Cultivating a Reverence for Life
Date Published: July 31, 2024
Publisher: BookBaby
In For Our Friends the Animals, Robert Echols delivers a stirring spiritual call to action for Christians and all people of conscience to embrace a reverence for life in its fullest form.
Blending biblical truth, compassionate prayers, and the life-affirming philosophy of Dr. Albert Schweitzer, this powerful work urges readers to see animals not as commodities—but as beloved creations of God. In Part One, Echols explores the deep moral and spiritual responsibility we hold toward all creatures. In Part Two, he presents practical steps to confront today's most pressing animal welfare issues—from factory farming to environmental degradation.
Whether you're a lifelong advocate or someone opening your heart to new possibilities, For Our Friends the Animals invites you into a faith-driven movement of empathy and transformation. Through spiritual insight and practical guidance, the book empowers readers to become stewards of compassion, protecting both creation and Creator's intention.
“This book is not just a read—it’s a spiritual pledge. A call to embody Christ’s love by caring for those who cannot speak for themselves.”
Join the movement. Embrace the message. Be the change.
Chapter 1
Opening
Prayers
Anima
Christi sanctifica nos!
Our
opening prayer—any opening prayer—has several purposes. Chief among those is to begin to meditate and focus on a sense
of contrition in which sins are admitted and mercy for those sins is requested.
Additionally, the opening prayer serves to set forth and express the theme of
our entire literary effort. The prayer may be uttered in silence or recited
aloud, and either way, as a community it is a means for our unified prayers of
the people to be gathered or collected and offered to the Father though Jesus
as we seek forgiveness ourselves and offer it to others. As Jesus said, “For if
you forgive men their trespasses, your heavenly father will also forgive you.”
Matt.6:14.
We
will employ two prayers to accomplish these tasks and goals, one known to have
been written by Albert Schweitzer, and the other thought to have been written
by him but without formal proof of authorship. As we pray and reflect upon
these prayers, let us begin to understand and dwell on one of the chief themes
of this celebration of the spirit of Jesus, of life: Namely, nurturing in us
and then applying concertedly, outwardly, and liberally a merciful love for our
fellow creatures. As we pray, let us experience the silent power of combined
prayer, of many souls seeking enlightenment and guidance in their dealings with
animals, praying for mercy and to be merciful.
There
is a prayer for animals that Schweitzer composed and recited as a child.
However, it is quite short and is not widely known. Here it is from Animals, Nature & Albert Schweitzer:
“O,
heavenly Father, protect and bless all things that have breath; guard them from
all evil, and let them sleep in peace.”
Here
is the more common Prayer for Animals, which is attributed to Schweitzer,
although there is a faction that holds that he was not the author. (This
version is taken from the Pinterest website.)
A
Prayer for Animals
Hear
our humble prayer, O God, for our friends the animals,
especially for animals who are suffering;
for animals that are overworked, underfed and cruelly treated;
for all wistful creatures in captivity that beat their wings against bars;
for any that are hunted or lost or deserted or frightened or hungry;
for all that must be put death.
We entreat for them all Thy mercy and pity,
and for those who deal with them we ask a heart of compassion
and gentle hands and kindly words.
Make us, ourselves, to be true friends to animals,
and so to share the blessings of the merciful.
Our
first commentary from Schweitzer is excerpted from one of his sermons from Albert Schweitzer. Reverence For Life.
“The interior joy we feel when we have done a good deed, when we feel we have
been needed somewhere and have lent a helping hand, is the nourishment the soul
requires.”
Additionally,
Schweitzer sets out his conviction that humans must be a part of the spiritual
world in order to be satisfied and at peace. But the doctor is keen to point
out that our presence in the spiritual world must be an active one. Our soul is
strengthened by the deeds we perform in the service of God. An active role in
the service of Jesus, of bringing his wishes for us to fruition, is a theme
found often in this book under various guises. We are called to lives of active
compassion as our analysis of the foregoing prayers will indicate.
The
first prayer is a charming childhood entreaty, presumably recited by the young
Schweitzer before going to sleep. It is important because the prayer includes
as its objects “all things”, all
life, not just humans. This concept is the beginning of our journey, the
commencement of understanding a reverence for life. We must seek and ourselves
provide protection for all life, and indeed, in uttering this prayer we tacitly
agree that all life is worthy of heavenly protection, and of ours. We
acknowledge implicitly that all creatures are God's creatures and merit His
protection and our intercession for such protection.
