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Q: Can people be creaturekind if they are not vegan? Can people consume animals and animal products and still be creaturekind?
Q: What is hands down the most compelling and powerful verse in the Bible that promises God’s love towards all his creatures? How do you suggest I apply that in my conversations to those who A. might not believe in God but love animals and/or B. might not love animals but believe in God?
Why do animals suffer? It’s a big question—an ancient, continuing, and persisting question. We have no divine FAQ page about God’s intentions. We have no single, simple, satisfying answer. As humans, we are bound to the limits of our creaturely capacities to interpret scripture, but we can do so in conversation with the church’s rich heritage of teachers, preachers, ministers, and heroes of the faith.
The movement of the heart is the Spirit’s transformative action within a believer which brings to birth a new person in Christ …
Introducing the CreatureKind Corner, a series where we’ll answer questions submitted by readers about Christian theology and animal protection.
This Pentecost, let’s open ourselves to the disruption of the Spirit that expands our Gospel mission. Let’s take even more seriously what it might mean to proclaim the gospel to all creation. Where might that lead us?
What will all of these animals do— The bulls and the rams, The cows and the sheep, The pigeons and the goats, And the lambs— Now that sacrifice has been abolished? Will they return home, To tell the good news, To the hawks, wolves, and camouflaged hunters? Their joyful songs echoing
I’ve been reflecting on Paul’s vision of a groaning creation with a Lenten group at church in the past weeks (Romans 8.18–25). I hadn’t thought of it before in connection with Holy Week, but this year the link seems inescapable. The groans of fellow human and non-human creatures have never sounded louder to me.
Ubi caritas et amour, Deus ibi est. Where charity and love are, God is there.
What does it mean for you, as a Christian, to care for God’s creatures? How do you practice this care in your day-to-day life? Let us hear from you!
Seeing ourselves as one creature among many is therefore a profound truth of Christian faith. There are two kinds of things: God and God’s creatures. We’re one of the second kind: we’re creaturekind.
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