'Slaves Bible' and Moon Jae-in Government

The "Bible Natural History Museum, London" basement in Washington had until recently a special Tian Shi chapter for a single Bible. Why did this Bible be treated so special in the place where all the rare Bibles of the world are Tian Shi from the ancient parchment Bible? This Bible was published in London in 1808 and was not long ago. It is seemingly no different from the ordinary Bible; however, after the completion of Genesis, it goes to the 19th chapter of the Baro Exodus. Exodus Chapters 1–18 are part of a dramatic scene in which Israeli leader Moses leads Jews and escapes Egypt from oppression.This book is the so-called "Slave Bible". It was made without the most dramatic scenes of the Old Testament while teaching the Bible to fear that black Slaves would escape in search of freedom. The white ruling class tried to teach 'rebellion' rather than 'love' through the Bible. About 90% of the Old Testament and 50% of the New Testament were deleted or edited in the Slaves Bible. The most important part of Jesus' teaching was also deleted. For example, the phrase "Jewish, Heline, servant, free man, man, woman, all in Jesus Christ" in Galatian chapter 3 was also deleted, and the message of salvation described in the Revelation of John was almost deleted. On the other hand, Peter's chapter 2 of the book "Person to the owner because of fear of crime" and Luke's 12 chapters "The species that did not do according to the owner's will will be very good." No matter how much the Bible teaches love, if the power corrects it, it becomes a tool of oppression in an instant. This Bible is now Tian Shi in the corner of the Bible Natural History Museum, London 2nd floor 'American Bible'. This 'editing of truth' is also happening in Korea in the 21st century. It's a double standard for the bizarre human rights of President Moon Jae-in, a former Baro 'human rights lawyer'. The Moon Jae-in government has not recently been named as one of the joint proposers of the United Nations Human Rights Resolution, which criticizes North Korea's human rights violations and calls for immediate improvement. It has been 11 years since 2008. The United States, which is directly negotiating North Korea's nuclear weapons, is also one of the 61 joint proposers. The South Korean delegation in United Nations said after falling into the joint proposal of the United Nations human rights resolution, "There is no change in the basic position of promoting North Korea human rights." Perhaps the clergymen who made the Slaves Bible said, "There is no change in the basic position of the Slaves mission," but "I have revised the main part in consideration of the overall situation of the Slaves system." But history has resolutely judged these clergy and made them a mockery. President Moon Jae-in, a former "human rights lawyer," should look back on whether he is writing a modern version of the "Slaves Bible."