1. Activist Feedback
2. Essay: What Is Humanity’s Relation to Animals?
3. This Week’s Sermon from Rev. Frank and Mary
Hoffman
1. Activist Feedback
Rick, who tabled with George, Bill, Julia, Cindy, Erin, and Barb at
the Greentree Festival in Kirkwood, MO, writes:
We handed out over 300 Christian and secular booklets, and 21 copies
of Vegetarianism and the Major World Religions. We also gave out several
boxes of Meatless Primal Strips [vegan beef jerky] donated by Veg Fund.
2. Essay: What Is Humanity’s Relation to Animals?
Last week I argued that if God cared about humanity, it was
reasonable to expect God to have similar concern for other conscious
beings. Many Christians who disagree argue that humans are special
creations. Scientific evolutionary theory holds that humans are simply
one of many species whose set of attributes have helped us propagate
impressively in the very recent geologic past, but humanity’s long term
success is very much in doubt.
What does the Bible say? It offers diverse views on the value of
animals. There are passages in which people kill and eat animals without
evident condemnation, and there are passages that indicate equal concern
for human and nonhuman beings. The latter include the vegan Garden of
Eden (Gen 1:29-30), the peaceful, harmonious “Peaceable Kingdom” (Isa
11:6-9), and the denunciation of animal sacrifices by many of the later
prophets. The Hebrew Scriptures describe humans and animals as having
the same essence: nephesh. Translators have obscured this by translating
this term differently when describing humans and animals. For example,
the King James Version and the Revised Standard Version translate
nephesh as “soul” for humans in Genesis 2:7 and “creature” for animals
in Genesis 2:19.
The writer of Ecclesiastes recognized the essential sameness of human
and nonhuman beings: “For the fate of the sons of men and the fate of
beasts is the same; as one dies, so dies the other. They all have the
same breath, and man has no advantage over the beasts; for all is
vanity. All go to one place; all are from the dust, and all turn to dust
again. Who knows whether the spirit of man goes upward and the spirit of
the beast goes down to the earth?” (3:19-21)
Humans in their vanity have routinely claimed that their religious
stories and traditions place themselves at the apex of creation,
entitling humans to harm other living beings as humans see fit. In
politics and in religion, the victors write the stories, and when it
comes to humanity versus the natural world, humans have been victorious
for the past few millennia. Should Christians listen to what science
tells us about humanity’s relationship with the natural world? I will
explore this question next week.
Stephen R. Kaufman, M.D.
3. This Week’s Sermon from Rev. Frank and Mary
Hoffman
Daniel, God’s Man in the Field (Part XI)
http://www.all-creatures.org/sermons97/s10sep89.html
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