MINORITY
REPORT – PART TWO:
JOHN WESLEY AND HUMPHREY PRIMATT
We may
pretend to what religion we please, but cruelty is atheism.
We may make our boast of Christianity; but cruelty is infidelity. We may trust to our orthodoxy; but cruelty is the worst of heresies.
We may make our boast of Christianity; but cruelty is infidelity. We may trust to our orthodoxy; but cruelty is the worst of heresies.
~
Rev. Humphrey Primatt
This
post picks up the discussion I began earlier addressing the fact that, while
the church as an institution may have been silent about -- or even hostile to
-- the idea of animal welfare as a Christian concern, there have always been
people of faith with a different view. John
Wesley and Humphrey Primatt were two eighteenth century Anglican clergy who
understood our obligations for mercy toward animals as a matter of faith and spoke
publicly about it.
John
Wesley, who founded the Methodist tradition, addressed the issue most directly
in his 1771 sermon, The GeneralDeliverance. Humphrey
Primatt is much less well-known today, but he tackled the issue head-on in a
tract of some 300-plus pages titled ADissertation on the Duty of Mercy and the Sin of Cruelty to Brute Animals, published in 1776. They do
not agree on all the theological particulars, but they do agree that we have an
obligation as followers of Christ to be merciful to all God’s creatures.
In The General Deliverance, John Wesley
presaged modern theories of the image of God as a functional matter, requiring
us to represent God to the rest of creation.
He argued that in their perfect state, prior to sin, humans were
distinguished from animals by the human ability to be in relationship with God,
and that in the gift of dominion “man was God's vicegerent upon earth, the
prince and governor of this lower world; and all the blessings of God flowed
through him to the inferior creatures.
Man was the channel of conveyance between his Creator and the whole
brute creation.”[1] With the Fall, Wesley argued, humans ceased
to fulfill that purpose, and the animals were cut off from God; but they will
be redeemed by Him in the new creation.
This idea is worth considering, he explained, for three reasons. First, it is a comfort to humans because if
God cares even for the animals, we can be assured he will care that much more
for humans. Second, it demonstrates the
justice of God, that he will not let their earthly sufferings go unnoticed or
unredeemed. Third, such considerations
may encourage us to imitate Him whose mercy is over all His works. They may soften our hearts towards the meaner creatures, knowing that the Lord careth for them. It may enlarge our hearts towards those poor creatures, to reflect that, as vile as they appear in our eyes, not one of them is forgotten in the sight of our Father which is in heaven. Through all the vanity to which they are now subjected, let us look to what God hath prepared for them. Yea, let us habituate ourselves to look forward, beyond this present scene of bondage, to the happy time when they will be delivered therefrom into the liberty of the children of God.
Primatt’s
powerful tract was even more direct in his call for compassion toward
animals. In A Dissertation on the Duty of Mercy and the Sin of Cruelty to Brute
Animals, Primatt argued forcefully that there can be no true Christian
religion without compassion for all God’s animals and that humans will be
called to account by God for their cruelties.[2] He opened with a grim, if realistic,
assessment of the state of affairs, whereby
“consciousness of our own dignity and excellence” leads humans to
believe that we alone are deserving of mercy and compassion, and “misled by
this prejudice,” we disregard some animals as unworthy of our notice and
consider others simply as created for our benefit, and are “indifferent to
their happiness or misery, and can hardly bring ourselves to suppose that there
is any kind of duty incumbent upon us toward them.”[3] It is to counter this “mistaken notion” that Primatt
wrote his treatise.[4] In it, Primatt demonstrates that kindness to
animals is not only consistent with good reason and justice, but also, and most
importantly, it is required by revelation – the teachings of our faith. Primatt argued that all creatures, “whether beast or bird or fish or fly or worm,” are
deserving of mercy.[5]
Moreover, he argued that silence from
the church on this topic is a serious matter, allowing the faithful to be
misled as to the nature of sin.
Primatt began by stipulating that there is, indeed, a
natural hierarchy of creatures which places humans at the top, but that this is
not a source of pride for humans, because all creatures are as they were designed
by God and the subservience or “ugliness” of some creatures is not a defect.[6] Moreover, all creatures, from humans to “the
vilest brute,” are subject to pain.
“Pain is pain, whether it is inflicted on man or beast, and the creature
that suffers from it, whether man or beast, being sensible of the misery of it
while it lasts, suffers Evil.”[7]
The sufferance of this evil, where no
offense has been given and no good can come, is cruelty and injustice, according
to Primatt. He tied the disregard of
animal suffering and the misuse of our position of power to similar sins among
humans: Just as differences in human skin color do not give some humans the
right to enslave others, or tall people to trample short ones, or rich people
to abuse poor ones, so “a man can have no natural right to abuse and torment a
beast, merely because the beast has not the mental powers of a man.”[8] Contrary to Aquinas, Primatt asserted that
our duty to treat others as we would wish to be treated extends not just to
humans, but to animals as well.[9] Primatt grants that “custom” would argue
against such a view, but custom, he argues, is no reliable teacher. “When we reflect upon the shocking
barbarities, and see the brutal rage
exercised by the most worthless of men, without controul of Law, and without
reproof from the Pulpit, we are almost tempted to draw this inference, that Cruelty cannot be a sin.”[10]
A turkey at a factory farm in North Carolina. Photo from an undercover investigation by Mercy For Animals |
Primatt then addressed at length why cruelty to animals
is a serious matter, even more serious in some cases than cruelty to humans,
since animals have no voice to complain, no courts for justice, can benefit
from no compensation if they are injured, and (contrary to Wesley) have no hope
of life everlasting. He considered and
countered the various arguments of his day regarding why humans are within
their rights to harm animals, he considered numerous arguments from scripture
regarding the nature of both humans and animals, including the ways in which we
are similar and dissimilar, our obligations toward various classes of animals,
and how our treatment of animals reflects on our character and our relationship
with God. He summed up his argument with
these words, “We may pretend to what religion we please, but Cruelty is
Atheism. We may make our boast of
Christianity, but Cruelty is Infidelity.
