the Bible itself supports the institution of slavery. How can one book be used to uphold two contradictory positions? In this Latimer Study, Mark Meynell examines the conundrum. Why did the apostle Paul not campaign for the abolition of slavery in his day? What did he really teach on the subject? Was slavery in the ancient world different from modern slavery, like the horrors of the American Deep South? In particular, this study focuses upon the problem of the New Testament ‘household codes’. How can Paul command slaves to obey their earthly masters, and also proclaim that in Christ Jesus there is ‘neither slave nor free’? Christians today rightly reject slavery, so should we also campaign against another aspect of the ‘household codes’ – the submission of wives to husbands? And what about the liberation of the victims of homophobia?
Mark Meynell is a director for Langham Preaching (part of Langham Partnership) and travels widely. He is a speaker, trainer and blogger. He is the author of When Darkness Seems My Closest Friend (IVP) and A Wilderness of Mirrors (Zondervan).
This book was originally published in 2007, but re-released on Kindle as it remains extremely relevant to contemporary issues in the church.
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