Would you agree that owning a person is not in itself a bad thing.
No. Absolutely, fundamentally, at the basis of the concept of human rights is the concept that we are something other than a commodity, that we have intrinsic worth, not transitive worth.
For example, when caught, a mass murderer will be owned by the taxpayer and controlled by him in a prison for life.
Prisoners are not 'owned' - they have their freedoms curtailed for a mixture of punishment and public protection, and the degree to which those freedoms are curtailed are something that we need to be mindful of, but at no point do they stop being people and start being trade goods.
A government may conscript men to serve in the army. This means for life, for someone who eventually gets killed.
And that's about a state forcing people to do something (ostensibly in service of the community) - in the modern world, increasingly, by a state that's elected the people making the decision. Again, though, that's about the state putting limitations on people's freedom, not fundamentally changing their status - it's a limited incursion on freedom, not the complete eradication of that freedom.
The conquest of Canaan and law of Moses ultimately shows the nature of God. Canaan is God's land, and because he is completely holy, there can be no sin in the land so serious sin that cannot be atoned for, such as adultery, must be punished by death. The indigenous idolatrous nations living in the land had to be either driven out or exterminated because it was God's land.
Because your God is a warmongering god with strange concepts of moral right and wrong - regardless, you can imprison 'sinners', you can educate or exile, but to take slaves is a moral evil far, far beyond that of adultery.
The point of the 'Holy land' is to show that actually we all deserve death, and consequently it points us to our need for a saviour.
The point of 'holy land' is to lay claim to property for a given 'in-group', any spiritual nonsense after the fact is hogwash. To paraphrase Captain Kirk, of all philosophers, what does a god need with a desert?
It is also a picture of what will happen at the final judgment, where all who are not under Christ as master will die the second death.
Because he loves us all unconditionally, right?
People tend to gasp at the barbarity of the Old Testament, including its comments about slavery. Only when seen through the lens of the holiness of God does it fully make sense.
Only through the delusion of religion can otherwise decent people countenance horrors such as slavery.
O.