PIGS ARE NOT "THE LAND"
CREATION CARE AND ANIMALS, PART TWO
“Speak up for those who cannot speak for themselves; ensure justice for those being crushed.”
Prov.31:8, New Living Translation
“Speak up for those who cannot speak for themselves; ensure justice for those being crushed.”
Prov.31:8, New Living Translation
Last week, I began a look at a theological perspective
variously known as “creation care,” “green theology,” “ecotheology,” and
similar terms. I noted that while this
perspective has done excellent work in helping us to understand that Scripture
places on humans obligations toward the rest of creation, rather than simply
conferring rights, it falls short in addressing our obligations toward
animals. The problem lies in the fact
that these authors most often fail to distinguish between sentient and
non-sentient elements of the non-human creation. They tend to consider animals as part of
“nature.” This allows them – and us -
(intentionally or otherwise) to disregard the fact that animals are individuals
and have value apart from their environment.
It also makes it easy to think of animals as “out there” – in the wild
somewhere, and lets us avoid turning our gaze on the animals we impact most
directly – the ones in places like factory farms and puppy mills and
laboratories.[1]
Ellen F. Davis, in her book, Scripture, Culture, and Agriculture, does turn her eyes directly on
farm animals, ever so briefly, and in so doing helps to illustrate the
disconnect between concern for animals and concern for the environment even
when food is the topic. [2] Davis has provided what she subtitles “An
Agrarian Reading of the Bible.” She
describes agrarianism as “a way of thinking and ordering life in community that
is based on the health of the land and of living creatures.”
Davis offers in this
work a thorough-going indictment of our modern food delivery system. “In this half-century,” she says, “it has
given North Americans probably the cheapest food in human history, but at what
cost?”[3] She addresses at some length the destruction
industrial agriculture wreaks on the land, on the farming families who cannot
compete with this industrial model, and on “the natural machinery that supports
life on Earth,” and puts it all in the context of the biblical covenant and the
tie of the ancient Israelites to the land.[4]
She also addresses a host of other
natural, economic, and social impacts of industrial agriculture. One looks in vain, however, for any sustained
discussion of the catastrophic suffering industrial agriculture imposes on
animals or its theological implications.
She writes movingly of the
devastation caused by current agricultural practices from a number of
perspectives, yet, notwithstanding her definition of agrarianism as addressing
the health of “all living creatures,” she offers no theological vision for how
an agrarian viewpoint should inform our relations with animals, either those
animals within the industrial agriculture system, those few relatively
fortunate animals raised for food on humane farms, or those in the wild who are
impacted not only by the pollution resulting from overworked soil, but also by
industrial agriculture practices (particularly those involving animals raised
for food) that befoul the water, the air, and habitat. Most disappointingly, notwithstanding her
grave concerns about our food supply, she gives only passing attention the
staple of the American diet: factory farmed meat.
That passing consideration comes in her examination
of Leviticus. She opens this chapter
quoting Aldo Leopold’s comments regarding ethical considerations being extended
“to include soils, waters, plants, and animals, or collectively, the land.”[5] Thus, as is so often the case in creation
care writings, Davis (and Leopold) appears to conflate the needs of animals
with the needs of inanimate nature. Yet,
animals, as sentient creatures, are manifestly not “the land” and are entitled
to a whole collection of ethical considerations that have no analogy to those
for soils, waters, or plants.
Nevertheless, in a section of her
discussion of Leviticus entitled “Eating To Blessing Or Damnation,” animals
raised for food do come briefly to the fore.[6] She points out that biblical writers
considered eating “a religious act, and all these writers treat thoughtless
eating a sacrilege,” and argues that provisions for clean and unclean animals
and methods of slaughter harken back to Genesis 1. Here is another disconnect, since in Genesis
1 only plants were given as food.
However, she is clear that while scripture allows for the eating of
animals, it is to be done with respect for the life taken; “it is an occasion
for covenant faithfulness.”
