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All Creatures Great and Small
by Rusty Pritchard






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Oil Spill Prayer is an initiative sponsored by Creation Hope, an organization whose purpose is to educate and mobilize Christians to fulfill their call to care for God’s creation and bring hope to a broken world. Oil Spill Prayer seeks to unite Christians and churches in the gulf coast, across the United States, and around the world in prayer about the Gulf Coast Oil Spill.



More Current Articles in
Creation Care:
Seasonal Eating Is an Act of Justice and Taste by Rachel Stone
Don’t Walk Alone: Doing walkability audits as a church community by Kendra Langdon Juskus
How the Church of the Future Will Do Creation Care by Norman Wirzba
Christian Environmental Stewardship: Not Just Cheap, Not Just Green by Kendra Langdon Juskus

Animal welfare is a neglected issue for many creation care advocates—a blind spot perhaps, or, as it has been for me, an area of carefully maintained ignorance It wasn't so for William Wilberforce. The Christian anti-slavery hero was also one of the co-founders of the Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals He was a clear example of holistic thinking about mercy and justice.  

My friend Christine Gutleben, the woman responsible for faith outreach at the Humane Society of the US, is currently touring the country with the band The Myriad, stopping at Christian colleges and universities (and plenty of other hip spots) to promote the cause of animal stewardship. The tour schedule sounds exciting and will continue through the first week of November. I hope she is able to inspire Christian students to follow in the footsteps of William Wilberforce.
 
I find it increasingly odd that many environmentalists are wary of animal welfare advocates; I'm sure it is partly because of the excesses of some extreme animal rights groups like PETA. I myself was pretty wary of the issue before meeting Christine, who helped me see what a no-brainer it is for creation care advocates to care about actual animals (as opposed to the more abstract idea of endangered species, or ecosystems). At the same time I became aware of the work of Ben DeVries, who runs the very informative blog and website not one sparrow. Ben is a graduate of Trinity Evangelical Divinity School and Moody Bible Institute, and he is one of the best thinkers I've come across on how faith connects to animal welfare. He's neither strident nor ideological, and he has helped me tremendously in thinking about the issue biblically. You can see his gracious style of communication clearly even on his Frequently Asked Questions page! Read it for yourself.
 
I'm not ready to become a vegetarian (and no, I don't think Jesus was a vegetarian, but please don't email me about it…!), or to disparage hunting and fishing. But my family is already eating less meat, partly for environmental reasons, partly for economic reasons. Concern for humane treatment of farm animals plays a much bigger role in our consumption decisions now (and choosing humanely-raised meat automatically reduces our consumption, because it is more expensive). Most of the worst farm animal abuse comes from large-scale concentrated animal feeding operations (CAFOs), so eating more ethically often coincides with supporting small-scale agriculture. Health concerns play a role too—but for many centuries the human problem was probably too little rather than too much meat. That's changed remarkably over the last century, and my own waistline and blood pressure are warning me to eat more carefully.
 
The Humane Society's video Eating Mercifully explores some of the faith dimensions of animal stewardship. It shows both vegetarians and meat-eaters who have made decisions to act more humanely in what they eat. You can watch the 26-minute video or the 7-minute trailer online, or order the DVD for use at home or in your church. HSUS also has a webpage devoted to faithful stewardship of animals.
 
Christians ought also to be concerned about animal fighting, whether they minister in the country or in the city. The Humane Society is doing great work with Michael Vick—whose own crisis led to a renewal of his faith—to educate young people about animal cruelty. Check out their short video about his effective new work raising awareness about dogfighting.
 
We need more than ever to be animated by the same Spirit that drove Wilberforce to fight for mercy for all God's creatures.
 
You'll find more details about the Human Society/The Myriad tour from the HSUS press release.
 
Rusty Pritchard is a natural resource economist and president of Flourish, a Christian nonprofit dedicated to revitalizing lives and landscapes.


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