Wesley Collected Works Vol 11
| Author | John Wesley |
|---|---|
| Type | treatise |
| Year | None |
| Passage ID | jw-wesley-collected-works-vol-11-087 |
| Words | 383 |
And it is true, a man may sell
himself to work for another; but he cannot sell himself to be
a slave, as above defined. Every sale implies an equivalent
given to the seller, in lieu of what he transfers to the buyer. But what equivalent can be given for life or liberty? His
property likewise, with the very price which he seems to
receive, devolves ipso facto to his master, the instant he
becomes his slave: In this case, therefore, the buyer gives
nothing, and the seller receives nothing. Of what validity
then can a sale be, which destroys the very principle upon
which all sales are founded ? “We are told, Thirdly, that men may be born slaves, by
being the children of slaves. But this, being built upon the
two former rights, must fall together with them. If neither
captivity nor contract can, by the plain law of nature and
reason, reduce the parent to a state of slavery, much less can
they reduce the offspring.” It clearly follows, that all
slavery is as irreconcilable to justice as to mercy. 4. That slave-holding is utterly inconsistent with mercy, is
almost too plain to need a proof. Indeed, it is said, “that
these Negroes being prisoners of war, our captains and
factors buy them, merely to save them from being put to
death. And is not this mercy?” I answer, (1.) Did Sir
John Hawkins, and many others, seize upon men, women,
and children, who were at peace in their own fields or houses,
merely to save them from death? (2) Was it to save them
from death, that they knocked out the brains of those they
could not bring away? (3.) Who occasioned and fomented
those wars, wherein these poor creatures were taken prisoners? Who excited them by money, by drink, by every possible
means, to fall upon one another? Was it not themselves? They know in their own conscience it was, if they have any
conscience left. But, (4.) To bring the matter to a short
issue, can they say before God, that they ever took a single
voyage, or bought a single Negro, from this motive? They
cannot; they well know, to get money, not to save lives, was
the whole and sole spring of their motions. 5.