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Samuel Hopkins was an American clergyman born on September 17, 1721. He is known for his theological writings and his role in the development of Hopkinsianism, a form of Calvinism that emphasized disinterested benevolence and the importance of virtue. Hopkins was a prominent figure in the Great Awakening, a religious revival movement that swept through the American colonies in the 18th century. His writings and teachings had a significant impact on the development of American Protestantism and the concept of social reform.
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"Furthermore, the slaves cannot be put into a more wretched situation, ourselves being judges, and the community cannot take a more lively step to escape ruin, and obtain the smiles and protection of Heaven."

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"However, I am willing to hear what you can produce from Scripture in favor of any kind of slavery."

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"In a word, if any kind of slavery can be vindicated by the Holy Scriptures, we are already sure our making and holding the Negroes our slaves, as we do, cannot be vindicated by any thing we can find there, but is condemned by the whole of divine revelation."

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"Willingness to be damned for the glory of God."

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"If it be not a sin, an open, flagrant violation of all the rules of justice and humanity, to hold these slaves in bondage, it is indeed folly to put ourselves to any trouble and expense in order to free them."

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"These Scriptures, therefore, are infinitely far from justifying the slavery under consideration; for it cannot be made to appear that one in a thousand of these slaves has done any thing to forfeit his own liberty."

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"God saw fit, for wise reasons to allow the people of Israel thus to make and possess slaves; but is this any license to us to enslave any of our fellow-men, to kill any of our fellow-men whom we please and are able to destroy, and take possession of their estates?"

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