Dr Suzanna Millar, Chancellor’s Fellow in Hebrew Bible / Old Testament at the University of Edinburgh, reflects upon the relationship between humans and sheep in the Old Testament and explains how compassionate care for animals was taken very seriously by the ancient Hebrews.
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The Old Testament is not known for its animal ethics. It has been
characterised as anthropocentric and as bloody with animal sacrifice. And
yet, it contains glimpses of compassion for other species which I think
should be taken seriously. In this article, I’ll explore two texts which
present examples of humans caring deeply for their sheep.
In 2 Samuel 12:1-4, the prophet Nathan tells a story to king David. He
describes a rich man with abundant livestock and poor man with a single ewe
lamb. This man treats the lamb like a daughter, holding her in his arms and
feeding her from his own cup. Proverbs 27:23-27 addresses a pastoralist,
counselling care for his livestock. English translations often obscure the
Hebrew here, but he is commended literally: “know well the faces of your
sheep and set your heart upon your flocks” (27:23).
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These passages reflect the daily life of Israel’s agro-pastoral society,
where human and animal lives were entangled. Animals shared homes with their
humans and structured the community’s daily and seasonal rhythms. This
created a relational infrastructure where ethics could happen. Humans and
animals depended on one another.
On the one hand, humans depended on animals. The rich man’s “very abundant
flocks and herds” (2 Sam 12:2) and the pastoralist’s sheep and goats (Prov
27:26) gave products and labour throughout their lives. Herds ploughed the
ground for crop production and their dung was collected for pottery,
plaster, fertiliser, and fuel. Sheep provided wool, indispensable for
textile production (27:26). And both sheep and goats offered milk, a vital
source of fat, protein, and nutrients (27:27). The poor man’s lamb (2 Sam
12:4)—though probably too young to lactate—is specified as a ewe, raising a
hopeful expectation of her dairying potential.
On the other hand, animals depended on humans. Most obviously, pastoralists
provided for their livestock’s physical needs. Sometimes they might share
their own food. Scientists have analysed ancient animal dung and found
within in remnants of the cultivated crops that we typically think of as
being human food. In 2 Samuel 12, the poor man hand-feeds the ewe lamb,
sharing his own morsel and cup (12:3), her inability to feed herself
suggesting vulnerability and dependence. In Proverbs, the pastoralist is
commended to observe the animals’ physical condition: to know his sheep’s
“faces” (panim; Prov 27:23) and elsewhere his cattle’s “soul/life” (nephesh;
Prov 12:10).
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But the possible meanings of panim and nephesh go beyond the physical. In
the Old Testament, the “face” and “soul” manifest emotions and desires, and
can even refer to a person’s whole being. To know your sheep’s face is,
furthermore, to enter relationship with him or her. Those who know someone
“face-to-face” enjoy a privileged intimacy (e.g. Exod 33:11; Deut 34:10).
Indeed, activities like shearing and milking are most successful in an
atmosphere of relationship and mutual trust.
The literary art of 2 Samuel 12 also suggests affectionate partnership
between lamb and man. Time is slowed; camera zooms in; we observe the
details as she eats from his morsel, drinks from his cup, lies in his bosom
(12:3). Habitual handling and feeding have been shown to foster
inter-species bonds, and the embrace in the bosom mirrors the closeness
between parent and child, husband and wife. Indeed, animals can become
emotionally bonded to humans and vice versa. Sometimes a lamb latches onto a
human as though to a biological mother, particularly if human care is given
from infancy onwards. Particularly, that is, if the lamb “grows up with” her
human caregiver and is “like a daughter to him” (12:3). The lamb here is
almost adopted as kin.
Such relationships entail emotional involvement from both parties, with
implications for conduct. Proverbs 27 exhorts the human caregiver to “set
his heart upon” his herds—a phrase which can simply mean “consider, think
about,” but which often suggests “consider important, occupy your attention
with.” Equally, it commends him to “truly know” his sheep’s faces (27:23),
using a verb (yada’) which can suggest knowledge deeper than the cognitive,
and a verbal form which underscores intensity.
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We might look here at the sheep’s face with the ethics of Levinas. While
Levinas did not include animals within his ethics, we might extend them in
this direction. Levinas stressed the vulnerability in the face of the Other,
which presents ethical imperatives. He spoke of the “total nudity of [the]
defenceless eyes” which stare at you with the demand “do not kill me.” For
Levinas, this face belongs to the vulnerable, the biblical triad of “widow,
orphan, or stranger,” and its gaze resists your claims to sovereign mastery.
“[T]he face” he said “presents itself, and demands justice.”
Of course, this demand is too often ignored, both in biblical texts and in
the contemporary world. In 1 Samuel 12, a rich man, devoid of compassion,
takes and kills the poor man’s lamb (12:4). In Proverbs 27, the kind
treatment of the flocks is ultimately for human gain (27:26-27).
Nonetheless, we can hear the demand for justice when we look into animals’
eyes. And we can follow the exemplar of the poor man and the pastoralist if
we treat animals as kin and know well the faces of our flocks.
Dr Suzanna Millar is a Chancellor’s Fellow in Hebrew Bible / Old Testament at the University of Edinburgh, UK. She is the author of Genre and Openness in Proverbs 10:1-22:16 (SBL, 2020) and is currently working on a monograph about power dynamics and nonhuman animals in the Books of Samuel.