Peaceable Journey
   
 



 
Peaceable Practices
Learn to see animals as individuals*
Connect with animals
Adopt a plant-based diet
Rescue animals
Advocate for animals
Preserve, protect and restore animal habitats


 
Bookmark and Share          



Donate


Glossary Terms
Abolition
Animal advocacy
Animal husbandry
Animal protection
Animal rights
Animal welfare
Animal-using industries
Commodification
Conscientious objection
Cruelty-free
Happy meat
Humane myth
Humane slaughter
Non-participation
Open rescue
Plant-based diet
Speciesism
Sustainable
Vegan
Vegetarian



Peaceable Kingdom: The Journey Home
Preview



 
back to previous page

My religious tradition doesn't forbid killing and eating animals, so that makes it ok, doesn’t it?

While the stories and teachings of numerous religious traditions make reference to the use and killing of animals for various purposes, it is important to recognize that very few of these same traditions have laws or rules that require this. Hence, by any measure, even those who are strict practitioners of their religious traditions can follow the voice of their personal conscience in this matter without being in conflict with the core principles of their religious tradition. There are individuals from virtually every religious tradition worldwide who are respected for their knowledge and moral leadership who also choose, for reasons of conscience, not to participate in the use and killing of animals.

Furthermore, it can be helpful to keep in mind that understanding of the morality of numerous activities and ideas mentioned in religious stories and teachings written long ago has evolved as human knowledge has evolved. The dramatic changes in the social status of women in many cultures over the centuries are an example of this, as was the widespread adoption of a ban on human slavery, which at various times was practiced on every settled continent. When human slavery was practiced in the US, many people believed it to be a religiously appropriate activity because of certain references to slavery in the Christian Bible. However, today, Christians of all denominations condemn this practice, and consider it to be in conflict with the core values of their tradition. Hence, many devout religious practitioners around the world are now re-evaluating their understanding of the ethics of the human-animal relationship, and as a result, are forging a new understanding of their relationship to the other animals with whom we share our world.


back to previous page