ON THE LOSS OF A PET
Loving God, you brought this beloved animal into the life of N. [and N.] to share kindness, joy, and faithful companionship: Receive our thanks and praise for thecommunity between your animals and your people, and all the ways in which we bless each other’s lives; in your goodness, Blessed Creator, hear our prayer.
~ From the Service At The Loss Of A Beloved Animal, Episcopal Church
In a recent edition of Christianity
Today’s blog, Her-meneutics, Karen Swallow Prior offers a beautiful reflection on the loss of a pet. I have
had the honor of meeting Prior at events hosted by the Human Society of the
United States Faith Outreach Department and I follow her on Twitter
(@LoveLifeLitGod). I am very grateful
for such an eloquent and heartfelt voice for animals in the Christian
community. Nevertheless, I must take
issue with a portion of what she says. (For
a related post, see Praying For Pets.)
Prior
opens her reflection recounting a time when, just days after having lost a pet,
she had to travel to a conference, where she was still so overcome with grief
she could not eat. She writes:
If I had been
mourning the death of a person, my life would have been understandably put on
hold. I wouldn’t have been expected to go to work the day following her death.
I could have cancelled my trip.
. . .
When a family
member dies, the bereft are offered sympathy, support, and condolences, from
meals and visits, to cards and flowers, to the funeral service, burial, and
beyond. Not so when the family member that dies is a pet.
When we mourn the loss of a pet, we mourn alone.
Then, although acknowledging that the love we
feel for our pets is very real, as is the loss we suffer when they are gone,
she says, “I’m not going to argue that it should be otherwise. Nor will I argue that the death of a pet
should be treated with the same moral, emotional, or social weight as the death
of a person. It should not.” Here is
where I take issue with Prior. I think
we enter deep waters here, and need proceed carefully, both pastorally and
theologically.
Sympathy cards for the
loss of a pet are readily found, cremation services and burial places are available,
and increasingly, liturgies for the loss of a pet are available.[1]
We should not be embarrassed to use them, if they will help.[2]
Loss is loss. What difference does it make whether the loss
is of a pet or a human? Grief is not
about societal expectation, and it is not about the deceased. It is about the survivor learning how to live
in a world where a loving presence (human or animal) that was once there is now
gone. Our role is to help.
That’s the pastoral
side.
Theologically,
downplaying the loss of a pet is also fraught with pitfalls, it seems to
me. Prior declines to “argue that the
death of a pet should be treated with the same moral, emotional, or social
weight as the death of a person.” I
think it is worth examining this statement in pieces. As to emotional weight, the studies
referenced by Prior herself show that for many people the emotional impact of a
loss of a pet is as severe as the loss of a human. The emotional weight is there, whether we
choose to acknowledge it or not. (Nor is this some modern
sensibility. As this article shows, humans have been deeply grieving the loss of their pets
since antiquity.) Indeed, it is an indicator of our capacity
for compassion, empathy, and love. It is
unclear to me how society or church families benefit from failing to lift that
up.
If by societal weight she means whether it would be
acceptable to cancel the trip to the conference, I think we need to come back,
again, to the depth of loss. Society has
not given people room to cancel plans for the death of a pet because we have
not yet taken these deaths seriously or recognized what these deaths mean for
the people left to deal with them. Do
we, as a society, want to recognize pain and give people time to heal (if they
need or want it), or do we want them to carry on regardless? I think different segments of society will
answer this question differently. For
Christian communities, it comes back again to the pastoral concerns for the
survivor and the kinds of people we want to become.
But what about “moral
weight”? Here, I think, is where the
theological piece comes in. Failure to
give pet deaths moral weight is what has caused a failure to give them emotional
and societal weight. They are “only animals,” after all, so it shouldn’t
matter. But the thing is, as studies
show, it does matter. A great deal.
Maybe they are not so “only,” after all.
I have reflected in
previous posts, in particular this one, on the
idea that humans, as uniquely made in the image of God, are more “valuable” than
all other animals. I believe Scripture
tells us that our creation in God’s image is not so much a factor of value as
it is an imposition of responsibility.
Our value, and the value of other animals, comes from the fact that we
are loved by God. If it can be said that
we have greater value (and honestly, I don’t really know how you compare the
value of one life to another; we are all as nothing when compared to the One
who gave His life), it can only come from the fact that we are tasked
with an important job: to reflect the character of God to creation, most
especially the animals. When we do not
do that job, when we puff ourselves up at the expense of those at our mercy, our
value is greatly diminished. Most of us
undertake that care-taking job most directly with our pets.
