between
hired servants and their masters.
Their untrustworthiness was proverbial. John
ix. 12, 13. None but the
lowest class engaged
as hired servants, and the kinds of labor assigned
to them required little knowledge and skill.
Various passages show the low repute and trifling
character of the class from which they were hired.
Judg. ix. 4; 1 Sam. ii. 5. The superior condition
of bought servants is manifest in the high trusts
confided to them, and in their dignity and authority
in the household. In no instance is a
hired
servant thus distinguished. The
bought
servant is manifestly the master’s representative
in the family—with plenipotentiary powers
over adult children, even negotiating marriage for
them. Abraham adjured his servant not to take
a wife for Isaac of the daughters of the Canaanites.
The servant himself selected the individual.
Servants also exercised discretionary power in the
management of their masters’ estates, “And
the servant took ten camels of the camels of his master,
for all the goods of his master were under his
hand.” Gen. xxiv. 10. The reason
assigned for taking them, is not that such was Abraham’s
direction, but that the servant had discretionary
control. Servants had also discretionary power
in the
disposal of property. See Gen.
xxiv. 22, 23, 53. The condition of Ziba in the
house of Mephibosheth, is a case in point. So
in Prov. xvii. 2. Distinct traces of this estimation
are to be found in the New Testament, Matt. xxiv.
45; Luke xii, 42, 44. So in the parable of the
talents; the master seems to have set up each of his
servants in trade with a large capital. The unjust
steward had large
discretionary power, was
“accused of wasting his master’s goods,”
and manifestly regulated with his debtors, the
terms
of settlement. Luke xvi. 4-8. Such trusts
were never reposed in
hired servants.
[Footnote A: “For the purchased servant
who is an Israelite, or proselyte, shall fare as his
master. The master shall not eat fine bread,
and his servant bread of bran. Nor yet drink old
wine, and give his servant new; nor sleep on soft
pillows, and bedding, and his servant on straw.
I say unto you, that he that gets a purchased
servant does well to make him as his friend, or he
will prove to his employer as if he got himself a
master.”—Maimonides, in Mishna Kiddushim.
Chap. 1, Sec. 2.]
The inferior condition of hired servants, is
illustrated in the parable of the prodigal son.
When the prodigal, perishing with hunger among the
swine and husks, came to himself, his proud heart broke;
“I will arise,” he cried, “and go
to my father.” And then to assure his father
of the depth of his humility, resolved to add, “Make
me as one of thy hired servants.”
If hired servants were the superior class—to
apply for the situation, savored little of that sense
of unworthiness that seeks the dust with hidden face,