By contrast to this biblical vision for
eating, she addresses the realities of our current food production system and
declares, “[o]ur own culture, especially in North America, certainly operates
the most death-dealing market the world has ever known. Considered within the context of creation, it
epitomizes our ingratitude for what God has done.”[7] She then briefly discusses factory farming,
accurately describing it as motivated solely by profit, resulting in the
management of animals in completely unnatural environments. She also correctly notes that while costs to
the consumer for meat at the market are kept low as a result of the system, the
real cost is much higher.
Even here, however, she does not turn
first to the cost in the suffering of the billions and billions of animals who
exist in this system. Instead, she first
addresses human suffering, identifying the cost to mostly nonunionized workers
in slaughterhouses, who must handle huge numbers of animals with split-second
timing, slaughtering thousands of animals a day in poor working conditions.[8] Turning only then to conditions in factory
farms, she notes, “[s]uffering, disease, and wasteful death for so-called
domesticated animals is also a large part of the cost our eating habits and
food production system,” and then she gives particular attention to hogs in
gestation crates, emphasizing the industrialized atmosphere in which hogs are
handled, “from birth to bacon,” including mechanized slaughter methods. Quoting Matthew Scully, she describes the
scene on the slaughterhouse floor, where “[t]he electrocutors, stabbers, and
carvers who work on the floor wear earplugs to muffle the screaming.” All of this is covered in a few paragraphs,
with minimal discussion of the impact on the animals themselves and without consideration
of the theological implications of the sheer cruelty to animals this system entails.
Citing Genesis 1:26, she points to the
connection between “mastery among” other animals (a translation she prefers to
“dominion over”) and our creation in the image of God. In considering what it means to be created in
that image, she argues that more than anything, the image of God gives human
life value.[9] She acknowledges the view that the image is
tied to the ancient role of kings and the unique Biblical perspective that all humans (not just kings) are created
as representatives of God’s rule on earth.
This vision includes the call to be holy, and for Davis, this holiness
is tied to proper use of the land for the good of community. According to Genesis, she argues, “the form
of human life is fundamentally ecological,”
which she understands as involved in the science of infinitely complex
relationships, with God at their center.[10] For agrarians, she argues, these
relationships are “best known as ‘food chains.’” Quoting Aldo Leopold, she describes, “a
fountain of energy flowing through a circuit of soils, plants, and
animals. Food chains are the living
channels which conduct energy upward; death and decay return it to the soil.”[11] She concludes that “the most essential
activity befitting humans created in the image of God is to secure the food
system that God gives to sustain all creatures.”[12] Considering our exercise of “mastery among”
the animals, she notes that humans are called upon to actively manage animal
populations, particularly in view of the damage human activity has caused to
natural ecosystems.[13] She does not address what value animal life
may have in view of her assertion that human life derives its value from the
image of God; she does not address the fact that only plants are part of the
food chain in the creation stories; and she does not address any potential
conflict between managing animal populations and compassionate care toward
individual animals.
Thus, while Davis’ work provides
important insights into several problems with our current food system, even
while she holds up agrarianism as concerned with “all living creatures,” she
fails to take the opportunity to address the cruelty and suffering that our
food system imposes on animals. Instead,
the attention that animals do receive suggests that she considers them to be
resources in the same way the land is a resource, to be treated well and with a
view to sustainability, but not as individual beings with their own inherent
value and whose suffering is a theological concern.
[1] Sadly, our impact is
increasingly felt by those in the wild, as well, as we crowd them out of their
habitat and use up the resources they need to survive and then complain that
they are turning up in “our” yards.
[2] Davis, Ellen. Scripture,
Culture, and Agriculture: An Agrarian Reading of the Bible (Cambridge:
Cambridge University Press, 2009).
[3] Davis, p. 13.
[4] Davis, pp. 13-20.
[5] Davis, p. 83.
[6] Davis, pp. 94-100.
[7] Davis, p. 97.
[8] Davis, pp. 97-98.
[9] Davis, p. 56. For my thoughts on the image of God and human
value, see this post.
[10] Davis, pp. 56-57
(emphasis original).
[11] Davis, p. 56.
[12] Davis, p. 58.
[13] Davis, pp. 53-54.
1 comment:
Always enjoy your posts, Lois, thank you, and look forward to the next!
Kathy Dunn
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