The intelligent Swedenborgian can
hardly doubt the plausibility of the hypothesis advanced in the two preceding chapters,
viz., that barbarians in general, and our imported Africans especially, are
descendants of some degraded portion of the most ancient church. They have celestial “remains,” and are
capable of the celestial life, when elevated above the sensual-corporeal
sphere into which they are at present immersed.
That celestial life is unlike our
rational-scientific life, of which in our ignorance and vanity we boast so much. It needs no book-learning, no colleges, no
arts and sciences for its development. We
can not impose our peculiarly natural civilization on the Negro, save to
his detriment. No possible cultivation,
after the methods suited to our specific genius, can evoke into life and vigor
the dormant seeds of the celestial nature slumbering in the African bosom. The course of his influx is from within outward,
from centre to circumference. What he
wants first of all is a proper basis, an orderly and well-regulated sensual-corporeal
sphere, to serve as a recipient vessel for the down-flowing powers within
him. He will procure spiritual truths
just as fast as he can ultimate his celestial affections.
Now the Negro has a perfect and inalienable
right to whatever will develop and make active his true organic spiritual
nature. If intercourse with the superior
races, commercial relations, trade and treaties, missionary efforts, and
educational enterprises can civilize the African, rouse his dormant energies,
cultivate his mind, Christianize his heart, and enable him to live an orderly,
useful, and genuine life, then African slavery would have no excuse. But if all this had been possible under the
operations of Divine Providence, African slavery would never have had an existence. Let all the world know, that the Christians
of the Southern States are ready to turn abolitionists, whenever it can be
proven that the material and spiritual interests of the slave will be promoted
by a state of freedom similar to ours.
The Dutch and English have had flourishing
settlements for 200 years in Africa, but in ten miles of their borders the
native is an irreclaimable savage. The
Portuguese have founded flourishing colonies, and their priests have baptized
whole tribes into the Catholic Church, but the Africans under their influence
are wretched barbarians. The little
colonies of Liberia and Sierra Leone, fostered by white protection and counsels,
have shed no ray of light into the darkness surrounding them. Missionaries have patiently and zealously labored,
but in vain. Dr. Livingstone, after years of enthusiastic effort,
has declared that commerce and civilization must precede religion. The free Negroes of Hayti are fast relapsing
into barbarism and idolatry. Those of Jamaica,
although under the strong military and civil surveillance of Great Britain,
have sunk into idleness and pauperism, and disappointed the hopes of
philanthropy. The free Negroes of the North
are generally pests to their neighborhoods, and enjoy the name without the
blessings of freedom. In Canada it is
even worse. The Negro has no conception
of the “dignity of labor,” or of the meaning of independence. Mr. Wilson says that the Negroes of the
Guinea Coast have no higher ambition than to be taken into the service of the
white man. And our free Negroes are mere
appendages to our civilization, not partakers of it. They are lackies, waiters, hangers-on, body
servants, etc., and nothing more. The
few who pretend to preach, lecture, edit, etc., are mere samples of childish precocity,
not types of national character. How
many Negroes have hewed their homes and fortunes out of the rich and free
western wilds, in the sturdy spirit of the New England pioneer? None.
The African race has attained its
highest present point of development in the Southern States, and in the condition
of slavery. It is more prolific there
than anywhere else in the world, or than any other nation in the world. It may therefore be safely presumed that the
checks to population, viz., deficient food, clothing, and shelter, excessive
labor, care, crime, misery, and want, do not exist in those States to any
notable degree. In physical,
intellectual, and moral character the American slave is far superior to his
African progenitor. And this improvement
is progressive. Amelioration of his
condition is constantly going on, and he is constantly also evincing more
rationality and virtue, more tact and taste, more mechanical genius and mental
power. He has no vices but those he
inherited from Africa, and he has superadded virtues and graces entirely unknown
to that continent. His religious character
is capable of the most beautiful cultivation, and if our Lord this day were to
gather up his jewels, how many would be found among the faithful, humble,
affectionate slaves of America!
This change has been mainly
effected by the firm but humane government exercised by the white man over the
Negro. It is unlike every system of
slavery which has heretofore existed, in this, that it is the subordination of
an inferior to a superior race, and not a domination of one part over another
part of the same race, or of one race over an equal race. The New Churchman should weigh well this
distinction. Things or persons on the
same plane or in the same series are to be co-ordinated, while of things
or persons in different series or planes, the inferior are to be subordinated
to the superior. This is the law of
divine order which prevails in the heavens and in all worlds where sin has not entered. Woe to that theology or philosophy which
fails to appreciate its deep signification!
