Your own poor circumstances in this life ought to put you particularly upon this,
   and taking care of your souls, for you cannot have the pleasures and enjoyments
   of this life like rich free people, who have estates and money to lay out as they
   think fit. If others will run the hazard of their souls, they have a chance of
   getting wealth and power, of heaping up riches, and enjoying all the ease, luxury,
   and pleasure their hearts should long after; but you can have none of these things,
   so that, if you sell your souls for the sake of what poor matters you can get in this
   world, you have made a very foolish bargain indeed.
   This information is certainly very explicit and to the point.
   He continues:--
   Almighty God hath been pleased to make you slaves here, and to give you
   nothing but labour and poverty in this world, which you are obliged to submit to,
   as it is his will that it should be so. And think within yourselves what a terrible
   thing it would be, after all your labours and sufferings in this life, to be turned into
   hell in the next life, and, after wearing out your bodies in service here, to go into a
   far worse slavery when this is over, and your poor souls be delivered over into
   the possession of the devil, to become his slaves for ever in hell, without any hope
   of ever getting free from it. If, therefore, you would be God's freemen in
   heaven, you must strive to be good and serve him here on earth. Your bodies, you
   know, are not your own--they are at the disposal of those you belong to; but your
   precious souls are still your own, which nothing can take from you if it be not
   your own fault. Consider well, then, that if you lose your souls by leading idle
   wicked lives here, you have got nothing by it in this world, and you have lost your
   all in the next. For your idleness and wickedness is generally found out, and
   your bodies suffer for it here; and, what is far worse, if you do not repent and
   amend, your unhappy souls will suffer for it hereafter.
   Mr. Jones, in that part of the work where he is obviating
   the objections of masters to the Christian instruction of their
   slaves, supposes the master to object thus:--
   You teach them that “God is no respecter of persons;” that “He hath made
   of one blood all nations of men,” “Thou shalt love thy neighbour as thyself;”
   “All things whatsoever ye would that men should do to you, do ye even so
   to them;” what use, let me ask, would they make of these sentences from the
   gospel?
   Mr. Jones says:--
   Let it be replied that the effect urged in the objection might result from im-
   perfect and injudicious religious instruction; indeed, religious instruction may
   be communicated with the express design, on the part of the instructor, to produce
   the effect referred to, instances of which have occurred.
   But you will say that neglect of duty and insubordination are legitimate effects
   of the gospel, purely and sincerely imparted to servants? Has it not in all ages
   been viewed as the greatest civiliser of the human race?
   How Mr. Jones would interpret the golden rule to the slave,
   so as to justify the slave-system, we cannot possibly tell. We
   can, however, give a specimen of the manner in which it has been
   interpreted in Bishop Meade's Sermons, p. 116. (Brooke's
   Slavery, &c., pp. 32, 33.)
   “All things whatsoever ye would that men should do unto you, do ye even so
   unto them;” that is, do by all mankind just as you would desire they should do
   by you, if you were in their place and they in yours.
   Now, to suit this rule to your particular circumstances, suppose you were
   masters and mistresses, and had servants under you; would you not desire that
   your servants should do their business faithfully and honestly, as well when your
   back was turned as while you were looking over them? Would you not expect
   that they should take notice of what you said to them? that they should behave
   themselves with respect towards you and yours, and be as careful of everything
   belonging to you as you would be yourselves? You are servants; do, therefore,
   as you would wish to be done by, and you will be both good servants to your
   masters and good servants to God, who requires this of you, and will reward you
   well for it, if you do it for the sake of conscience, in obedience to his commands.
   The reverend teachers of such expositions of Scripture do great
   injustice to the natural sense of their sable catechumens, if they
   suppose them incapable of detecting such very shallow sophistry,
   and of proving conclusively that “it is a poor rule that won't work
   both ways.” Some shrewd old patriarch, of the stamp of those
   who rose up and went out at the exposition of the Epistle to
   Philemon, and who show such great acuteness in bringing up
   objections against the truth of God, such as would be thought
   peculiar to cultivated minds, might perhaps, if he dared, reply to
   such an exposition of Scripture in this way: “Suppose you were
   a slave--could not have a cent of your own earnings during your
   whole life, could have no legal right to your wife and children,
   could never send your children to school, and had, as you have
   told us, nothing but labour and poverty in this life--how would
   you like it? Would you not wish your Christian master to set
   you free from this condition?” We submit it to everyone who is
   no respecter of persons, whether this interpretation of Sambo's is
   not as good as the bishop's. And if not, why not?
