Religion, Spirituality, Animals and VEGetarianism (currently VEGANISM)
This page is a:
Religious and spiritual informational donation for the church, world religions and spiritual movements.
It is a call of unity for planetary and spiritual healing of ALL God’s CHILDREN.
Evidence That Jesus and The Original Aramaic Christians Were Vegetarians
The real reason for Jesus crucifixion
"The Cleansing of the Temple" is a great short video explaining the profound ramifications of Jesus expelling the money changers from the Temple, accusing them of turning the Temple into a den of thieves. Please visit:
Jesus wanted to end the bloodshed of innocent animals!
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GQ-h0hh5wxA
Have a blessed day!
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Lorena Mucke
Coordinator
Christian Vegetarian Association
Beloved church and religious organizations leaders in Canada and around the world,
We’ve come to you, today, to share the Holy Scriptures messages on a very essential subject and to personally invite all church leaders on the next local and global journey in order to help heal our world at a far deeper level! Below is a collection of highly important information, as a donation of our many years of work and study on the subject, about the next natural step for humanity and the planet!
The religious, health, compassion, environment healing and TRUE world peace aspect of a vegetarian/vegan lifestyle is covered through a rich collection of extremely informative and powerful material, backed up by the Holy Scriptures and also reputable scientists and environmentalists. We would like to invite all churches and their religious leaders, on behalf of our beloved planet which needs our collective support for healing, to review, save and to share this or part of this information with your congregation.
Churches, holding mass on these topics, sharing literature that we could design as part of our donation to your church, with its congregation members can have an instant, very big, POSITIVE, HEALING impact on our world and God with his Son, Jesus Christ could not be more pleased than through such actions as this being the most noble forms of helping our Divine Creation of all beings. This message will be sent forth to many other churches in Canada and all around the world.
THANK YOU for taking the time to read and review this material.
https://www.huffpost.com/entry/the-bible-and-human-domin_b_681363
Kristin M. Swenson, Ph.D.: The Bible and Human 'Dominion' Over Animals: Superiority or Responsibility?
HOLY SCRIPTURES quotes:
RELIGION and VEGetarianism
The Diet Ordained by God
God giveth the grains and the fruits of the earth for food: and for righteous man truly there is no other lawful sustenance for the body." ~ Jesus, The Gospel of the Holy Twelve (earliest known recorded words of Jesus)
'Thou shalt not kill any living thing,' for life is given to all by God, and that which God has given, let not man taketh it away. ~Jesus, Gospel of the Holy Twelve
"LET NO FLESH MEAT ENTER YOUR MOUTHS" (JESUS: Lect. 38, GHT) *
Wherefore I say unto all who desire to be my disciples, keep your hands from bloodshed and let no flesh meat enter your mouths, for God is just and bountiful, who ordaineth that man shall live by the fruits and seeds of the earth alone. JESUS; Gospel of the Holy Twelve; Lection 38
Verily I say unto you, for this end have I come into the world, that I may put away all blood offerings and the eating of the flesh of the beasts and the birds that are slain by men. JESUS; The Gospel of the Holy Twelve; Lection 75
Blessed are they who keep this law, for God is manifested in all creatures. All creatures live in God, and God is hid in them. . JESUS; The Gospel of the Holy Twelve; Lection 75
"Thou shalt not kill," Exodus 20:13 - Deuteronomy 5:17
The exact Hebrew wording of this biblical phrase is lo tirtzack which accurately translates as "any kind of killing whatsoever."
"But flesh with the life thereof, which is the blood thereof, shall ye not eat (Genesis 9.4-5)
"He that killeth an ox is as if he slew a man." (Isaiah 66.3)
"And the flesh of slain beasts in his body will become his tomb. For I tell you truly, he who kills, kills himself, and whoso eats the flesh of slain beasts, eats the body of death." ~ Jesus, The Gospel of Peace
"Better is a dinner of herbs where love is, than a stalled ox with hatred within." ~ Proverbs 15:17
"Do not destroy the work of God for the sake of something to eat." ~ Romans 14:20
"He who killeth an ox is as if he slew a man. And when ye spread forth your hands, I will hide mine eyes from you: yea, when ye make many prayers, I will not hear, for your hands are stained with blood, and your mouths are defiled with flesh." ~ God, Isaiah 1:15,66:3
And God said, "Behold, I have given you every herb bearing seed, which is upon the face of all the earth, and every tree, in which is the fruit of a tree yielding seed; to you it shall be for food. And to every beast of the earth, and to every fowl of the air, and to every thing that creepeth upon the earth, wherein there is a living soul, I have given every green herb for food: and it was so." ~God, Genesis 1:29-30
Man's fate is like that of the animals; the same fate awaits them both: As one dies, so dies the other. All have the same breath; man has no advantage over the animal. Everything is meaningless. All go to the same place; all come from dust, and to dust all shall return. Ecclesiastes 3 18-20
Biblical Opposition to Flesh Eating
EXPLANATIONS AS TO WHY THE BIBLE CONTAINS SO FEW OBSERVATIONS CONDEMNING THE VICTIMIZATION AND KILLING OF ANIMALS
http://www.thenazareneway.com/Biblical_Opposition_to_Flesh_Eating.htm
Jesus Condemneth the Ill Treatment of Animals
Gospel of the Holy Twelve; Lection 38
http://www.thenazareneway.com/jesus_condemneth_ill_treatment_animals.htm
And Jesus said unto them, Verily I say unto you, they who partake of benefits which are gotten by wronging one of God's creatures, cannot be righteous: nor can they touch holy things, or teach the mysteries of the kingdom, whose hands are stained With blood, or whose mouths are defiled with flesh. Gospel of the Holy Twelve; Lection 38
The Nazarene Way of Essenic Studies
Christ's Assault on Blood Sacrifice
Denouncing the Sacrificial Slaughter of Animals
http://www.thenazareneway.com/holy_week/assault_on_blood_sacrifice.htm
http://www.stephen-knapp.com/vegetarianism_supported_in_the_bible.htm Vegetarianism: Supported in the Bible
http://www.thenazareneway.com/thou_shalt_not_kill.htm
The Nazarene Way of Essenic Studies
~ Biblical Vegetarianism ~Sin, Dis-ease and Abstinence from Flesh as Food
The Conviction and Practice of Compassionate Living
http://www.thenazareneway.com/index_vegetarian.htm
Was Jesus Christ a Vegan? (via Ceton Cito)
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0ThulwgVMuA
JESUS: "LET NO FLESH MEAT ENTER YOUR MOUTHS" (Lect. 38, GHT)
via Vedic Sastras
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Nb6dWrace38
Jesus was a Vegetarian ~ MUST SEE! (via me2super)
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Iv3uU2YY6pM
Jesus was a vegetarian (via veganfuture)
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5Ww9YF2A17Y
Why I Think Jesus Was a Vegetarian
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xJ5hT_Gv5-U
http://www.ivu.org/history/christian/christ_veg.html
https://www.amazon.com/Lord-Christ-Jesus-Was-Vegan/dp/1420813021
The Lord Christ Jesus Was a Vegan BOOK
http://www.squidoo.com/saintfrances Saint Francis of Assisi--Patron Saint of Animals
"Fish" is another frequently mistranslated word in the Bible. Its reference is often not to the form of swimming life, but to the symbol by which early Christians could identify each other. It was a secret sign, needed in times of persecution, prior to official acceptance of Christianity as a state religion.
The sign of the fish was a mystical symbol and conversational password. Its name deriving from the Greek word for fish, "ichthus" Much later it was represented an acrostic, composed of leading letters of the Greek phrase, "Iesous Christos Theou Uios Soter"-"Jesus Christ, Son of God, Saviour."
Frequent references to fish are intended as symbolic of The Christ and have nothing to do with the act of eating a dead fish. But the symbol of the fish did not meet with Roman approval. They preferred the sign of the cross, choosing to concentrate more on the death of Christ than on His brilliant life. Perhaps this is one reason only ten percent of His life record appears in the canonical scriptures. Most of His first thirty years has been omitted.
http://www.thenazareneway.com/thou_shalt_not_kill.htm
http://www.st-francis-medal.com/st-francis-blessing-of-the-animals.htm St. Francis Prayer for Animals
http://www.all-creatures.org/cva/default.htm Christian Vegetarian Association
https://www.vegetarianfriends.net/issue76.html
Saint Isaac the Syrian
The seventh-century Christian mystic Saint Isaac the Syrian asks, “What is a charitable heart? It is a heart which is burning with love for the whole creation, for men, for the birds, for the beasts . . . for all creatures.
He who has such a heart cannot see or call to mind a creature without his eyes being filled with tears by reason of the immense compassion which seizes his heart; a heart which is softened and can no longer bear to see or learn from others of any suffering, even the smallest pain being inflicted upon a creature.
That is why such a man never ceases to pray for the animals . . . moved by the infinite pity which reigns in the hearts of those who are becoming united with God.”
May all beings be free and at peace, Will
http://worldpeacediet.com - our daily VegInspiration For The Day
http://circleofcompassion.org - our Prayer Circle For Animals Weekly Update
John Wesley
John Wesley, the eighteenth-century founder of Methodism, has written, “I believe in my heart that faith in Jesus Christ can and will lead us beyond an exclusive concern for the well-being of other human beings to the broader concern for the well-being of the birds in our backyards, the fish in our rivers, and every living creature on the face of the earth.”
http://www.compassionatespirit.com/spiritual-trads-and-veg.htm
http://www.all-creatures.org/cva/default.htm Christian Vegetarian Association
http://www.all-creatures.org/cva/freemembership.htm
http://www.all-creatures.org/cva/howtohelp.htm
Animals and World Religions
Despite increasing public attention to animal suffering, little seems to have changed: Human beings continue to exploit billions of animals in factory farms, medical laboratories, and elsewhere. In this wide-ranging and perceptive study, Lisa Kemmerer shows how spiritual writings and teachings in seven major religious traditions can help people to consider their ethical obligations toward other creatures.
Dr. Kemmerer examines the role of nonhuman animals in scripture and myth, in the lives of religious exemplars, and by drawing on foundational philosophical and moral teachings. She begins with a study of indigenous traditions around the world, then focuses on the religions of India (Hindu, Buddhist, and Jain) and China (Daoism and Confucianism), and finally, religions of the Middle East (Judaism, Christianity, and Islam). At the end of each chapter, Kemmerer explores the inspiring lives and work of contemporary animal advocates who are motivated by a personal religious commitment.
https://www.amazon.com/Animals-World-Religions-Lisa-Kemmerer/dp/019979068X
Kinship and Killing: The Animals in World Religions
Through close readings of Jewish, Christian, Islamic, and Buddhist texts, Katherine Wills Perlo proves that our relationship with animals shapes religious doctrine, particularly through the tension between animal exploitation and the bonds of kinship. She pinpoints four different strategies for coping with this conflict.
The first is aggression, in which a divinely conferred superiority or karma justifies animal usage. The second is evasion, which emphasizes benevolent aspects of the human-animal relationship within the exploitative structure, such as the image of Jesus as a "good shepherd." The third is defense, which acknowledges the problematic nature of killing, leading many religions to adopt a propitiation mechanism, such as apologizing for sacrifice. And the fourth is effective-defensive, which recognizes animal abuse as inherently unethical.
As humans feel more empathy toward animals, Perlo finds that adherents revise their interpretations of religious texts. Preexisting ontologies, such as Christianity's changing God or Buddhism's principle of impermanence, along with advances in farming practices and technology, also encourage changes in treatment.
As cultures begin to appreciate the
different types of perception and consciousness experienced by nonhumans, definitions of reality become complicated and humans lean more toward unitary accounts of shared existence. These evolving attitudes exert a crucial influence on religious thought, Perlo argues, moving humans ever closer to a nonspeciesist world.
https://www.amazon.com/Kinship-Killing-Animal-World-Religions/dp/023114623X
http://www.vina.cc/news/index.php/General/The-Indian-Glory-of-Ahimsa-and-Vegetarianism.html
Jesus' compassionate confrontation
Jesus questioned the foundation of war and oppression, which was then, as it is now, the killing and eating of animals.
Back then it was animal sacrifice performed by priests at the temple, which was the main source of wealth and prestige for the Jewish religious power structure, as well as being the source of meat for the populace.
Jesus’ confrontation at the temple in which he drove out those selling animals for slaughter was a bold attack on the fundamental herding paradigm of viewing animals merely as property, sacrifice objects, and food.
The Bible and Human 'Dominion' Over Animals: Superiority or Responsibility?
It is in-deed our spiritual death
Learning to look the other way brings spiritual death in everyone who practices it.
In encouraging it, religious institutions show how far they have strayed from the passionate mercy and all-seeing kindness taught and lived by those whose spiritual evolution and illumination inspired the institutions themselves.
May all beings be free and at peace, Will
New offering:Prayer Circle for Monday
Today, let us send our prayers to all farmed animals.
May compassion and love reign over all the earth for all farmed animals―Dear ducks, geese, turkeys, chickens; cows, pigs, lambs, bison, elk, deer, and all of you who are suffering today in tiny cages or crowded into feedlots, being beaten, fed poisoned and unnatural food, and for those of you languishing without water or food on trucks or entering the slaughterhouses.
We bear witness to your suffering, we take action to permanently end it, and we continually send out an energy field of love and compassion to comfort you and to transform the hearts and souls of those who support this violent oppression.
We send our tears and our prayers on wings of love to you. Compassion encircles the earth for each of you and for all beings.
~ Judy Carman and www.worldpeacediet.com
http://www.angelfire.com/mi/dinosaurs/carnivores.html
"Behold this watermelon, the fruit of the earth." Jesus then broke open the watermelon and said:
"See thou with thine own eyes the good fruit of the soil, the meat of man, and see thou the seeds within, count ye them, for one melon maketh ...a hundredfold and even more.
If thou sow this seed, ye do eat from the true God. For no blood was spilled, nay no pain nor outcry did ye hear with thy ears or see with thine eyes.
The true food of man is from the mother of the earth, for she brings forth perfect gifts unto the humble of the land.
But ye seek what Satan giveth, the anguish, the death, and the blood of living souls taken by the sword.
Know ye not, those who live by the sword are the ones who die by the same death?
Go thine way then, and plant the seeds of the good fruit of life, and leave ye off from hurting the innocent creatures of God."
*The Gospel of the Holy Twelve, also known as The Gospel of the Hebrews, The Essene Gospel, The Gospel of the Ebionites, or just plain "The Gospel."
(This book has been translated from Aramaic by the Englishman, Reverend Gideon H. Ousley, 1835-1906).
*Jesus was a life long Vegetarian, and denounced the killing of animals and eating their flesh,
..as did all Essene' (Nazarene), for a hundred years, prior to his birth.
you remember them, don't you?
the second most famous Essene, was John the Baptist
(and we all know he was a hippie:)
"Behold this watermelon, the fruit of the earth." Jesus then broke open the watermelon and said:
"See thou with thine own eyes the good fruit of the soil, the meat of man, and see thou the seeds within, count ye them, for one melon maketh a hundredfold and even more.
If thou sow this seed, ye do eat from the true God. For no blood was spilled, nay no pain nor outcry did ye hear with thy ears or see with thine eyes.
The true food of man is from the mother of the earth, for she brings forth perfect gifts unto the humble of the land.
But ye seek what Satan giveth, the anguish, the death, and the blood of living souls taken by the sword.
Know ye not, those who live by the sword are the ones who die by the same death?
Go thine way then, and plant the seeds of the good fruit of life, and leave ye off from hurting the innocent creatures of God."
*The Gospel of the Holy Twelve, also known as The Gospel of the Hebrews, The Essene Gospel, The Gospel of the Ebionites, or just plain "The Gospel."
(This book has been translated from Aramaic by the Englishman, Reverend Gideon H. Ousley, 1835-1906).
-the following is referenced from "Conscious Eating, by, Gabriel Cousens, M.D.JESUS AND VEGETARIANISM
The Dead Sea Scroll materials unearthed in 1947 indirectly suggest that Jesus was a lifelong vegetarian.
This is because they indicate that the Essenes were vegetarians, and historically there is evidence that Jesus was raised in an Essene community; therefore it is highly likely that he and his family were vegetarian.
https://www.amazon.com/dp/1556432852/
..This is because they indicate that the Essenes were vegetarians, and historically there is evidence that Jesus was raised in an Essene community; therefore it is highly likely that he and his family were vegetarian.