This
prayer also acknowledges the obvious—namely, that there is evil in this world,
and as a result, cruel, unpleasant things can happen to any entity. Even as a
boy, Schweitzer, perhaps indirectly, captures another important concept that we
will continue to develop. This concept is the responsibility of every human
being to prevent and preclude evil to the maximum extent possible. Evil does
exist in this world, and much of that evil especially acts of cruelty and harm
perpetrated upon creatures, domesticated and feral, is manmade. That we are
responsible for acts of barbarity, and as a consequence that we are
additionally responsible for ceasing those acts and preventing them wherever
possible, is an awareness of life that came early to Schweitzer.
There
is a second sort of evil, perhaps more implicit than explicit in Schweitzer's
boyhood prayer, but certainly no less deserving of our attention. Evil
perpetuated directly and purposefully on animals is painful enough to
contemplate, but just as insidious and wrong is the evil of which we are aware
but which we leave unattended, ignored, deliberately overlooked. Let's face it,
we humans know fully well how animals are maltreated, how they are forced to
lead lives of pain, squalor, and terror, most often at our expense and on our
behalf. Let us not turn a blind eye to such suffering; rather, may we
acknowledge our responsibility for having caused such distress. Let us freely
admit that no amount of clever packaging or sophistry, no amount of linguistic gymnastics
can hide our guilt. There is as great an evil in being aware of wrongdoing and
taking no action to counter it as there is in engaging in acts of malevolence.
Let us seek and accept responsibility, not only for our own actions that cause
suffering for animals, but for those of other people done to animals on our
behalf. Let us accept responsibility for being able to speak out and actively
oppose the infliction of such cruelty and for not having done so.
As
we pray and reflect on our own behavior, let us be mindful of that
responsibility. Let us not be blind to our actions or inactivity and their
consequences, but let us have the courage and compassion to see ourselves as we
are, and properly and accurately assess the outcomes toward animal life that
our behavior brings about. Let us accept the plain truth that all life comes
from God and that we who walk this earth as humans have a special obligation to
protect God's other creatures from harm.
Our
second opening prayer introduces and touches upon several important ideas,
ideas that will be developed throughout this portion of the book and the next.
The first line makes mention of humility in “our humble prayer”. For too long
humans have seen themselves as the focal point of existence, at the heart of
life on earth, as the reason that life and the earth exist at all. This prayer
asks us to reconsider our place, to come to the realization that we are one of
many creatures on this planet, not at all special merely because of our
presence.
The
first line then invokes the name of God for our petitions in an unmistakable
acknowledgment that God is not only our creator, but the creator of all living
things. There would be no point in seeking God's help for animals were this not
the case. In our prayers let us dwell on that crucial fact: All creatures come
from God, and when we injure or mistreat any creature, in so doing we do great
damage to our own solidarity with the Lord. We rebuff him by our misuse of
those lives He has placed here. Finally, the first line makes clear our
relationship with animals; they are our friends. As such, animals are not to be
exploited, harmed, mistreated, or injured. They are not means to human ends.
They enjoy as friends a special status with us; indeed, friendship brings with
it an obligation of care. We owe a duty of care to our friends, and that duty
extends to our friends the animals.
Lines
two through six delineate in a ghastly way some examples of the ill treatment
accorded animals by people and asks that God hear our prayer for those animals
who are the recipients of that treatment. These lines are reflective of an all
too common human phenomenon, the exploitation of animals for human greed,
profit, and amusement. Work animals are seen as a means to an end, as a
business asset to be worked as much as possible, cared for as little as
possible (care costs money, after all), and to be discarded when no longer
capable of turning a profit.
Farm
animals are often housed in deplorable conditions with their ability to move
freely, indeed, to move at all, heartlessly curtailed. Their ability to lead a
life, even remotely accordingly to their abilities and wishes is restricted at
best and usually prevented entirely. Once deemed ready for slaughter, such
animals are crammed together on arduous, torturous journeys that culminate in a
bloody, frightening butchery. All to end up on our dinner table.
Human
amusement at animal enslavement finds manifestation in zoos, animal parks,
animal shows, but also in horse and dog racing, even dog fighting and fighting
among other species. Again, when an animal no longer can earn its keep and
becomes merely a cost center, its life is ended, ignominiously and without
ceremony or remorse. Let our thoughts turn to all these poor creatures, and may
we reflect on just how badly we humans have dealt with them. May that
reflection start us on the path to understanding and sympathy, toward viewing
animals as friends, as fellow creatures, as lives to be respected and aided,
not as tools to be worked and discarded when no longer useful.
