Struggle Between Slavery and Christanity

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How can the particularly monstrous slave owners who possess such a despicable stance towards slaves portray themselves to be fully devoted Christians? In this interpretation, Frederick Douglass attempts to address the issues between slavery and Christianity that he had to undergo during his era as a slave. He reveals how the slaveholders during that time span aimed to make a connection by linking the two in order to justify their misbehavior and wickedness towards slaves. Their behavior was undeniable to him and he was repulsed by the way they had no courtesy for the truth of religion. This made him interrogate his faith and judgment in Christianity an insufficient number of times.
His master Thomas Auld is a prime example. Master Thomas Auld was a man who was not born in a family with slaves, and only came in correspondence with them during his marriage to his spouse. Frederick Douglas contention of this was that it might possibly be the reason he was one of the most negligent masters he ever stumbled upon. This accusation originated when Master Auld had left and proceed to a distinct church in Maryland. When he arrived back, he transformed into an excessively religious man with new and fresh faith towards Christianity. Instead of become more affectionate and charitable like everybody would presume, he became way more brutal and callous to his slaves. This demented Douglass even more, because he considered it to give the slaveholders an unsatisfactory status in society because religion is supposed to be metamorphic in someone's life and make them an improved person. There were other slaveholders in the area who were very religious but they were much kinder to slaves than Master Auld was. Nevertheless, he still saw Christianity ...

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... slavery as a heavenly duty. He wrote this passage to show how slavery is wrong, but his views on religion connected with slavery are the strongest point made in this reading. I think we all can agree that treating people as unequal or cruel is actually going against the bible instead of following it. Christianity is all about doing a good deed and making the heavenly father proud, but slaveholders were doing the exact opposite. Someone once said that one of the worst sins you can commit is knowing what the rules say in the bible and still going against it. Douglass is trying to prove that just because you go to church and praise God does not mean you are a true Christian.

Works Cited

Douglass, Frederick. Narrative of the Life of Frederick Douglass, An American Slave,
Written by Himself. 8. B. New York City: W.W. Norton & Company, Inc., 2012. 1174-1239. Print.

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