We may trust to our Orthodoxy, but Cruelty is the worst of Heresies.”[11] Arguing that “a Cruel Christian is a Monster
of Ingratitude,” he concluded with an exhortation “to Be Merciful as God is
Merciful; to Be Merciful as you hope for Mercy; and to receive with Reverence
and Attention the BLESSING of the Lord Jesus Christ – Blessed are the Merciful, for they shall obtain Mercy.”[12]
Both of these, but especially Primatt's tract, are well worth reading in the original They are as relevant to us today as when they were
when they were first penned. As
individuals who seek to grow in faith, and as faith communities, we must address animal welfare if we hope
to grow into the people we are called to be – we must, in Primatt’s words, be
merciful as we hope for mercy.
[1] Global Ministries, The
United Methodist Church, John Wesley, Sermon 60, “The General Deliverence,”
available at http://www.umcmission.org/Find-Resources/Global-Worship-and-Spiritual-Growth/John-Wesley-Sermons/Sermon-60-The-General-Deliverence).
[2] Primatt, Humphrey. A Dissertation on the Duty of Mercy and the
Sin of Cruelty to Brute Animals (Google Books http://books.google.com/books?id=b1wPAAAAIAAJ&printsec=frontcover&source=gbs_ge_summary_r&cad=0#v=onepage&q&f=false.
[3] Primatt, pp. ii-v.
[4] Primatt, p. iii.
[5] Primatt, p. ii,
note.
[6] Primatt, p. 6.
[7] Primatt, p. 7-8.
[8] Primatt, p. 12.
[9] Primatt, p. 17-21.
[10] Primatt, pp. 24-25,
emphasis original.
[11] Primatt, pp. 321-22.
[12] Primatt, pp. 323, 326.
4 comments:
Love the "pain is pain" quote from Primat and the "Cruelty is…" quote. I may have to re-quote those!
I strikes me as so odd that our human imperfections and sins can somehow be used as a justification for regaining the Lord's favor. In that "hierarchy" it seems to me that animals are superior. With very few exceptions that I could think of, animals seem truly innocent/without sin. Thus, aren't they really the perfect beings? Or am I wrong and do theologians view animals as being sinful as well?
I think traditionally, theologians have viewed animals as having no immortal soul, and thus no moral dimension, so "sin" was not something that could be spoken about in regard to animals. However, it has generally been recognized that animals suffer with humans as a result of human sin, and that humans' original disobedience to God resulted in a distortion of creation, causing suffering among humans and animals. (The apostle Paul talks of all of creation groaning waiting for the new creation. Romans 8:22) More recently (and in a secular framework), ethologists (animal behaviorists) have learned a great deal about how animals think and perceive the world. Marc Bekoff in particular writes about "morality" among some animals, but what he means is that they understand the rules of their group and know they must follow those rules to be a welcome part of their group. Even as we recognize the greater awareness that animals have of the world and their surroundings than we have been giving credit for, I think it would be a stretch to attribute to animals the ability to make decisions that could be termed "sinful" or not. Certainly, most animals have a much better ability to live peaceably among their fellow creatures than humans do.
This is a great piece Lois! The view of the Imago Dei as a functional characteristic, rather than as a "property" inherent in human nature, is one I've been convinced of since reading J. Richard Middleton, and Gordon Fee. I wonder, though, whether you've read David .S. Cunningham's chapter in Creaturely Theology, entitled "The Way of All Flesh: Rethinking the Imago Dei". The main gist of his argument is that theology must rethink it's historical tendency to interpret the Imago Dei in terms that suggest that the most significant dividing line within the created order is that between humans and everything else. He suggests the category of "all flesh" as a much better way of thinking about divisions within creation. But at one point in the chapter, he seems to question whether any real content can be given to this concept of the Imago Dei such that all humans, and no other creatures "image God". He seems to gesture towards a kind of Thomistic metaphysics of participation and analogy, in which all things bear a similarity to some aspect of their Creator. It's definitely worth a read (especially for someone interested in how this doctrine relates to questions about the relation between humans and animals). Really, the whole book is worth picking up if you haven't yet. (There's even a section, by Celia Deane-Drummond on the question of moral agency in animals, that discusses the work of ethologists like Bekoff.) Thanks for the wonderful blog. And if you're interested, check out mine at: thenephesh.wordpress.com
Hi! Thanks so much for your comments. I have not read Cunningham, but will add it to my ever-growing list. You have intrigued me by your comment that he seems to question whether real content can be given to Imago Dei. Too complex to address in a blog comment, but I think it's very important to stick very close to scripture in considering these ideas (it was by dislodging the idea from its scriptural context that we got into so much trouble, it seems to me) and so I would be quite hesitant to say it has no content. I like what Richard Baukham does with the subject in Living With Other Creatures - looking for a balance between the vertical aspects of Imago Dei (our relationship with God) and the horizontal aspects (what he calls our "common creatureliness" with the other animals). I like Middleton's work, too. I have visited your blog and this it's great ! I have left a comment there. Let's stay in touch.
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