Gman,
I'm reading through Zuck, Merrill, and Bock's
Biblical Theology of the Old Testament (Moody, 1991), and I came across this quote that I thought you might find very interesting with respect to Hebrew slavery:
Merrill wrote:Appropriately, the first stiulation concerns bondage (21:2-6) because the essence of the covenant was the deliverance of Israel by Yahweh from bondage to Egyptian domination. Hebrews who found themselves indentured to other Hebrews were allowed to go free in the seventh year, a fact that clearly relates the significance of redemption to creation. The universe was created by Yahweh in six days and on the seventh it entered into the rest of His sovereignty, a rest in which man shared the freedom of lordship. But the other side of the matter was the freedom of the slave to decide to remain with his master. This shifts the focus from that of deliverance from an evil master to commitment to a gracious one. The slave, given the opportunity to disrupt the relationship with his lord, declared his covenant loyalty by asserting that he loved his master (v. 5). He followed this declaration by submitting to the slave mark (v. 6), thus bearing witness to the world of his voluntary vassalage and of his intention to serve his master forever. The analogy to Israel as a vassal people to Yahweh is obvious. (41-42)
I don't have time to fully put this quote in its broader context, but very briefly, he is pointing out the fact that Ex: 20-23 are written in the form of a sovereign-vassal treaty, with the Ten Commandments serving as the general stipulations (the apodictic laws) and Book of the Covenant (20:22-23:33) serving as the specific stipulations, or explanatory applications of the generals (casuistic laws).
In light of this, the passage on slavery is very much an application of the Ten and speaks more broadly to Israel's relationship with God. It is in that view that biblical "slavery" ought to be understood.
Proinsias wrote:I don't think you are hearing me. Preference for ice cream is a moral issue
And
that, brothers and sisters, is the kind of foolishness you get people who insist on denying biblical theism. A good illustration of any as the length people will go to avoid acknowledging basic truths.