Unveiled Artist
Veteran Member
Take your time guys, Im in no rush.
You have to forgive me, but I hope this will be more of an intellectual talk rather than a debate. Its controversial in nature and in DIRs not everyone can participate.
My points are in:
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I want to talk about sacrifice both religious/ritual and just plain killing animals so we can eat.
I was reading this: Animal Sacrifice in Modern Paganism and Haitian Vodou and Animal Sacrifice
The first one talks about how modern pagans view sacrifice and the moral nature of sacrifice in and of itself. The second talks about how Hatian Vodou sees sacrifice and the moral ethics they use to with good intention justify the nature of ritual actions.
Take your time. Both articles are not long.
So, right now Im cooking Chicken. Im going to season it read to eat with vegies and rice. Sounds good. Yet, I come across these sitesa nd it dawns on me those of us who eat meat are participating in a sacrifice of an animal (now thats commons sense, right?)
1. Yet, we shy from animal sacrifice in a religious context. Why?
In the articles, it says that the religious sacrifice, if not more humanely, animals just as farmers do when we later buy our meats from the grocery stores. In ritual, after the animal is slain, it is cooked (of course there are customs that go with this), as Im cooking my chicken right now, and given to the community to eat. The live-force or spirit of the animal was given to the community as, in my interpretation of learning so far, a way of balancing how we see life and death. How the food we eat is connected to how much we are comfortable with death. (This philosophizing can go on for hours, so Ima skip)
Now, if I am correct, in Judaism, Christianity, and Muslim all eat meat at one time or another outside of fasting. But I want to focus on Christianity since that is what I know best and I can get to the point with what I know best. Maybe Jews can help me with context. Muslims, of course, as well. Anyone knowledgle in biblical text is cool; and, Im looking for a spiritual point of view as well rather than academic.
Throughout the Old Testament (and Torah), in Exodus and Leviticus there is a profound use of animal sacrifice to give to god for remission of their sins. I read up to Joshua, so I can quote; but, thats not quite my point.
2. My curiousity peaked as Im cooking this chicken, what if (and this is harsh), I was cooking a human to give it up for sacrifice? How is this different voluntary (which according to the articles, by the priests they find if the animal "is ready" to be sacrified as well as with divination) or not any different than Christ given himself up to god to save others by remission of their sins?
Its the same as the articles when they talk about African traditions and specifically Vodou. However, instead of offering a human sacrifice, they offer up an animal.
That makes a whole lot more sense to me. Its not just because one is a animal and the other is a human, it makes sense because we sacrifice animals four our nourishment (our lives) everyday. With humans we kill or murder daily with in some cases no regards to the lives we kill just who we save in the process of slaughter.
More questions
3. Christians and Muslims, since I know Muslism you two acknowledge the Biblea s Divine, how do you and Christians see human sacrifice in comparison to that of Vodou and that of the Old Testament?
4. Do you see a huge similarity (Christians) that you are asking for remission for sins as a Voudist does of an animal?
5. Does the sacrifice being human and from god make the sacrifice more humane than that of an animal? (Remember, Vodou get permission from god as well and from the spirits before they sacrifice animals)
6. Muslims, how do you feel about this subject? If you consider the divinity of the Bible, then there is some importance in Christ sacrifice that you maybe understand even though you disbelief in the christian claim of sacrificial offerings for sins to please god.
7. Everyone else, maybe you can shed some respectful light in how these two ideas compare.
Recap:
They both come from god
They both are seen as necessary by its believers
They both are used for remission of sins
They both are meant for communion
They both are a means of life
8. Catholics, I was thinking this is why sacrifical offering is offered every Mass. It is completing the meal to which was done in the OT. This is also a comparison of what is done in Vodou and other African religions.
How do you feel about the comparison in addition to the questions above?
Take your time guys. Im in no rush.
**
My points are in:
**
I was reading this: Animal Sacrifice in Modern Paganism and Haitian Vodou and Animal Sacrifice
The first one talks about how modern pagans view sacrifice and the moral nature of sacrifice in and of itself. The second talks about how Hatian Vodou sees sacrifice and the moral ethics they use to with good intention justify the nature of ritual actions.
Take your time. Both articles are not long.
So, right now Im cooking Chicken. Im going to season it read to eat with vegies and rice. Sounds good. Yet, I come across these sitesa nd it dawns on me those of us who eat meat are participating in a sacrifice of an animal (now thats commons sense, right?)
1. Yet, we shy from animal sacrifice in a religious context. Why?
In the articles, it says that the religious sacrifice, if not more humanely, animals just as farmers do when we later buy our meats from the grocery stores. In ritual, after the animal is slain, it is cooked (of course there are customs that go with this), as Im cooking my chicken right now, and given to the community to eat. The live-force or spirit of the animal was given to the community as, in my interpretation of learning so far, a way of balancing how we see life and death. How the food we eat is connected to how much we are comfortable with death. (This philosophizing can go on for hours, so Ima skip)
Now, if I am correct, in Judaism, Christianity, and Muslim all eat meat at one time or another outside of fasting. But I want to focus on Christianity since that is what I know best and I can get to the point with what I know best. Maybe Jews can help me with context. Muslims, of course, as well. Anyone knowledgle in biblical text is cool; and, Im looking for a spiritual point of view as well rather than academic.
Throughout the Old Testament (and Torah), in Exodus and Leviticus there is a profound use of animal sacrifice to give to god for remission of their sins. I read up to Joshua, so I can quote; but, thats not quite my point.
2. My curiousity peaked as Im cooking this chicken, what if (and this is harsh), I was cooking a human to give it up for sacrifice? How is this different voluntary (which according to the articles, by the priests they find if the animal "is ready" to be sacrified as well as with divination) or not any different than Christ given himself up to god to save others by remission of their sins?
Its the same as the articles when they talk about African traditions and specifically Vodou. However, instead of offering a human sacrifice, they offer up an animal.
That makes a whole lot more sense to me. Its not just because one is a animal and the other is a human, it makes sense because we sacrifice animals four our nourishment (our lives) everyday. With humans we kill or murder daily with in some cases no regards to the lives we kill just who we save in the process of slaughter.
More questions
3. Christians and Muslims, since I know Muslism you two acknowledge the Biblea s Divine, how do you and Christians see human sacrifice in comparison to that of Vodou and that of the Old Testament?
4. Do you see a huge similarity (Christians) that you are asking for remission for sins as a Voudist does of an animal?
5. Does the sacrifice being human and from god make the sacrifice more humane than that of an animal? (Remember, Vodou get permission from god as well and from the spirits before they sacrifice animals)
6. Muslims, how do you feel about this subject? If you consider the divinity of the Bible, then there is some importance in Christ sacrifice that you maybe understand even though you disbelief in the christian claim of sacrificial offerings for sins to please god.
7. Everyone else, maybe you can shed some respectful light in how these two ideas compare.
Recap:
They both come from god
They both are seen as necessary by its believers
They both are used for remission of sins
They both are meant for communion
They both are a means of life
8. Catholics, I was thinking this is why sacrifical offering is offered every Mass. It is completing the meal to which was done in the OT. This is also a comparison of what is done in Vodou and other African religions.
How do you feel about the comparison in addition to the questions above?
Take your time guys. Im in no rush.
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