A "Kind" Master's Share of Christianity
A
planter’s influence of his servants, self-proclaimed kind-heartedness, and religious
justification, June, 1752,
Surely there should be no shame in Christ Jesus, even on the
terms of servitude. It sits as no secret in my household that the barbarous trade
of African men and women is one of brutality and inhumanity. Nor is it unknown
that the common man performs a disservice to his workers. From what I know,
their voyages across the great Atlantic consist of the most terrible of
illnesses and the common ringing of death. I do not identify with such a beastly number nor am I in the support of
it. The addle-pated sailors think nothing of their unwilling captors, unlike
myself. Instead, I treat my servants with a proud standard of respect. Such
respect permits them the knowledge, or, perhaps, obligation, of a Christian
faith.
Near my property is a house of worship which I, being strong
in morality, attend regularly. Most recently, our minister proclaimed a
statement of high controversy: allowing Negro servants to experience Christ to
share the gospel with them. I, like my brothers and sisters in Christ, found
uncertainty in the idea, but accepted it as Christ-like. And so, upon the
following Sunday morning all of my workers dawned their finest fabric and began
the journey, by foot, to the house of worship. Of the bunch of Negroes who tend
to the stock that embrace loyalty through Christian faith, some tell me of
their experience. They return the minister’s words, he tells them that they
truly do have not only a Father but a Great Friend in Heaven. Though they be
slaves, the work that they do on the sinful Earth is the most righteous of work
and that they shall receive a just wager for it in the Father’s utopia. The
minister, withholding wisdom copiously, preached to an exclusive Negro
congregation that when they serve their master, they are serving God. After
hearing of such beautiful words, I permitted their travel to another sermon,
and another. After this, their work in the fields became joyous! As opposed to
standard dreadful silence and uneasy groans, I now witness, by both eye and
ear, gleeful hymnals and the most harmonious of sound. I have no fears that my obedient
workers would revert their newfound liberties to thwarting my amorous gestures.
They, by my loving and gentle hand, receive only the best of food, agreeable
rest, and plentiful water in the Floridian sun. Rarely, if at all, must they
quiver in fear of my hand as lashings only come to the blatantly disobedient. Once
in a little while I find it that I must remind them that their present
condition is one of good will, and that I apply far more generosity than that
of the men who obsess over world-wide trade – the love of money.
I have done the Good Lord’s work – sharing the gospel even
to my Negro servants. I have chosen not to do as other cruel men do to their
Negroes in torturing them with hot wax, dismemberment, branding, and the like. To
my workers, discipline comes only through the occasional whip. Unlike the evil
planter, I share the blood of Jesus with the illiterate Negro servant and bless
him with the freedom of Godly love! Shame on those who prevent any man from knowing
such love!
Sources: Davis, David Brion. Inhuman
Bondage: the Rise and Fall of Slavery in the New World. Oxford University Press, 2008.
Bacon, Thomas. Two
Sermons Preached to a Congregation of Black Slaves at the Parish Church of S.P.
In the province of Maryland (London: John Oliver, 1749).
Hello Dalyn! To start things off, I love the title, great way to start the article. I like the formality used in your writing, really emphasizes the importance of the matter. Great job in relating the topic to Christianity, given its importance in that age. the vocabulary gave it a strong meaning, specially on that last paragraph. It happens very often where we talk about the worst on these type of situations, when I bet there had to be people who disagreed with the rest. It was great to see the progression in the owner's perspective with time.
ReplyDeleteDefinitely one of the best written articles so far, congrats!
Dalyn, I really enjoyed the point of view provided in this blog post. It is not often in the study of slavery in North America do we look on the religious opposition to the practice this early on. I liked that you included the controversy of the Africans attending church, regardless of their status as free or bound by servitude. This entry made me consider the role of religious opposition in the slave trade and if there is any discernible impact on trans atlantic trade.
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