February 22, 2007

On Slavery's Abolition And Religious Faith

A new movie, Amazing Grace, opens today, all about the efforts of William Wilberforce to bring about the abolition of slavery in Great Britain. It stands as a pointed reminder of the power of religious faith for motivating social change.

Joseph Loconte has this to say about the abolition movement and the message it should hold for those who express hostility to the involvement of people of faith in the political process.

A convert to evangelical Christianity, Wilberforce is greatly admired in religious circles today, if not always imitated. Early in his parliamentary career, he made a vow to avoid the corruptions of political influence — and kept it. He was known for his intellectual seriousness and personal charm. French author Madame de Stael confessed her surprise after dining with him: "I have always heard that he was the most religious, but I now find that he is the wittiest man in England."

Wilberforce sought to change hearts and minds, not just laws. So he organized boycotts and petitions, staged demonstrations and commissioned artwork to mobilize public opinion on a national scale. Wilberforce suffered many setbacks — his abolition bills were repeatedly killed in committee or defeated in the House of Commons — but he kept on.

Most important, he was unafraid to invoke the Gospel to challenge the consciences of slavers and their supporters in Parliament. In his "Letter on the Abolition of the Slave Trade," published in January 1807, Wilberforce placed the brutish facts of human trafficking against the backdrop of Christian compassion and divine justice.

"We must believe," he warned, "that a continued course of wickedness, oppression and cruelty, obstinately maintained in spite of the fullest knowledge and the loudest warnings, must infallibly bring down upon us the heaviest judgments of the Almighty." A month later, on Feb. 23, the House of Commons voted 283 to 16 to abolish the slave trade.

In our post-Sept. 11 era, there's suspicion and antagonism toward religious belief, especially when it mixes with politics. Secularists such as Richard Dawkins and Sam Harris describe the beliefs of the faithful as a "delusion" and akin to "insanity." Wilberforce endured similar scorn. He was lampooned for his "damnable doctrine" and dismissed as a "treacherous fanatic."

Modern skeptics should remember that the great campaign against the international slave trade was not led by atheists. It was fought by people with deep Christian convictions about the dignity and freedom of every person made in the image of God.

In my lifetime, we have seen a civil rights movement that centered around the churches of America, black and white, for support, and a host of other efforts by people of Christian faith to be salt and light in the world. And yet all too often those efforts have clashed with the secular ideology of opinion elites, who have then attempted to delegitimize the efforts of those who, like Wilberforce, seek to denounce the moral evils of the day and bring about solutions to them.

We ignore and marginalize such voices at our peril.

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Posted by: Greg at 11:35 PM | Comments (10) | Add Comment
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1 You mean the double standard used when some claim the separation of church and state while at the same time attempt to enforce the state as the true church?

Posted by: T F Stern at Fri Feb 23 16:42:45 2007 (z1IoH)

2 That is a little one sided. The opposition to freeing the slaves was lead in the South by church goers who cited the Bible for their beliefs.

Posted by: Gary Denton at Sat Feb 24 08:11:27 2007 (fF8Dm)

3 Even conceding that point (which is not entirely accurate), the point remains that marginalizing people of faith is done at society's peril, for their participation has brought much more good than it has evil.

Posted by: Rhymes With Right at Sat Feb 24 11:32:26 2007 (gLQDn)

4 Gary,

I think your history is a little one sided. Maybe you should take some history classes and look at real diaries from the "south" and give up the hand stamped civil war books that the northern press wrote. You might have an awakening.

Posted by: Joe at Sun Feb 25 07:22:00 2007 (H3Zz5)

5 Gee, Joe, I have taken such classes in the past, and have read any number of such diaries -- including some of the actual diaries, not edited versions, while attending Washington & Lee University (you know, the school where General Lee was president from 1865-1870).

And you clearly aren't aware that I TEACH history.

Posted by: Rhymes With Right at Sun Feb 25 08:28:52 2007 (8fhUN)

6 Before their was a Civil War there was already a great division that occured in the churches, with the Southern churches supporting slavery and the Northern churches opposed, with very minor exceptions.

Generally the real power in any Southern community isn't held by people that can be defined as secular. Faith can be a great force for change, but it is frequently opposed by equally fervent faithful followers who don't hold identical views.

Posted by: Gary Denton at Sun Feb 25 14:37:41 2007 (fF8Dm)

7 And I'll agree with the observation, Gary, but can't help but note that the abolition movement was based more on religious faith than support for slavery was, for the latter was supported more with economic and political arguments rather than appeals to morality and theology.

Posted by: Rhymes With Right at Mon Feb 26 01:16:03 2007 (yVOzO)

8 "Gee, Joe, I have taken such classes in the past, and have read any number of such diaries..."

I was writing to Gary. See where I wrote his name?

Anyway, I read my family's southern history not in classes but in their hand written diaries. Their account is different than yours.

Have a good one and keep on TEACHING history.

Posted by: Joe at Mon Feb 26 04:39:45 2007 (rItTJ)

9 I've had enough people call me Gary over the years that I answer to it in an automatic fashion. I forgot there was a Gary on the thread. Sorry for the confusion.

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