The
final five lines ask for “mercy and pity” for these beings, but the prayer also
makes it clear that we humans must change our attitude and consequent behavior
toward them. May we seek and find in our hearts the ability and strength to
show compassion, to be gentle and kind, to be sympathetic even when we are
derided by other humans for doing so. As our friends these animals are
deserving of compassion, gentleness, and kindness from us, but the prayer is
quite plain in stating that these traits are not common in humans now, that we
must actively pray to receive such traits, and even more to the point, we must
affirmatively change our behavior to incorporate those traits in our every
action. We pray to God for His assistance in making those affirmative changes
possible and enduring. We pray to God that our eyes and hearts may be opened to
animal suffering, to the unassailable fact that so much suffering is human
caused, and that with His help we may share “the blessings of the merciful”
with our friends. May God grant us the ability not only to see animal
suffering, but to acknowledge a sense of duty and obligation to alleviate it in
every possible way we can. That is being active in the kingdom of God.
Chapter 2
We Begin Our Journey
The
purpose of this chapter is officially to launch our journey to living a life of
compassion, perhaps also described as our blueprint for coexistence. This
section can and should be viewed as an introduction, a preparation, a
commencement of activity and thought. Our prayers, quotations, and analyses
help frame and kick off our voyage, but it is crucial to note that this is not
a journey of one, of a person going it alone. Let us employ the ideas in this
chapter and in this book, not only as a beginning, but a beginning of a
combined effort, an occasion of concerted, allied thoughts and prayers, and
ultimately unified action and behavior based on those thoughts and prayers.
Many
times a psalm serves well to initiate a spiritual quest, so a psalm it shall
be. Our psalm is a famous one in which the creative power of almighty God is
celebrated. Please read it carefully and slowly before turning to Schweitzer's
comments and the analysis and argument.
Psalm 104 (from
the Holy Bible, New International Version)
1 Praise
the Lord, my soul.
Lord my
God, you are very great;
you
are clothed with splendor and majesty.
2 The Lord wraps himself
in light as with a garment;
he stretches out the
heavens like a tent
3 and
lays the beams of his upper chambers on their waters.
He makes the clouds his chariot
and rides on the wings of the wind.
4 He
makes winds his messengers,
flames of fire his servants.
5 He
set the earth on its foundations;
it can never be moved.
6 You
covered it with the watery depths as with a garment;
the waters stood above the
mountains.
7 But
at your rebuke the waters fled,
at the sound of your thunder they
took to flight;
8 they
flowed over the mountains,
they went down into the valleys,
to the place you assigned for them.
9 You
set a boundary they cannot cross;
never again will they cover the earth.
10 He
makes springs pour water into the ravines;
it flows between the mountains.
11 They
give water to all the beasts of the field;
the wild donkeys quench their
thirst.
12 The
birds of the sky nest by the waters;
they sing among the branches.
13 He
waters the mountains from his upper chambers;
the land is satisfied by the fruit of
his work.
14 He
makes grass grow for the cattle,
and plants for people to cultivate—
bringing forth food from the earth;
15 wine that
gladdens human hearts,
oil to make their faces shine,
and bread that sustains their
hearts.
16 The
trees of the Lord are well watered,
the cedars of Lebanon that he
planted.
17 There
the birds make their nests;
the stork has its home in the junipers.
18 The
high mountains belong to the wild goats;
the crags are a refuge for the hyrax.
19 He
made the moon to mark the seasons,
and the sun knows when to go down.
20 You
bring darkness, it becomes night,
and all the beasts of the
forest prowl.
21 The
lions roar for their prey
and seek their food from God.
22 The
sun rises, and they steal away;
they return and lie down in their dens.
23 Then
people go out to their work,
to their labor until evening.
24 How
many are your works, Lord!
In wisdom you made them all;
the earth is full of your creatures.
25 There
is the sea, vast and spacious,
teeming with creatures beyond number—
living things both large and small.
26 There
the ships go to and fro,
and Leviathan, which you formed to
frolic there.
27 All
creatures look to you
to give them their food at the proper time.
28 When
you give it to them,
they gather it up;
when you open your hand,
they are satisfied with good
things.
29 When
you hide your face,
they are terrified;
when you take away their breath,
they die and return to the dust.
30 When
you send your Spirit,
they are created,
and you renew the face of the ground.
31 May
the glory of the Lord endure forever;
may the Lord rejoice in his
works—
32 he
who looks at the earth, and it trembles,
who touches the mountains, and they
smoke.
33 I
will sing to the Lord all my life;
I will sing praise to my God as long as
I live.
34 May
my analysis and argument be pleasing to him,
as I rejoice in the Lord.
35 But
may sinners vanish from the earth
and the wicked be no more.
Praise
the Lord, my soul.
Praise
the Lord.
