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Slavery

September 20, 2008

How to Be Human

Slavery is a fundamentally inhumane condition. Being owned and treated as property robs people of the dignity and honor of being a human. This has deeply affected how these [post-exodus] Israelites see themselves and the world around them. What God begins here at Sinai with the Ten Commandments is the long process of teaching them how to be human again (see Exodus 19-20). These commands are vital truths about what it means to live in authentic human community.

The first commandment instructs the people to "have no other gods." Their humanity is directly connected to their ability to remember their liberation, which was a gift from God. If they forget God — the one, true God who freed them — they are at that very same moment forgetting their story. If they forget their story, they might forget what it was like to be slaves, and they might find themselves back in a new sort of slavery (see Romans 6:15-18).

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by Rob Bell and Don Golden

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June 23, 2008

The Cost of Discipleship

Being a slave is not an appealing (or dignified) prospect for anyone, regardless of his or her background. The idea that Jesus demanded absolute slave-like obedience to His lordship is a particularly difficult concept for people from contemporary Western cultures to grasp. But that is no reason to ignore or soft-pedal what Scripture clearly teaches about our duty to submit to Christ as Lord.

Jesus' portrayal of discipleship as slavery had no more appeal to the popular tastes or felt needs of His time than it does today. In fact, because most people in Jesus' time were so familiar with real-life slavery, they surely had a much more vivid mental picture than we do of what Jesus was demanding when He called for absolute self-denial and surrender to His lordship.

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by John MacArthur

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November 06, 2007

CNN Heroes: Vote for Zach Hunter!

Zach Hunter Zach Hunter is a modern day abolitionist who launched the Loose Change to Loosen Chains campaign while in seventh grade. His goal is to have slavery wiped from the planet in his lifetime, and has already raised thousands of dollars for this cause. He wrote Be the Change: Your Guide to Freeing Slaves and Changing the World.

Go to http://www.cnn.com/SPECIALS/2007/cnn.heroes/ and cast your vote for Zach Hunter today for the CNN Heroes segment.

Zach Hunter on GodTube

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March 19, 2007

Ending Slavery...in the Twenty-First Century

Zach Hunter by Zach Hunter

Modern slavery takes many ugly forms. It can be anything from whole families getting into medical debt and having to work in a brickyard till they die; to little girls working in brothels; to kids being forced to roll cigarettes all day long. In fact, there are actually more slaves in the world today than there were during the entire transatlantic slave trade! You may be wondering how people become slaves.

Many think it all starts with a dramatic kidnapping, but that is rarely the case. Usually, it has to do with money, or lack of it. Sometimes a family allows a child to go with a trusted family friend who promises a good job to help meet the family’s needs. The child soon discovers this “friend” has sold them into slavery. Or, in some instances, a desperate parent will sell their child into slavery. Often the parents are misled to believe their child will have better living conditions and maybe an opportunity for a better education. Instead, the child becomes a slave.

I was reading some modern slave stories when I came across the story of a boy named Rakesh who lived in a village in India. He was sold into slavery by his own parents to pay off a debt.

Consider what that must have been like! If your parents got into financial trouble, they could probably get another mortgage on the house, sell some household items or a car, or borrow money from a family member or friend. Can you imagine parents actually selling their own kid into slavery to take care of a debt? If that happened to you, imagine how you’d feel about yourself and the value you had to your family.

Rakesh and many other children worked in a place where yarn was woven into rugs that were exported to wealthier countries like the United States. The kids were forced to weave rugs all day, squatting down with their backs against the wall. They didn’t go to school. They didn’t play with friends. They didn’t enjoy the freedoms we take for granted. The slave masters wanted children because they have little fingers that can weave the intricate patterns that bring a lot of money in rug stores.

Let me make it plain about Rakesh’s life. It’s not like he was working at a job he just didn’t like. Or had a weekend job where his boss wasn’t nice. If Rakesh didn’t show up to work on time, he was beaten with the iron claw used to separate threads. The claw was a heavy metal device with teeth (like a comb’s) on one end and a curved handle on the other end.

Rakesh worked in this situation for a long time until an organization called Free the Slaves joined with local rescuers to free Rakesh and the other children. (For more information, visit www.freetheslaves.com.) The rescuers built little thatched schools for the freed children where they could learn to read and write and begin to build a brighter future.

Be the Change

Rakesh is now head of the disciplinary committee at his school. If students get in a fight, he calls them to the front of the classroom and makes them apologize. He says, “You were beaten before by your slave master. Take advantage of this opportunity to make something of yourselves.”

This past summer I’ve been able to speak to nearly half a million people about slavery, God’s passion for justice, and how they can get involved in helping to end slavery forever. God has given me a spirit of peace as I speak up for others. I know I have courage that comes from him, and that he is the one who enables me to do what I do.

Some people seem to be afraid of an idea they call the “social gospel.” I don’t know everything they mean by that term, but I think they’re concerned that if we emphasize serving the poor and bringing justice as part of God’s calling for us, we’re saying living for Christ isn’t about holiness and trying to get closer to God. But I don’t see it that way.

Compassion is not some alternate gospel. Compassion is an overflow of the gospel—the Good News of Christ’s sacrifice. Compassion says we have embraced the relationship with God through Christ. It’s not that we have to earn our salvation by doing good things, but compassion and service flow out of us because we are filled with God’s love. If we don’t take care of orphans and widows, if we don’t care for the poor and hurting, how can we say we belong to Jesus?

From Be the Change: Your Guide to Freeing Slaves and Changing the World by Zach Hunter

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