The Essene Gospel of Peace, book one, taken from the original Aramaic third century manuscript discovered in 1927 in the secret Vatican archives by Dr. Edmond Bordeaux Szekely, directly and strongly suggest that Jesus was a lifelong vegetarian.
It reveals his direct teachings against the eating of flesh.
Nevertheless, as these documents come to the surface, there is still lack of definite proof, as well as confusion about mistranslations and conscious and unconscious changes made in the scriptures as we see them today.
This is especially true with claims of various changes and deletions in the Gospels and the Epistles that in all probability largely occurred at the Council of Nicaea in A.D. 325.
According to The Profit of the Dead Sea Scrolls by Upton Clary Ewing, a theologian praised by world famous Albert Schweitzer, M.D., as the "renaissance of Leonardo da Vinci":
"There is hardly a single scholar among bible exegetists who will not agree that there are many inconsistencies and contradictions to be found in the Gospels and Epistles."
Perhaps this inability to make a final proof one way or the other is fortunate, as no ones faith need be flatly challenged by this chapter.
Ultimately there is room to believe whatever one feels comfortable believing. This topic is not meant to challenge anyone's religious beliefs.
It is meant to raise issues and information not readily available in order to aid and support those who are Christian vegetarians already or those Christians contemplating the transition to vegetarianism as a part of the medicine for healing themselves and this planet.
The following information is for those who are confused or disempowered in their desire to be vegetarian by the commonly held interpretations, based on the currently used editions of the New Testament, that maintain Jesus was not a vegetarian.
To understand the relationship of Jesus to vegetarianism we must probe into a realm in which much of the historical documentation has been lost, and that which is left is partially confused by the subtleties in the translation from Greek to English.
The accuracy of the translations has also been affected by the limited understanding and philosophy of those who were doing the translating.
For example, the world "meat," which appears 19 times in the New Testament, seems to imply that Jesus sanctioned meat eating.
The most accurate understanding, however, of the word "meat" in the translation from Greek to English does not imply flesh food at all.
The Greek word translated as "meat" is more precisely translated as "food" or "nourishment," and not animal flesh as we currently think when we hear the word "meat."
For example, Jesus did not actually say, "Have ye any meat?" as in John 21:5 but "Have ye anything to eat?"
And when the Gospels say that the disciples went away to buy meat (John 8), it merely means to buy food.
Similarly mistranslations have occurred with the use of the word "fish."
The misunderstanding of this word results in a portrayal of Jesus as eating fish and encouraging the eating or killing of fish by others.
In the early church, the word "fish" was a secret term. The Greek word for fish is I-CH-TH-U-S. It is made up of the first letters of the words "Jesus Cristos Theou Uios Soter."
This translates as Jesus Christ Son of God Saviour. The fish is also found as a Christian symbol in the catacombs.
It is symbolic of the Piscean Age, which was emerging at the time. It is entirely conceivable that the word "fish," as written in the New Testament, was used primarily in this deeper mystical way.
Since Jesus taught in parables and metaphors, I believe its use in the New Testament was to communicate this deeper meaning of "fish" rather than the literal idea of a dead fish that was physically eaten.
In this context, the feeding of the fish to the people is a metaphor for the feeding of the higher teachings of the Master to the masses.
In a second-century book by Irenaeus (A.D. 120-202), it was twice stated that Jesus fed the multitude of 5,000 with bread alone.
Others have pointed out that there is an aquatic plant called the fish plant that was used as food in that era as well as during Babylonian times.
These fish plants were dried in the sun, beaten into mortar, and baked into bread-like rolls and sold in the open market. Perhaps in the translation, the "plant" portion of the word designated as the fish plant was omitted.
It was only in the 4th century that fish was added to the bread offering in the scriptures.
This suggests that the second-century version of the Gospel of the Hebrews might be more authentic. In this translation, it says in the Lection XXIX, verse 7 and 8:
"And when he had taken the six loaves and the seven clusters of grapes, he looked up to heaven, and blessed and broke the loaves, and the grapes also, and gave them to his disciples to set before them, and they divided them among all.
And they did all eat and were filled. And they took up twelve baskets full of the fragments that were left. And they that did eat of the loaves and of the fruits were about five thousand men, women, and children, and he taught them many things."
In any case, the souls of the five thousand, we can assume, were at least fed with the mystical meaning of fish.
THE HISTORICAL JESUS
It is a lot easier to understand Jesus' teachings about vegetarianism when he is understood in his historical context.
He and his family were associated with the Essene movement of the times. The Essenes were Jewish communities of very evolved people who had broken away from the mainstream of Jewish thought several hundred years before the time of Jesus.
They were vegetarians in accordance with the highest meaning of the Law of Moses, which said, "Thou shalt not kill." They were also against the practice of animal sacrifice.
In The Prophet of the Dead Sea Scrolls, Ewing quotes Philo of Alexandria, a historian writing during the times of Jesus' ministry, who said:
"They are called Esseni because of their saintliness. They do not sacrifice animals, regarding a reverent mind as the only true sacrifice."
Ewing quotes Professor Teicher in saying:
"But we have there (in the Essene scriptures) the emphatic prohibition of eating animals. No consumption of meat means no killing of animals and both together means no sacrifice of animals."
The Dead Sea Scrolls by Millar Burrows, quotes from the Essene scriptures:
"Let not a man make himself abominable with any living creature or creeping thing by eating of them."
The lives of the Essenes required a discipline and purity of mind, body, and spirit that was beyond the practice of the typical religious person of the time.
The Essenes developed self-sufficient communities in the peace of the desert in order to make it easier to focus on God.
It is thought that Jesus and his parents were part of the Essenes, some of whom were also called the Nazarenes.
It is said that Jesus escaped to an Essene community in the desert to avoid the murderous intent of King Herod.
It was in the Essene communities that was raised and trained. Some of the Essenes, such as John the Baptist, as well as the master Jesus himself, went out into public to uplift the people.
As part of their teaching of compassion and love for all life, they taught vegetarianism.
For example, in the Essene Gospel of Peace, book one (P. 36), Jesus is quoted as saying:
"God commanded your forefathers: "Thou shalt not kill." But their heart was hardened and they killed.
Then Moses desired that at least they should not kill men, and he suffered them to kill beasts. And then the heart of your forefathers was hardened yet more, and they killed men and beasts likewise.
But I do say to you: Kill neither men nor beasts, nor yet the food which goes into your mouth. For if you eat living [uncooked] food, the same will quicken you, but if you kill your food, the dead food will kill you also."
What is important here is that this teaching is a direct quote of Jesus from an original Aramaic third-century manuscript found in the secret archives of the Vatican.
It is not a teaching by implication. The message is consistent with Jesus' own dietary practice and that of his community of birth and where he grew up, which also practiced vegetarianism.
Aside from these exciting findings, most of the information concerning Jesus' explicit teachings on this subject has been lost or destroyed.
One exception is the work by Epiphanius (A.D. 315-403), a Catholic bishop of Constantia in Cyprus. In his book Panarion (as explained in A Critical Investigation of Epiphanius' Knowledge of the Ebionites:
A Translation and Critical Discussion of "Panarion," by Glenn Alan Kochit), Epiphanius points out that according to the Ebionites, a group of early Judaic Christians who were vegetarians:
-Whenever you speak to them (Ebionites) concerning flesh food, the Ebionites reply they were vegetarian because "Jesus revealed it to me." [This was a direct teaching they were referring to and not a revelation.]
There is another early book called The Gospel of the Holy Twelve, also known as The Gospel of the Hebrews, The Essene Gospel, The Gospel of the Ebionites, or just plain "The Gospel."
This book has been translated from the Aramaic by the Englishmen, Reverend Gideon H. Ousley (1835-1906).
Ousley claims that it is the translation of the original gospel and that it had been preserved first by the Essenes and then later in a Tibetan monastery after the Essenes were forced to leave their communities in A.D. 68 by the advancing Romans.
The Essenes apparently hid many of their scriptures in the desert (such as the Dead Sea Scrolls) and took some with them as they disappeared.
Reverend Ousley claims that this gospel was taken to a Tibetan Buddhist monastery by Essene monks. It was in the Tibetan monastery that Reverend Ousley found it.
If this is authentic, as some scholars believe, it would be the most ancient and complete writings available about Jesus and his teachings.
Dr. Ewing believed that this might be the original gospel, but it might have been known primarily as "The Gospel," and was written in western Aramaic..
*Jesus' teachings of vegetarianism in the Gospel of the Hebrews is both poetic and clear as he answers a doubting Sadduce man who asked,
"Tell me, please, why sayest thou, do not eat the flesh of animals...?" Jesus' beautiful answer to him was:
"Behold this watermelon, the fruit of the earth." Jesus then broke open the watermelon and said:
"See thou with thine own eyes the good fruit of the soil, the meat of man, and see thou the seeds within, count ye them, for one melon maketh a hundredfold and even more.
If thou sow this seed, ye do eat from the true God. For no blood was spilled, nay no pain nor outcry did ye hear with thy ears or see with thine eyes.
The true food of man is from the mother of the earth, for she brings forth perfect gifts unto the humble of the land.
But ye seek what Satan giveth, the anguish, the death, and the blood of living souls taken by the sword.
Know ye not, those who live by the sword are the ones who die by the same death?
Know ye not, those who live by the sword are the ones who die by the same death?
Go thine way then, and plant the seeds of the good fruit of life, and leave ye off from hurting the innocent creatures of God."
In a teaching to his disciples in Lection XXXII, verse 4, of the Gospel of the Hebrews, Jesus is completely clear about his opposition to killing and eating animals:
"For of the fruits of the trees and the seeds alone do I partake, and these are changed by the spirit into my flesh and my blood. Of these alone and their like shall ye eat who believe in me, and are my disciples, for of these, in the spirit, come to life and health and healing unto man."
In the same section, verse nine, Jesus explains the problem of the custom of flesh-eating with an understanding of the past and a prophecy for the future return to vegetarianism for the whole world:
"Verily I say unto you, in the beginning, all creatures of God did find their sustenance in the herbs and the fruits of the earth alone, till the ignorance and the selfishness of man turned many of them from the use which God had given them, to that which was contrary to their original use, but even these shall yet return to their natural food, as it is written in the prophets "Isaiah," and their words shall not fail."
In Lection XXXVIII, verses 3, 4, and 6 of the Gospel of the Hebrews, the spiritual meaning of the awareness and practice of the oneness with all of life is translated into Jesus' teachings of vegetarianism and non cruelty to animals and all of life; his words are consistent with the awareness one would expect from some of Jesus' great spiritual stature:
3 God giveth the grains and the fruits of the earth for food; and for righteous man truly there is no other lawful sustenance for the body.
4 The robber who breaketh into the house made by man is guilty, but they who break into the house made by God, even of the least of these are the greater sinners. Wherefore I say unto all who desire to be my disciples, keep your hands from bloodshed and let no flesh meat enter your mouths, for God is just and bountiful, who ordaineth that man shall live by the fruits and seeds of the earth alone.
6 And whatsoever ye do unto the least of these my children, ye do it unto me. For I am in them and they are in me. Yea, I am in all creatures and all creatures are in me. In all their joys I rejoice, in all their afflictions I am afflicted, wherefore I say unto you: Be ye kind to one another, and to all the creatures of God..
HISTORY OF VEGETARIANISM IN EARLY CHRISTIANITY
From Epiphanius' book, it is shown that the immediate followers of Jesus, the Judaic Christians, were vegetarians until the fifth century. This was about 100 years after the historical struggle among the three main factions of Christianity of those times: Judaic Christians, Christian Gnostics, and Catholic Christians.
According to the evidence presented in The Vegetarianism of Jesus Christ by Charles Vaclivik, the Judaic Christians were led for 30 years after Jesus left the physical realm by his brother James.
Vaclivik's historical evidence suggests that the Judaic Christians were the very first Christians. They were the ones who actually walked and prayed with Jesus. After them the Christian Gnosticism developed, and around A.D. 70 the Catholic Christians began their ascent to power.
The Judaic Christians and the Gnostics were vegetarians and the Catholic Christians were not. Many early Christian leaders were also vegetarians. Clement of Alexandria (A.D. 160-240) wrote,
"It is far better to be happy than it is to have our bodies act as graveyards for animals."
Saint John Chrysostom (A.D. 345-407) also taught that the unnatural eating of flesh meat was polluting.
Man scholars think that the original Christian documents were altered at the Council of Nicaea in A.D. 325 to make them acceptable to the Emperor, Constantine. Steve Rosen, in Food for Spirit, points out that flesh-food-eating was not officially permitted until the 4th century when Emperor Constantine, through his powerful influence, made his version of Christianity the official version for everyone.
Vegetarian Christians had to practice in secret or risk being put to death for heresy. Rosen writes that Constantine used to have molten lead poured down their throats if they were captured. By the 4th century, the Catholic Christians became considerably more politically powerful than the other two groups.
Most of the literature of the Judaic Christians and Gnostics was essentially destroyed during the political repression of this time period. In The Vegetarianism of Jesus Christ, it is postulated that the translations after this time may have been altered away from a vegetarian menu, as the Catholic Christians did not believe in vegetarianism and or were not ready for it.
If people are surprised that there was more than one Christian faction in the first 100 years after Jesus, it is useful to remember that we now have hundreds of different Christian churches..
JESUS AND ANIMAL SACRIFICE
Epiphanius points out that the early Essenes were not only vegetarians, but also opposed to animal sacrifice. It is in this context that one gets a further understanding of why Jesus chased out the money lenders from the Temple and freed the animals who were going to be sacrificed.
It was the money lenders who exchanged money so that Jews coming from foreign lands could purchase animals for sacrifice.
The teachings of Jesus and the Essenes stood directly against the practice of the other Jewish sects and that of the Romans, who also practiced animal sacrifice.
Titus Flavius Clemens, one of the most respected of the early Christian fathers, is quoted in Ethics of Diet by Howard Williams as saying, "Sacrifices were invented by men as a pretext for eating flesh."
This seems to be essentially the Essene understanding of the motivation behind sacrifices. According to Ewing, the Essene understanding of the diet was based on the commandment, "Thou shalt not kill," and the first dietary commandment of Genesis 129, quoted earlier,
which gave humanity fruits, nuts, seeds, vegetables, grains, and grasses to eat, but specifically not flesh food.
The position of Jesus against animal sacrifice, is of course, consistent with his humanness, his love for all of God's creatures, and his vegetarianism. According to Hastings Encyclopedia on Religion and Ethics,
The Gospel according to the Apostles was used by the Ebionites (viz Nazarenes). Herein is found the "Essene Christ." He denounces sacrifice and the eating of animal flesh.
Epiphanius quotes Jesus, in his confrontation with the high priest in the Temple after he has chased out the money lenders,
"I come to abolish sacrifices, and unless you cease sacrifices my anger will not cease from you."
The Gospel of the Hebrews also clarifies that Jesus not only advised against eating our animal friends, but he had come to end blood sacrifices. In Lection XXI, verse 8, preaching to his disciples he says:
"I am come to end the sacrifices and feasts of blood; and if ye cease not offering and eating of flesh and blood, the wrath of God shall not cease from you; even as it came to your fathers in the wilderness, who lusted for flesh, and they ate to their content, and were filled with rottenness, and the plague consumed them."
Many believe that Jesus ate the lamb of the passover meal and used this as indirect evidence that he did not teach or practice vegetarianism. In the Gospel According to the Hebrews, Lection LXXVI, section 27, which predates the addition of the gospels used today, Judas is quoted as inciting Caiaphas against Jesus for not eating lamb at the Passover:
Now Judas Iscariot had gone to the house of Caiaphas and said unto him, "Behold he (Jesus) has celebrated the Passover within the gates of Jeresalem, with the Mazza in place of the lamb. I indeed bought a lamb, but he forbode that it shall be killed, and lo, the man of whom I bought it is witness.
It is important to remember that the information in the gospel came from earlier Judaic sources and not vice versa. Changes in translations commonly occur, and this could be one of them. Again, Jesus' refusal to eat the Passover lamb is consistent with his role and high spiritual awareness as the great Essene teacher of the time and also his actions against animal sacrifice in the Temple..