Schweitzer's
commentary is excerpted from one of his sermons. “When our wills are united
with the will of God, we never take all the goodness and beauty and people and
things in life for granted, but we accept them again and again as a gift from
him—given that we may serve him with still greater joy and thank him for it...”
In
his book, Reverence for Life,
Schweitzer often reiterates his thesis and theme of an active service to God
through hearing and heeding the words of Jesus. Schweitzer asserts that in such
service we will especially come to know Jesus more and more and gradually
acknowledge him as our master. Additionally, by virtue of increased familiarity
with Jesus, we unite more and more with our fellow humans, confident that as a
unified front we can help bring about the world Jesus sought to achieve.
May
this psalm assist us in gaining perspective on creation, as it so plainly
identifies God as the creator of all things, for our purposes, all life. “The
earth is full of your creatures.” As this passage truly opens the argument of
this book, let the words of this psalm open our hearts and minds to the
magnificence and sacredness of life. May we realize that we are but one of
God's creatures. May we give thanks for our creation, and in giving thanks may
we understand that all life is created by God, all life is under His
protection, doing His bidding. May we realize and accept that His bidding for
us requires that we care and nurture all life.
For
this purpose were we made, that through us and our actions His creatures might
live as they were intended to live, free from human domination and devastation,
able to enjoy their lives to the fullest extent. May this psalm remind us that
we all live and die, that we all inhabit this earth together, and that harm to
any of God's creatures is a rebuke of God's kindness and love. Such a rebuke is
an unforgivable sin. As the psalm ends: “...may sinners vanish from the earth
and the wicked be no more.” May we in our thoughts and deeds seek to show care
and compassion to all creatures, just as we implore the Lord to show His mercy
to us.
As
we turn our thoughts to God, let us also turn our attention to the requirement
for praying, then acting in unison. While an alteration in our attitudes and
subsequent alteration of behavior must and will start with each of us
individually, let us reflect also on the requisite need for unity. As a large
cadre of believers committed to acting with compassion we can effect change as
no one individual can. So, as we pray and meditate on the gift of life that has
been bestowed upon us, without our asking and without our meriting, let us in
this introductory phase start to contemplate and embed in our hearts and minds
the transformation in the treatment of animals that a united front of
affirmative, active compassion can bring about.
It
takes neither intense thought nor imagination to visualize and understand the
interlocked nature of all life. There is a fine balance to life on earth, and
upsetting that balance anywhere, at any time places life—all life—in peril. For
too long we humans have not only acted with individual selfishness, but we have
acted selfishly as a species. We have blithely and deliberately ignored the
harm that we have caused other life forms on this planet. We have viewed the
world as produced and in existence solely for human life and purposes. Only
recently has that view begun to shift, as the legitimacy of the “butterfly
effect”, as it is now commonly understood, is more and more strengthened with
each environmental catastrophe that occurs. Only recently has some widespread
thought been given to the idea that animals have rights as well, and that we
human animals are called to be guarantors of those rights. May we humans, then,
pray not only to act in concert with each other, but in concert with all life.
More and more may people seek ways of bringing responsible stewardship of the
earth, of all life to bear on all our activities.
Chapter 3
We Ask for Mercy and Learn to Give
It
In
this chapter we discuss the concept of mercy. Mercy is a simple concept. At its
basic level mercy involves the ability of one entity with the capacity to wield
destructive or harmful results on a second entity, but choosing not to do so.
It is an option the first entity need not select, but one it opts for out of
compassion.
One
of the most effective ancient prayers of mercy was the Kyrie. In the Kyrie we
beg for mercy. We repeat three times. Kyrie
eleison, Lord have mercy. Christe
eleison, Christ have mercy.
From
the website fwdioc.org comes the following disquisition on mercy.
“In
reciting the liturgical responses, ‘Lord have mercy… Christ have mercy… Lord
have mercy,’ we become like David, repenting of our sins and asking for God’s
forgiveness. We become like the blind men begging for Christ to heal our own
weaknesses and lack of spiritual vision. We become like the fathers in the
Gospel, pleading for Jesus to act in the lives of those we love. In saying Kyrie eleison (Lord, have mercy)..., we
humbly entrust our entire lives—all our weaknesses, sins, fears and
sufferings—and the lives of those we love, to the merciful heart of Christ.
