[The Sable Cloud by Nehemiah Adams]@TWC D-Link book
The Sable Cloud

CHAPTER IX
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I am not pleading for slavery.

I simply say that God would not have put his people, whom He had not cast off forever, into slavery, if slavery, _per se_, were the sum of all villanies, or, if the practical effect of it on them would be, necessarily, destruction, or inconsistent with his purposes of benevolence.

I will add, that every people and every man, who hold others in bondage, should be admonished that when God puts his captives, his bondmen, into their hands, He is most jealous of the manner in which the trust is discharged.

I do think, I say it here with all possible emphasis, it is the most delicate, the most solemn, the most awful responsibility, to stand in the relation of master to a bondman.
* * * * * "No further discussion was had at that time, the hour being late, and so the meeting was closed with prayer and singing.

Masters and servants joined to chant a hymn, of which the following, written many years after by Gregory of Nazianzum, might almost seem to be the expansion:-- "'Christ, my Lord, I come to bless Thee, Now when day is veiled in night, Thou who knowest no beginning, Light of the eternal light.
"'Thou hast set the radiant heavens, With thy many lamps of brightness, Filling all the vaults above; Day and night in turn subjecting To a brotherhood of service, And a mutual law of love.
"'Own me, then, at last, thy servant, When thou com'st in majesty; Be to me a pitying Father, Let me find thy grace and mercy; And to Thee all praise and glory Through the endless ages be.' "Leaning on the arm of Onesimus, Philemon returned to bless his household.
* * * * * "Thus far," said I, "you have my Night Thoughts." I asked Mr.North if he accepted the present New Testament Canon as correct?
He said that he did.


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