230-year-old Wesley text challenges
modern-day slavery and racism
LONDON - A controversial anti-slavery
pamphlet has been republished ahead of this year's Bicentenary
of the Abolition of the Slave Trade Act. Originally available
in 1774, John Wesley's "Thoughts Upon Slavery" challenged
those in the society of his day to wake up to the evils of slavery.
John Wesley, the founder of Methodism
and celebrated preacher, was well known as an opponent of slavery.
He wrote "Thoughts Upon Slavery" to confront the widespread
acceptance of slavery and to call for the abolition of the Slave
Trade Act.
Although he never lived to see this happen, his writings and preaching
were instrumental in the abolitionist movement.
"Thoughts Upon Slavery"
has been reproduced with additional biographical details, including
links to resources and information on the current "Set All
Free" campaign to combat modern forms of slavery. It also
contains the reprint of a letter written by Wesley to William
Wilberforce, offering encouragement in his opposition to slavery,
written six days before Wesley's death in 1791.
Methodist Secretary for Racial
Justice Naboth Muchopa said: "It is essential that we remember
that the slave trade is not dead. We cannot turn a blind eye to
the modern forms of slavery that surround us such as people trafficking,
immigrants being paid slave wages and unfair trade laws that force
countries into poverty and debt.
"The Methodist Church today must go back to Wesley and his
call to name the evil that we would term 'racism' and shame us
of our contemporary ills."
The pamphlet was considered highly
controversial when it was first published because of the common
and often unchallenged acceptance of slavery, which was highly
lucrative for Britain and its colonies.
But "Thoughts Upon Slavery"
is not simply a moral argument about the evils of slavery; it
offers an insight into the way slaves were treated and the conditions
under which they were forced to live. Wesley discussed the gross
punishments suffered by disobedient slaves and the rewards offered
to those who killed or captured slaves who had run away.
All this led Wesley to ask: "Where
is the justice of taking away the lives of innocent, inoffensive
men; murdering thousands of them in their own land, by their own
countrymen; many thousands, year after year, on shipboard, and
then casting them like dung into the sea; and tens of thousands
in that cruel slavery to which they are so unjustly reduced?"
Other resources available for
the 2007 bicentenary include a set of seven posters jointly produced
by the Methodist Church. The posters feature images of abolitionists
and freedom fighters, together with their thoughts on the slave
trade. - The Methodist Church in Britain.