THE VEGETARIANISM OF THE DISCIPLES
Dr. Ewing points out that the highly respected church father, Eusebius, quotes Hegesippus (about A.D. 160),
who said that James, the disciple and brother of Jesus who became head of the Judaic Christians, was a vegetarian who "drank no wine, wore no wool, nor ate any flesh."
It was said that he followed this practice from birth. It is likely that all of Jesus' family, including himself, were raised as vegetarians and lived that way as adults.
It is also likely that in the light of the overall evidence, all but one of the disciples were vegetarian.
Ewing quotes the Clementine Hominies XXII, 6, who also suggests that most of the disciples if not all were vegetarian:
They followed the Apostles in their custom of daily lustrations.
They refused to partake of flesh or wine. taking as their pattern Saint Peter, whose food was bread, olives and herbs
the "fish" story:
"In the early church, the word 'fish' was a secret term. The Greek word for fish is I-CH-TH-U-S. It is made up of the first letters of the words 'Jesus Cristos Theou Uios Soter.'
This translates as Jesus Christ Son of God Saviour. The fish is also found as a Christian symbol in the catacombs.
It is symbolic of the Piscean Age, which was emerging at the time. It is entirely conceivable that the word 'fish,' as written in the New Testament, was used primarily in this deeper mystical way.
Since Jesus taught in parables and metaphors, I believe its use in the New Testament was to communicate this deeper meaning of 'fish' rather than the literal idea of a dead fish that was physically eaten.
In this context, the feeding of the fish to the people is a metaphor for the feeding of the higher teachings of the Master to the masses."
""..And whatsoever ye do unto the least of these my children, ye do it unto me. For I am in them and they are in me. Yea, I am in all creatures and all creatures are in me. In all their joys I rejoice, in all their afflictions I am afflicted, wherefore I say unto you: Be ye kind to one another, and to all the creatures of God."
-The Gospel of the Holy Twelve(Essene Gospel) ♥"
For the kingdom of God is not meat and drink; but righteousness, and peace, and joy in the Holy Ghost. -Romans 14:17
HUNTING
Did Jesus approved of hunting?
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lBLuQaZ-Uu8
Woe unto the hunters for they shall be hunted. Lo, every creature which God hath made hath its end and purpose." http://www.thenazareneway.com/index_vegetarian.htm
http://circleofcompassion.org/articles/articles-will/article-buddhalowcarb.htm
http://circleofcompassion.org/articles/articles-will/article-buddha101.html
Jesus was a Vegetarian: Biblical and Historical Proof
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Dx6J6jh1Dzo
Thou Shall Not Kill by Rev. BJ Stannard Part 1 of 4
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HjvH7v8dM5c
"Only if we twist God's word to rationalize our addiction to cruel animal products could we fool ourselves...into believing that God doesn't care if we are violent or peaceful, or if we intentionally cause harm or try to avoid it. To consume animal products in order to survive is one thing. To engage in entirely avoidable meanness, in order to satisfy an indulgence, is quite another and violates the very essence of God's calls to be merciful and peaceful." - Gary Loewenthal -
If there are such things as "forbidden fruit" and "original sin", the taking of others' lives in order to feast on their dead flesh would seem to fit that description far better than the image of someone eating an apple, an act that deprives no one of life or liberty. The "original sin" is usurping the role of God and claiming for ourselves the powers over life and death.
Jesus: An Animal Advocate
Joel Freedman, chair of the public education committee of Animal Rights Advocates of Upstate New York, makes a case for Jesus being vegetarian and spreading his message of compassion and love to all creatures. Freedman refers to the Bible but also to the Gospel of the Holy Twelve, what he calls the “original teachings of Jesus.” Regardless of accepting all or some Christian beliefs, Feedman emphasizes that if we just follow Jesus’ core teaching of “do unto others as you would have them do unto you,” the world would be a more compassionate one. Please visit
Joel Freedman: Was Jesus a pioneer of animal-rights, vegetarian activism?
There is no doubt that Jesus showed us the path of healing, restoration and reconciliation. His teachings centered on embracing the least, the poor, the suffering, the victim and the needed. Today, billions of God’s creatures every week around the world are recipient of humanity’s fury due to hardness of heart. When we allow ourselves to feel and to empathize with the pain and suffering God’s creatures are experiencing, we realize we don’t want to be part of the cause anymore. And we also realize that a lifestyle that includes the exploitation of any other being is inconsistent with Christ’s teachings.
Joel Freedman, of Canandaigua, chairs the public education committee of Animal Rights Advocates of Upstate New York.Joel Freedman, of Canandaigua, chairs the public education committee of Animal Rights Advocates of Upstate New York.
Have a blessed day!
<>< <>< <><
Lorena Mucke
Coordinator
Christian Vegetarian Association
"Never be ashamed to say, 'No thank you; I do not eat meat. I have conscientious scruples against eating the flesh of dead animals." ~Ellen White, co-founder Seventh Day Adventists, 1901
Sentient living being (God/Source/Creator/Creation/Life) image by
The heart of Jainism is non-violence to all beings, it is a religion of compassion, universal love, it considers the welfare of all living beings, and not of man alone. One of the basic virtues of Jainism is ahimsa, non-violence. A Jain world would be free from violence or exploitation of any creature and the environment. Jainism teaches us to look upon all beings as we would upon upon our own self, thus Inflicting injury to them is inflicting injury to one's self.
Unless we live with non-violence and reverence for all living beings in our hearts, all our humaneness and acts of goodness, all our vows, virtues, and knowledge, all our practices to give up greed and acquisitiveness are meaningless and useless." “He who harms animals has not understood or renounced deeds of sin... Those whose minds are at peace and who are free from passions do not desire to live at the expense of others.
http://www.thisveganlife.org/praise-the-lord-and-pass-the-pork-chops/
The Buddha and Islamic Sufi saint Misri
The Buddha says in the Mahaparinirvana-sutra, “Eating meat destroys the attitude of great compassion.”
The ninth-century Islamic Sufi saint Misri says, “Never think of anyone as inferior to you. Open the inner Eye and you will see the One Glory shining in all creatures.”
Uncover mercy and justice
The vegan ideals of mercy and justice for animals have been articulated for centuries, often from within the religious establishment, and it is fascinating and instructive to see how these voices have been almost completely silenced or marginalized by the herding culture.
It seems to be an unconscious reflex action. For example, if we read Jesus’ teachings, we find a passionate exhortation to mercy and love, yet the possibility that the historical Jesus may have been a vegan is a radical idea for most Christians.
Jesus, radical vegan
Jesus’ message was intolerably radical, for it was the revolutionary vegan message of mercy and love for all creatures that strikes directly at the mentality of domination and exclusion that underlies both the herding culture we live in today and the culture of Jesus’ time.
Religion must be inclusive of all
All of us are celebrations of infinite mysterious Spirit, deserving of honor and respect.
If our religions don’t emphasize this and include all of us, it’s time to replace them with spiritual teachings and traditions that do.
Anna Sewell, Black Beauty
There is no religion without love, and people may talk as much as they like about their religion, but if it does not teach them to be good and kind to beasts as well as man it is all a sham.”
~ Anna Sewell, Black Beauty
Please look into this
Religion’s turning away has allowed the atrocities to continue and legitimized the turning away of the general population.
This turning away is the paradigmatic learning that our culture specializes in, particularly with regard to the plight of the animals we eat and use; it is the everyday teaching of not seeing, not caring, disconnecting, and ignoring.
St. Francis of Assisi on exclusion
If you have men who will exclude any of God’s creatures from the shelter of compassion and pity, then you have men who will deal likewise with their fellow men.”
~ St. Francis of Assisi
Are Cows More Godly Than Humans?
https://www.all-creatures.org/sermons98/s20121021.html
The multitude of your sacrifices―what are they to me?’ says the Lord.
‘I have more than enough of burnt offerings of rams and the fat of fattened animals; I have no pleasure in the blood of bulls and lambs and goats….
Your hands are full of blood; wash and make yourselves clean. Take your evil deeds out of my sight.’ ”
~ Isaiah 1:11, 15-16
https://www.all-creatures.org/sermons98/s20121209.html
PETA discusses religion and animal rights
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vBWfiUFlMV4
The Five Wonderful Mindfulness Trainings
http://dharma.ncf.ca/introduction/precepts.html
Once we become aware of suffering, we can then be moved to compassion for ourselves and others as we see that we are all mutually caught in the web of worldly pain. According to Thay, “we undertake to cultivate compassion and use it as a source of energy for the protection of life-- to remove suffering and transform it.”
http://www.yoga-losangeles.com/LA_Yoga_Peace_Article.html
All beings tremble before danger, all fear death.
- Dhammapada 54
Buddhist scriptures encourage universal compassion. Buddhist teachings are overwhelmingly friendly toward non-human animals. While one might find the occasional Buddhist writer who believes that animals are expendable to our purposes, that the pain of other creatures does not matter spiritually, that we may eat animals and wear animals and kill animals, most Buddhists would disagree. The overwhelming majority of Buddhist writings do not support this contention.
There is no clear distinction between non-humans and humans in Buddhist philosophy. Eons of transmigration have had a predictable result: today’s duck and dog are yesterdays human sisters and brothers. Each cow and chicken was at some point one’s parent, and to harm one’s parent is a particularly base act for Buddhists. All species are also subject to the same karmic process. Karma can no more be avoided by a Persian cat than it can by an avahi (woolly lemur). The Sutta Piṭāka notes that one’s actions determine one’s future as surely as “the wheel follows the foot of the ox that draws the carriage” (Burtt 52). Karma rules the lives of animals and humans alike (Kraft 277): Lassie and the Prince of Wales are both subject to the same moral laws.
Buddhism offers a vision of radical inter-identification. A vision where all living beings are identified with all other entities. This vision does not merely teach that we are all in this together, but that we all are this, “rising and falling as one living body” (Cook 229). Thich Nhat Hanh writes:
A human being is an animal, a part of nature. But we single ourselves out from the rest of nature. We classify other animals and living beings as nature, as if we ourselves are not part of it. Then we pose the question, “How should I deal with Nature?” We should deal with nature the way we deal with ourselves. . . ! Harming nature is harming ourselves, and vice versa. (Hanh 41)
Radical Buddhist interdependence does not allow for an independent entity, action, word, or thought; all things influence all other things. Each being, each act, is critical to every other being and every other act. To cause suffering to a dog or pig is to cause suffering to oneself. The idea of radical interdependence led some Buddhists to conclude that all things are one another in their very essence.
http://www.all-creatures.org/articles/an-tpr-buddhist.html
Thich Nhat Hanh: "... I am determined not to kill, not to let others kill..."
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=G2CILMpmtnk
Why Are Few Spiritual Teachers Vegan?
http://www.onegreenplanet.org/animalsandnature/why-are-few-spiritual-teachers-vegan/
The Lost Religion of Jesus: Simple Living and Nonviolence in Early Christianity
https://www.amazon.ca/Lost-Religion-Jesus-Keith-Akers/dp/1930051263/ref=sr_1_1
Ancient plant based eating
https://agnvegglobal.blogspot.com/2021/04/ancient-veganism.html
NATIVE, ABORIGINAL cultures
What Did American Indians Eat, Actually?
http://www.onegreenplanet.org/lifestyle/what-did-american-indians-eat-actually/
2. Book Review: Animals and World Religions, ed. by Lisa Kemmerer
Animals and World Religions is a very interesting and information packed book, which is written in an easily readable form and at the same time is serves as a text book and reference source of the historical and practiced way religions view animals.
Lisa Kemmerer coins the word "anymals" meaning no-human animals, and uses it throughout the book to simplify which is being referenced.
For us, one of the most interesting features of the book was the very thorough discussion on aboriginal religions, and how they all recognize that they and the anymals are spiritually created alike and deserve to be treated with compassion, which to us positively shows that all peoples, cultures, and religions really knew the truth. However, at the same time, aboriginal cultures created myths to justify the killing of the animals, as if the anymals freely give their lives to the human hunters.
Throughout the remainder of Animals and World Religions, we see that all the major religions also had their foundational belief rooted in this peaceful coexistence that was created to be between all the animals of the world, including the environment in which we all live.
And as with the aboriginal societies, they also corrupted themselves to justify the exploitation of anymals, and they "hide" the fact about their foundational beliefs in their modern day teachings. The worst case of this distortion of the truth exists in the justification of factory farming and commercial fishing, which Lisa Kemmerer also discusses.
We highly recommend Animals and World Religions to everyone as a reference guide, for we all know religious people and need to be knowledgeable when discussing with other people the need for all of us to return to the golden age of peaceful living for all inhabitants of the world.
2012, Oxford University Press, $35
(reviewed by Frank and Mary Hoffman)
About the Author: Lisa Kemmerer (B.A. in international studies, Reed College; M.T.S. in comparative religions, Harvard University School; Ph.D. in philosophy, University of Glasgow, Scotland) is a philosopher-activist, artist, and lover of wild places, who has hiked, biked, kayaked, backpacked, and traveled widely. She is the author and editor of several books, and is currently associate professor of philosophy and religion at Montana State University, Billings.
Early Native American cultures are sometimes held out as good role models in terms of "respectful" and "responsible" use of animals for food. But many Indian tribes' diets were mainly plant-based. They were gatherers and master cultivators, and made their houses from earth, not hides and used plant-derived fabrics for their clothing. People often romanticize one small part of a culture in a vain attempt to justify their own easily-avoidable exploitations under much different circumstances.
The Indian tribes that killed bison did so for a relatively short period of time, using the Europeans' guns and horses. They didn't always use the whole animal; sometimes they just shot bison and cut off the ears - there was a market for this for a while - and sold them to white people in return for whiskey. The reality of the Indian bison hunter is nowhere near the perfect model that its modern (mis)appropriaters would like to believe it is.
Honoring and respecting animals today, when we can drive a short distance to a store with hundreds or thousands of healthy plant foods all year, means not killing them. I'm sure that Civil War doctors who didn't use anesthesia respected their patients, but that doesn't mean we should emulate that today and call it "respect."
Another important distinction between Indian cultures and our own is that hunting in early days was often practiced out of need, as a matter of survival. It is said that early Native Americans revered animals and were saddened at the sight of the white man's herds, who they regarded as "slave animals".
If Indians were saddened at our society's lack of reverence and our treatment of animals in the past, just imagine what they might think if they could witness our current reality, in which most farmed animals are confined from birth in horrid conditions and treated as if they had no intelligence or feelings or needs... and are denied virtually everything that could make a life worthwhile... and then are killed purely to satisfy our habits and tastes.
These issues are more fully addressed in a book by Will Tuttle, PhD. It's called "The World Peace Diet".
Adapted from the work of Gary Loewenthal
Woe unto the hunters for they shall be hunted. Lo, every creature which God hath made hath its end and purpose." http://www.thenazareneway.com/index_vegetarian.htm
ANIMALS and WORLD RELIGIONS
SPIRITUAL TRADITIONS
and VEGETARIANISM
http://www.compassionatespirit.com/spiritual-trads-and-veg.htm
Society of Ethical and Religious Vegetarians
Vegetarianism and the
Major World Religions Pamphlet
http://www.serv-online.org/pamphlet.pdf
Judaism
"As president of Jewish Vegetarians, I want to point out that the production and consumption of meat and other animal products violates basic biblical teachings to treat animals with compassion, preserve our health, protect the environment, conserve natural resources, and help hungry people. - Richard Schwartz -
the Hebrew words in Genesis were intentionally mistranslated by Thomas Aquinas in the 1200's from the original words, which were "steward" to "dominion," which is how it then proliferated and was translated into English as an excuse/justification for exterminations, enslavement, and abuse of other species. And, an increasing number of contemporary Jews are convinced that the 6th commandment DOES, in fact, applied to both humans and non-humans, and since it has been demonstrated that humans are primates whose diets should be plant-based, the 6th commandment DOES apply and humanity is therefore in violation of it.
Source:
SOULutions: Education, awareness, RESOURCES and guidance
Google & watch: “EARTHLINGS”
Google & watch: “Best Speech You Will Ever Hear” - Gary Yourofsky
World’s MOST POWERFUL 10 MINs SPEECH
Philip Wollen : Animals Should Be Off The Menu debate | Subtitles in 18 languages
Google & watch: “WORLD PEACE DIET”
Full Text Link:
https://www.hkbnews.net/post/jesus-the-vegan-christ-died-for-animal-liberation-by-dr-chapman-chen
Christspiracy
·
This year millions of lambs will be slaughtered in celebration of Easter and Passover.
