time and earnings, and even the power to “own
any thing, or acquire any thing?” a “quart
of corn a-day,” the legal allowance of food[C]!
their
only clothing for one half the year,
“
one shirt and
one pair of pantaloons[D]!”
two hours and a half only, for rest and refreshment
in the twenty-four[E]!—their dwellings,
hovels, unfit for human residence, with but
one apartment, where both sexes and all ages herd
promiscuously at night, like the beasts of the field.
Add to this, the ignorance, and degradation; the daily
sundering of kindred, the revelries of lust, the lacerations
and baptisms of blood, sanctioned by law, and patronized
by public sentiment. What was the bondage of
Egypt when compared with this? And yet for her
oppression of the poor, God smote her with plagues,
and trampled her as the mire, till she passed away
in his wrath, and the place that knew her in her pride,
knew her no more. Ah! “I have seen
the afflictions of my people, and I have heard their
groanings, and am come down to deliver them.”
HE DID COME, and Egypt sank a ruinous heap, and her
blood closed over her. If such was God’s
retribution for the oppression of heathen Egypt, of
how much sorer punishment shall a Christian people
be thought worthy, who cloak with religion a system,
in comparison with which the bondage of Egypt dwindles
to nothing? Let those believe who can that God
commissioned his people to rob others of
all
their rights, while he denounced against them wrath
to the uttermost, if they practised the
far lighter
oppression of Egypt—which robbed it’s
victims of only the least and cheapest of their rights,
and left the females unplundered even of these.
What! Is God divided against himself? When
He had just turned Egypt into a funeral pile; while
his curse yet blazed upon her unburied dead, and his
bolts still hissed amidst her slaughter, and the smoke
of her torment went upwards because she had “ROBBED
THE POOR,” did He license the victims of robbery
to rob the poor of ALL? As
Lawgiver did
he
create a system tenfold more grinding than
that for which he had just hurled Pharaoh headlong,
and overwhelmed his princes, and his hosts, till “hell
was moved to meet them at their coming?”
[Footnote A: The Egyptians evidently had domestic
servants living in their families; these may have
been slaves; allusion is made to them in Ex. ix. 14,
20, 21.]
[Footnote B: The land of Goshen was a large tract
of country, east of the Pelusian arm of the Nile,
and between it and the head of the Red Sea, and the
lower border of Palestine. The probable centre
of that portion, occupied by the Israelites, could
hardly have been less than sixty miles from the city.
The border of Goshen nearest to Egypt must have been
many miles distant. See “Exodus of the Israelites
out of Egypt,” an able article by Professor
Robinson, in the Biblical Repository for October,
1832.]
[Footnote C: Law of N.C. Haywood’s
Manual 524-5.]