Animal lives matter inherently: God calls them “good,”
takes delight in them, and covenants with them, wholly apart from their
relationships with humans. Animals are
imbued with the same “nephesh” – breathe of life – that humans are given. (For example, Genesis 1 and 2.) Animal deaths matter, too. If the lives and deaths even of sparrows are
significant to God, should not the lives and deaths of our pets have moral
significance to us?
Animals also have moral significance because how we
interact with them has a great deal to with the formation of our character and the right use of power. In those relationships, we have the
opportunity to grow closer to (or farther from) God as we undertake (or
neglect) the task we were given by God at creation.
Prior reflects on one
way pets can help us understand the character of God and the human relationship
with God. Prior suggests, “Animals show
us what our own fragility looks like before God. . . . When we love an animal, we
bring with that love all the might and grace of one both in and above the world
of that creature. . . . I think perhaps we are no more like God than when we
love an animal.” Here is a statement of
the enormous responsibility we have as humans in relation to God and
animals. Working that responsibility out
in day to day life seems to me to be a matter of great moral weight.
Finally, I always cringe when I hear Christians talk
about how humans are more important, more significant, more valuable than animals
and that we matter more to God. The
corollary is that we should not “waste” resources (financial, natural, or
emotional) on animals. I hear in these
words the words of the Pharisees saying the Israelites, as God’s chosen people,
were more important than the Samaritans, the Canaanite woman, the tax
collectors, and the Gentiles. I hear
them saying that they could stand on their status before God and disregard the
needs of those less “valuable” to God.
Prior, of course, is not saying that. Indeed, she specifically refutes the idea
that we must choose between caring for animals and caring for humans, pointing
out that God’s is a “both/and” economy. She
is a strong and important Christian voice for animals. Yet . . . yet, it seems to
me she takes a step in the wrong direction, disregarding what Richard Bauckham calls
our “common creatureliness” with the animals, by saying so decisively,
“Nor will I argue that the death of a pet should be treated with the same
moral, emotional, or social weight as the death of a person. It should
not.” Perhaps; but these are very tricky
scales, and I don’t think the weights are quite so easily sorted out. The idea that humans are more important
before God is one that has led to untold suffering in God’s creation and,
thereby, a great deal of sin. We need to be mindful of how many human thumbs we
are putting on the scales.
My beloved, and still very much missed, Winston |
[1] One such liturgy,
authorized by the Episcopal Church, is the source of the opening quote in this
post, and is available on the web page of the Episcopal Network for Animal Welfare.
[2] It is always important to
remember, of course, that grief is a deeply personal thing, and everyone
grieves differently, whether for the loss of a human or a pet. What is helpful to one person, may only make
things harder for another.
3 comments:
Thank you for this very valuable post. As we both know, losing a pet - especially one for whom we as adults have been the sole caretaker - is devastating. Fortunately, I am surrounded by people - including my immediate managers at work - who understand this pain and who gave me significant support during the time when my dog Bailey was sick and I realized I was going to have to do the most loving thing for him I could do. I was allowed to work from home during his last week and took some time off afterwards. A lot of people don't have that kind of support. Even so, I have to admit that even a part of me felt somewhat guilty to not be able to just "rally" when I got back to work. I felt like people were going to expect me to just have moved on. Now I'm at the point where I don't care what people think - NO ONE has a right to dictate my feelings or how I cope with a situation. Now, my dog Addie has lymphoma and we're doing chemo for her. I couldn't care less if people don't understand why I may need to take time off or work from home to tend to her needs. She is my baby. Just because she is not a human baby doesn't mean she's entitled to any less love and care.
I hope that this mentality continues to see a shift to more compassion and empathy for human's deep pain in the loss of a pet.
Thank you!
Lois, thank you for voicing this. When I read Prior's post, I thought some of the same. Thanks for voicing it!
Kathy Dunn
Thanks to both LTE and Kathy Dunn! I think it is so important to recognize the significance of pets in people's lives, for the sake of both the animals and the humans. Not only do humans need support when they are going through tough times, but so long as we continue to downplay the importance pets and our relationships with them, we also downplay the importance of other animals and our obligations to them, as well. LTE - I whole-heartedly support your decision not to be concerned about what others think when you care for Addie - I cancelled many a plan bc Winston needed me, too. To do otherwise seems cruel to those furry folks who depend so utterly on us. I'm glad you both found this post helpful!
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