But What Would Jesus Do?
[a series of questions below]
If Passover lambs are slaughtered to commemorate the lamb sacrifice when the Hebrews escaped Egypt…
Why does Jeremiah 7:22 and Amos 5:25 both imply that there were no sacrifices commanded when the Hebrews fled Egypt?
Why did Jesus say “go and learn what this means: I desire mercy, not sacrifice”, echoing the anti-sacrificial position of the biblical prophets.
Why does an original Hebrew gospel of Matthew [lost to history but quoted by Early Church fathers] state that Jesus said: “I have no desire to eat the flesh of this Passover Lamb with you.”?
In the scriptures, Why does Jesus celebrate Passover with his Last Supper of bread, and state “this is my flesh”?
Why is Passover ALSO the Feast of Unleavened Bread?
“The Good Shepherd lays down his life for the sheep” John 10:11
What will YOU do? 🐑
#christspiracy #documentary #whatwouldjesusdo
#wwjd #easter #passover #jesus #goodshepherd
Chapman ChenVegan Theology 純素神學
·
Dave Thompson: Why 95% of Christians are Pharisees
The documentary Christspiracy has revealed to a much wider audience that there was a heated conflict in first century Judaism between sects who practiced blood sacrifice based on the Torah, namely the flesh eating Pharisees and Sadducees, and sects who opposed blood sacrifice based on the Prophets, namely the vegan Therapeutae, pacifist Essenes, Nazarenes, and Ebionites. Jesus of Nazareth was clearly opposed to blood sacrifice as evidenced by his cleansing of the Temple which set free the animals awaiting slaughter, and his quoting of the Prophets, "Go and learn what this means, 'I require mercy, not sacrifice'".
In a tragic 180 degree turnabout, a flesh eating Pharisee named Saul, later Paul, hijacked the Jesus Movement based solely on visions in his head and made Jesus into a human blood sacrifice himself. He even mocked the original vegan followers of Jesus calling them "weak of faith". Of course Paul's flesh eating, blood magic version of "The Christ" won out, aided by the Jewish war with Rome, and over time became the state religion of the empire, the Roman Catholic Church.
No attempts at Christian reformation have gone back far enough to the original Jewish Reform Movement of John the Baptist, Jesus of Nazareth, and his brother, James the Just, which abhorred blood sacrifice and abstained from eating flesh. In fact this movement was mercilessly persecuted, tortured, and exterminated out of existence as "heretics" by Pauline Christianity. So in the end the original Jesus Movement failed and was turned into its own opposite - a flesh eating, blood magic superstition of vicarious human sacrifice!
Recursos Veganos
·
LIVING IN ALIGNMENT WITH THE TEACHINGS OF JESUS WHILE NOT BEING VEGAN IS INCOMPATIBLE. HERE'S WHY.
Key points of the post:
a) The post is neither to promote Christianity nor to criticize it.
b) The post does not claim that Jesus was vegan or that he directly taught veganism.
c) The post calls for reflection on the idea that Jesus' most important teachings of love, compassion, peace, and justice would be incompatible with a non-vegan lifestyle in which people participate in the cruel exploitation and killing of animals for their use and consumption when we do not need them in modern times.
OK, let's start...
To reflect on, according to the Bible, commandments, and teachings of God and Jesus:
1) God created man as a strict vegetarian, and that was his will:
"And God said, 'Behold, I have given you every herb bearing seed, which is upon the face of all the earth, and every tree, in the which is the fruit of a tree yielding seed; to you it shall be for meat.'... And God saw everything that he had made, and, behold, it was very good. And the evening and the morning were the sixth day." - Genesis 1:29 and 1:31
2) God commanded:
"Thou shalt not kill." - Exodus 20:13
3) The Golden Rule, a generic rule for morality, according to Jesus:
"... all things whatsoever ye would that men should do to you, do ye even so to them: for this is the law and the prophets." - Matthew 7:12
4) Jesus summarized the commandments by saying:
"... Thou shalt love thy neighbour as thyself." - Matthew 22:37-39
5) Jesus spoke about doing or not doing to the weakest and most needy:
Both for helping and harming them:
"... Verily I say unto you, Inasmuch as ye have done it unto one of the least of these my brethren, ye have done it unto me." - Matthew 25:40
And for not helping "... Verily I say unto you, Inasmuch as ye did it not to one of the least of these, ye did it not to me." - Matthew 25:45
6) Although Genesis 1:26 speaks of humanity's "dominion" over creation, this dominion can be interpreted as a responsibility to care for and protect all of God's creatures instead of exploiting them.
In Genesis 2:15, we are urged to "till" and "keep" the earth, which implies responsible cultivation of the land and protection of its biodiversity.
VEGANISM FOR ETHICS LINKED TO THE VALUES TRANSMITTED BY JESUS
Living according to the values taught by Jesus implies being consistent with veganism, which basically means not exploiting animals, not being cruel to them, not killing them, not using them as products, or as machines for production.
Although Jesus did not directly say that we should not eat animals or other derivative products, it can be deduced from the values he taught. Most of the values he taught could not be respected if one were not vegan, especially knowing that nowadays in a civilized society there is no need to exploit or consume animals. Because we can be healthy with a well-planned vegan diet and we don't need to use animals for any other purpose.
Therefore, here are the main values transmitted by Jesus that would imply a vegan lifestyle to avoid contradiction:
a) Unconditional love: Jesus taught love for God, oneself, and others as the most important commandment. One cannot love unconditionally and kill animals for consumption when alternatives are available.
b) Compassion: Jesus showed compassion for the needy and taught his followers to do the same. Genuine compassion cannot be had if one contributes to the exploitation and killing of animals unnecessarily.
c) Justice: Jesus defended social justice and caring for the less privileged. One cannot be just if one participates in the exploitation and suffering of animals for pleasure or convenience.
d) Honesty and Truth: Jesus taught the importance of living an honest life and speaking the truth. It would be hypocritical to speak of love and respect while participating in the meat and dairy industry, which involves cruelty and animal suffering.
e) Generosity and Detachment: Jesus praised generosity and the willingness to give up material possessions for the needy. Giving up animal products in favor of respect for animal life is an act of generosity and compassion.
f) Peace: Jesus preached peace as an ideal to strive for. Peace cannot be sought while contributing to the violence and killing of billions of animals each year in the food industry when it could be avoided with a diet that God himself has indicated in Genesis 1:29, so from creation, we would already be prepared to live healthy lives.
In summary, being vegan is not only an ethical choice but also a way of living in accordance with the fundamental values taught by Jesus, promoting love, compassion, justice, and peace towards all forms of life on the planet.
CARE FOR THE ENVIRONMENT ACCORDING TO JESUS
While Jesus did not directly address environmental care and environmentalism in the terms we understand today, his teachings and principles are aligned with respect and responsibility towards God's creation. Here are some ideas that reflect this connection:
a) Custody responsibility: Jesus taught the importance of caring for and responsibly managing the resources entrusted to us. This implies being good stewards of the earth and its resources, rather than exploiting it indiscriminately.
b) Connection with nature: Jesus spent much time in nature, teaching and sharing spiritual lessons in natural settings such as mountains, forests, and lake shores. This intimate connection with nature suggests an appreciation for the beauty and importance of preserving it.
c) Teachings on humility and simplicity: Jesus emphasized the importance of living a simple life centered on spiritual values rather than on the accumulation of material wealth. This attitude of humility and simplicity can translate into a lower environmental impact and greater harmony with nature.
d) Love for all creatures: Jesus taught love and care for all forms of life, including animals. This attitude of compassion toward living beings can extend to the care and protection of their natural habitat.
In summary, although Jesus did not directly address environmental care in his teachings, his principles of responsibility, connection with nature, humility, and love for all creatures can inspire an approach of respect and care toward the planet and the environment.
THE IMPORTANCE OF ENVIRONMENTAL CARE IN THE OLD TESTAMENT
The Old Testament of the Bible emphasizes human responsibility to care for and preserve God's creation. Although there are no specific commandments directly addressing environmental care, several passages highlight the importance of being good stewards of the land and showing respect for God's creation.
In Genesis 2:15, we are urged to "till" and "keep" the earth, which implies responsible cultivation of the land and protection of its biodiversity. This responsibility is reinforced in passages such as Psalms 24:1, which acknowledges divine ownership of the earth, and Leviticus 25:23, which emphasizes our role as temporary stewards of God's resources.
Additionally, while Genesis 1:26 speaks of humanity's "dominion" over creation, this dominion can be interpreted as a responsibility to care for and protect all of God's creatures rather than exploiting them.
A VEGAN DIET TO CARE FOR THE ENVIRONMENT
Because diets that include animal-derived foods cause much more harm to the environment than vegan diets, in terms of deforestation, species extinction, greenhouse gas emissions, impact on climate change, excessive water use, and pollution. Studies show that if the world adopted a vegan diet, we could free up to 75% of the land currently used for agriculture.
This information is detailed in the 11-minute short film 'Veganism Could Save the Planet' (by Earthling Ed):
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QnrtRaM28cY
CONCLUSION:
Unlike other religions that often follow dogmas of a spiritual teacher, veganism, which has nothing to do with religion, is the result of using reason and evidence leading to an ethical philosophy of non-animal exploitation. The most fundamental teachings of religions are those of love, compassion, peace, and justice. Therefore, veganism is the logical result of applying those values. How can one claim to love unconditionally, to be compassionate towards others, to seek peace and justice, while exploiting and killing animals that do not want to suffer and want to live, and without necessity?
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Related to this you can also watch:
Someone has taken the effort to analyze all the verses in the Bible that would be related to a vegan message. Video of about 30 minutes with subtitles:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_eAhKIwaj70
"101 reasons to go vegan":
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YnQb58BoBQw
The "Open Rescue" of Temple Animals by Jesus the Vegan Christ. By Dr. Chapman Chen
Summary: Jesus cleansed the Holy Temple and took direct action to "open rescue" the animals therein, because He and God "desire compassion, rather than sacrifice" (Matthew 9:13; Hosea 6:6); and the Temple had been turned by the chief priests, the vendors, the moneychangers, and the worshippers into "a den of thieves" (Mark 11:16, Luke 20:46, Matthew 21:12-13 KJV) or a slaughterhouse sacrificing innocent animals as commodities, something akin to a modern mercantile exchange, from which the stakeholders, especially the big bosses -- the chief priests and the scribes -- made enormous profits. When Jesus disrupted their lucrative revenue stream, they plotted to have Him killed by the Roman Empire. Though animal sacrifice largely ceased after the Fall of Jerusalem in 70 AD, the recent importation of five heifers into Israelfor sacrifice has allegedly triggered off the October 7 terrorist attack. (It's still no excuse for Hamas to massacre innocent people.) And animal flesh consumption is in fact animal sacrifice to our belly-idol.
1. Jesus Desires Compassion, NOT Sacrifice
Jesus warned against meat-eating:- “Be on guard, so that your hearts do not become heavy with the eating of flesh" (Luke 21:34, Evangelion Da-Mepharreshe — Old Syriac-Aramaic Manuscript of the New Testament Gospels). And He admonished the Pharisees, quoting Hosea 6:6, "Go and learn what this means: I desire compassion rather than sacrifice" (Matthew 9:13 NASB).
In the Gospel of the Ebionites, Jesus condemned animal sacrifice in the Temple of Jerusalem:- “I have come to abolish the sacrifices, and if you cease not from sacrificing, my wrath will not cease from you” (Panarion 30.16.5). He deliberately held the Last Supper before the Passover (John 13:1-2), and during the Last Supper, bread instead of meat was blessed by Him (Luke 2:14-20; Mark 14:22-24; Matthew 26:26-29). When Epiphanius questioned a Jewish Christian as to why he was a vegan, the Jewish Christian responded simply: "Christ revealed it to me" (Panarion 30. 18.9).
2. Holy Temple = Chicago Mercantile Exchange (CME)
During the open rescue, Jesus reprimanded those selling doves, "Make not my Father's house an house of merchandise" (John 2:16 KJV). In fact, the Temple as the central place of animal sacrifice was like the Chicago Mercantile Exchange (CME) as the central marketplace for trading; the cows, lambs and pigeons being sold and bought as offerings were similar to commodities traded on an exchange (meat is still traded as a commodity on major exchanges like CME); the chief priests and scribes in charge of the Temple's operations were like the CME Group which oversees the functioning the exchange; the vendors in the Temple selling animals to those who traveled long distances and could not bring their own animals for sacrifice were akin to the brokers who act as intermediaries between the traders and the exchange, managing the placement of orders and the necessary financial transactions; the moneychangers who exchanged foreign currency for pilgrims from afar with different currencies into the local currency acceptable for the Temple tax are comparable to CME currency exchange services which facilitate the trading of currency futures and the settlement process; and the Jewish worshippers can be likened to traders purchasing commodities or securities.
3. A Den of Thieves/Murderers!
The chief priests and scribes were "thieves" because they literally stole wealth from the believers by deceiving them to pay dearly for animals to be sacrificed on the altar so that their sins may be forgiven by God, while in reality God hates and despises these burnt offerings (Amos 5:21-4). The Hebrew word מָּרִיץ (parits) for "thieves" can also mean "violent one" or "murderer" (Brown-Driver-Briggs 1906). The chief priests, scribes, vendors, moneychangers, and even the worshippers who paid for the animals to be killed, were, of course, murderers of innocent creatures of God.
4. Procedures of Animal Sacrifice
After a Jewish worshipper purchased an animal for sacrifice from a vendor in the Holy Temple, the following procedures would typically occur:
A. Confession and Laying on of Hands: The person bringing the sacrifice would rest their hands on the animal and, if applicable, confess their sins.
B. Slaughter: The animal would then be slaughtered by a priest, and its blood captured in a vessel.
c. Blood Manipulation: The blood would be applied to the walls of the altar through sprinkling, smearing, or pouring, depending on the type of sacrifice.
D. Processing the Sacrifice: The animal, after being slaughtered, would be washed, and certain parts would be prepared and offered on the altar. The remaining parts of some sacrifices were consumed by the priests, while others could be eaten by the person who brought the sacrifice and their family.
E. Disposal of Remains: Any remains not used or consumed would be disposed of in a manner prescribed by religious law
Thus, the chief priests were the party that received the greatest benefits from the animal sacrifice business; they got both the money and the fattest portions of the animal flesh involved, which was a most precious commodity in those days.
5. Jesus was Crucified for Animal Liberation
As God never required sacrifice (Isaiah 1:11-12), "the whole sacrifice business was a fraud", to borrow Keith Akers's (2000:118) words, a lie not to be trusted. "Cleansing the temple" was an act of animal liberation not unlike Direct Action Everywhere's open rescue of animals from factory farm. By emptying the Temple of the animals about to be sacrificed, by expelling the dealers in animals out of the Temple and by quoting Jeremiah 7:11, Jesus debunked the business fraud of the chief priests and scribes and disrupted their lucrative source of income. As a result, they profoundly resented Jesus and plotted to get rid of him once and for all (Mark 11:17). They framed Him up for being the "King of the Jews" (Matthew 27:11, Mark 15:2, Luke 23:3 and John 18:33), implying that He's the leader of a Jewish insurrection against the Roman Empire. This eventually led to Jesus' crucifixion by the Romans.
6. Animal Sacrifice and the October 7 Attack by Hamas
Although the traditional animal sacrifices, as conducted in the times of the Temple, in general ceased with its destruction in 70 AD, the recent importation of five red heifers into Israel, presumably required for a purification ritual in preparation for the building of a Third Temple on the Temple Mount, where the Al Aqsa Mosque currently stands, has allegedly triggered off the October 7 terrorist attack by Hamas.
7. Conclusion
In conclusion, Jesus was a pioneer and a martyr for the cause of animal liberation. Although animal sacrifice is no longer practiced in Christianity nowadays, mainstream churches following Paul the religious conman instead of Jesus the Vegan Christ still treacherously maintain that meatism is allowed or even condoned by God. In reality, eating animal flesh means sacrificing innocent animals' lives to the idol god of the belly (Philippians 3:19), or to gluttony (Proverbs 23:20-21) (cf. Hicks 2018; Chen 2022a), thereby worshipping a false god in place of the Almighty God. Mind you: God is love (1 John 4:7 NIV); God loves the world (John 3:16), including ALL His creation (Psalm 145:9); and Christ is compassion (Matthew 12:6-7). So go VEGAN this Easter, if you are not already vegan. Amen!