Note well, however, that in this system
the celestial man is not brought into bondage to the natural, but that the sensual-corporeal
sphere of the African, which in its barbaric state prevents the evolution
of his celestial “remains,” is so subordinated to the rational-scientific sphere
of the white man, that his celestial nature obtains for the first time the means
of ultimating itself. The Negro thus
acquires a sound natural basis, somewhat similar to that of the white race,
into which his descending celestial can be inserted. It is the duty of the white man to give him this
basis in a wise and gentle manner; and it is the duty of the Negro to submit to
the disciplinary ordeal which may be requisite in attaining it.
To understand this subject more fully,
let us examine the nature of government in general, not in a dry political
form, but in the glowing light of the New Church. Let us first refresh our memories with the essential
principle of government in the heavens, according to which all our earthly
institutions should be moulded.
After asserting that the forms of
government in heaven are infinitely various, Swedenborg goes on to say of the
governors or rulers:
“They are such as are
distinguished beyond others for love and wisdom, consequently such as from a
principle of love desire the good of all, and from the wisdom by which also
they are distinguished, know how to provide that the good they desire may be
realized. Persons of this character do
not domineer and command imperiously, but minister and serve. Neither do they account themselves greater
than others, but less; for they put the good of society and of their neighbor
in the first place, and their own in the last.
They, nevertheless, are in the enjoyment of honor and glory, they dwell in
the centre of the society in a more elevated place than others, and inhabit magnificent
palaces. They also accept this glory and
that honor, not however for their own sake, but for the sake of securing
obedience; for all in heaven know that honor and glory are conferred on them by
the Lord, and that therefore they are to be obeyed.” (Heaven and Hell, 218.)
“A similar government in
miniature obtains also in every house. There
is in each house a master, and there are domestics. The master loves the domestics, and the
domestics love the master; the consequence of which is that out of love they mutually
serve each other. The master teaches how
they should live and prescribes what they should do, and the domestics obey and
perform their duties. To be of use is
the delight of life among all. Hence it
is evident that the Lord's kingdom is a kingdom of uses.” (Heaven and Hell, 219.)
What a beautiful moral picture is
here presented! Will the heavens ever
truly open and descend upon us in this manner?
Think of it! No ambition, no lust
of power, no pride of place, no contempt of others, no misery of the poor, no
folly of the rich, no envy, no jealousy, no deceit, no corruption, no vanity,
no dissatisfaction, no inalienable rights to claim—but simple duties to perform,
while mutual love and humility reign supreme, and order, peace, and happiness ensue! This shining Utopia surely beckons us in the
shadowy distance. Come it will, whoever may
doubt! It will be effected by the Divine
Humanity descending through the Word and through angelic spheres, and operating
into the remotest bounds of nature. On
the political or civil plane of life, two great agencies are at work to promote
this glorious revolution, viz., the doctrine of political equality, soon to be
restricted to those of equal race, and the patriarchal institution of slavery,
that curious modern approach to the end which was in the beginning.
Swedenborg says, that the
antediluvians lived in families under a patriarchal head, who represented the
Lord, and was at the same time priest and law-giver, being actuated by the
purest paternal love. There was no
political organization whatever, in our sense of the term. Wife, children, and their wives and children,
and all the men-servants and maid-servants, and their increase, constituted the
family or tribe, and looked up to a common head. This happy state of life, typical of heavenly
order, began to perish when self-love arose, and with it a disposition to
appropriate the property of others. The military
spirit was then engendered, and families and tribes coalesced and consolidated
for mutual defence or attack. The pure
African has never liberated himself from this miserable political thraldom into
which his ante-diluvian ancestors fell. By
continued perversions and the ever-accumulating pressure of hereditary impulse,
his whole nature has become thoroughly servile on one hand and thoroughly
despotic on the other. His fetichism,
his conjuring and witchcraft, his serpent-worship, his dirt-eating, and his
thousand peculiarities of manner and custom, declare his awful and thorough
degradation.