“As...Thomas
Howard expressed, this cry for God’s mercy sums up all the pleas of a fallen
world. He says, In the Kyrie…we may hear the fathomless cry of the whole race
of man ascending to heaven from the depths. Kyrie! goes up from all widows, and
all dispossessed and brutalized children, and from all the maimed, and the
prisoners and exiles, and from every sick-bed, and indeed from all the wounded
beasts, and, we could believe, from all rivers and seas stained with man’s
filth and landscapes scarred by his plunder. In the liturgy, somehow, we stand
before the Lord in behalf of his whole groaning creation. And beyond the
liturgy: When we hear the groaning of creation, when we see an animal
suffering, or some child or hear an ambulance pass, we say ‘Kyrie eleison!’ as the liturgy has
taught us. We are priests, remember, through our Baptism; and one of the tasks
of the priest is to intercede for others who don’t or can’t pray for
themselves. This mystical entrusting of all humanity and indeed, all creation,
to the infinite mercy of Christ is what we enter into each time we recite the
Kyrie...”
Our
commentary on the concept of mercy comes from Schweitzer as set forth in the
book, The Animal World of Albert
Schweitzer.
“We
can do nothing about the cruelty which exists among nature's living creatures.
We ourselves, however, as people who have learned wisdom, must not train
animals to provide entertainment for us by the cruel murder of their poor
victims.”
Here,
the doctor does acknowledge that cruelty exists in nature, but he adjures all
of us never to add to the already existent cruelty. Rather, he insists that it
is incumbent upon us to demonstrate as much mercy and compassion as we possibly
can muster. Schweitzer recognizes that we humans often, too often, bring pain
and suffering to our fellow creatures, often mindlessly and for no valid
purpose. Because of our actions Schweitzer calls on us to impose a duty on
ourselves to act mercifully wherever and whenever possible.
And
from Animals, Nature and Albert
Schweitzer: “How much effort will it take for us to get men to
understand the words of Jesus, 'Blessed are the merciful', and to bring them to
the realization that their responsibility includes all creatures. But we must
struggle with courage.”
Mercy.
This is our cry to God to be mindful of our weaknesses and to take them into
account in judging us. Even more to the point, the request for mercy is a tacit
admission of the differing levels of power between the requester and to whom
the request is made. It is an acknowledgment that God reigns supreme over us,
that we are indeed, at His mercy.
Animals
stand to us in nearly the same position as we stand to God. Though many animals
are stronger and faster than we humans, through our intellect, our ability to
work in concert, and through our sheer numbers, we are the dominant species on
this planet. A crucial difference—most animals cannot ask us for mercy. By
their very existence on earth, and by ours, animals beg for mercy each day. We
must give it willingly and often, never waiting for a formal prayer or
invocation. They ask to be left unhurt, never needlessly killed or cruelly
exploited, never abused or abandoned, never caged or enslaved. Their cries for
mercy simply ask us to function as stewards of all life on this planet. Mercy
means humans exercise self-restraint and realize that every human action
carries with it consequences for all life on earth.
And
here let us dwell on a theme that will be recurrent in this book: It is not
enough to pray for some kindly quality, mercy in this case. We must pray for
the courage, energy, and ability to act on and bring about the desired state of
affairs. To pray to be infused with mercy is a start, but only a start. Mercy
cannot exist if it is kept in thought alone. Mercy by its very definition
requires positive acts of charity and care. Mercy requires an involvement in
life, that we take an active role. May we pray then, as we ask God to take an
active role in our lives by showing us mercy, to take that same active role
with all beings with whom we are involved. May we pray to act affirmatively, to
help life that we encounter, to ease pain and suffering as much as we can.
Without
ever being asked to do so, let us show mercy in our role of trustee and
caretaker by affording animals a chance to live their lives in accordance with
their nature. Let us be merciful by not hunting, not eating meat, not
destroying habitats, not over breeding or breeding for fighting or racing, by
not abandoning animals we have brought into this world. Above all, let us be
merciful by adopting and living an affirmative duty of compassion, of care. Let
us not only seek to avoid the infliction of harm, but let us positively act to
redress harm where we find it. As we seek protection from God's awesome power,
may we stay our own hand and offer protection to all the animals that inhabit
this planet with us. That is mercy.
Chapter
19
Marching Orders
And now come our final
marching orders. We've learned that a reverence for life, the love and
compassion of the Sermon on the Mount of Jesus made universal, is our chosen
philosophy, our ethos. A reverence for life will guide us in our relations with
all life, especially with other animals, if we allow it to do so. But what are
we to do? Are there indeed marching orders that will dictate our behavior? Is
there a set of written rules setting forth right and wrong behavior between
humans and other animals? Is there a prescribed code of conduct for us that we
can print, frame, and hang on a wall for all to see?
