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Huntsville, Ala., Jan. 31, 1857.
The Golden Rule.
This view of the Golden Rule is the only exposition of that great text which has ever been given in words sufficiently clear, and, with practical ill.u.s.trations, to make the subject intelligible to every capacity. The explanation is the truth of G.o.d, and it settles forever the slavery question, so far as it rests on this precept of Jesus Christ.
No. IV.
Rev. Albert Barnes:--
Dear Sir:--The argument against slave-holding, founded on the Golden Rule, is the strongest which can be presented, and I admit that, if it cannot be perfectly met, the master must give the slave liberty and equality. But if it can be absolutely refuted, then the slave-holder in this regard may have a good conscience; and the abolitionist has nothing more to say. Here is the rule.
"Therefore, all things whatsoever ye would that men should do to you, do ye even so to them; for this is the law and the prophets."
(Matt. vii. 12.)
In your "_Notes_," on this pa.s.sage you thus write:--"This command has been usually called the Savior's _Golden Rule_; a name given to it on account of its great value.--_All that you_ EXPECT or DESIRE _of others, in similar circ.u.mstances_, DO TO THEM."
This, sir, is your exposition of the Savior's rule of right. With all due respect, I decline your interpretation. You have missed the meaning by leaving out ONE word. Observe,--you do not say, All that you OUGHT to _expect_ or _desire_, &c., THAT _do to them_. No. But you make the EXPECTATION or DESIRE, _which every man_ ACTUALLY HAS _in similar circ.u.mstances_, THE MEASURE _of his_ DUTY _to every other man_. Or, in different words, you make, without qualification or explanation, the MERE EXPECTATION or DESIRE which every man,--with no instruction, or any sort of training,--wise or simple, good or bad, heathen, Mohammedan, nominal Christian,--WOULD HAVE _in similar circ.u.mstances_, THE LAW OF OBLIGATION, _always binding_ upon him TO DO THAT SAME THING _unto his neighbor!_
Sir, you have left out _the very idea_ which contains the sense of that Scripture. It is this: Christ, in his rule, _presupposes_ that the man to whom he gives it _knows_, and from the Bible, (or providence, or natural conscience, _so far as in harmony_ with the Bible,) the _various relations_ in which G.o.d has placed him; and the _respective duties_ in those relations; _i.e._ The rule _a.s.sumes_ that he KNOWS what he OUGHT to _expect_ or _desire_ in similar circ.u.mstances.
I will test this affirmation by several and varied ill.u.s.trations. I will show how Christ, according to your exposition of his rule, speaks on the subject,--of _revenge, marriage, emanc.i.p.ation_,--_the fugitive from bondage_. And how he truly speaks on these subjects.
_Revenge--Right according to your view of the Golden Rule_.
Indian and Missionary--Prisoner tied to a tree, stuck over with burning splinters.
Here is an Indian torturing his prisoner. The missionary approaches and beseeches him to regard _the Golden Rule_. "Humph!" utters the savage: "Golden Rule! what's that?" "Why" says the good man, "all that you _expect_ or _desired_ other Indians, in similar circ.u.mstances, do you even so to them." "Humph!" growls the warrior, with a fierce smile,--"Missionary--good: that's what I do now. If I was tied to that tree, I would _expect_ and _desire him_ to have _his_ revenge,--to do to me as I do to him; and I would sing my death-song, as he sings his.
Missionary, your rule is Indian rule,--good rule, missionary. Humph!"
And he sticks more splinters into his victim, brandishes his tomahawk, and yells.
Sir, what has the missionary to say, after this perfect proof that you have mistaken the great law of right? Verily, he finds that the rule, with your explanation, tells the Indian to torture his prisoner. Verily, he finds that the wild man has the best of the argument. He finds he had left out the word OUGHT; and that he can't put it in, until he teaches the Indian things which as yet he don't know. Yea, he finds he gave the commandment too soon; for that he must begin back of that commandment, and teach the savage G.o.d's ordination of the relations in which he is to his fellow-men, before he can make him comprehend or apply the rule as Christ gives it.
_Marriage--Void under your Interpretation of the Golden Rule_.
Lucy Stone, and Moses--Lady on sofa, having just divorced herself--Moses, with the Tables of the Law, appears: she falls at his feet, and covers her face with her hands.