#VeganChrist #VeganTheology #VeganChurch
Kawshik Mamun
·
THE EASTER MESSAGE FOR ANIMALS
For as long as there have been animal advocates, the practicing Christians among them have tended to feel that there was no place for them in the churches. Only in recent years have some Christian denominations begun to consider the possibility that cruelty to animals might be a crime against the animals’ creator. At the same time - and possibly due to the success of Dan Brown’s thriller novel The DaVinci Code and the movie made from it - many Christians have begun to suspect that much is missing from the official story of Jesus’s life, recorded in the New Testament, also known as the Christian Bible. Most recently, there has been the release of the documentary “Christspiracy,” which claims there has been a 2,000-year cover-up of Jesus’s advocacy of veganism, for which he died after threatening the animal sacrifice industry in the Jerusalem Temple. Such a claim is not at all far-fetched.
Indeed, Jesus was killed by the meat industry as it existed in Judea 2,000 years ago. The Jerusalem Temple was essentially a slaughterhouse, with the main function being the religious sacrifice of animals. People either brought their most valuable animals with them to be sacrificed by the priests, or the people bought them from the so-called moneychangers. When Jesus "cleansed the Temple” by driving out the sacrificial animals and the men who were selling them, it threatened the Temple's revenue stream. But Jesus knew what he was doing in interrupting the animal killing: he was answering the call of the Prophets such as Isaiah who decried animal sacrifice as an abomination in the eyes of God. Jesus knew his act of rebellion would bring him to the attention of the high priests. These high priests then manipulated and coerced the Roman governor into having Jesus crucified. So, it is not false to claim that Jesus was killed by the meat industry or that he was killed in an act of animal liberation.
Most Christians believe Jesus’s rage was solely against the moneychangers, but moneychanging was an officially approved and regulated role in the Temple. In the canonical gospels, Jesus calls the moneychangers “thieves” or “robbers.” However, Oxford ancient languages scholar Deborah Rooke translates the Hebrew word "parits," often interpreted as "thieves," as meaning "violent ones” (this we learn from “Christspiracy”). Jesus was not angry because the priests had turned his father's house into a dishonest bank but because of the violent killing of animals.
It is true that there is little written in the four canonical Gospels of the New Testament that portrays Jesus as a man who cared deeply about animals. Jesus is quoted as saying that God knows when a sparrow falls, but even that is prefaced with a statement that humans are worth much more than sparrows. Yet there is the passage from John 10:11: "I am the good shepherd, and the good shepherd gives up his life for his sheep."
In spite of sparse references to animals in the canonical gospels, there were a large number of gospels attributed to Jesus’s disciples that were circulating through Christian communities from the second to the early fourth century C.E., some of which are likely to have been as authentic as the four eventually selected for the New Testament by the First Council of Nicea in 325 C.E. All but four of many gospels were rejected, with many of the rest burned. Some of the surviving “apocryphal” gospels claim that Jesus did not eat meat, and some show him as being devoted to animals.
The living Jesus is not depicted eating meat in any of the four official gospels, though he allegedly provided fish to a hungry crowd like manna from heaven in the Miracle of the Loaves and Fishes. However, although the later gospels describe him multiplying both loaves and fishes, close examination of the passage in the earliest gospel, Matthew, reveals that Jesus fed the bread to the assembled multitudes without the fish.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YnQb58BoBQw
Importantly, there was no meat served at the "Last Supper," the traditional Jewish Passover meal that would normally have included lamb. This Passover meal was celebrated by Jesus with his 12 disciples on Thursday, a day earlier than Passover was normally observed but seemingly in accordance with the Qumran calendar followed by Jews of the Essene sect which opposed animal sacrifice. In a Holy Thursday homily delivered on April 5, 2007, Pope Benedict XVI confirms that “Jesus celebrated the Passover without a lamb.”
In another reveal, Pope Benedict went on to state, "According to John, Jesus died on the Cross at the very moment when the Passover lambs were being sacrificed in the temple. The death of Jesus and the sacrifice of the lambs coincided.”
Instead of the sacrificial lamb at his Passover meal, Jesus creates a ritual based on bread and wine. This sacrament, called communion or the eucharist, has been practiced by Christians for 2,000 years with no shedding of blood. Some reject the descriptions of Jesus as the “lamb of God” or “the last sacrifice” because they believe such language validates the idea that the shedding of animals’ blood had redemptive value as an Old Testament practice. However, Jesus did say he was to be “the last sacrifice,” clearly indicating that he wanted to end animal sacrifice.
In the Gospel of Luke, parts of Jesus's story appeared that were not in other texts. It is believed by some that Luke sought out Mary, mother of Jesus, and recorded from her knowledge and perspective. At any rate, Luke records the birth story, in which Jesus was born among animals in a stable - the same types of animals one might see offered as sacrifices in the Jerusalem Temple. Through inference, we can see that even in the officially-sanctioned story of the life of Jesus, there was the theme of oneness with animals from beginning to end...from Jesus's birth among the animals to his death on the cross as “the last sacrifice."
The behavior of Jesus's disciples provide circumstantial evidence of Jesus's abhorrence of animal sacrifice by not going to the Temple to sacrifice animals after Jesus's death - or at least there is no record of them doing so or discussing it. If the original disciples had sacrificed at the temple, it might have been mentioned in the letters of Paul. From one of Paul's letters to a community of Christians in another town, we learn that there was argument about what meat, if any, Christians might eat. Paul, a Roman who never knew the living Jesus, seemed to be in conflict with the original Jewish Christians. Paul writes to assure the new Christians that they could eat the meat of any and all animals. Paul went so far against vegetarianism in his letter to Timothy (4:3) as to state that it would be a departure from the faith, as well as "giving heed to seducing spirits, and doctrines of devils," if one were "commanding [Christians] to abstain from meats.” To Paul, who virtually usurped the disciple Peter’s place as Jesus’s designated head of the early Christian church, it was a heresy to even speak of not eating meat.
But even Paul’s assurances apparently did not end the unease about eating animals, as is shown in the official 4th century church recommendation that Christians refrain from eating meat on Fridays - Friday being the day of the week that Jesus was crucified. The Catholic Encyclopedia of 1907 states that the Christian practice of meatless Fridays went back even farther than the 4th century: "From the dawn of Christianity, Friday has been signalized as an abstinence day, in order to do homage to the memory of Christ suffering and dying on that day of the week.”
According to the Christian website Gotquestions, the Catholic Church historically forbade eating meat on all Wednesdays, Fridays, and Saturdays, later relaxing its law to ban consuming meat only on Ash Wednesday and all Fridays. In 1966, Catholic bishops in America diluted it further, with Pope Paul VI's blessing, to recommend abstention from meat only on Fridays during Lent. Nonetheless, they retained the rule's original purpose, to remind the faithful that: "Jesus gave up His body (His flesh), and Catholics, in an effort to attain greater communion with Christ, refrain from consuming flesh."
The Catholic Online website confirms that meatless Fridays were "in honor of the Passion of Jesus on Good Friday."
https://www.catholic.org/lent/abfast.php
The Catholic Compass website has more to say: "Meat, to become food for humans, involves the killing of a living creature. This was permitted to human beings in the Book of Genesis. Nevertheless, on the day when we are remembering the cruel way in which Our Lord was killed, by our abstinence from meat we are saying: Christ died for me, out of love for me and the whole world; today I do not want any blood shed for my mere enjoyment."
Let us say every day that we do not want any blood shed for our mere enjoyment.🙏
Chapman ChenVegan Theology 純素神學
·
Christspiracy Review by Craig Douglas Wescoe (Pls click the link below to access the full review)
https://creationcarechurch.org/christspiracy-review/
The two overarching messages I took away from the film, that I encourage you to likewise take away from it and share with others:
The knowledge that Jesus was an animal liberator who opposed the practice of temple sacrifice and animal slaughter, and that this truth has been covered up and hidden for far too long, despite it being in plain sight in our own Bibles!
Absolutely!
The other takeaway message, concerns what we as viewers of the film should do with this knowledge:
2. “Tag, you’re it!”
Now it’s our turn to put this knowledge into practice. Let’s all become disciples of Jesus, embracing His guidance, walking just as He walked, opposing the systems of violence and injustice that He opposed, and continue the movement that He started two thousand years ago!
On this Resurrection Sunday, let’s resurrect the message of animal liberation and incorporate it back into the gospel message where it belongs. The gospel is good news for ALL creation.
Jesus came not only to save humans but to redeem the whole world from the sway of the wicked one. Let’s renounce the violent and misguided ways of the world, and let’s walk according to the Way of our King Jesus.
Let’s all say in one accord:
“Your kingdom come, Your will be done, On earth as it is in heaven.”
LET’S ALL FOLLOW JESUS!!
https://creationcarechurch.org/christspiracy-review/...
Chapman ChenVegan Theology 純素神學
20h ·
EarthlingEd: The cultural tradition of butchering lambs for Easter is so brutally contradictory with our cultural fondness of lambs. Lambs are found in so many things related to human children - books, toys, clothes, decor, nursery rhymes and fairytales. We connect them with our own children as they are full of innocence and life.
Sheep have a deep bond with their young, and lambs are known to form very close relationships with their mothers. Sheep, like other maternal parents (human and non-human), get distressed when they can’t find their children. So the sheep whose children are used for lamb ‘production’, suffer huge amounts of grief and turmoil when their babies are taken from them year after year. We eat babies in the name of tradition and we destroy families in the name of peace. This isn’t in our nature, as we would never take a child to a slaughterhouse to witness how a ‘leg of lamb’ arrived at the family dinner table.
Easter is a celebration of life, so why must so many suffer and die? Blood does not need to be shed in order for us to celebrate. The foundations of so many of our traditions come from the idea of unity and togetherness, so indeed today and everyday let us live by those values and pledge to not only live in unity with our own species, but all species.
Source
https://www.instagram.com/p/C5JBfluN_vj/
Chapman ChenVegan Theology 純素神學
Kyndel Paige Batson: Christians eat this precious being on Easter and all in the name of Jesus. People eat the skin & severed body parts of animals to celebrate the resurrection of Yeshua; that seems so backwards from the preaching of our savior... Jesus Christ.
As they were eating at the last supper Yeshua took the Bread, blessed it and broke it & gave it to His disciples and said: "Take this and eat it for this is my body"
Wouldn't He have given the disciples some flesh from an innocent, unblemished Lamb & said that was His body; which was symbolic of Himself, and the most likely representation, being that it is Flesh? Why did Jesus say that the Bread was His body?
Think about that for more than a second!
Would the Prince of Peace; Yeshua, cut the throat of a a baby Lamb?
If you celebrate Easter by eating a Lamb or part of a Lamb that was killed for you, please remember that four days before His crucifixion, Jesus entered the temple to cleanse it of violence. He freed the animals that were being traded to be slaughtered for food and sacrifice.
And He said to them, “It is written, My house shall be called a house of prayer,’ but you have made it a den of violent ones; a den of murderers.”-Matthew 21:13
There are sooooo many scriptures that profess God's love for animals. "God tests them [humans] so that they may see they are like the animals. Man's fate is like that of the animals. The same fate awaits them both. As one dies, so dies the other. All have the same breath. Man has no advantage over the animal. Everything is meaningless. All go to the same place. All come from dust and to dust all return. Who knows if the spirit of man rises upward and the spirit of the animal goes down into the earth." Ecclesiastes 3:19-21
Christians kill & eat animals unnecessarily. It is not God’s will to stop the heartbeat & shed the blood of His good & beloved creation. The bloodshed of animals was a sacrifice to cover the sin of humans. But, when Jesus died.... He became the Ultimate human sacrifice for all of our sins. There was no longer a need for animals to be sacrificed.
That is where man continued to devour the flesh of God's innocent beings for the sheer pleasure of taste. That is a sin!
To murder for pleasure & not to eat an animal because man is absolutely starving & there is no other options available to him what so ever. That is the only way I see God allowing man to eat His precious animals, after Jesus died & that was if man was starving & had absolutely nothing else to eat at all. But, if there are any other foods available... we should be eating those foods & not murdering Gods creatures for food when it is not at all necessary.
People celebrate Easter by eating children. That is absolutely insane to me. Lambs are the most pure & innocent creatures & people butcher them mercilessly in the name of some tradition.
You can easily celebrate Easter without harming defenceless beings; in the name of religion. It's unnecessary to be cruel to any animal, especially in the name of Jesus. That makes zero sense.
All lambs are lambs of God. Go vegan this Easter if you are not yet vegan!
Saint Francis of Assisi: “One day he came across a man who was bringing to the market two lambs for sale, tied, baled and hanging from his shoulders. Hearing the bereaved, she approached, caressed them, as a mother usually does with crying little ones and asked the master to torment her lamb brothers. The man replied that he was taking them to the slaughterhouse to sell them and make money from it. Hearing this, Francesco traded his cloak with the lambs and kept them free under his protection”.
(Excerpt from Thomas da Celano, Second Life)
Stop Animal Holocaust
·
"Finally, when we see what can be done in the name of God, we wonder what's left for the devil as activity. "
Sandrine Fillassier.
via Vegan Theology
https://www.facebook.com/groups/1244059309879943
Religion, Spirituality, Animals and VEGetarianism (currently VEGANISM)
This page is a:
Religious and spiritual informational donation for the church, world religions and spiritual movements.
It is a call of unity for planetary and spiritual healing of ALL God’s CHILDREN.
Evidence That Jesus and The Original Aramaic Christians Were Vegetarians
The real reason for Jesus crucifixion
"The Cleansing of the Temple" is a great short video explaining the profound ramifications of Jesus expelling the money changers from the Temple, accusing them of turning the Temple into a den of thieves. Please visit:
Jesus wanted to end the bloodshed of innocent animals!
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GQ-h0hh5wxA
Have a blessed day!
<>< <>< <><
Lorena Mucke
Coordinator
Christian Vegetarian Association
www.ChristianVeg.org
Beloved church and religious organizations leaders in Canada and around the world,
We’ve come to you, today, to share the Holy Scriptures messages on a very essential subject and to personally invite all church leaders on the next local and global journey in order to help heal our world at a far deeper level! Below is a collection of highly important information, as a donation of our many years of work and study on the subject, about the next natural step for humanity and the planet!
The religious, health, compassion, environment healing and TRUE world peace aspect of a vegetarian/vegan lifestyle is covered through a rich collection of extremely informative and powerful material, backed up by the Holy Scriptures and also reputable scientists and environmentalists. We would like to invite all churches and their religious leaders, on behalf of our beloved planet which needs our collective support for healing, to review, save and to share this or part of this information with your congregation.
Churches, holding mass on these topics, sharing literature that we could design as part of our donation to your church, with its congregation members can have an instant, very big, POSITIVE, HEALING impact on our world and God with his Son, Jesus Christ could not be more pleased than through such actions as this being the most noble forms of helping our Divine Creation of all beings. This message will be sent forth to many other churches in Canada and all around the world.
THANK YOU for taking the time to read and review this material.
Kristin M. Swenson, Ph.D.: The Bible and Human 'Dominion' Over Animals: Superiority or Responsibility?
https://www.huffpost.com/entry/the-bible-and-human-domin_b_681363
HOLY SCRIPTURES quotes:
RELIGION and VEGetarianism
The Diet Ordained by God
God giveth the grains and the fruits of the earth for food: and for righteous man truly there is no other lawful sustenance for the body." ~ Jesus, The Gospel of the Holy Twelve (earliest known recorded words of Jesus)
'Thou shalt not kill any living thing,' for life is given to all by God, and that which God has given, let not man taketh it away. ~Jesus, Gospel of the Holy Twelve
"LET NO FLESH MEAT ENTER YOUR MOUTHS" (JESUS: Lect. 38, GHT) *
Wherefore I say unto all who desire to be my disciples, keep your hands from bloodshed and let no flesh meat enter your mouths, for God is just and bountiful, who ordaineth that man shall live by the fruits and seeds of the earth alone. JESUS; Gospel of the Holy Twelve; Lection 38
Verily I say unto you, for this end have I come into the world, that I may put away all blood offerings and the eating of the flesh of the beasts and the birds that are slain by men. JESUS; The Gospel of the Holy Twelve; Lection 75
Blessed are they who keep this law, for God is manifested in all creatures. All creatures live in God, and God is hid in them. . JESUS; The Gospel of the Holy Twelve; Lection 75
"Thou shalt not kill," Exodus 20:13 - Deuteronomy 5:17
The exact Hebrew wording of this biblical phrase is lo tirtzack which accurately translates as "any kind of killing whatsoever."
