ELLA, I think it is really both. God is love, merciful and forgiving.
But he is also to be respected and obeyed. God is, after all, GOD.
Actually, it was the Pilgrims, and the founding Fathers, and the slaves
on the Underground Railroad who make the links with Moses. Feiler is
just pointing this out. He is showing us the influence of Moses' history
in our own history.
JONATHAN, to me the surprise was that there was Hebrew on the dollar
bill at all. Jewish immigration at that time was very low; they had no
signicant influence as a group, that I can see. The teaching of Hebrew in
the colleges and the Biblical influences of this time apparently do
come from the scriptures, predominantly Exodus and Deuteronomy.
The Great Awakening; This is a site that helped put 'The Great Awakening' in a proper perspective for me. I really had only the vaguest notion of it.
tp://nationalhumanitiescenter.org/tserve/eighteen/ekeyinfo/grawaken.htm
"proving biblically that the Bible 'sanctions, tolerates, regulates and does nothing to eliminate slavery.' "
I agree that nothing was done to eliminate slavery, except to forbid
Hebrew enslaving Hebrew, and allowing for the redemption of Hebrews
enslaved elsewhere. Realistically, the Biblical leaders had to deal with
conditions as they existed, and the Bible is brutally honest about human
shortcomings. There are instances where leniency in judging slaves was
made law. In the New Testament, the Christian slave attains a different
status. "In Christ..there is neither slave nor free.." Masters and slaves
were instructed in a new relationship to one another.
The groundwork was laid there for the changes to come. It is our
shame that those changes came so slowly, due to greed, ignorance and
arrogance.
JONATHAN, that was a very moving tribute to your sister. It meant so
much to me to see the astounding number of people who came to my Father's funeral. I knew he was loved and respected, but I didn't realize how many people he had touched. The most touching eulogy was spoken
but a nephew, the son of his twin brother. I'll never forget it.