Dominion Over Wildlife?

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Publisher:
Wipf and Stock Publishers
Publication Date:
2009
Language:
English

Description

For centuries Christians believed that God granted humanity dominion over the animal kingdom, meaning that we had a moral right to kill, manage, and eat animals including wildlife. Recently, however, environmental and animal rights activists have assaulted this traditional perspective. They argue that dominion as expressed in meat eating and hunting has resulted in species extinction and environmental degradation. Christian Animal Rights (CAR) activists suggest that the church must reevaluate its traditional beliefs in light of the fact that God's original creation was free of human on animal violence. God, they argue, did not want man's dominion to be expressed through trapping, killing, and eating of animals. These violent activities only came about after the Fall, as God condescended to our hardness of heart. CAR activists point to Christ's sacrificial work of reconciliation as a model for modern Christian behavior: as Christ sacrificed for us, we should avoid eating meat and hunting as ways we can participate in Christ's non-violent work of reconciling creation to himself. In this book, Stephen Vantassel investigates the biblical, ethical, and scientific arguments employed by the CAR movement concerning human-wildlife relations. In this regard, the book engages in practical theology by addressing several important questions: How should Christians treat our wildlife neighbors? Has the Church been wrong in its understanding of human dominion? Does God want Christians to avoid hunting, trapping, fishing, and adopt a vegetarian lifestyle? This book provides answers to these questions by detailing a theology the author calls, Shepherdism.

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ISBN:
9781621892168

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Grouping Information

Grouped Work ID63e6f909-954e-efe2-4435-bedc64d17fb6
Grouping Titledominion over wildlife
Grouping Authorstephen m vantassel
Grouping Categorybook
Grouping LanguageEnglish (eng)
Last Grouping Update2025-08-02 22:23:36PM
Last Indexed2025-08-22 23:39:33PM

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For centuries Christians believed that God granted humanity dominion over the animal kingdom, meaning that we had a moral right to kill, manage, and eat animals including wildlife. Recently, however, environmental and animal rights activists have assaulted this traditional perspective. They argue that dominion as expressed in meat eating and hunting has resulted in species extinction and environmental degradation. Christian Animal Rights (CAR) activists suggest that the church must reevaluate its traditional beliefs in light of the fact that God's original creation was free of human on animal violence. God, they argue, did not want man's dominion to be expressed through trapping, killing, and eating of animals. These violent activities only came about after the Fall, as God condescended to our hardness of heart. CAR activists point to Christ's sacrificial work of reconciliation as a model for modern Christian behavior: as Christ sacrificed for us, we should avoid eating meat and hunting as ways we can participate in Christ's non-violent work of reconciling creation to himself. In this book, Stephen Vantassel investigates the biblical, ethical, and scientific arguments employed by the CAR movement concerning human-wildlife relations. In this regard, the book engages in practical theology by addressing several important questions: How should Christians treat our wildlife neighbors? Has the Church been wrong in its understanding of human dominion? Does God want Christians to avoid hunting, trapping, fishing, and adopt a vegetarian lifestyle? This book provides answers to these questions by detailing a theology the author calls, Shepherdism.
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63e6f909-954e-efe2-4435-bedc64d17fb6
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last_indexed
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2 Months
Month
Quarter
Six Months
Year
primary_isbn
9781621892168
publishDate
2009
publisher
Wipf and Stock Publishers
recordtype
grouped_work
subject_facet
Christianity
Church
Electronic books
Religion
Theology
title_display
Dominion Over Wildlife?
title_full
Dominion Over Wildlife? [electronic resource] / Stephen M. Vantassel
title_short
Dominion Over Wildlife?
topic_facet
Christianity
Church
Electronic books
Religion
Theology

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hoopla:MWT12318113eBookeBookEnglishWipf and Stock Publishers20091 online resource (232 pages)

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