Notice now in this connection, that,
the African mind, properly speaking, has never had a political existence. Its sole political life has been found in the
perversions and inversions of the patriarchal system. If it could this day be miraculously restored
to its original stand-point, whence it could work out its interior organic
life, it would neither know nor learn anything of political rights, privileges
or principles. That whole sphere of
thought, so natural and delightful to other races, is entirely foreign to its
nature. Negro attempts at political
organization, outside of the controlling or modifying sphere of the white race,
must necessarily be failures and farces.
When we refuse the Negro political equality, we deny him no right which
he ever possessed, or could ever of himself obtain, and we withhold from him
the means of inflicting great injury upon himself and others.
With the opening of the spiritual
degree of the human mind, came the establishment of priesthoods and kingdoms
and empires, with their complex theological and political forms and mysteries. There are similar forms of society now
existing in the spiritual heavens. The
divine right of kings and priests in the first part of this era was
unquestionable, simply because the priests and kings acted and thought divinely. But all that was changed. Evil became predominant in its two hateful
forms—love of self and love of the world.
Asia and Europe have been deluged with blood, over and over again, by the
priests and kings struggling for power and ascendency. All the religions of the earth have become
corrupted and perverted, and all the governments have degenerated into instruments
of oppression and tyranny. For every one
of them, the condemnatory handwriting has appeared on the wall. They are breaking up and dissolving, either
by interior disintegration or by exterior violence; and the field of the world is
being made ready for the descent of the New Jerusalem.
One of the greatest agencies in achieving
this desirable result is the dogma of political equality. This doctrine has transferred to the people that
divine right which had become the opprobrium of kings. That “all men are created free and equal,” and
that government should exist only by consent of the governed, are now the most
popular and progressive doctrines in the world.
Whatever doubts may be suggested as to their philosophical truth, and
whatever difficulties may oppose their practical operation, it is certain that
they are destined to revolutionize modern society. They will be powerful at least in destroying
and effacing the old order of things, and for that they will deserve the
gratitude of the world. It is clear,
however, to reflecting minds that these doctrines have no reconstructive
power,—and that they would ultimate a perfect anarchy, if we were not assured
that new and true principles were descending from heaven, which will finally
govern the social and all other spheres of human life.
Now we affirm, without fear of contradiction
from any intelligent New Churchman, that African slavery is an institution
which is to play an important part in the reconstruction of society upon true
and heavenly principles. African
slaver}' provides, as we have clearly shown, a channel for the descent of
celestial influences into the world, such as have never before been known or
experienced. Influx, we know, is quiet
and imperceptible, like the action of sunlight upon flowers, so that we could know
nothing of its operations but for the revealed doctrines of the church. But influx from heaven through regenerating African
slaves, as proper mediums, is at this moment the interior force which is
co-operating with the dogma of political equality in the external sphere for
the reconstruction of society and the regeneration of mankind. We may separate; we may fight; but the North
and the South are interiorly and indissolubly united. The North is furnishing the true external
basis into which the interior life of the South is to flow for the salvation of
the race. Oh, New Churchmen! how can ye fail to see the sublime and
glorious truth? The North and South
should be related to each other like man and woman, like faith and charity,
like external and internal. Who has sown
the seeds of discord in our midst? That
old dragon, that hell within the church, which preaches faith alone and aspires
to spiritual dominion over the souls of men.
He musters strongly for his last battle.
The first beneficent effect of
the institution of African slavery toward the regeneration of the Negro, is
that it withholds him from evils.
The first step toward the regeneration of the white man, in whom the rational-scientific
plane is developed, and whose mind can therefore be elevated into heavenly
light, is to abstain from evils. The
Negro can not abstain, because he is not receptive of spiritual truth, being
in bondage to sensual-corporeal cupidities and phantasies. He must therefore be withheld like a
child, and in this respect the white race is commissioned to hold provisionally
a parental relation toward him. The master
must prevent intemperance in eating and drinking; he must prohibit polygamy and
curb licentiousness; he must punish lying and theft; he must guard against
quarreling and fighting, and withhold each from encroaching upon the rights of
others. Punishment may be requisite to
effect all this good, and to that precise degree it is righteous and proper. Those who can not be actuated by love or
persuaded by reason must be controlled by fear.
