As a hunter most of my life I can only give my :twocents:
When I first started hunting as a young boy with my father, I’ll never forget crying when dad shot that first Rabbit. It started yelling and sent shivers down my spine. But, as dad explained with the rabbit, we thank God for our food, and I also ask Him to relieve their suffering. When we started deer hunting I realized that these majestic animals were a creation of God, and were beautiful sights to behold. I also came to understand that God placed them here for us to survive on.
I’m reminded of the Passover. God told the people to take the blood of an unblemished lamb and place it on the door posts. But that wasn’t all that they were to do with that lamb…if you read closely they were also commanded to EAT the lamb. So if they were to use the blood and go to bed without eating it, they would get up in the morning and their first born son would be dead…eating meat is biblical!
Now, I personally confess that I have never got a deer - Oh, I’ve tried, but ‘buck fever’ got the best of me on more than one occassion. I grew up out west in Utah and 12 years ago moved to Indiana for a job and here you can’t rifle hunt, so I haven’t been in quite some time. However, I recently started shooting Bow and fell in love with it, and decided this year I would try my hand at bow-hunting.
If God grants me the shot to get a deer, I will try…not for the ‘sport’ of it, though the thrill of the chase is exhilirating, but for the meat itself. I love deer meat and its been a long time since I’ve had any. The farmers around here love for hunters to use their land to clear the deer overpopulation that eat their crops (soy beans and corn - stuff the vegans eat)…In Indiana we are allowed to take 1 buck and multiple doe’s…I have promised God that if I get more than one, the rest will go to the local food bank. (We have local processors who will process the meat for free and deliver it to the food bank.)
I am Pro-Life, from conception to natural death…but I also believe in putting food on the table for my family. And yes, in the beginning the clothes, bow, etc. are expensive - but over time the meat I’ll get from hunting will cost less and less compaired to the rising costs of processed meats.