The answer is “No!” A
reverence for life is spiritual, not legalistic. A reverence for life exists in
our souls and hearts, and our brains, too, but not as a codex of laws. A
reverence for life is an attitude toward all other creatures that we must consciously
and continuously choose and strive to follow. It is about having the spirit of
Jesus in us, directing us toward acts of love and compassion. Perhaps Albert
Schweitzer puts it best: “Philosophy wants to imagine ethics as a well-ordered
system of duties and commandments which can be fulfilled… Love cannot be put into a system of rules and
regulations. It issues absolute commands. Each of us must decide for himself
how far he can go toward carrying out the boundless commandment of love without
surrendering his own existence and must decide, too, how much of his life and
happiness he must sacrifice to the life and happiness of others.”
There is a change in the offing that is shifting how
humans view our place in the world. While most religions and philosophies
celebrate the primacy of humans, more and more of us question how this can be.
How can humans be considered in a strictly positive and adulatory light when
the human race through its many depredations has become the supreme destroyer.
The Sixth Extinction is upon us, and it is the result solely and totally of
human action and inaction. Our “rap sheet” is almost too much to bear. We
slaughter and ingest hundreds of billions of innocent animals each year. We
destroy countless habitats to the tune of 160,000 square kilometers annually.
The destruction of each such square kilometer brings with it the attendant loss
of wildlife, all life within that boundary. We over breed domesticated animals
and use them solely for our amusement and profit, tossing them on the dung heap
of existence when we are through with them, when they can not earn another
penny for us. We pollute the biosphere, pollute the land, pollute the oceans,
and even have left our debris in space and on the moon.
Religions, being
anthropocentric as they are, all too often blithely ignore all this carnage in
celebration of the human being. Human responsibility for the Sixth Extinction,
for the harm we have caused the biosphere and all who live within it, is seldom
dealt with by any religion. It is merrily ignored in the name of human
triumphalism, and many people, young and old alike, are realizing that this
state of affairs cannot continue; it is not sustainable. More and more people
have come to the conclusion that the human race is not the be all and end all
of existence; rather, we are a part of life on this planet, charged by our
intellect and organizational capacity with an obligation of stewardship for all
life. We must be guardians of life, accepting a responsibility of an active
compassion for life, rather than its exploitation as usurpers and butchers.
Schweitzer identified this cause a century ago in his philosophy of a Reverence
for Life. What is needed is an ethic of universal love, the marvelous and limitless
love of Jesus' Sermon on the Mount made universal, applied to all life, not
just humans. To quote Schweitzer: “a [person] is ethical, only where life, as
such, is sacred to him, that of plants and animals as that of his fellowmen,
and when he devotes himself helpfully to all life that is in need of help.”
If
religion is to survive and thrive it will find ways of weaving Schweitzer's
Reverence for Life into its ethical and credal fabric. Those religions that
accomplish this will survive and grow in the twenty-first century and beyond.
Those that don't will end up on the list of failures subsumed under the rubric,
”a creed outworn”. Perhaps Pope Francis says it best for our time: “All
creation has an intrinsic value that is independent of its usefulness.” Or
perhaps even better is the message of his namesake, St. Francis of
Assisi: “God
requires that we assist the animals, when they need our help. Each being (human
or creature) has the same right of protection.”
Then how do we deal with
animals? Let's return to the litany of horrid human behavior presented in
Chapter 14. One approach would be to compile a list of “thou shalts” and “thou
shalt nots” and post it for all to see. That is diametrically opposed to a reverence
for life. That simply won't work for many reasons.
One, life is seldom that
simple, seldom a matter of black or white. Two, no list could possibly cover
every situation or give reasonable, actionable guidance for every case. There
are too many possibilities and permutations to be encountered in life to reduce
each one to a written dictum, and most importantly, only a reverence for life
calls upon us to apply love and compassion across the board, acting
affirmatively to render assistance or otherwise better a situation we
encounter. Acting out of conscious love, not out of written commands. A
reverence for life calls upon adherents to get involved in every situation, in
every encounter, not simply avoiding certain behavior or certain occasions but
always choosing to act in a positive way with the welfare of the subject of our
acts uppermost in our minds.
Then, without hard and fast
rules, what are we to do? A reverence for life leaves it up to us. We are
called to acknowledge the inherent value and worth of every life, to view every
life as an end in itself rather than a means for human purposes, to promote and
enhance life rather than take it, restrict it, or abuse it, and to practice
affirmative acts of compassion, caring, and relief of suffering to the maximum
extent we can.
What does all this mean for
you? Simply this: You are, each one of is, an autonomous individual who must
make moral and ethical judgments, sometimes many of them, every day. No one
else can do it for you. Ultimately each one of us is responsible for his actions
or failures to act. Each situation is different, and it calls upon us to assess
the situation with a critical eye, open mind, and compassion filled heart. Take
ownership of your life. Be certain that every act reflects the moral
underpinning of a reverence for life, and do the best you can.