   To us, with our feelings and associations, such discourses as
   these of Bishop Meade appear hard-hearted and unfeeling to the
   last degree. We should, however, do great injustice to the cha-
   racter of the man, if we supposed that they prove him to have
   been such. They merely go to show how perfectly use may
   familiarise amiable and estimable men with a system of oppression,
   till they shall have lost all consciousness of the wrong which it
   involves.
   That Bishop Meade's reasonings did not thoroughly convince
   himself is evident from the fact that, after all his representations
   of the superior advantages of slavery as a means of religious
   improvement, he did, at last, emancipate his own slaves.
   But, in addition to what has been said, this whole system of
   religious instruction is darkened by one hideous shadow--the
   Slave-trade. What does the Southern Church do with her
   catechumens and communicants? Read the advertisements of
   Southern newspapers, and see. In every city in the slave-raising
   States behold the depôts, kept constantly full of assorted negroes
   from the ages of ten to thirty! In every slave-consuming State
   see the receiving-houses, whither these poor wrecks and remnants
   of families are constantly borne! Who preaches the gospel to
   the slave-coffles? Who preaches the gospel in the slave-prisons?
   If we consider the tremendous extent of this internal trade--if
   we read papers with columns of auction advertisements of human
   beings, changing hands as freely as if they were dollar-bills
   instead of human creatures--we shall then realise how utterly
   all those i 
					     					 			nfluences of religious instruction must be nullified by
   leaving the subjects of them exposed “to all the vicissitudes of
   property.”
   CHAPTER X.
   WHAT IS TO BE DONE?
   The thing to be done, of which I shall chiefly speak, is, that
   the whole American Church, of all denominations, should unitedly
   come up, not in form, but in fact, to the noble purpose avowed
   by the Presbyterian Assembly of 1818, to seek the entire aboli-
   tion of slavery throughout America and throughout Christendom.
   To this noble course the united voice of Christians in all other
   countries is urgently calling the American Church. Expressions
   of this feeling have come from Christians of all denominations in
   England, in Scotland, in Ireland, in France, in Switzerland, in
   Germany, in Persia, in the Sandwich Islands, and in China.
   All seem to be animated by one spirit. They have loved and
   honoured this American Church. They have rejoiced in the
   brightness of her rising. Her prosperity and success have been
   to them as their own, and they have had hopes that God meant
   to confer inestimable blessings through her upon all nations. The
   American Church has been to them like the rising of a glorious
   sun, shedding healing from his wings, dispersing mists and fogs,
   and bringing songs of birds and voices of cheerful industry, and
   sounds of gladness, contentment, and peace. But lo! in this
   beautiful orb is seen a disastrous spot of dim eclipse, whose
   gradually widening shadow threatens a total darkness. Can we
   wonder that the voice of remonstrance comes to us from those
   who have so much at stake in our prosperity and success? We
   have sent out our missionaries to all quarters of the globe; but how
   shall they tell their heathen converts the things that are done in
   Christianised America? How shall our missionaries in Maho-
   metan countries hold up their heads, and proclaim the superiority
   of our religion, when we tolerate barbarities which they have
   repudiated?
   A missionary among the Karens, in Asia, writes back that
   his course is much embarrassed by a suspicion that is afloat
   among the Karens that the Americans intend to steal and sell
   them. He says:--
   I dread the time when these Karens will be able to read our books, and get a
   full knowledge of all that is going on in our country. Many of them are very
   inquisitive now, and often ask me questions that I find it very difficult to answer.
   No, there is no resource. The Church of the United States
   is shut up, in the providence of God, to one work. She can
   never fulfil her mission till this is done. So long as she
   neglects this, it will lie in the way of everything else which
   she attempts to do.
   She must undertake it for another reason--because she
   alone can perform the work peaceably. If this fearful problem
   is left to take its course as a mere political question, to be
   ground out between the upper and nether millstones of political
   parties, then what will avert agitation, angry collisions, and the
   desperate rending of the Union? No, there is no safety but in
   making it a religious enterprise, and pursuing it in a Christian
   spirit, and by religious means.
   If it now be asked what means shall the Church employ,
   we answer, this evil must be abolished by the same means
   which the apostles first used for the spread of Christianity, and
   the extermination of all the social evils which then filled a
   world lying in wickedness. Hear the apostle enumerate them:
   “By pureuess, by knowledge, by long-suffering, by the Holy
   Ghost, by love unfeigned, by the armour of righteousness on the
   right hand and on the left.”
   We will briefly consider each of these means.
