T
trentonzero
Guest
There seems to be a classical argument that goes like this:
“It’s immoral to eat meat because it causes pain to animals.”
“Jesus Christ was sinless. He ate meat. To the degree you believe eating meat immoral, you deny Christianity.”
Does the (Christian) vegetarian have any answers to this?
I’ve been thinking about this some.
The only one I can think of:
"We are granted lordship over the earth (to cultivate it) in Genesis. So we have the right to kill animals for our food and neccessity. But Jesus didn’t teach his followers to walk around the world mindlessly taking those things to which they were entitled, especially from those weaker than them. The Church hasn’t taught it either. Justice (everyone getting what is their due) is a virtue…but so is Charity (the strong voluntarily giving the weak more than justice demands).
We say that the charity can be done for moral reasons, why can’t vegetarianism be done for moral reasons in the same way (provided we don’t go too far and say that the eating of meat is immoral…it is virtous for a landlord to give a poor man some leeway in paying his rent, but its not immoral for the landlord to expect his money…so it is virtous to not eat animals, but its not immoral to eat them).
Is this way of thinking valid? If not, what is wrong with it?
“It’s immoral to eat meat because it causes pain to animals.”
“Jesus Christ was sinless. He ate meat. To the degree you believe eating meat immoral, you deny Christianity.”
Does the (Christian) vegetarian have any answers to this?
I’ve been thinking about this some.
The only one I can think of:
"We are granted lordship over the earth (to cultivate it) in Genesis. So we have the right to kill animals for our food and neccessity. But Jesus didn’t teach his followers to walk around the world mindlessly taking those things to which they were entitled, especially from those weaker than them. The Church hasn’t taught it either. Justice (everyone getting what is their due) is a virtue…but so is Charity (the strong voluntarily giving the weak more than justice demands).
We say that the charity can be done for moral reasons, why can’t vegetarianism be done for moral reasons in the same way (provided we don’t go too far and say that the eating of meat is immoral…it is virtous for a landlord to give a poor man some leeway in paying his rent, but its not immoral for the landlord to expect his money…so it is virtous to not eat animals, but its not immoral to eat them).
Is this way of thinking valid? If not, what is wrong with it?