Pete Hegseth Religious Leader Shocking Conclusion on Slavery & Emancipation Part 5

This is the fifth article on the prominent Reverend Douglas Wilson views on slavery and the Civil War. Wilson is the leader of Secretary of Defense Pete Hegseth’s religious community. Douglas Wilson authored a book on the Civil War and the Emancipation of African Americans called On Southern Slavery As It Was in 1995. In the first article we looked at the religious leader’s broad overview of the Civil War and slavery and how to interpret those historical facts through a Christian lens. In the second article, I went into Wilson’s claim that owning a slave was righteous under Christianity.  In my third article I looked at how the Union effort in the Civil War was a war on Christianity. In the fourth article we review Wilson’s claim that slavery was not all that bad.

Now, with this, the final article, we will look at Wilson’s conclusions about slavery, the Civil War, and Reconstruction.

Doug Wilson makes a fantastic claim for the superiority of the of the position of enslaved Black people over poor whites in the South. He writes, without any documentation supporting his claim, that:

Nearly every slave in the South enjoyed a higher standard of living than the poor whites of the South—and, had a much easier existence. [p. 30-31]

Why wouldn’t white people try to pass as Black, if this was the case?

Based on his “research” into how Blacks felt about their advantages under slavery, he also makes the claim that a higher proportion of Free Blacks owned slaves than white people did an that this made them into Confederates during the Civil War:

“Given this testimony, it is not surprising that most southern blacks (both free and slave) supported the Southern war effort. Some of course supported that effort from purely seltish motives. Fully 25% of the free blacks owned slaves.’* Most of these were quite wealthy, and knew that a Northern victory would bring economic and social ruin on them, which, of course, it did. But many Southern blacks supported the South because of long established bonds of affection and trust that had been forged over generations with their white masters and friends. They gladly supported the war effort with food, labor, and sometimes fighting. Their loyalty to the principles of the South rivaled and was sometimes even greater than that of some whites.” [p. 26-27]

Wilson makes an argument that “Black Confederates” filled the Southern armies. He says they “gladly supported” the Confederates. Wilson says that Blacks “loyalty to the principles of the South” was equal to those of white Southerners, even though the “principles” included holding Blacks in bondage.

Those of us who were brought up in the 1960s recall elderly whites opine that Black families were more stable under slavery than freedom. It is unusual for a person writing in the 1990s, after scholarly books had been published on slavery’s attack on the Black family, to say the same thing, as Wilson does:

One could argue that the black family has never been stronger than it was ‘under slavery. [p. 34-35]

Now lets be honest about this. In most states in the “Old South” marriages between slaves were illegal. Children could be taken from their parents and sold without regard to age. And, although elsewhere Wilson claims that the rape of enslaved women was a rare occurrence, slave narratives by women said it was common and modern testing of DNA shows it to have taken place many times.

Next Wilson presents an assessment the United States “After the death of the Old American Republic,” which means after the surrender of the Confederacy:

After the death of the Old American Republic, the nation created by the new revolutionaries became a nightmare for the newly-freed black men and women. The laws which were ostensibly passed to help them were used more and more to exclude them from the privileges they once enjoyed under the restricted freedom of slavery. For example, licensure requirements and the rise of unionism have systematically excluded black artisans and craftsmen from making the living they had made before the War. Welfare laws have removed the black man from his position of breadwinner and head over the home, and the black family has been gradually destroyed. Blacks were freed from the southern plantations only to become the slaves of an impersonal state. [p. 37]
First, before the end of slavery, many occupations were not open to Free Blacks. This exclusion was not introduced by Reconstruction. There were the Black Codes passed by all-white legislatures in the first months after the Confederate defeat. These were passed by all-white electorates, many of who had held some position in the Confederate government or armies. These laws were not “ostensible passed to help them,” they were passed by all-white Southern legislatures to try to keep Blacks as near slavery as possible. A year after the Black Codes went into effect, Congress began to pass legislation to safeguard the rights of African Americans. The Civil Rights Bill of 1866 and the Fourteenth Amendment passed soon thereafter, did not “exclude” Blacks from rights they “enjoyed…under slavery.” Under these 1866-1868 laws Blacks could marry, hold property, enter into contracts, serve on juries, in many cases could vote, and hold elected office. These laws did not “exclude” Blacks, they opened the door for more equal inclusion.
Were laws passed that excluded Blacks after the Civil War? Of course. As Federal troops were withdrawn from state after state in the 1870s, the “Redeemers” took power. The “Redeemers” were typically old Confederates who worked to create a society as near to life under slavery as possible. Blacks were excluded from voting and holding office in the 1870s and soon thereafter Jim Crow laws were passed which discriminated against Blacks in virtually every aspect of everyday life, including where a Black could sit on a bus! This was not a product of Reconstruction, it was a problem of the Redeemer victory in the 1870s.
In the final section of the book, Wilson looks back at the Christian blessings of slavery both for the slave and the white owners:
“Unexpected Blessings
But in spite of the evils contained in the [slave] system, we cannot overlook the benefits of slavery for both blacks and whites.
We refer here to several matters of some importance.
First was the influence of Christianity. More than one slave lived to thank God for his servitude—despite all the hardships involved. Martin Jackson of Texas puts it this way: “T believe that slavery in this country, taking everything into consideration, was a Godsend for the slaves. The twenty million Negroes are descended from four million sent over from Africa. If it had not been for the slave traffic, we would still be living in Africa. I would be a heathen and my children would be heathens.”*’ More than one former slave had reason to stand in the place of the biblical Joseph and say, “Men meant it for evil, but God meant it for good.” The slavery they were delivered from was. far worse than any they suffered in this country.
Slavery produced in the South a genuine affection between the races that we believe we can say has never existed in any nation beforé the War or since. Whatever its failures, slavery produced in the South a degree of mutual affection between the races which will never be achieved through any federally-mandated efforts.” [p. 37-38]
So, slavery did more to integrate America than freedom did?
Conclusion
None need lament the passing of slavery. But who cannot but lament the damage to both white and black that has occurred as a consequence of the way it was abolished? We are forced to say that, in many ways, the remedy which has been applied has been far worse than the disease ever was.
The issue of slavery was used to provoke a revolution in 1861. That revolution has continued to this day, and slavery has increased in our land as a result. It is time for us to stand and declare the truth about slavery and to expose the failures of the abolitionist worldview. Having done this, we must go on to proclaim the only truth which can set all men truly free from slavery—the gospel of our Lord Jesus” Christ. [p.37-39]
Note: The feature illustration shows a scene from a Virginia history of that state in which a Black family is welcomed ashore from African by their new white master and friend.
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Author: Patrick Young