Throughout the ages, we have accepted killing, violence, and violent behavior as just being a part of life - it's time we change!
By: Frank L. Hoffman
Our society has become so desensitized to the natural sensitivities that God created in our being, that we become callous in the ways in which we respond to our children. In so doing, we can cause severe trauma and destroy our children's developing faith and sensitivities.
At the 1999 NAVS Summerfest on the University of Pittsburgh Johnstown campus, author, lawyer, and lecturer, Jim Mason told of how this occurred in his life.
When Jim was five years old he walked out into the back yard of his farm home in Missouri, and for the first time in his life, saw pigs being slaughtered. He saw their bodies hanging from a tree. What he saw and smelled and heard so traumatized his God given sensitivities that he became seriously ill and suffered nightmares for days, and had to be taken to his aunt's home for a while. Jim says, "I was reluctant to return to the farm. I still have a memory blackout of that time. My last memory is the image of those pigs' bodies hanging from the tree, the tub full of heads, and the blood." For several years after this, this family would also send young Jim to his aunts, when they were slaughtering animals.
The family only recognized that Jim had a problem with "growing up". They never recognized the hardness of heart that they were exhibiting. This conclusion was amplified when Jim was eleven years old. The "men" of the family were going to castrate the calves, which Jim knew was very painful for the calves, for he had previously heard their cries of pain. When he held back from following them, he was told to either go back to the house with the women, or become like the men and go to the barn with them. Here was this sensitive lad being faced with the dilemma of being called a sissy and a girl, or becoming a "man" by being hard of heart.
Today, he says that he should have gone back to the house and learned to cook, but he didn't, he went with the men. Such treatment left Jim feeling very much alone, for in his heart, he knew the truth that animals are sensitive, loving and feeling beings, just as we are. His only real friend became his dog, and the two were very close. When Jim was thirteen his dog died, which left him heart-broken. Jim's family has a long Methodist tradition, and Jim had what he considered to be a strong belief in God. Jim knew that animals had souls and spirits just as we do. He knew it because he observed these beings on their terms, and because of his relationship with his dog. Reaching into his faith, Jim reconciled his sorrow with the fact that he would once again see his friend in heaven. When he went to his pastor and asked for confirmation of his conclusion, his pastor looked sad, but told him that animals don't go to heaven.
Immediately, Jim's faith was shattered. Better this pastor had tied a millstone around his neck and drowned himself than do such injustice to this sensitive child. And this pastor is not alone in his actions. Jim's family members also have participated in this violence to Jim's faith and sensitivities. It's as we are told in Matthew 18:1-1-7...
1. At that time the disciples came to Jesus and asked, "Who
is the greatest in the kingdom of heaven?"
2. He called a little child and had him stand among them.
3. And he said: "I tell you the truth, unless you change and become like
little children, you will never enter the kingdom of heaven.
4. Therefore, whoever humbles himself like this child is the greatest in the
kingdom of heaven.
5. "And whoever welcomes a little child like this in my name welcomes me.
6. But if anyone causes one of these little ones who believe in me to sin,
it would be better for him to have a large millstone hung around his neck
and to be drowned in the depths of the sea.
7. "Woe to the world because of the things that cause people to sin! Such
things must come, but woe to the man through whom they come!
(NIV)
Nowhere in the Bible are we told that animals don't go to heaven. To the contrary, we are told that they are living souls just as we are.
Even if this pastor didn't fully understand this, he could have said, "The Bible doesn't tell us, but we can hope and pray that it's true. Would you like me to pray with you?" But this pastor didn't do this. Our societal influences had so corrupted this man's faith and sensitivities, too, that he was likewise blinded to the truth.
Jim has since turned his attention to helping people become more loving and compassionate toward all of God's non-human creatures, but he has never returned to the church from where he saw much of this hardness of heart coming.
How long are we going to continue to shoot ourselves in the foot by sanitizing violence in our society?
Jim Mason is the author of An Unnatural Order: Why We Are Destroying the Planet and Each Other.
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