"But flesh with the life thereof, which is the blood thereof, shall ye not eat (Genesis 9.4-5)
"He that killeth an ox is as if he slew a man." (Isaiah 66.3)
"And the flesh of slain beasts in his body will become his tomb. For I tell you truly, he who kills, kills himself, and whoso eats the flesh of slain beasts, eats the body of death." ~ Jesus, The Gospel of Peace
"Better is a dinner of herbs where love is, than a stalled ox with hatred within." ~ Proverbs 15:17
"Do not destroy the work of God for the sake of something to eat." ~ Romans 14:20
"He who killeth an ox is as if he slew a man. And when ye spread forth your hands, I will hide mine eyes from you: yea, when ye make many prayers, I will not hear, for your hands are stained with blood, and your mouths are defiled with flesh." ~ God, Isaiah 1:15,66:3
And God said, "Behold, I have given you every herb bearing seed, which is upon the face of all the earth, and every tree, in which is the fruit of a tree yielding seed; to you it shall be for food. And to every beast of the earth, and to every fowl of the air, and to every thing that creepeth upon the earth, wherein there is a living soul, I have given every green herb for food: and it was so." ~God, Genesis 1:29-30
Man's fate is like that of the animals; the same fate awaits them both: As one dies, so dies the other. All have the same breath; man has no advantage over the animal. Everything is meaningless. All go to the same place; all come from dust, and to dust all shall return. Ecclesiastes 3 18-20
Biblical Opposition to Flesh Eating
EXPLANATIONS AS TO WHY THE BIBLE CONTAINS SO FEW OBSERVATIONS CONDEMNING THE VICTIMIZATION AND KILLING OF ANIMALS
http://www.thenazareneway.com/Biblical_Opposition_to_Flesh_Eating.htm
Jesus Condemneth the Ill Treatment of Animals
Gospel of the Holy Twelve; Lection 38
http://www.thenazareneway.com/jesus_condemneth_ill_treatment_animals.htm
And Jesus said unto them, Verily I say unto you, they who partake of benefits which are gotten by wronging one of God's creatures, cannot be righteous: nor can they touch holy things, or teach the mysteries of the kingdom, whose hands are stained With blood, or whose mouths are defiled with flesh. Gospel of the Holy Twelve; Lection 38
The Nazarene Way of Essenic Studies
Christ's Assault on Blood Sacrifice
Denouncing the Sacrificial Slaughter of Animals
http://www.thenazareneway.com/holy_week/assault_on_blood_sacrifice.htm
http://www.stephen-knapp.com/vegetarianism_supported_in_the_bible.htm Vegetarianism: Supported in the Bible
http://www.thenazareneway.com/thou_shalt_not_kill.htm
The Nazarene Way of Essenic Studies
~ Biblical Vegetarianism ~Sin, Dis-ease and Abstinence from Flesh as Food
The Conviction and Practice of Compassionate Living
http://www.thenazareneway.com/index_vegetarian.htm
Was Jesus Christ a Vegan?
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0ThulwgVMuA
JESUS: "LET NO FLESH MEAT ENTER YOUR MOUTHS" (Lect. 38, GHT)
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Nb6dWrace38
Jesus was a Vegetarian ~ MUST SEE!
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Iv3uU2YY6pM
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5Ww9YF2A17Y
http://www.ivu.org/history/christian/christ_veg.html
The Lord Christ Jesus Was a Vegan BOOK
The Lord Christ Jesus Was a Vegan Paperback – December 16, 2005
by Saba (Author)
https://www.amazon.com/Lord-Christ-Jesus-Was-Vegan/dp/1420813021
http://www.squidoo.com/saintfrances Saint Francis of Assisi--Patron Saint of Animals
St. Francis of Assisi: Brother to All Creatures
http://www.praying-nature.com/site_pages.php?section=St.+Francis+of+Assisi&category_ref=67
"Fish" is another frequently mistranslated word in the Bible. Its reference is often not to the form of swimming life, but to the symbol by which early Christians could identify each other. It was a secret sign, needed in times of persecution, prior to official acceptance of Christianity as a state religion.
The sign of the fish was a mystical symbol and conversational password. Its name deriving from the Greek word for fish, "ichthus" Much later it was represented an acrostic, composed of leading letters of the Greek phrase, "Iesous Christos Theou Uios Soter"-"Jesus Christ, Son of God, Saviour."
Frequent references to fish are intended as symbolic of The Christ and have nothing to do with the act of eating a dead fish. But the symbol of the fish did not meet with Roman approval. They preferred the sign of the cross, choosing to concentrate more on the death of Christ than on His brilliant life. Perhaps this is one reason only ten percent of His life record appears in the canonical scriptures. Most of His first thirty years has been omitted. http://www.thenazareneway.com/thou_shalt_not_kill.htm
http://www.st-francis-medal.com/st-francis-blessing-of-the-animals.htm St. Francis Prayer for Animals
http://www.all-creatures.org/cva/default.htm Christian Vegetarian Association
https://www.vegetarianfriends.net/issue76.html
Saint Isaac the Syrian
The seventh-century Christian mystic Saint Isaac the Syrian asks, “What is a charitable heart? It is a heart which is burning with love for the whole creation, for men, for the birds, for the beasts . . . for all creatures.
He who has such a heart cannot see or call to mind a creature without his eyes being filled with tears by reason of the immense compassion which seizes his heart; a heart which is softened and can no longer bear to see or learn from others of any suffering, even the smallest pain being inflicted upon a creature.
That is why such a man never ceases to pray for the animals . . . moved by the infinite pity which reigns in the hearts of those who are becoming united with God.”
May all beings be free and at peace, Will
http://worldpeacediet.com - our daily VegInspiration For The Day
http://circleofcompassion.org - our Prayer Circle For Animals Weekly Update
John Wesley
John Wesley, the eighteenth-century founder of Methodism, has written, “I believe in my heart that faith in Jesus Christ can and will lead us beyond an exclusive concern for the well-being of other human beings to the broader concern for the well-being of the birds in our backyards, the fish in our rivers, and every living creature on the face of the earth.”
http://www.compassionatespirit.com/spiritual-trads-and-veg.htm
http://www.all-creatures.org/cva/default.htm Christian Vegetarian Association
http://www.all-creatures.org/cva/howtohelp.htm
Animals and World Religions
Despite increasing public attention to animal suffering, little seems to have changed: Human beings continue to exploit billions of animals in factory farms, medical laboratories, and elsewhere. In this wide-ranging and perceptive study, Lisa Kemmerer shows how spiritual writings and teachings in seven major religious traditions can help people to consider their ethical obligations toward other creatures.
Dr. Kemmerer examines the role of nonhuman animals in scripture and myth, in the lives of religious exemplars, and by drawing on foundational philosophical and moral teachings. She begins with a study of indigenous traditions around the world, then focuses on the religions of India (Hindu, Buddhist, and Jain) and China (Daoism and Confucianism), and finally, religions of the Middle East (Judaism, Christianity, and Islam). At the end of each chapter, Kemmerer explores the inspiring lives and work of contemporary animal advocates who are motivated by a personal religious commitment.
https://www.amazon.com/Animals-World-Religions-Lisa-Kemmerer/dp/019979068X
Kinship and Killing: The Animals in World Religions
Through close readings of Jewish, Christian, Islamic, and Buddhist texts, Katherine Wills Perlo proves that our relationship with animals shapes religious doctrine, particularly through the tension between animal exploitation and the bonds of kinship. She pinpoints four different strategies for coping with this conflict.
The first is aggression, in which a divinely conferred superiority or karma justifies animal usage. The second is evasion, which emphasizes benevolent aspects of the human-animal relationship within the exploitative structure, such as the image of Jesus as a "good shepherd." The third is defense, which acknowledges the problematic nature of killing, leading many religions to adopt a propitiation mechanism, such as apologizing for sacrifice. And the fourth is effective-defensive, which recognizes animal abuse as inherently unethical.
As humans feel more empathy toward animals, Perlo finds that adherents revise their interpretations of religious texts. Preexisting ontologies, such as Christianity's changing God or Buddhism's principle of impermanence, along with advances in farming practices and technology, also encourage changes in treatment.
As cultures begin to appreciate the
different types of perception and consciousness experienced by nonhumans, definitions of reality become complicated and humans lean more toward unitary accounts of shared existence. These evolving attitudes exert a crucial influence on religious thought, Perlo argues, moving humans ever closer to a nonspeciesist world.
https://www.amazon.com/Kinship-Killing-Animal-World-Religions/dp/023114623X
Christian Vegetarian Association
https://agnvegglobal.blogspot.com/2011/12/christian-vegetarian-association.html
http://www.vina.cc/news/index.php/General/The-Indian-Glory-of-Ahimsa-and-Vegetarianism.html
Jesus' compassionate confrontation
Jesus questioned the foundation of war and oppression, which was then, as it is now, the killing and eating of animals.
Back then it was animal sacrifice performed by priests at the temple, which was the main source of wealth and prestige for the Jewish religious power structure, as well as being the source of meat for the populace.
Jesus’ confrontation at the temple in which he drove out those selling animals for slaughter was a bold attack on the fundamental herding paradigm of viewing animals merely as property, sacrifice objects, and food.
It is in-deed our spiritual death
Learning to look the other way brings spiritual death in everyone who practices it.
In encouraging it, religious institutions show how far they have strayed from the passionate mercy and all-seeing kindness taught and lived by those whose spiritual evolution and illumination inspired the institutions themselves.
May all beings be free and at peace, Will
New offering:Prayer Circle for Monday
Today, let us send our prayers to all farmed animals.
May compassion and love reign over all the earth for all farmed animals―Dear ducks, geese, turkeys, chickens; cows, pigs, lambs, bison, elk, deer, and all of you who are suffering today in tiny cages or crowded into feedlots, being beaten, fed poisoned and unnatural food, and for those of you languishing without water or food on trucks or entering the slaughterhouses.
We bear witness to your suffering, we take action to permanently end it, and we continually send out an energy field of love and compassion to comfort you and to transform the hearts and souls of those who support this violent oppression.
We send our tears and our prayers on wings of love to you. Compassion encircles the earth for each of you and for all beings.
~ Judy Carman and www.worldpeacediet.com
http://www.angelfire.com/mi/dinosaurs/carnivores.html
"Behold this watermelon, the fruit of the earth." Jesus then broke open the watermelon and said:
"See thou with thine own eyes the good fruit of the soil, the meat of man, and see thou the seeds within, count ye them, for one melon maketh ...a hundredfold and even more.
If thou sow this seed, ye do eat from the true God. For no blood was spilled, nay no pain nor outcry did ye hear with thy ears or see with thine eyes.
The true food of man is from the mother of the earth, for she brings forth perfect gifts unto the humble of the land.
But ye seek what Satan giveth, the anguish, the death, and the blood of living souls taken by the sword.
Know ye not, those who live by the sword are the ones who die by the same death?
Go thine way then, and plant the seeds of the good fruit of life, and leave ye off from hurting the innocent creatures of God."
*The Gospel of the Holy Twelve, also known as The Gospel of the Hebrews, The Essene Gospel, The Gospel of the Ebionites, or just plain "The Gospel."
(This book has been translated from Aramaic by the Englishman, Reverend Gideon H. Ousley, 1835-1906).
*Jesus was a life long Vegetarian, and denounced the killing of animals and eating their flesh,
..as did all Essene' (Nazarene), for a hundred years, prior to his birth.
you remember them, don't you?
the second most famous Essene, was John the Baptist
(and we all know he was a hippie:)
"Behold this watermelon, the fruit of the earth." Jesus then broke open the watermelon and said:
"See thou with thine own eyes the good fruit of the soil, the meat of man, and see thou the seeds within, count ye them, for one melon maketh a hundredfold and even more.
If thou sow this seed, ye do eat from the true God. For no blood was spilled, nay no pain nor outcry did ye hear with thy ears or see with thine eyes.
The true food of man is from the mother of the earth, for she brings forth perfect gifts unto the humble of the land.
But ye seek what Satan giveth, the anguish, the death, and the blood of living souls taken by the sword.
Know ye not, those who live by the sword are the ones who die by the same death?
Go thine way then, and plant the seeds of the good fruit of life, and leave ye off from hurting the innocent creatures of God."
*The Gospel of the Holy Twelve, also known as The Gospel of the Hebrews, The Essene Gospel, The Gospel of the Ebionites, or just plain "The Gospel."
(This book has been translated from Aramaic by the Englishman, Reverend Gideon H. Ousley, 1835-1906).
-the following is referenced from "Conscious Eating, by, Gabriel Cousens, M.D.JESUS AND VEGETARIANISM
The Dead Sea Scroll materials unearthed in 1947 indirectly suggest that Jesus was a lifelong vegetarian.
This is because they indicate that the Essenes were vegetarians, and historically there is evidence that Jesus was raised in an Essene community; therefore it is highly likely that he and his family were vegetarian.
Conscious Eating
https://www.amazon.ca/Conscious-Eating-Gabriel-Cousens-M-D/dp/1556432852/ref=sr_1_1
CONTINUED
..This is because they indicate that the Essenes were vegetarians, and historically there is evidence that Jesus was raised in an Essene community; therefore it is highly likely that he and his family were vegetarian.
The Essene Gospel of Peace, book one, taken from the original Aramaic third century manuscript discovered in 1927 in the secret Vatican archives by Dr. Edmond Bordeaux Szekely, directly and strongly suggest that Jesus was a lifelong vegetarian.
It reveals his direct teachings against the eating of flesh.
Nevertheless, as these documents come to the surface, there is still lack of definite proof, as well as confusion about mistranslations and conscious and unconscious changes made in the scriptures as we see them today.
This is especially true with claims of various changes and deletions in the Gospels and the Epistles that in all probability largely occurred at the Council of Nicaea in A.D. 325.
According to The Profit of the Dead Sea Scrolls by Upton Clary Ewing, a theologian praised by world famous Albert Schweitzer, M.D., as the "renaissance of Leonardo da Vinci":
"There is hardly a single scholar among bible exegetists who will not agree that there are many inconsistencies and contradictions to be found in the Gospels and Epistles."
Perhaps this inability to make a final proof one way or the other is fortunate, as no ones faith need be flatly challenged by this chapter.
Ultimately there is room to believe whatever one feels comfortable believing. This topic is not meant to challenge anyone's religious beliefs.
It is meant to raise issues and information not readily available in order to aid and support those who are Christian vegetarians already or those Christians contemplating the transition to vegetarianism as a part of the medicine for healing themselves and this planet.
The following information is for those who are confused or disempowered in their desire to be vegetarian by the commonly held interpretations, based on the currently used editions of the New Testament, that maintain Jesus was not a vegetarian.
To understand the relationship of Jesus to vegetarianism we must probe into a realm in which much of the historical documentation has been lost, and that which is left is partially confused by the subtleties in the translation from Greek to English.
The accuracy of the translations has also been affected by the limited understanding and philosophy of those who were doing the translating.
For example, the world "meat," which appears 19 times in the New Testament, seems to imply that Jesus sanctioned meat eating.
The most accurate understanding, however, of the word "meat" in the translation from Greek to English does not imply flesh food at all.
The Greek word translated as "meat" is more precisely translated as "food" or "nourishment," and not animal flesh as we currently think when we hear the word "meat."
For example, Jesus did not actually say, "Have ye any meat?" as in John 21:5 but "Have ye anything to eat?"
And when the Gospels say that the disciples went away to buy meat (John 8), it merely means to buy food.
Similarly mistranslations have occurred with the use of the word "fish."
The misunderstanding of this word results in a portrayal of Jesus as eating fish and encouraging the eating or killing of fish by others.
In the early church, the word "fish" was a secret term. The Greek word for fish is I-CH-TH-U-S. It is made up of the first letters of the words "Jesus Cristos Theou Uios Soter."
This translates as Jesus Christ Son of God Saviour. The fish is also found as a Christian symbol in the catacombs.
