Tribal Hypocrisy and Slavery, the Abrahamic Tradition?

Reading the following texts from Leviticus, the third book of the Torah and the Old Testament, we shall see a very strange mixture of progressive economics and tribal-based hypocrisy [racism] and slavery. We will logically conclude [in line with historical facts as well] that “Do onto others as you’d have them do onto you” referred strictly to one’s own race and religion, not to people of different races, not to heathens/pagans. The humanistic interpretation we give to this saying today should never be transposed with its root, for that would be anachronistic and a falsification of history.
Slavery is treated in a more or less grey manner in the New Testament. But slavery is fundamentally justified in the Old Testament, in the Quran, and in other faiths, especially since slavery was a widespread phenomenon across most of the world [a sad consequence of the progress of surplus agriculture]. And we will also note that the part on progressive economics has become a long, lost art or practice, among both Jews and Christians – and it’s a disgusting repudiation of the true Judaic and Christian Jesus Christ, committed throughout the centuries by fake Jews and fake Christians.
As professor Michael Hudson put it – referring to the Pharisees, Hillel the Elder [the founder of Rabbinic Judaism], and the money interests behind them – “They said ‘we’ve got to get rid of this guy [Christ] and rewrite Judaism and make it about sex instead of class war’, which is really what the whole Old Testament is about. That was where Christianity got perverted. Christianity turned so anti-Jesus, it was the equivalent of the American Tea Party, applauding wealth and even greed, Ayn-Rand style. […] Over the last 1000 years the Catholic Church has been saying it’s noble to be poor. But Jesus never said it was good to be poor. What he said was that rich people are greedy and corrupt. That’s what Socrates was saying, as well as Aristotle and the Stoic Roman philosophers, the biblical prophets in Isaiah. But that’s not what Evangelical Christianity is all about today. American Fundamentalist Christians say don’t share a penny. King Jesus is going to make you rich. Don’t tax millionaires. Jesus may help me win the lottery. Tax poor people whom the Lord has left behind – no doubt for their sins. There’s nothing about the Jubilee Year here.”
As for American Manifest Destiny [American Exceptionalism], in my opinion, the obvious foundation for it is the belief that Americans were the creators of a new Israel, and they themselves the new chosen people of God. Americans being European colonists, just like the Jewish immigrants/colonists from the West and the Soviet Union who flocked to the region of Palestine, then under British occupation [whose elites also believed to be chosen, see Disraeli convincing the royal family to adopt circumcision], to create a homeland, fulfilling the Zionist [religious nationalist] ambition. And after World War 2, this American Manifest Destiny took over from where the British Empire left off; Israel being the most important spearhead of Western Imperialism in the Middle East. I won’t get into the end time views of Christian Zionists, because that’s a whole other realm of crazy.
If any avid unionist will say, well, what about the civil war? That war wasn’t fought to free the blacks and end slavery because it was morally repugnant. It was a war fought for geopolitical and economic reasons. Slavery had become an antiquated [agrarian] economic system, and the Southern elites had to be brought in line, else some foreign power, or some league of foreign powers could get involved [at some point in time] to contain a disunited nation [de facto two in one] whose future economic security and power rested on industrialism.
Leviticus 25:3-55
Six years you shall sow your field, and six years you shall prune your vineyard and gather in its crop, but during the seventh year the land shall have a sabbath rest, a sabbath to the LORD; you shall not sow your field nor prune your vineyard.
Your harvest’s aftergrowth you shall not reap, and your grapes of untrimmed vines you shall not gather; the land shall have a sabbatical year.
All of you shall have the sabbath products of the land for food; yourself, and your male and female slaves, and your hired man and your foreign resident, those who live as aliens with you.
Even your cattle and the animals that are in your land shall have all its crops to eat.
You are also to count off seven sabbaths of years for yourself, seven times seven years, so that you have the time of the seven sabbaths of years, namely, forty-nine years.
You shall then sound a ram’s horn abroad on the tenth day of the seventh month; on the day of atonement you shall sound a horn all through your land.
You shall thus consecrate the fiftieth year and proclaim a release through the land to all its inhabitants It shall be a jubilee for you, and each of you shall return to his own property, and each of you shall return to his family.
You shall have the fiftieth year as a jubilee; you shall not sow, nor reap its aftergrowth, nor gather in from its untrimmed vines.
For it is a jubilee; it shall be holy to you. You shall eat its crops out of the field.
On this year of jubilee each of you shall return to his own property.
If you make a sale, moreover, to your friend or buy from your friend’s hand, you shall not wrong one another.
Corresponding to the number of years after the jubilee, you shall buy from your friend; he is to sell to you according to the number of years of crops.
In proportion to the extent of the years you shall increase its price, and in proportion to the fewness of the years you shall diminish its price, for it is a number of crops he is selling to you.