Some broad examples as
regards treatment of animals? Sure. Should I eat meat or animal flesh? That's
your choice, your decision. You must assess the ethics of taking an innocent
life for your wants. You must assess the state of animal agriculture, mindful
of the horrible, often cruel treatment accorded fellow creatures by humans. You
must decide whether, if you are to adhere to a reverence for life as your
guide, you can ingest the product of such life taking and life cruelty with its
attendant degradation of the environment. You must make the same type of
analysis for horse and dog racing, animal parks and zoos, trade in wildlife and
attendant slaughter, destruction of habitats for human wants, animal fighting
and over breeding, and the list goes on as we've previously seen.
And now here are just a few
specific examples of cruelty toward animals that we are called to oppose and
combat. These are excerpts from past ruminations and are presented to give the
reader additional ideas on how to approach and analyze this difficult topic.
Changes in animal agriculture
will result only in response to consumer changes. If meat, dairy, poultry, and
pork consumption decrease, agriculturalists, who are not stupid, will shift to
those crops and foods that consumers are eating. The more that people shift to
a vegetarian or vegan diet, the fewer cattle, dairy, poultry, and pork
slaughtering and rendering facilities we will have. As the number of those
facilities dwindles, presumably the environmental issues they create will
dwindle as well, and humans may yet live another century or more without having
totally fouled our own nest, without having totally destroyed our own earth.
Ah, but there's the rub, for
the earth is not ours, despite anthropocentric leanings to the contrary. Humans
are one species out of millions, called by our incredible intelligence and
equally incredible organizational skill to be stewards of our world. It is high
time that the human race made the transition from usurper of earth's bounty to
its protector. Let us then, particularly young people who will shape the future
of this planet, pledge drastically to reduce meat consumption, not only because
it is good for our health and for our environment, but for the simple reason
that cruel, inhumane treatment as well as any unnecessary killing of a living
thing is wrong.
And that's the most important
point of all. It is galling to note how many people are upset at the trade in
dog, cat, and horse meat outside the United States, but those same people don't
care a whit for the millions of other domesticated animals who are tortured and
butchered right here for our pleasure. This is the most pressing issue for
humanity to deal with; namely, the barbaric, inhumane treatment accorded farm
animals throughout their miserable lives. This must stop. We humans must
evidence a reverence for life, all life, taking those actions that enhance and
promote life, and avoiding those actions that hinder or harm life. In this way,
one by one, we will change not only the practices of animal ag, but our
relationship with all life within the biosphere. Another crucial issue with
regard to treatment of animals deals with breeding. To help guide our thinking,
here is a quick analysis and argument on horse breeding and one of its main
offshoots, horse racing.
With a reverence for life as
our ethos, we need some basic standards to help reduce the number of unwanted
horses and to provide better care for those that are bred. Again, breeders must
first agree that animals are not commodities, but rather are lives worthy of
reverence and compassionate stewardship, meaning that horses shall be bred for
companionship only and only when their proper care is assured. We must have
further restrictions on breeding, which restrictions include at a minimum
casual breeding licenses, a strict limit on the number of times a mare can be
bred, veterinarian oversight and certification of the breeding process, and a
license provision permitting county animal control officials to inspect the
mother, offspring, and facilities where breeding is taking place should those
officials have reason to suspect the horses are not in good health or otherwise
not humanely cared for.
While we push for an end to horse
racing and thereby breeding for horse racing (one of the chief causes of the
unwanted horse population), due to money and memes a reversal of the status quo
is unlikely soon, so let's work for some achievable results. There are tens
(perhaps hundreds) of thousands of unwanted horses from the racing and rodeo
sports that end up slaughtered. Far too many horses, those bred for racing and
in general, end up unloved and neglected. Many more are neglected or otherwise
maltreated before being moved on from the industries that brought them into
being. Horses are costly, so once they become money losers many are
slaughtered, abandoned, or otherwise barely cared for, if at all.
Again, these are creatures brought
into the world largely due to human volition and action, so, at the very least,
we owe something to the creatures we have created for our own needs and then
abandoned when those needs were no longer met. Part of the license fee for
breeding horses must include a sizable amount payable to the county where the
horses are kept to pay for a horse sanctuary. This place would afford all those
horses who are no longer wanted, for whatever reason, a place of safety and
compassion where they can live out their lives. The license fee would also
help pay for vet and farrier care, food, and sanctuary upkeep. Those horses
that could be adopted out should be given that opportunity (with proper
safeguards to ensure the adopting party will care for the horse lovingly and
not ship it directly to the slaughterhouse), but any abandoned horse will be
welcomed and tended to.