It is symbolic of the Piscean Age, which was emerging at the time. It is entirely conceivable that the word "fish," as written in the New Testament, was used primarily in this deeper mystical way.
Since Jesus taught in parables and metaphors, I believe its use in the New Testament was to communicate this deeper meaning of "fish" rather than the literal idea of a dead fish that was physically eaten.
In this context, the feeding of the fish to the people is a metaphor for the feeding of the higher teachings of the Master to the masses.
In a second-century book by Irenaeus (A.D. 120-202), it was twice stated that Jesus fed the multitude of 5,000 with bread alone.
Others have pointed out that there is an aquatic plant called the fish plant that was used as food in that era as well as during Babylonian times.
These fish plants were dried in the sun, beaten into mortar, and baked into bread-like rolls and sold in the open market. Perhaps in the translation, the "plant" portion of the word designated as the fish plant was omitted.
It was only in the 4th century that fish was added to the bread offering in the scriptures.
This suggests that the second-century version of the Gospel of the Hebrews might be more authentic. In this translation, it says in the Lection XXIX, verse 7 and 8:
"And when he had taken the six loaves and the seven clusters of grapes, he looked up to heaven, and blessed and broke the loaves, and the grapes also, and gave them to his disciples to set before them, and they divided them among all.
And they did all eat and were filled. And they took up twelve baskets full of the fragments that were left. And they that did eat of the loaves and of the fruits were about five thousand men, women, and children, and he taught them many things."
In any case, the souls of the five thousand, we can assume, were at least fed with the mystical meaning of fish.
THE HISTORICAL JESUS
It is a lot easier to understand Jesus' teachings about vegetarianism when he is understood in his historical context.
He and his family were associated with the Essene movement of the times. The Essenes were Jewish communities of very evolved people who had broken away from the mainstream of Jewish thought several hundred years before the time of Jesus.
They were vegetarians in accordance with the highest meaning of the Law of Moses, which said, "Thou shalt not kill." They were also against the practice of animal sacrifice.
In The Prophet of the Dead Sea Scrolls, Ewing quotes Philo of Alexandria, a historian writing during the times of Jesus' ministry, who said:
"They are called Esseni because of their saintliness. They do not sacrifice animals, regarding a reverent mind as the only true sacrifice."
Ewing quotes Professor Teicher in saying:
"But we have there (in the Essene scriptures) the emphatic prohibition of eating animals. No consumption of meat means no killing of animals and both together means no sacrifice of animals."
The Dead Sea Scrolls by Millar Burrows, quotes from the Essene scriptures:
"Let not a man make himself abominable with any living creature or creeping thing by eating of them."
The lives of the Essenes required a discipline and purity of mind, body, and spirit that was beyond the practice of the typical religious person of the time.
The Essenes developed self-sufficient communities in the peace of the desert in order to make it easier to focus on God.
It is thought that Jesus and his parents were part of the Essenes, some of whom were also called the Nazarenes.
It is said that Jesus escaped to an Essene community in the desert to avoid the murderous intent of King Herod.
It was in the Essene communities that was raised and trained. Some of the Essenes, such as John the Baptist, as well as the master Jesus himself, went out into public to uplift the people.
As part of their teaching of compassion and love for all life, they taught vegetarianism.
For example, in the Essene Gospel of Peace, book one (P. 36), Jesus is quoted as saying:
"God commanded your forefathers: "Thou shalt not kill." But their heart was hardened and they killed.
Then Moses desired that at least they should not kill men, and he suffered them to kill beasts. And then the heart of your forefathers was hardened yet more, and they killed men and beasts likewise.
But I do say to you: Kill neither men nor beasts, nor yet the food which goes into your mouth. For if you eat living [uncooked] food, the same will quicken you, but if you kill your food, the dead food will kill you also."
What is important here is that this teaching is a direct quote of Jesus from an original Aramaic third-century manuscript found in the secret archives of the Vatican.
It is not a teaching by implication. The message is consistent with Jesus' own dietary practice and that of his community of birth and where he grew up, which also practiced vegetarianism.
Aside from these exciting findings, most of the information concerning Jesus' explicit teachings on this subject has been lost or destroyed.
One exception is the work by Epiphanius (A.D. 315-403), a Catholic bishop of Constantia in Cyprus. In his book Panarion (as explained in A Critical Investigation of Epiphanius' Knowledge of the Ebionites:
A Translation and Critical Discussion of "Panarion," by Glenn Alan Kochit), Epiphanius points out that according to the Ebionites, a group of early Judaic Christians who were vegetarians:
-Whenever you speak to them (Ebionites) concerning flesh food, the Ebionites reply they were vegetarian because "Jesus revealed it to me." [This was a direct teaching they were referring to and not a revelation.]
There is another early book called The Gospel of the Holy Twelve, also known as The Gospel of the Hebrews, The Essene Gospel, The Gospel of the Ebionites, or just plain "The Gospel."
This book has been translated from the Aramaic by the Englishmen, Reverend Gideon H. Ousley (1835-1906).
Ousley claims that it is the translation of the original gospel and that it had been preserved first by the Essenes and then later in a Tibetan monastery after the Essenes were forced to leave their communities in A.D. 68 by the advancing Romans.
The Essenes apparently hid many of their scriptures in the desert (such as the Dead Sea Scrolls) and took some with them as they disappeared.
Reverend Ousley claims that this gospel was taken to a Tibetan Buddhist monastery by Essene monks. It was in the Tibetan monastery that Reverend Ousley found it.
If this is authentic, as some scholars believe, it would be the most ancient and complete writings available about Jesus and his teachings.
Dr. Ewing believed that this might be the original gospel, but it might have been known primarily as "The Gospel," and was written in western Aramaic..
*Jesus' teachings of vegetarianism in the Gospel of the Hebrews is both poetic and clear as he answers a doubting Sadduce man who asked,
"Tell me, please, why sayest thou, do not eat the flesh of animals...?" Jesus' beautiful answer to him was:
"Behold this watermelon, the fruit of the earth." Jesus then broke open the watermelon and said:
"See thou with thine own eyes the good fruit of the soil, the meat of man, and see thou the seeds within, count ye them, for one melon maketh a hundredfold and even more.
If thou sow this seed, ye do eat from the true God. For no blood was spilled, nay no pain nor outcry did ye hear with thy ears or see with thine eyes.
The true food of man is from the mother of the earth, for she brings forth perfect gifts unto the humble of the land.
But ye seek what Satan giveth, the anguish, the death, and the blood of living souls taken by the sword.
Know ye not, those who live by the sword are the ones who die by the same death?
Know ye not, those who live by the sword are the ones who die by the same death?
Go thine way then, and plant the seeds of the good fruit of life, and leave ye off from hurting the innocent creatures of God."
In a teaching to his disciples in Lection XXXII, verse 4, of the Gospel of the Hebrews, Jesus is completely clear about his opposition to killing and eating animals:
"For of the fruits of the trees and the seeds alone do I partake, and these are changed by the spirit into my flesh and my blood. Of these alone and their like shall ye eat who believe in me, and are my disciples, for of these, in the spirit, come to life and health and healing unto man."
In the same section, verse nine, Jesus explains the problem of the custom of flesh-eating with an understanding of the past and a prophecy for the future return to vegetarianism for the whole world:
"Verily I say unto you, in the beginning, all creatures of God did find their sustenance in the herbs and the fruits of the earth alone, till the ignorance and the selfishness of man turned many of them from the use which God had given them, to that which was contrary to their original use, but even these shall yet return to their natural food, as it is written in the prophets "Isaiah," and their words shall not fail."
In Lection XXXVIII, verses 3, 4, and 6 of the Gospel of the Hebrews, the spiritual meaning of the awareness and practice of the oneness with all of life is translated into Jesus' teachings of vegetarianism and non cruelty to animals and all of life; his words are consistent with the awareness one would expect from some of Jesus' great spiritual stature:
3 God giveth the grains and the fruits of the earth for food; and for righteous man truly there is no other lawful sustenance for the body.
4 The robber who breaketh into the house made by man is guilty, but they who break into the house made by God, even of the least of these are the greater sinners. Wherefore I say unto all who desire to be my disciples, keep your hands from bloodshed and let no flesh meat enter your mouths, for God is just and bountiful, who ordaineth that man shall live by the fruits and seeds of the earth alone.
6 And whatsoever ye do unto the least of these my children, ye do it unto me. For I am in them and they are in me. Yea, I am in all creatures and all creatures are in me. In all their joys I rejoice, in all their afflictions I am afflicted, wherefore I say unto you: Be ye kind to one another, and to all the creatures of God..
HISTORY OF VEGETARIANISM IN EARLY CHRISTIANITY
From Epiphanius' book, it is shown that the immediate followers of Jesus, the Judaic Christians, were vegetarians until the fifth century. This was about 100 years after the historical struggle among the three main factions of Christianity of those times: Judaic Christians, Christian Gnostics, and Catholic Christians.
According to the evidence presented in The Vegetarianism of Jesus Christ by Charles Vaclivik, the Judaic Christians were led for 30 years after Jesus left the physical realm by his brother James.
Vaclivik's historical evidence suggests that the Judaic Christians were the very first Christians. They were the ones who actually walked and prayed with Jesus. After them the Christian Gnosticism developed, and around A.D. 70 the Catholic Christians began their ascent to power.
The Judaic Christians and the Gnostics were vegetarians and the Catholic Christians were not. Many early Christian leaders were also vegetarians. Clement of Alexandria (A.D. 160-240) wrote,
"It is far better to be happy than it is to have our bodies act as graveyards for animals."
Saint John Chrysostom (A.D. 345-407) also taught that the unnatural eating of flesh meat was polluting.
Man scholars think that the original Christian documents were altered at the Council of Nicaea in A.D. 325 to make them acceptable to the Emperor, Constantine. Steve Rosen, in Food for Spirit, points out that flesh-food-eating was not officially permitted until the 4th century when Emperor Constantine, through his powerful influence, made his version of Christianity the official version for everyone.
Vegetarian Christians had to practice in secret or risk being put to death for heresy. Rosen writes that Constantine used to have molten lead poured down their throats if they were captured. By the 4th century, the Catholic Christians became considerably more politically powerful than the other two groups.
Most of the literature of the Judaic Christians and Gnostics was essentially destroyed during the political repression of this time period. In The Vegetarianism of Jesus Christ, it is postulated that the translations after this time may have been altered away from a vegetarian menu, as the Catholic Christians did not believe in vegetarianism and or were not ready for it.
If people are surprised that there was more than one Christian faction in the first 100 years after Jesus, it is useful to remember that we now have hundreds of different Christian churches..
JESUS AND ANIMAL SACRIFICE
Epiphanius points out that the early Essenes were not only vegetarians, but also opposed to animal sacrifice. It is in this context that one gets a further understanding of why Jesus chased out the money lenders from the Temple and freed the animals who were going to be sacrificed.
It was the money lenders who exchanged money so that Jews coming from foreign lands could purchase animals for sacrifice.
The teachings of Jesus and the Essenes stood directly against the practice of the other Jewish sects and that of the Romans, who also practiced animal sacrifice.
Titus Flavius Clemens, one of the most respected of the early Christian fathers, is quoted in Ethics of Diet by Howard Williams as saying, "Sacrifices were invented by men as a pretext for eating flesh."
This seems to be essentially the Essene understanding of the motivation behind sacrifices. According to Ewing, the Essene understanding of the diet was based on the commandment, "Thou shalt not kill," and the first dietary commandment of Genesis 129, quoted earlier,
which gave humanity fruits, nuts, seeds, vegetables, grains, and grasses to eat, but specifically not flesh food.
The position of Jesus against animal sacrifice, is of course, consistent with his humanness, his love for all of God's creatures, and his vegetarianism. According to Hastings Encyclopedia on Religion and Ethics,
The Gospel according to the Apostles was used by the Ebionites (viz Nazarenes). Herein is found the "Essene Christ." He denounces sacrifice and the eating of animal flesh.
Epiphanius quotes Jesus, in his confrontation with the high priest in the Temple after he has chased out the money lenders,
"I come to abolish sacrifices, and unless you cease sacrifices my anger will not cease from you."
The Gospel of the Hebrews also clarifies that Jesus not only advised against eating our animal friends, but he had come to end blood sacrifices. In Lection XXI, verse 8, preaching to his disciples he says:
"I am come to end the sacrifices and feasts of blood; and if ye cease not offering and eating of flesh and blood, the wrath of God shall not cease from you; even as it came to your fathers in the wilderness, who lusted for flesh, and they ate to their content, and were filled with rottenness, and the plague consumed them."
Many believe that Jesus ate the lamb of the passover meal and used this as indirect evidence that he did not teach or practice vegetarianism. In the Gospel According to the Hebrews, Lection LXXVI, section 27, which predates the addition of the gospels used today, Judas is quoted as inciting Caiaphas against Jesus for not eating lamb at the Passover:
Now Judas Iscariot had gone to the house of Caiaphas and said unto him, "Behold he (Jesus) has celebrated the Passover within the gates of Jeresalem, with the Mazza in place of the lamb. I indeed bought a lamb, but he forbode that it shall be killed, and lo, the man of whom I bought it is witness.
It is important to remember that the information in the gospel came from earlier Judaic sources and not vice versa. Changes in translations commonly occur, and this could be one of them. Again, Jesus' refusal to eat the Passover lamb is consistent with his role and high spiritual awareness as the great Essene teacher of the time and also his actions against animal sacrifice in the Temple..
THE VEGETARIANISM OF THE DISCIPLES
Dr. Ewing points out that the highly respected church father, Eusebius, quotes Hegesippus (about A.D. 160),
who said that James, the disciple and brother of Jesus who became head of the Judaic Christians, was a vegetarian who "drank no wine, wore no wool, nor ate any flesh."
It was said that he followed this practice from birth. It is likely that all of Jesus' family, including himself, were raised as vegetarians and lived that way as adults.
It is also likely that in the light of the overall evidence, all but one of the disciples were vegetarian.
Ewing quotes the Clementine Hominies XXII, 6, who also suggests that most of the disciples if not all were vegetarian:
They followed the Apostles in their custom of daily lustrations.
They refused to partake of flesh or wine. taking as their pattern Saint Peter, whose food was bread, olives and herbs
the "fish" story:
"In the early church, the word 'fish' was a secret term. The Greek word for fish is I-CH-TH-U-S. It is made up of the first letters of the words 'Jesus Cristos Theou Uios Soter.'
This translates as Jesus Christ Son of God Saviour. The fish is also found as a Christian symbol in the catacombs.
It is symbolic of the Piscean Age, which was emerging at the time. It is entirely conceivable that the word 'fish,' as written in the New Testament, was used primarily in this deeper mystical way.
Since Jesus taught in parables and metaphors, I believe its use in the New Testament was to communicate this deeper meaning of 'fish' rather than the literal idea of a dead fish that was physically eaten.
In this context, the feeding of the fish to the people is a metaphor for the feeding of the higher teachings of the Master to the masses."
""..And whatsoever ye do unto the least of these my children, ye do it unto me. For I am in them and they are in me. Yea, I am in all creatures and all creatures are in me. In all their joys I rejoice, in all their afflictions I am afflicted, wherefore I say unto you: Be ye kind to one another, and to all the creatures of God."
-The Gospel of the Holy Twelve(Essene Gospel) ♥"
For the kingdom of God is not meat and drink; but righteousness, and peace, and joy in the Holy Ghost. -Romans 14:17
HUNTING
Did Jesus approved of hunting?