So you shall not wrong one another, but you shall fear your God; for I am the LORD your God.
You shall thus observe My statutes and keep My judgments, so as to carry them out, that you may live securely on the land.
Then the land will yield its produce, so that you can eat your fill and live securely on it.
But if you say, “What are we going to eat on the seventh year if we do not sow or gather in our crops?” then I will so order My blessing for you in the sixth year that it will bring forth the crop for three years.
When you are sowing the eighth year, you can still eat old things from the crop, eating the old until the ninth year when its crop comes in.
The land, moreover, shall not be sold permanently, for the land is Mine; for you are but aliens and sojourners with Me.
Thus for every piece of your property, you are to provide for the redemption of the land.
If a fellow countryman of yours becomes so poor he has to sell part of his property, then his nearest kinsman is to come and buy back what his relative has sold.
Or in case a man has no kinsman, but so recovers his means as to find sufficient for its redemption, then he shall calculate the years since its sale and refund the balance to the man to whom he sold it, and so return to his property.
But if he has not found sufficient means to get it back for himself, then what he has sold shall remain in the hands of its purchaser until the year of jubilee; but at the jubilee it shall revert, that he may return to his property.
Likewise, if a man sells a dwelling house in a walled city, then his redemption right remains valid until a full year from its sale; his right of redemption lasts a full year.
But if it is not bought back for him within the space of a full year, then the house that is in the walled city passes permanently to its purchaser throughout his generations; it does not revert in the jubilee.
The houses of the villages, however, which have no surrounding wall shall be considered as open fields; they have redemption rights and revert in the jubilee.
As for cities of the Levites, the Levites have a permanent right of redemption for the houses of the cities which are their possession.
What, therefore, belongs to the Levites may be redeemed and a house sale in the city of this possession reverts in the jubilee, for the houses of the cities of the Levites are their possession among the sons of Israel.
But pasture fields of their cities shall not be sold, for that is their perpetual possession.
Now in case a countryman of yours becomes poor and his means with regard to you falter, then you are to sustain him, like a stranger or a sojourner, that he may live with you.
Do not take usurious interest from him, but revere your God, that your countryman may live with you.
You shall not give him your silver at interest, nor your food for gain.
I am the LORD your God, who brought you out of the land of Egypt to give you the land of Canaan and to be your God.
If a countryman of yours becomes so poor with regard to you that he sells himself to you, you shall not subject him to a slave’s service.
He shall be with you as a hired man, as if he were a sojourner; he shall serve with you until the year of jubilee.
He shall then go out from you, he and his sons with him, and shall go back to his family, that he may return to the property of his forefathers.
For they are My servants whom I brought out from the land of Egypt; they are not to be sold in a slave sale.
You shall not rule over him with severity, but are to revere your God.
As for your male and female slaves whom you may have–you may acquire male and female slaves from the pagan nations that are around you.
Then, too, it is out of the sons of the sojourners who live as aliens among you that you may gain acquisition, and out of their families who are with you, whom they will have produced in your land; they also may become your possession.
You may even bequeath them to your sons after you, to receive as a possession; you can use them as permanent slaves. But in respect to your countrymen, the sons of Israel, you shall not rule with severity over one another.

Now if the means of a stranger or of a sojourner with you becomes sufficient, and a countryman of yours becomes so poor with regard to him as to sell himself to a stranger who is sojourning with you, or to the descendants of a stranger’s family, then he shall have redemption right after he has been sold. One of his brothers may redeem him, or his uncle, or his uncle’s son, may redeem him, or one of his blood relatives from his family may redeem him; or if he prospers, he may redeem himself.

He then with his purchaser shall calculate from the year when he sold himself to him up to the year of jubilee; and the price of his sale shall correspond to the number of years. It is like the days of a hired man that he shall be with him.

If there are still many years, he shall refund part of his purchase price in proportion to them for his own redemption; and if few years remain until the year of jubilee, he shall so calculate with him. In proportion to his years he is to refund the amount for his redemption.

Like a man hired year by year he shall be with him; he [the non-Jew] shall not rule over him [the Jew] with severity in your sight.

Even if he [the Jew] is not redeemed [from the non-Jew] by these means, he shall still go out in the year of jubilee, he and his sons with him.

For the sons of Israel are My servants; they are My servants whom I brought out from the land of Egypt. I am the LORD your God.

The post Tribal Hypocrisy and Slavery, the Abrahamic Tradition? appeared first on The Duran.

Source