A look around any part of the
world, or our beautiful state, will confirm that we humans live in a throwaway
society. When an item is no longer useful or pleasurable, we discard it with
scant heed to the consequences. Sadly this philosophy pervades our dealings
with horses. These animals are viewed as things to be used and then discarded
when no longer useful. We must start seeing these creatures as lives with their
own intrinsic value, and because of that possessing under natural law a right
to exist, to be cared for, and to live their lives to the fullest. As it is we
humans who have brought these horses into this world, we owe them that and so
much more. Under the aegis of a reverence for life, let us treat these horses
with compassion and stewardship all through their lives.
Now let us set forth one
final analysis, one on dog fighting, to help you formulate your own analysis
and subsequent ethos. Dog fighting is an illegal, underground blood spectacle
in which selectively bred dogs fight each other to the death for the plaudits,
pleasure, and remuneration of humans. These dogs undergo vicious, horrific
training that includes beatings, deprivations, and often the injection of
illegal, performance-enhancing substances. They “practice” on smaller dogs,
cats, rabbits, even raccoons until their “trainers” believe they are ready for
the ring. Losers are either killed outright or left to die. Statistics on dog
fights are hard to come by, as this activity is illegal in every state, but
animal groups estimate that there are 40,000 dog fighters in the United States
with some 16,000 dogs dying annually. This means that there are probably
hundreds of thousands of “spectators”, and all these figures may well be just
the tip of the iceberg.
To breed, train, and force an
animal to inflict damage and death on another creature solely for the enjoyment
and financial gain of a few humans is simply abhorrent to all that is decent
and compassionate. It is in complete violation of the philosophy of a reverence
for life, of the belief that all life is sacred, and each life should be
permitted to express normal behavior, not behavior induced and compelled by
exploitative humans. To cause harm in this manner is simply vile and utterly
inhumane. These dogs by the way are usually quite gentle with humans. In fact,
they have enough affection for their human handlers literally to die for them.
To treat these animals as we do is the ultimate betrayal of trust.
Each situation of animal
cruelty cited in Chapter 14 (and the limited examples discussed in the analysis
and argument above) has hundreds if not thousands of current examples. We
picked a representative few to detail the extent of the crisis facing us and to
assist us in bringing a reverence for life to bear on these situations. How do
we handle them?
In each case your duty is to
assess clearly and openly the behavior toward animals by humans, often done on
your behalf. Don't turn a blind eye, engage in wishful thinking or
bowdlerization phrasing to hide the reality of what transpires. Then you must contrast
that behavior with the behavior called for by a reverence for life (love,
compassion, life enhancement and stewardship, the reduction of suffering), and
decide honestly what you will do.
Our marching orders then are
a model of simplicity. Filled with the spirit and buoyed by the words of Jesus,
take the philosophy, the ethos of a reverence for life, and affirmatively bring
it to bear in your world. Show and share the love and compassion of Jesus. View
all life as sacred, as God's handiwork. Seek to utilize our extraordinary human
abilities to enhance life, all lives, and to lessen the suffering of those
lives when and where you are able to do so. As you step out of your door each
day, resolve to put a reverence for life into practice. Do so and you will most
assuredly be helping Jesus complete His life's work. God bless you.
About the Author
Robert Echols is a spiritual author, thought leader, and passionate advocate for animals and all of God’s creation. As the author of For Our Friends the Animals: Cultivating a Reverence for Life, Echols blends Christian spirituality, biblical wisdom, and the moral philosophy of Dr. Albert Schweitzer to offer a powerful message: we are called to protect and uplift all living beings.
A cancer survivor and U.S. Army veteran, Robert's life journey has been guided by service—to his country, his faith, and now, to the voiceless creatures that share our planet. He is the founder and former president of the For Our Friends the Animals Foundation, a nonprofit dedicated to financially supporting animal shelters, rescues, and sanctuaries. Under his leadership, the foundation funded the construction of animal shelters in Florida, putting faith into action and making his life his argument, as Schweitzer once wrote.
Robert frequently shares his message of compassion on LinkedIn, in podcasts, and as a guest speaker throughout the Mobile Bay, Alabama area. With academic credentials from Phillips Exeter Academy, New York University, and Emory University (J.D./M.B.A.), and a past career as an ethics officer and Army JAG attorney, Robert’s voice is both seasoned and deeply principled.
His current writing project is a four-volume spiritual treatise titled For Our Friends the Animals, empowering others to embrace a universal love rooted in Christ’s teachings and a reverence for all life.
“Let my words inspire you to become a steward of the earth and a champion for animals—because the love of Jesus is not just for humanity, but for all creation.”
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