This woman, everybody knows, was married some time since, after a fas.h.i.+on; that is to say, protesting publicly against all laws of wedlock, and entering into the relation so long only as she, or her husband, might continue pleased therewith.
Very well. Then I, without insult to her or offense to my readers, suppose that about this time she has shown her unalienable right to liberty and equality by giving her husband a bill of divorcement. Free again, she reclines on her couch, and is reading the Tribune. It is mid-day. But there is a light, above the brightness of the sun, s.h.i.+ning round about her. And _he_, who saw G.o.d on Sinai, stands before her, the glory on his face, and the tables of stone in his hands. The woman falls before him, veils her eyes with her trembling fingers, and cries out, "Moses, oh, I believed till now that thou practised deception, in claiming to be sent of G.o.d to Israel. But now, I know thou didst see G.o.d in the burning bush, and heard him speak that law from the holy mountain. Moses, I know ... I confess.".... And Moses answers, and says unto her, "Woman, thou art one of a great cla.s.s in this land, who claim to be more just than G.o.d, more pure than their Maker, who have made their inward light their G.o.d. Woman, thou in '_convention_' hast uttered _Declaration of Independence_ from man. And, verily, thou hast a.s.serted this claim to equality and unalienable right, even now, by giving thy husband his bill of divorcement, in thy sense of the Golden Rule. Yea, verily, thou hast done unto him all that thou _expectedst_ or _desiredst_ of him, in similar circ.u.mstances. And now thou thinkest thyself free again. Woman, thou art a sinner. Verily, thine inward light, and declaration of independence, and Golden Rule, do well agree the one with the other. Verily, thou hast learned of Jefferson, and Channing, and Barnes. But, woman, notwithstanding thou hast sat at the feet of these wise men, I, Moses, say thou art a sinner before the law, and the prophets, and the gospel. Woman, thy light is darkness; thy declaration of equality and right is vanity and folly; and thy Golden Rule is license to wickedness.
"Woman, hast thou ears? Hear: I, by authority of G.o.d, ordained that the man should rule over thee. I placed thee, and children, and men-servants, and maid-servants, under the same law of subjection to the government ordained of G.o.d in the family,--the state. I for a time sanctioned polygamy, and made it right. I, for the hardness of men's hearts, allowed them, and made it right, to give their wives a bill of divorcement.
Woman, hear. Paul, having the same Spirit of G.o.d, confirms my word. He commands _wives_, and children, and servants, after this manner:--'Wives, submit yourselves unto your own husbands, as it is fit in the Lord; children, obey your parents in all things, for this is well pleasing unto the Lord; servants, obey in all things your masters according to the flesh; not with eye-service, as men-pleasers; but in singleness of heart, fearing G.o.d.' Woman, Paul makes _that rule_ the same, and _that submission_, the same. The _manner_ of the rule he varies with the relations. He requires it to be, in the _love_ of the husband, even as Christ loved the church,--in the _mildness_ of the father, not provoking the children to anger, lest they be discouraged,--in _the justice and equity_ of the master, knowing that he also has a master in heaven: (Colossians.) Woman, hear. Paul says to thee, the man _now_ shall have one wife, and he _now_ shall not give her a bill of divorcement, save for crime. Woman, thou art not free from thy husband. Christ's Golden Rule must not be interpreted by thee as A. Barnes has rendered it; Christ _a.s.sumes_ that thou _believest_ G.o.d's truth,--that thou _knowest_ the relation of husband and wife, and the _obligations and rights_ of the same, _as in the Bible; then_, in the light of this _knowledge_, verily, thou art required to do what G.o.d says thou _oughtest_ to do. Woman, thou art a sinner. Go, sin no more. Go, find thy husband; see to it that he takes thee back. Go, submit to him, and honor him, and obey him."
_Emanc.i.p.ation--Ruin--Golden Rule, in your meaning, carried out_.
Island in the Tropics--Elegant houses falling to decay--Broad fields abandoned to the forest--Wharves gra.s.s-grown--Negroes relapsing into the savage state--A dark cloud over the island, through which the lightning glares, revealing, in red writing, these words:--"_Redeemed, regenerated, and disenthralled by the irresistible genius of universal emanc.i.p.ation"_.--[Gospel--according to Curran--and the British Parliament.]