This principle rules in our government of our own children and in our
own police regulations, and it is the principle upon which our Lord through
ministering angels reduces the hells to order, and contributes to the comfort
and peace of their inhabitants. It is
unquestionably true that even severe corporeal punishment, administered in a spirit
of justice and for good ends, is serviceable in dissipating the thick sphere of
cupidities and phantasies which surrounds and spiritually suffocates the
undisciplined barbarian.
The next step for the African's
good (we need not here consider the motives of the master) is to compel him to
do uses. The hereditary devil which has
possessed him for centuries has imposed on his constitution an almost
ineradicable torpor. Swedenborg, in
several places, speaks of the sphere of the ante-diluvians as dreadfully oppressive
and paralyzing, —taking away from its subjects almost all faculty of thought
and action. It is this sphere which we
have to dissipate from the barbarous African, and nothing but the strong power
of slavery, compelling him to do uses, can effect it. Swedenborg tells of wicked spirits who are
confined to hard labor for their food and clothes until they see and
acknowledge their falsities and evils. Paupers
and vagrants are compelled to labor in all civilized countries. Experience proves that when the African is
thus withheld from evil and compelled to do uses, his voluntary principle is
developed, a new nature flows out, and he is the most teachable, willing, good-natured,
light-hearted, affectionate, and happy creature in the world.
We hold it to be self-evident,
that God has created every man with a specific genius and given him definite faculties
for its ultimation. It is not only his
right, but his duty to exercise these faculties, for rights and duties go
always together. No man can lawfully
push another from his appointed place, and it should be the aim of government
to secure to each and all the proper sphere for the natural and perfect
development of character. Rights should
be respected and their corresponding duties enforced. The end in view in the institution of slavery
is the preparation of a natural basis for the outflowing of a beautiful
celestial nature. Whatever is necessary
for this, the African has a right to claim and the white man is bound to give. If social equality, competitive labor,
political privileges, philosophical culture will bring the celestial “remains”
to light out of the primitive darkness of the barbarian’s soul, let him have
them! The North believes this, and charges
the South with barbarism and despotism for not coinciding in the opinion. We think very differently, and the New
Churchman who knows what the celestial is, can not long be deceived by
the sophistries which have been arrayed against us.
The celestial is best developed in the family sphere,
and in the exercise of domestic and agricultural uses. The house represents celestial good, while
the street, typical of commercial and political life, refers only truths. The town or city corresponds to the spiritual,
while the country corresponds to the celestial. It is the pre-eminent mark of the celestial
to be willing to serve. To serve,
therefore, in domestic and agricultural life is characteristic of the celestial
genius. The celestial genius needs no
books, no political organizations, no philosophizing for its evolution. It needs an orderly external, in which the
inferior is subordinated to the superior;—it needs an atmosphere of cheerful
duty and use, of simple tastes, of sympathy and fidelity, of reverence and
gentleness, of justice and mercy and love. In a well-regulated, cultivated Christian
family, the southern slave is bountifully supplied with the means of calling
forth his peculiar and remarkable genius.
How long the institution is to
last, what modifications it is to receive, and how it is to disappear in the
final and perfect order of things, we can not clearly foresee. Providence has permitted it, so far, for the
good of all parties, and has even made use of our very evils for its benefit. Selfishness brought the Negro from Africa; selfishness
reduced him to order and made him capable of uses; selfishness feeds and
clothes and protects him. If the Negro
could not have been made subservient to our interests, we should long ago have
turned him adrift, driven him before us and exterminated him, as we have done
the Indian. Such would be the issue of abolition. This is melancholy', but it is true. What we need now, is not new conduct, but new
motives. The natural man leads an orderly,
useful life, from the hope of gain or power or reputation. The spiritual man leads the very same life,
from love to the Lord and the neighbor. Spiritualize
the motives of the slaveholder and he becomes a regenerate man, who, while
prudently caring for his own interests and for those about him, is rendering
incalculable service to the church and the world.
In view of the organic
constitution of the Negro—of the facts and necessities of the case, of the
inexorable march of history and progress, according to universal laws of Divine
Providence not yet fully discovered, and of the glorious ends to be attained,—is
slaveholding a sin? How can a New
Churchman of enlarged views entertain the thought for a moment!
