Par.
1 1| so full of the spirit of Christian mercy, has been offered
2 6| things St. Paul, with that Christian charity with which he was
3 6| divine nature. Through this Christian charity the various races
4 6| able to gather together, Christian and free, organized anew
5 7| spared no pains to make the Christian people, in a matter of such
6 8| Those first disciples of the Christian faith very well understood
7 9| compare the pagan and the Christian attitude toward slavery
8 9| through her discipline in the Christian faith, and with baptism
9 9| acquire habits suitable to the Christian life. Therefore, when, amid
10 10| History has no case to show of Christian slaves for any other cause
11 10| through the beneficence of the Christian faith, so that it both seemed,
12 10| Do not, then, call any Christian man a slave, unless, indeed,
13 10| held in respect equally by Christian masters and servants, that
14 11| wherever the profession of the Christian faith has flourished. Unless
15 12| that as Salvian relates, in Christian families, even though not
16 13| not make a slave of any Christian, because no one was a slave
17 15| nearly blotted out from among Christian nations, States were anxious
18 17| yet not instructed in the Christian faith. The last, moreover,
19 21| lawfully, temperately, and in a Christian manner. Is is, however,
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