ARE YOU A GOOD WITCH, OR A BAD WITCH?
“I’m not a witch at
all!”
~ Dorothy, The Wizard of
Oz
With Halloween just around the corner, witches are
making their annual appearances in decorations, costumes, advertisements, and
more. In traditional lore, before our
modern sensibilities had tamed witches and made them sources of Halloween fun,
they were quite frightening because of their unknown powers; it seemed they
might bring harm in ways communities were unable to predict or defend. But we humans have powers of our own, and,
like witches, we wield our power in frightening ways.
Since my last post, I’ve been thinking a lot about power. The choices we make regarding how to use our power, as I’ve written before, say much about who we are. In my last post I observed, “When we insist on our ‘greater value’ over the animals and the presumed benefits that attach to such an exalted position, we misunderstand the nature of power and we oppose God’s will for how we are to live and move in the world.” Some recent events have had me reflecting on the right use of power, and its relationship to our creation in God’s image, again.
One such event was the launch of the Every
Living Thing initiative, which I was very fortunate to attend. It is an effort by the evangelical community,
in cooperation with the Humane Society of the United States Faith Outreach
Department, to develop and disseminate an evangelical statement on human
obligations to animals. It is an
extremely encouraging statement, underscoring our human responsibilities to
care for our fellow sentient creatures with mercy and compassion. I urge you to take a look at it here, as well
as at the explanatory essays that accompany it, available through a link on the bottom of the
same page. (Confession: I haven’t yet had the opportunity to read the
essays myself.) During the launch, two
points made by various speakers struck me in particular, and they are also
reflected in the statement itself. One
is an insistence on humans as unique in creation and of greater value than
other animals; the other is the underscoring of animals as given to us as food. I look forward to working my way through the
essays to see how they expand on these two ideas, which are, of course, based
on scripture, but which need to be handled with great care if they are to be
consistent with a larger message of scripture, which is that power is given for
the benefit of the powerless, not the powerful.
An example of compassionate use of power |
Our creation in the image of God, the
All-Powerful One, is the source of both our “uniqueness” and our power.[1] One speaker at the launch said during
informal remarks that he affirms the uniqueness of humans not just in degree,
but in kind. I didn’t have a chance to
follow up with him, but I wanted to ask what he believes that difference “in
kind” is, and what its implications might be for our role and status in
creation.[2] In other words, I wonder if his understanding that humans are different from the animals “in kind” matters in some way
in his view of how we are to value animals; does it give us rights, or impose on us
obligations? These are questions worth
pondering because the insistence on humans as different from and superior to
animals has been used as justification for a great deal of suffering. I shall, indeed, be interested to see how the
essays in support of the evangelical statement address this issue.
Another context in which our power over animals recently
presented itself to me was in regard to a recent article about a study of
African elephants and their ability to communicate with one another. The article posits the idea of “language”
among the elephants, stating among other things, that the elephants appear to
have a specific “word” for potential danger from human beings. Other studies have addressed potential
language among birds, and even different dialects among the same species of
bird from different geographic areas. Crows
also have a specific indicator for danger from humans – and they will teach
each other and their young which specific humans are to be feared. I wonder what it says about us as humans that
when we learn about what animals are “saying,” it is that humans are to be
feared.
If you saw my Facebook post about the elephant
study, you know that it immediately brought to my mind the passage from the
post-flood story in Genesis, in which God tells Noah that “the fear and dread”
of humans will be on all the other creatures of the earth from this time
forward – the time when animals are “given into the hands” of humans, and
humans are allowed for the first time to eat animals. (Genesis 9:2). We have, in this scene, gone from caretakers
to hunters and destroyers. We have
failed in the first task given to us at creation, to reflect the image of God -
the character of self-sacrificing love - to the rest of creation. This has always struck me as one of the
saddest passages in the Bible, representing a true breach in the fabric of
creation and an irretrievable (for now) loss of fellowship among all
creatures. So long as the animals fear
us, and so long as we view them as food, we do indeed live in a broken
world. I note that it is immediately
after permitting this brokenness that God reaffirms His own commitment to
continued fellowship with the animals, covenanting with them (as well as with
humans), never again to destroy the earth with a flood. Genesis
9:9-10. God is faithful where humans
fall short.
So, speaking only for myself, notwithstanding
the many fine statements in the Every Living Thing initiative, I was sorry that
it so clearly affirms the use of animals for food. To me, this seems to affirm our broken
state. I would have been happier if it had
acknowledged our permission to use animals for food, but urged Christians to live
now as though the Kingdom of God were “at hand,” and, reflecting God’s
character through the loving sacrifice of a “right” (which turns out not to be
much of a sacrifice at all), choose a diet closer to that given us at creation,
a diet based on plants. Perhaps the
essays get there.
I have written before (here and here) about the obligations that
come with power, and I have expressed my view that our creation in God’s image
is not a matter of how we were made, but is instead a vocation, a call to
reflect God’s character in the world.
What makes humans unique is that we are given the ability (the power) to perform that
task. We have unparalleled power in the world
–power that can build up or destroy; power that can heal or kill; power that
can give or take; power that can be used for the benefit of others, or for our
own benefit. Scripture has a great deal
to say about how we are to wield power in the world. It seems to me that no theology of creation care or animal
welfare is complete without taking those lessons into account. As Bruce Birch has said, it is as
representatives of God that we are given power in the world.[3]
In The
Wizard of Oz, the Munchkins initially feared Dorothy because she appeared to have
awesome power when she landed in Munchkinland, killing the Wicked Witch of the
East with her house. The Munchkins
wanted to know whether she would use her power to help them or to terrorize them.
“Are you a good witch, or a bad witch?”
asked Glenda, the Good Witch of the North.
Dorothy of course, had no idea of
her power: “Why, I’m not a witch at
all!” Many of us don’t realize the power
we wield, either. We don’t recognize
that we are exercising power every time we choose what to eat or what to wear
or what entertainment to support or what products to buy. These are not neutral decisions. They may not cause a house to fall on anyone,
but they are life and death decisions.
When we make these choices, we need to ask ourselves whom we are
representing when we exercise our power.
Are we bringing the Kingdom of God, or are we living in brokenness?
[1] As I discussed in this earlier post, however, I don’t know that it is a source of greater human value than
other animals. I believe our value comes
from the fact that we, like other animals, are loved by God.
[3]
Birch, Bruce C. Let Justice Roll Down: The Old Testament,
Ethics, and Christian Life. Louisville: West Minster/John Knox Press, 1991,
pp. 88-89.
1 comment:
Lois, love the Halloween connection, and especially the Vegan Witches cartoon! :)
The points you bring up in this post are my sentiments, and others as well, exactly. There are some that think this was a watered down compromise. What are your thoughts about that, where this might go, and what it actually signifies? I too have yet to read the essays; hoping to do that yet this afternoon.
Thanks again for the post.
Kathy Dunn, Shepherding All God’s Creatures
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