Jamaica, sir, to say nothing of St. Domingo, is ill.u.s.tration of your theory of the Golden Rule, in negro emanc.i.p.ation. You tell the Southern master that all he would _expect_ or _desire_, if he were a slave, he must do unto his bondman; that he must not pause to ask whether the relation of master and slave be ordained of G.o.d or not. No. You tell him, _if_ he would _expect_ or _desire_ liberty were he a slave, _that_ settles the question as to what he is to do! He must let his bondman go free. Yea, _that_ is what you teach: because the moment you put in the word OUGHT, and say, all that you OUGHT to _expect_ or _desire_,--_i.e._ all that you _know_ G.o.d commands you to _expect _ or _desire_ in your relations to men, _as established by him,_--THAT _do to them_. Sir, when you thus explain the Golden Rule, then your argument against slave-holding, so far as founded on this rule, is at once arrested; it is stopped short, in full career; it has to wait for reinforcement of FACT, which may never come up.
For, suppose the FACT to be, that the relation of master and slave is one mode of the government ordained of G.o.d. Then, sir, the master, _knowing that_ FACT, and _knowing_ what the slave, _as a slave_, OUGHT to _expect_ or _desire_, he, the master, then FULFILS THE GOLDEN RULE when he does that unto his slave which, in similar circ.u.mstances, he OUGHT to expect _to be done unto himself_. Now comes the question, OUGHT he then to _expect_ or _desire_ liberty and equality? THAT is the question of questions on this subject. And without hesitation I reply, The Golden Rule DECIDES _that question_ YEA or NAY, _absolutely_ and _perfectly_, as G.o.d's word or providence shows that the GOOD _of the family, the community, the state_, REQUIRES that the slave IS or IS NOT _to be set free and made equal_. THAT GOOD, _as G.o.d reveals it_, SETTLES THE QUESTION.
Let the master then see to it, how he hears G.o.d's word as to THAT GOOD.
Let him see to it, how he understands G.o.d's providence as to THAT GOOD.
Let him see to it, that he makes no mistake as to THAT GOOD. For G.o.d will not hold him guiltless, if he will not hear what he tells him as to THAT GOOD. G.o.d will not justify him, if he has a bad conscience or blunders in his philosophy. G.o.d will punish him, if he fails to bless his land by letting the bond go free when, he OUGHT to emanc.i.p.ate. And G.o.d will punish him, if he brings a curse upon his country by freeing his slave when he OUGHT NOT to give him liberty.
So, then, _the Golden Rule does not_, OF ITSELF, _reveal to man at all what are his_ RELATIONS _to his fellow-men; but it tells him what he is to_ DO, _when he_ ALREADY KNOWS THEM.
So, then, you, sir, cannot be permitted to tell the world that this rule must emanc.i.p.ate all the negro slaves in the United States,--no matter how unprepared they may be,--no matter how degraded,--no matter how unlike and unequal to the white man by creation,--no matter if it be a natural and moral impossibility,--no matter: the Golden Rule must emanc.i.p.ate by authority of the first sentiments of the Declaration of Independence, and by obligation of the great law of liberty,--the intuitional consciousness of the eternal right!
No. The Rule, as said, _presupposes_ that he who is required to obey it does already _know_ the relations in which G.o.d has placed him, and the respective duties in those conditions. Has G.o.d, then, established the relations of husband and wife, parent and child, master and slave? Yes.
Then the command comes. It says to the husband, To aid you in your known obligations to your wife,--to give you a lively sense of it,--suppose yourself to be the wife: whatsoever, therefore, you OUGHT, in that condition, to _expect_ or _desire_, that, as husband, do unto your wife.
It says to the parent, Imagine yourself the child; and whatsoever, as such, you OUGHT to _expect_ or _desire, that_, as parent, do unto your child. It says to the master, Put yourself in the place of your slave; and whatsoever you OUGHT, in that condition, to _expect_ or _desire, that_, as master, do unto your slave. Let husband, parent, master, _know_ his obligations from G.o.d, and obey the Rule.
_Fugitive Slave--Obeying the Golden Rule under your version_.
Honorable Joshua R. Giddings and the Angel of the Lord--Hon. Gentleman at table--Nine runaway negroes dining with him--The Angel, uninvited, comes in and disturbs the feast.