There is no need to recount the Biblical
argument for and against slavery. One
party contends, and with great force, that the Bible recognizes its existence
as one great means and agency of human development; and if it does not plainly sanction
it, at least nowhere condemns it. The
other side affirms that the spiritual principles of the Christian religion
demand its overthrow. We, who interpret
the word spiritually, ought to attain a high theological and philosophical
stand-point, whence to discover the genuine truth, apart from all appearances
of the letter or ratiocination of the understanding.
It is said upon abstract grounds that
there can be no such thing as the right of property in man. That one man can own another in the same
sense as that in which he owns a thing, is of course a wicked absurdity. Slaves are not chattels, but “chattels
personal,” that is, property possessed of human rights, of which nothing
can divest it. These rights are food,
clothing, discipline, religious instruction, regulated labor, protection, sympathy,
etc. We have no property either in the
souls or bodies of our slaves. We simply
have a right to their labor and obedience, in consideration of the immense
benefits we confer upon them. We have
simply a right to hold them to an apprenticeship for life, both for their own
and the public good. The apprenticeship is
for life, and not for a term of years, because they are organically children or
minors, and can never take such care of themselves as we can take of them. Spiritually speaking, man has no property. Our proprium, or that which is truly our own,
is wholly evil and false. What we
possess is given by the Lord, and it is given only for use. If the Lord has seen fit to adjoin the sensual-corporeal
sphere of the African, as a servant to ours, in order that we may infuse a new and
true life into it, and if we discharge our stewardship faithfully and well, it
matters not by what names, opprobrious or otherwise, men may designate the
relationship which exists between the two races.
But, says the abstractionist, you
violate the golden rule, “Do unto others as you would that they should do unto
you.” This beautiful precept of charity
has been grossly misunderstood and perverted to party purposes. Its true meaning evidently is, that we should
be in the continual desire of doing good to all men, and should treat others
as it would be wise and just for us to he treated if we were in their places. It has been tortured to signify, that we
should grant every man his wishes, provided we imagine that we would wish the
same on a change of conditions. The
judge, then, must pardon the murderer; the magistrate must release the vagrant;
the creditor must absolve his debtor; the rich must give all to the poor; the
employer must change places with the employed!
Upon this principle, which would destroy all order and all society, it
is demanded that the master shall liberate his slave. Now, in the light of heaven, the African ought
to wish to go through the disciplinary ordeal he is now experiencing for his
own good and the good of others; and we ought to endeavor, by salutary measures
suggested by our superior wisdom, to cultivate his spiritual faculties, until,
as to goodness and truth, he attains our own stand-point. Such is the true law of charity as applied to
the Negro, and there is nothing in the institution of slavery to retard, but
very many things to foster its operation.
We speak from much observation and living experience.
When we descend from universals to
particulars, or from the general to the special, slaveholding is sinful or otherwise,
according to the animus or spirit with which it is practised. If the master gives his servant as little as
possible, stints him of food and clothing, works him hardly, treats him with
indifference or severity, and cares little or nothing for him except as a
valuable beast of burden, he commits the odious sin of the capitalist or employer,
who reduces the wages of labor to the lowest possible standard, and pursues his
business with the utmost selfishness and unchristian disregard of the rights,
feelings, and happiness of others. If
the master imposes unreasonable tasks, exacts improper services, inflicts undue
punishments, or violates any principle of charity and justice toward his slave,
he commits grievous sins, which are by no means limited to slaveholding countries. If he is imperious and implacable, domineering
and tyrannical, miserly and cruel,—as many men are, independently of local
institutions,—his whole moral nature is tainted, and he is sinful in all the
relations of life. Such men have
domineered over wives and children and dependents in all ages and countries. Slavery did not bring them into existence.
If the slaveholder assumes his responsibilities wit a solemn
sense of their sacred character; if he regards bis slave with kindness and
forbearance and sympathy; if he provides, to the best of his ability and belief,
for his physical comfort and his moral and religious instruction; if he
administers discipline with justice, and tempers justice with mercy; if he
protects and guides and regulates with a generous hand and a loving heart, in
infancy and sickness and old age; not only is his slaveholding not a sin, but
it is a blessing to all around him, and comes back to himself, as all blessings
finally do, in the cultivation of his religious life and the development of his
spiritual nature. The unfoldings of the
spiritual world may possibly reveal the fact, that this Christian slaveholder, misunderstood
and reviled as he now is by his brethren in other countries, had attained the
sublimest point of human civilization.
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