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lBLuQaZ-Uu8
Woe unto the hunters for they shall be hunted. Lo, every creature which God hath made hath its end and purpose." http://www.thenazareneway.com/index_vegetarian.htm
http://circleofcompassion.org/articles/articles-will/article-buddhalowcarb.htm
http://circleofcompassion.org/articles/articles-will/article-buddha101.html
Jesus was a Vegetarian: Biblical and Historical Proof
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Dx6J6jh1Dzo
Thou Shall Not Kill by Rev. BJ Stannard Part 1 of 4
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HjvH7v8dM5c
"Only if we twist God's word to rationalize our addiction to cruel animal products could we fool ourselves...into believing that God doesn't care if we are violent or peaceful, or if we intentionally cause harm or try to avoid it. To consume animal products in order to survive is one thing. To engage in entirely avoidable meanness, in order to satisfy an indulgence, is quite another and violates the very essence of God's calls to be merciful and peaceful." - Gary Loewenthal -
If there are such things as "forbidden fruit" and "original sin", the taking of others' lives in order to feast on their dead flesh would seem to fit that description far better than the image of someone eating an apple, an act that deprives no one of life or liberty. The "original sin" is usurping the role of God and claiming for ourselves the powers over life and death.
https://www.all-creatures.org/ff/frank-veganpalooza2012.html
Jesus: An Animal Advocate
Joel Freedman, chair of the public education committee of Animal Rights Advocates of Upstate New York, makes a case for Jesus being vegetarian and spreading his message of compassion and love to all creatures. Freedman refers to the Bible but also to the Gospel of the Holy Twelve, what he calls the “original teachings of Jesus.” Regardless of accepting all or some Christian beliefs, Feedman emphasizes that if we just follow Jesus’ core teaching of “do unto others as you would have them do unto you,” the world would be a more compassionate one. Please visit
Joel Freedman: Was Jesus a pioneer of animal-rights, vegetarian activism?
https://www.mpnnow.com/story/opinion/2012/08/07/joel-freedman-was-jesus-pioneer/45598543007/
There is no doubt that Jesus showed us the path of healing, restoration and reconciliation. His teachings centered on embracing the least, the poor, the suffering, the victim and the needed. Today, billions of God’s creatures every week around the world are recipient of humanity’s fury due to hardness of heart. When we allow ourselves to feel and to empathize with the pain and suffering God’s creatures are experiencing, we realize we don’t want to be part of the cause anymore. And we also realize that a lifestyle that includes the exploitation of any other being is inconsistent with Christ’s teachings.
Joel Freedman, of Canandaigua, chairs the public education committee of Animal Rights Advocates of Upstate New York.Joel Freedman, of Canandaigua, chairs the public education committee of Animal Rights Advocates of Upstate New York.
Have a blessed day!
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Lorena Mucke
Coordinator
Christian Vegetarian Association
www.ChristianVeg.org
"Never be ashamed to say, 'No thank you; I do not eat meat. I have conscientious scruples against eating the flesh of dead animals." ~Ellen White, co-founder Seventh Day Adventists, 1901
Sentient living being (God/Source/Creator/Creation/Life) image by
The heart of Jainism is non-violence to all beings, it is a religion of compassion, universal love, it considers the welfare of all living beings, and not of man alone. One of the basic virtues of Jainism is ahimsa, non-violence. A Jain world would be free from violence or exploitation of any creature and the environment. Jainism teaches us to look upon all beings as we would upon upon our own self, thus Inflicting injury to them is inflicting injury to one's self.
Unless we live with non-violence and reverence for all living beings in our hearts, all our humaneness and acts of goodness, all our vows, virtues, and knowledge, all our practices to give up greed and acquisitiveness are meaningless and useless." “He who harms animals has not understood or renounced deeds of sin... Those whose minds are at peace and who are free from passions do not desire to live at the expense of others.
http://www.thisveganlife.org/praise-the-lord-and-pass-the-pork-chops/
The Buddha and Islamic Sufi saint Misri
The Buddha says in the Mahaparinirvana-sutra, “Eating meat destroys the attitude of great compassion.”
The ninth-century Islamic Sufi saint Misri says, “Never think of anyone as inferior to you. Open the inner Eye and you will see the One Glory shining in all creatures.”
Uncover mercy and justice
The vegan ideals of mercy and justice for animals have been articulated for centuries, often from within the religious establishment, and it is fascinating and instructive to see how these voices have been almost completely silenced or marginalized by the herding culture.
It seems to be an unconscious reflex action. For example, if we read Jesus’ teachings, we find a passionate exhortation to mercy and love, yet the possibility that the historical Jesus may have been a vegan is a radical idea for most Christians.
Jesus, radical vegan
Jesus’ message was intolerably radical, for it was the revolutionary vegan message of mercy and love for all creatures that strikes directly at the mentality of domination and exclusion that underlies both the herding culture we live in today and the culture of Jesus’ time.
Religion must be inclusive of all
All of us are celebrations of infinite mysterious Spirit, deserving of honor and respect.
If our religions don’t emphasize this and include all of us, it’s time to replace them with spiritual teachings and traditions that do.
Anna Sewell, Black Beauty
There is no religion without love, and people may talk as much as they like about their religion, but if it does not teach them to be good and kind to beasts as well as man it is all a sham.”
~ Anna Sewell, Black Beauty
Please look into this
Religion’s turning away has allowed the atrocities to continue and legitimized the turning away of the general population.
This turning away is the paradigmatic learning that our culture specializes in, particularly with regard to the plight of the animals we eat and use; it is the everyday teaching of not seeing, not caring, disconnecting, and ignoring.
St. Francis of Assisi on exclusion
If you have men who will exclude any of God’s creatures from the shelter of compassion and pity, then you have men who will deal likewise with their fellow men.”
~ St. Francis of Assisi
Are Cows More Godly Than Humans?
https://www.all-creatures.org/sermons98/s20121021.html
The multitude of your sacrifices―what are they to me?’ says the Lord.
‘I have more than enough of burnt offerings of rams and the fat of fattened animals; I have no pleasure in the blood of bulls and lambs and goats….
Your hands are full of blood; wash and make yourselves clean. Take your evil deeds out of my sight.’ ”
~ Isaiah 1:11, 15-16
https://www.all-creatures.org/sermons98/s20121209.html
PETA discusses religion and animal rights
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vBWfiUFlMV4
The Five Wonderful Mindfulness Trainings
http://dharma.ncf.ca/introduction/precepts.html
Once we become aware of suffering, we can then be moved to compassion for ourselves and others as we see that we are all mutually caught in the web of worldly pain. According to Thay, “we undertake to cultivate compassion and use it as a source of energy for the protection of life-- to remove suffering and transform it.”
http://www.yoga-losangeles.com/LA_Yoga_Peace_Article.html
All beings tremble before danger, all fear death.
- Dhammapada 54
Buddhist scriptures encourage universal compassion. Buddhist teachings are overwhelmingly friendly toward non-human animals. While one might find the occasional Buddhist writer who believes that animals are expendable to our purposes, that the pain of other creatures does not matter spiritually, that we may eat animals and wear animals and kill animals, most Buddhists would disagree. The overwhelming majority of Buddhist writings do not support this contention.
There is no clear distinction between non-humans and humans in Buddhist philosophy. Eons of transmigration have had a predictable result: today’s duck and dog are yesterdays human sisters and brothers. Each cow and chicken was at some point one’s parent, and to harm one’s parent is a particularly base act for Buddhists. All species are also subject to the same karmic process. Karma can no more be avoided by a Persian cat than it can by an avahi (woolly lemur). The Sutta Piṭāka notes that one’s actions determine one’s future as surely as “the wheel follows the foot of the ox that draws the carriage” (Burtt 52). Karma rules the lives of animals and humans alike (Kraft 277): Lassie and the Prince of Wales are both subject to the same moral laws.
Buddhism offers a vision of radical inter-identification. A vision where all living beings are identified with all other entities. This vision does not merely teach that we are all in this together, but that we all are this, “rising and falling as one living body” (Cook 229). Thich Nhat Hanh writes:
A human being is an animal, a part of nature. But we single ourselves out from the rest of nature. We classify other animals and living beings as nature, as if we ourselves are not part of it. Then we pose the question, “How should I deal with Nature?” We should deal with nature the way we deal with ourselves. . . ! Harming nature is harming ourselves, and vice versa. (Hanh 41)
Radical Buddhist interdependence does not allow for an independent entity, action, word, or thought; all things influence all other things. Each being, each act, is critical to every other being and every other act. To cause suffering to a dog or pig is to cause suffering to oneself. The idea of radical interdependence led some Buddhists to conclude that all things are one another in their very essence.
http://www.all-creatures.org/articles/an-tpr-buddhist.html
Thich Nhat Hanh: "... I am determined not to kill, not to let others kill..."
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=G2CILMpmtnk
Thich Nhat Hanh - The End Of Suffering
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NMab_lYY5lE
Why Are Few Spiritual Teachers Vegan?
http://www.onegreenplanet.org/animalsandnature/why-are-few-spiritual-teachers-vegan/
The Lost Religion of Jesus: Simple Living and Nonviolence in Early Christianity
Keith Akers
http://www.onegreenplanet.org/lifestyle/what-did-american-indians-eat-actually/
2. Book Review: Animals and World Religions, ed. by Lisa Kemmerer
Animals and World Religions is a very interesting and information packed book, which is written in an easily readable form and at the same time is serves as a text book and reference source of the historical and practiced way religions view animals.
Lisa Kemmerer coins the word "anymals" meaning no-human animals, and uses it throughout the book to simplify which is being referenced.
For us, one of the most interesting features of the book was the very thorough discussion on aboriginal religions, and how they all recognize that they and the anymals are spiritually created alike and deserve to be treated with compassion, which to us positively shows that all peoples, cultures, and religions really knew the truth. However, at the same time, aboriginal cultures created myths to justify the killing of the animals, as if the anymals freely give their lives to the human hunters.
Throughout the remainder of Animals and World Religions, we see that all the major religions also had their foundational belief rooted in this peaceful coexistence that was created to be between all the animals of the world, including the environment in which we all live.
And as with the aboriginal societies, they also corrupted themselves to justify the exploitation of anymals, and they "hide" the fact about their foundational beliefs in their modern day teachings. The worst case of this distortion of the truth exists in the justification of factory farming and commercial fishing, which Lisa Kemmerer also discusses.
We highly recommend Animals and World Religions to everyone as a reference guide, for we all know religious people and need to be knowledgeable when discussing with other people the need for all of us to return to the golden age of peaceful living for all inhabitants of the world.
2012, Oxford University Press, $35
(reviewed by Frank and Mary Hoffman)
About the Author: Lisa Kemmerer (B.A. in international studies, Reed College; M.T.S. in comparative religions, Harvard University School; Ph.D. in philosophy, University of Glasgow, Scotland) is a philosopher-activist, artist, and lover of wild places, who has hiked, biked, kayaked, backpacked, and traveled widely. She is the author and editor of several books, and is currently associate professor of philosophy and religion at Montana State University, Billings.
Early Native American cultures are sometimes held out as good role models in terms of "respectful" and "responsible" use of animals for food. But many Indian tribes' diets were mainly plant-based. They were gatherers and master cultivators, and made their houses from earth, not hides and used plant-derived fabrics for their clothing. People often romanticize one small part of a culture in a vain attempt to justify their own easily-avoidable exploitations under much different circumstances.
The Indian tribes that killed bison did so for a relatively short period of time, using the Europeans' guns and horses. They didn't always use the whole animal; sometimes they just shot bison and cut off the ears - there was a market for this for a while - and sold them to white people in return for whiskey. The reality of the Indian bison hunter is nowhere near the perfect model that its modern (mis)appropriaters would like to believe it is.
Honoring and respecting animals today, when we can drive a short distance to a store with hundreds or thousands of healthy plant foods all year, means not killing them. I'm sure that Civil War doctors who didn't use anesthesia respected their patients, but that doesn't mean we should emulate that today and call it "respect."
Another important distinction between Indian cultures and our own is that hunting in early days was often practiced out of need, as a matter of survival. It is said that early Native Americans revered animals and were saddened at the sight of the white man's herds, who they regarded as "slave animals".
If Indians were saddened at our society's lack of reverence and our treatment of animals in the past, just imagine what they might think if they could witness our current reality, in which most farmed animals are confined from birth in horrid conditions and treated as if they had no intelligence or feelings or needs... and are denied virtually everything that could make a life worthwhile... and then are killed purely to satisfy our habits and tastes.
These issues are more fully addressed in a book by Will Tuttle, PhD. It's called "The World Peace Diet".
Adapted from the work of Gary Loewenthal
Woe unto the hunters for they shall be hunted. Lo, every creature which God hath made hath its end and purpose." http://www.thenazareneway.com/index_vegetarian.htm
ANIMALS and WORLD RELIGIONS
SPIRITUAL TRADITIONS
and VEGETARIANISM
http://www.compassionatespirit.com/spiritual-trads-and-veg.htm
Society of Ethical and Religious Vegetarians
Vegetarianism and the
Major World Religions Pamphlet
http://www.serv-online.org/pamphlet.pdf
Judaism
"As president of Jewish Vegetarians, I want to point out that the production and consumption of meat and other animal products violates basic biblical teachings to treat animals with compassion, preserve our health, protect the environment, conserve natural resources, and help hungry people. - Richard Schwartz -
the Hebrew words in Genesis were intentionally mistranslated by Thomas Aquinas in the 1200's from the original words, which were "steward" to "dominion," which is how it then proliferated and was translated into English as an excuse/justification for exterminations, enslavement, and abuse of other species. And, an increasing number of contemporary Jews are convinced that the 6th commandment DOES, in fact, applied to both humans and non-humans, and since it has been demonstrated that humans are primates whose diets should be plant-based, the 6th commandment DOES apply and humanity is therefore in violation of it.
SOULutions: Education, awareness, RESOURCES and guidance
Google & watch: “EARTHLINGS”
Google & watch: “Best Speech You Will Ever Hear” - Gary Yourofsky
World’s MOST POWERFUL 10 MINs SPEECH
Philip Wollen : Animals Should Be Off The Menu debate | Subtitles in 18 languages
Google & watch: “WORLD PEACE DIET”
Scrolling down to first read ALL of the links' subject titles is most helpful
Planetary healing from the ground up (main link)
https://agnvegglobal.blogspot.com/2012/05/planetary-healing-from-ground-up.html
FOOD, the most dangerous weapon of mass control
https://agnvegglobal.blogspot.com/2012/08/food-most-dangerous-weapon-of-mass.html
HUMAN OMNIVORISM myth debunked
https://agnvegglobal.blogspot.com/2012/01/human-omnivorism-debunked.html
“HUMANE” MEAT myth debunked
https://agnvegglobal.blogspot.com/2011/12/humane-meat-myth-debunked.html
“HUMANE” MEAT, dairy, eggs and fish FOOD myth debunked
https://agnvegglobal.blogspot.com/2013/06/humane-meat-dairy-eggs-and-fish-food.html
SCIENTIFIC PROOF that HUMANS are NATURAL HERBIVORES
https://agnvegglobal.blogspot.com/2011/12/scientific-proof-that-humans-are.html
DEBUNKING the MEAT diets
https://agnvegglobal.blogspot.com/2012/12/debunking-meat-diets.html
DAIRY CALCIUM HEALTH MYTH DEBUNKED
https://agnvegglobal.blogspot.com/2012/07/dairy-calcium-health-myth-debunked.html
The DARK TRUTH about DAIRY INDUSTRY
https://agnvegglobal.blogspot.com/2012/07/dark-truth-about-dairy-industry.html
ANIMAL PROTEIN MYTH DEBUNKED & SPORTS
https://agnvegglobal.blogspot.com/2011/12/animal-protein-myth-debunked-sports.html
DEBUNKING our FOOD MYTHS
https://agnvegglobal.blogspot.com/2012/12/debunking-our-food-myths.html
Science and Health
https://agnvegglobal.blogspot.com/2011/12/science-and-health.html
Physicians Committee for Responsible Medicine
https://agnvegglobal.blogspot.com/2011/12/physicians-committee-for-responsible.html
VEGAN nutrition
https://agnvegglobal.blogspot.com/2011/12/vegan-nutrition.html
How to make a smooth, natural transition to a vegan lifestyle
https://agnvegglobal.blogspot.com/2011/12/how-to-make-smooth-natural-transition.html
MEAT of the FUTURE is HERE
https://agnvegglobal.blogspot.com/2012/05/meat-of-future-is-here_31.html
VEGAN DAIRY
https://agnvegglobal.blogspot.com/2012/06/vegan-dairy.html
VEGAN CHEESE
https://agnvegglobal.blogspot.com/2012/05/vegan-cheese.html
CRUELTY FREE HOLIDAYS TRADITIONAL & INTERNATIONAL RECIPES
https://agnvegglobal.blogspot.com/2011/12/cruelty-free-holidays-traditional.html
HUMAN SPIRITUAL evolution through FOOD
https://agnvegglobal.blogspot.com/2012/01/human-spiritual-evolution-through-food.html
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