Giddings has boasted in Congress of having had nine fugitive slaves to break bread with him at one time. I choose, then, to imagine that, during the dinner, the angel who found Hagar by the fountain stands suddenly in the midst, and says to the negroes, "Ye slaves, whence came ye, and whither will ye go?" And they answer and say, "We flee from the face of our masters. This abolitionist told us to kill, and steal, and run away from bondage; and we have murdered and stolen and escaped. He, thou seest, welcomes us to liberty and equality. We _expect_ and _desire_ to be members of Congress, Governors of States, to marry among the great, and one of us to be President. Giddings, and all abolitionists, tell us that these honors belong to us equally as to white people, and will be given under the Golden Rule." And the angel of the Lord says to them, "Ye slaves, return unto your masters, and submit yourselves under their hands.
I sent your fathers, and I send you, into bondage. I mean it unto good, and I will bring it to pa.s.s to save much people alive." Then, turning to the tempter, he says, "Thou, a statesman! thou, a reader of my word and providence! why hast thou not understood my speech to Hagar? I gave her, a slave, to Sarah. She fled from her mistress. I sent her back. Why hast thou not understood my word four thousand years ago,--that _the slave shall not flee from his master?_ Why hast thou also perverted my law in Deuteronomy, (xxiii. 15, 16?) I say therein, 'Thou shalt not deliver unto his master the servant which is escaped from his master unto thee: he shall dwell with thee, even among you, in that place which he shall choose, in one of thy gates where it liketh him best: thou shalt not oppress him.' Why hast thou not known that I meant the _heathen slave_ who escaped from his _heathen master?_ I commanded, Israel, in such case, not to hold _him_ in bondage. I made this specific law for this specific fact.
Why hast thou taught that, in this commandment, I gave license to all men-servants and maid-servants in the whole land of Israel to run away from their masters? Why hast thou thus made me, in one saying, contradict and make void all my laws wherein I ordained that the Hebrews should be slave-owners over their brethren during years, and over the heathen forever? Why hast thou in all this changed my Golden Rule? I, in that rule, _a.s.sume_ that men _know_ from revelation and providence the relations in which I have placed them, and their duties therein. I then command them to do unto others what they thus _know_ they _ought_ to do unto them in these relations; and I make the obligation quick and powerful, by telling every man to imagine himself in such conditions, and then he will _the better_ KNOW '_whatsoever_' he should do unto his neighbor. Why hast thou made void my law, by making me say, 'All that thou _expectest_ or _desirest_ of others, in similar circ.u.mstances, do to them'? I never imagined to give such license to folly and sin. Why hast thou imagined such license to iniquity? Verily, thou tempter, thou hast in thy Golden Rule made these slaves thieves and murderers, and art now eating with them the bread of sin and death.
"Why hast thou tortured my speech wherein I say that I have made of _one blood_ all nations of men, to mean that I have created all men equal and endowed them with rights unalienable save in their consent? I never said that thing! I said that I made all men to descend from _one parentage!_ That is what I say in that place! Why hast thou tortured that plain truth?
Thou mightest as well teach that all 'the moving creatures that have life, and fowl that fly above the earth, in the open firmament of heaven,' are _created equal_, because I said I brought them forth _of the water_. Thou mightest as well say that 'all cattle, and creeping thing and beast of the earth, _are created equal_, because I said I brought them forth _of the earth_, as to affirm the _equality of men_ because I say they are _of one blood_. Nay, I have made men unequal as the leaves of the trees, the sands of the sea, the stars of heaven. I have made them so, in harmony with the infinite variety and inequality in every thing in my creation. And I have made them unequal in my _mercy_. Had I made all men equal in attributes of body and mind, then _unfallen man_ would never have realized the varied glories of his destiny. And had I given _fallen man_ equality of nature and unalienable rights, then I had made the earth an Aceldama and Valley of Gehenna. For what would be the _strife_ in all the earth among men equal in body and mind, equal in power, equal in depravity, equal in will, each one maintaining rights unalienable? When would the war end? Who would be the victors where all are giants? Who would sue for peace where none will submit? What would be _human social life?_ Who would be the weak, the loving? Who would seek or need forbearance, compa.s.sion, self-denying benevolence? Who would be the grateful? Who would be the humble, the meek?
What would be _human_ virtue, what _human_ vice, what _human_ joy or sorrow? Nay, I have made men _unequal_ and given them _alienable rights_, that I might INSt.i.tUTE HUMAN GOVERNMENT and reveal HUMAN CHARACTER.
"Why hast thou been willingly ignorant of these first principles of the oracles of G.o.d, which would have made thee truly a Christian philosopher and statesman?"