Domestic Slavery Considered as a Scriptural Institution

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Domestic Slavery Considered as a Scriptural Institution by Finn, Nathan A.; Harper, Keith, 9780881461077
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  • ISBN: 9780881461077 | 0881461075
  • Cover: Hardcover
  • Copyright: 5/1/2008

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Domestic Slavery originated in the nineteenth century as a literary debate between two Baptist leaders over the Bible's teachings on slavery. The chapters were originally letters published in a Baptist newspaper in Boston, Massachusetts. Southern pastor Richard Fuller and Northern educator Francis Wayland were each able defenders of their respective positions. These men were also good friends who believed that a difference of opinion about slavery should not necessitate a breaking of Christian fellowship. Unfortunately, these two Baptists leaders proved naive in this regard. Just weeks after the publication of the correspondence in book form, Fuller's Southern Baptist Convention broke away from the larger Baptist denomination and formed a new ecclesiastical body. A number of issues factored into the division, though the slavery debate was what ultimately led to the creation of a separate Baptist denomination in the South.
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