   First, “by Pureness.” Christians in the Northern free States
   must endeavour to purify themselves and the country from various
   malignant results of the system of slavery; and, in particular,
   they must endeavour to abolish that which is the most sinful--
   the unchristian prejudice of caste.
   In Hindostan there is a class called the Pariahs, with which
   no other class will associate, eat, or drink. Our missionaries tell
   the converted Hindoo that this prejudice is unchristian; for God
   hath made of one blood all who dwell on the face of the earth, and
   all mankind are brethren in Christ. With what face shall they
   tell this to the Hindoo, if he is able to reply, “In your own Chris-
   tian country there is a class of Pariahs who are treated no better
   than we treat ours. You do not yourselves believe the things
   you teach us.”
   Let us look at the treatment of the free negro at the North.
   In the States of Indiana and Illinois, the most oppressive and
   unrighteous laws have been passed with regard to him. No law
   of any slave State could be more cruel in its spirit than that
   recently passed Illinois by which every free negro coming into
   the State is taken up and sold for a certain time, and then, if he
   do not leave the State, is sold again.
   With what face can we exhort our Southern brethren to eman-
   cipate their slaves, if we do not set the whole moral power of the
   Church at the North against such abuses as this? Is this course
   justified by saying that the negro is vicious and idle? This is
   adding insult to injury.
   What is it these Christian States do? To a great extent
   they exclude the coloured population from their schools; they
   discourage them from attending their churches by invidious dis-
   tinctions; as a general fact, they exclude them from their shops,
   where they might learn useful arts and trades; they crowd
   them out of the better callings where they might earn an honour-
   able livelihood; and having thus discouraged every elevated
   aspiration, and reduced them to almost inevitable ignorance,
   idleness, and vice, they fill up the measure of iniquity by making
   cruel laws to expel them from their States, thus heaping up wrath
   against the day of wrath.
   If we say that every Christian at the South who does not use
   his utmost influence against the iniquitous slave-laws is guilty,
   as a republican citizen, of sustaining those laws, it is no less true
   that every Christian at the North who does not do what in him
   lies to procure the repeal of such laws in the free States, is, so
   far, guilty for their existence. Of late years we have had
   abundant quotations from the Old Testament to justify all manner
   of oppression. A Hindoo, who knew nothing of this generous
   and beautiful book, except from such pamphlets as Mr. Smylie's,
   might possibly think it was a treatise on piracy, and a general
   justification of robbery. But let us quote from it the directions
   which God gives for the treatment of the stranger: “If a
   stranger sojourn with you in your land, ye shall not vex him.
   But the stranger that dwelleth among you shall be as one born
   among you; thou shalt love him as thyself.” How much more
   does this apply when the stranger has been brought into our
   land  
					     					 			by the injustice and cruelty of our fathers!
   We are happy to say, however, that the number of States in
   which such oppressive legislation exists is small. It is also
   matter of encouragement and hope that the unphilosophical and
   unchristian prejudice of caste is materially giving way, in many
   parts of our country, before a kinder and more Christian spirit.
   Many of our schools and colleges are willing to receive the
   coloured applicant on equal terms with the white. Some of the
   Northern free States accord to the coloured freeman full political
   equality and privileges. people, under this
   encouragement, have, in many parts of our country, become rich
   and intelligent. A very fair proportion of educated men is rising
   among them. There are among them respectable editors, eloquent
   orators, and laborious and well-instructed clergymen. It gives
   us pleasure to say that, among intelligent and Christian people,
   these men are treated with the consideration they deserve; and,
   if they meet with insult and ill-treatment, it is commonly from
   the less-educated class, who, being less enlightened, are always
   longer under the influence of prejudice. At a recent ordination
   at one of the largest and most respectable churches in New York,
   the moderator of the Presbytery was a black man, who began
   life as a slave; and it was undoubtedly a source of gratification
   to all his Christian brethren to see him presiding in this capacity.
   He put the questions to the candidates in the German language,
   the church being in part composed of Germans. Our Christian
   friends in Europe may, at least, infer from this that, if we have
   had our faults in times past, we have, some of us, seen and are
   endeavouring to correct them.
   To bring this head at once to a practical conclusion, the
   writer will say to every individual Christian, who wishes to do
   something for the abolition of slavery, Begin by doing what lies
   in your power for the coloured people in your vicinity. Are
   there children excluded from schools by unchristian prejudice?
   Seek to combat that prejudice by fair arguments, presented in a
   right spirit. If you cannot succeed, then endeavour to provide
   for the education of these children in some other manner. As