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This page contains a single entry by Alex published on November 6, 2008 11:57 AM.

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Number of animals killed in the world by the meat, dairy and egg industries since you opened this webpage, not including the billions of marine animals killed annually.

On ensoulment

Many people of faith regard themselves as progressive. Their faith in Christ, for example, is resolute. However, they are not doctrinaire in their belief system - scripture is open to interpretation, and organized religion takes on the "broken mirror" analogy: each faith represents but one piece of the whole, therefore, none of the individual pieces represent the "whole truth" but a single part. Issues, then, such as homosexual marriage, capital punishment, environmentalism, and abortion are viewed with a far less dogmatic eye by Liberal Christians (derisively labeled "al la cart Christians" by some, I say approaching rationality) than by their more strident counterparts. Another issue, evolution, is also accepted by most of the progressive faithful, thus rejecting the fiction, pseudo-science "creationism."

And here is my point: If you accept evolution then you must agree with the statement that "we" all evolved from a single source; from the primordial ooze we arose. However, as a person of faith, or a Christian more specifically given the context of Western society, you must also believe in an afterlife of some kind, or else your faith doesn't really follow from anything. Therefore, given biblical teaching, the issue of ensoulment must be broached - it is, after all, from this notion of the "soul" that the idea of eternal life is derived. This raises a fundamental question: If you accept both evolution and some conception of an afterlife, at what point does ensoulment take place?

It seems to me that there are only two possible answers to this question. One, god selected the stage of the evolutionary chain in which Homo sapiens erupted to introduce to the world "souls," which, in keeping with Judeo-Christian dogma, excludes all nonhuman animals from grace or eternal life. If only considered for a moment, however, the issue of arbitrariness enters the equation. In effect, so the reasoning goes, god saw three beings standing in front of him: a worm, a cow, and a human animal. Leaving aside the fact that each of these three beings originated from a single source through complicated processes of evolution where some genes mixed and others branched out in different directions, and that what separates one from the other is merely an alteration in the genetic code, god decided to select but one being from but one evolutionary stage to grant eternity too. Considering Darwin's theory holistically, selecting as god selected is almost ludicrously absurd given that he/she could have just as easily closed his/her eyes and pointed to some canid species, for example. Natural selection is essentially random mutation. There is no design, therefore, Z mutation getting a "soul," while A-Y do not, is uncomfortably arbitrary. Framing this arbitrariness as "divine plan" does not change its nature.

The second answer is more interesting. One might reason that creation as we know it will, in some perfected state, make-up heaven as we know it. Earth cleansed; god's grand design abstracted existentially. Avoiding the arbitrariness problem raised in the initial answer, the validity of the theory of evolution means that at our genesis, inchoate life was ensouled, and generation after evolutionary generation new life came into being, each sharing two traits: A) origins, and B) a soul. As a theological (and philosophical) issue, investigating further this brief sketch would be an interesting pursuit in and of itself. However, another, perhaps more, interesting question arises. If all beings along the evolutionary chain have been granted eternal life, then killing some of that life - with all the suffering therein - as a means to satisfy a taste bud (and only a taste bud) ought to be a cause for concern. Consider the outcome: What words will assuage the perfectly reasonable sentiment of hostility of the female cow whom had to experience rape, pregnancy, the removal of her baby, and milking-by-machine, over and over and over again, so that we can enjoy dairy ice cream as opposed to the non-dairy varieties? If confronted in the afterlife with a family of pigs who had to suffer the unimaginable in this life because "I just love bacon," will an apology sway? What of the chickens, or any of the other billions upon billions of animals that we kill for their flesh, sport, or convenience? The heavenly horizon darkens. Perhaps all nonhuman life go to a different heaven? One can only hope.

"But," goes the inevitable rebuttal, "god gave them to us to use as our means." Indeed, but remember:

Genesis 1 29:30:
"Then God said, "Behold, I have given you every plant yielding seed that is on the surface of all the earth, and every tree which has fruit yielding seed; it shall be food for you; and for every beast of the earth and every bird of the sky and to everything that moves on earth which has life, I have given every green plant for food"; and it was so."
We were "created" as vegans; in our perfected state non-interference with sentient life was a maxim. It was Original Sin that ended this harmony.

Romans 5:12:
"Therefore, just as through one man sin entered the world, and death through sin, and so death spread to all men, because all sinned."
Man sinned and god rescinded its decree that human animals (and nonhuman animals many believe) ought to be vegans. Where then do the progressive faithful find a defense of killing animals to please their palates?

Will be crossposted @ Vegan Soapbox 

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