I believe the assertion that man is alone as the only physical being with a soul, and is alone made in the image of god, are very… Arrogant.
Hi Skadi, I just wanted to address a few things here from your posts. Firstly, regarding the above, let me ask you, would it be arrogant if I said “Mankind has the most developed brain of all species on earth”? If something is true, it’s true, regardless of who’s saying it.
From a theological standpoint, we believe man to be made in the Image of God because God revealed this to us through scripture,
not because we’re any smarter, or more moral than any other creature.
It degrades all other life and creates an image of man as seperate from and above nature.
Why must this be true? That one man is president doesn’t degrade every other American. Moreover, the President may try to live as though he’s separate than and above America, but when he does that, he doesn’t act according to his office, and actually reduces it. He’s American as much as any other American. Likewise is it with mankind. We are not separate and above nature. We’re part of it.
I see why the idea developed, since we are far more intelligent than other species on this particular planet, but the people who conceived this had no knowledge of evolution.
It is an assumption on your part that the idea developed, rather than it having been revealed. In point of fact, the Catholic position is that the human person is a body-soul union. This means that an action of the human body cannot be distinguished from an action of the human soul. Spiritual maturity and growth occur alongside physical maturity and growth.
The position of the Catholic Church is that all living things have souls, but that the human soul is unique in that it is spiritual and immortal, personal. It does not have this position
because it observed intellectual, or moral superiority. Rather, because it was revealed. Such superiority merely confirms it. The superior development of the brain doesn’t diminish this truth, but enhances it, because it would make less sense if we have superior intellect, for example, but with the brain development of a mouse. This is because we are what we are, a body-soul union.
I believe all living things have a soul. I think to claim that only we do and that all of existence was put here to serve us, the divinely chosen race, is remarkably arrogant and ultimately leads to mans disassociation from nature.
It is not the Catholic Church’s position that “all of existence was put here to serve us, the Divinely chosen race.” Actually, quite the opposite. In the Catholic paradigm, the higher up on the hierarchy you stand, the more obligation you hold to serve those below you. That is, when St. Paul commands husbands to “love your wives,” he means “serve your wives.” This is most deeply reflected in Christ, Himself, who is the head of the Church, but who spent His life serving us, even sacrificing His life for us.
Likewise, when it is recorded in Genesis that God gave man “dominion” over the earth, it means that we have an obligation to serve the earth. It is our household, and while it behooves the earth to obey, it behooves us to serve. We must observe Paul’s exhortation to “Love.” Our duty is to love, protect, and serve the earth and all its creatures, for we are over them, as a father is over his children. Our intellectual superiority, our free wills, our moral sense, are all reasons that we must take up this role.
To see the divine spark within all life rejected, and them reduced to sacks of meat created to serve humans, as nothing more than robots of flesh and blood, well that disturbs me to my very core.
Again, this is a mischaracterization of the Catholic position. All living things have souls. The soul, whether spiritual or otherwise, is from God. But that doesn’t make all souls equal. A microbial soul is different from a vegetative soul. A vegetative soul is different from an animal soul. An animal soul is different from a human soul. A human soul is different from an angelic soul.
Bottom line is this: it is not arrogance to see order in nature, and thus higher and lower places in that order. Moreover, it is not the Catholic position that having a higher order means that lower order beings are irrelevant, or merely mechanisms for our own uses and pleasures. Rather, because we are higher order, we are obliged to serve and care for those lower order creatures who are under our dominion, as declared by God. A simple example of this is the Catholic teaching regarding Guardian Angels. These are higher order beings, angels, in perpetual service to, through care for, humans, lower order beings. That is the meaning of order in the Catholic paradigm. “The first will be last and the last will be first.”