Evangelicals and Animal Stewardship

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Rusty Pritchard

Evangelicals and Animal Stewardship

For over 20 years I’ve been a student of American environmentalisms. The plural is intentional. Environmental concern flows from many springs, and though some of the streams merge, they also divide, so it rarely forms a single channel. Similarly, I’ve seen that there is more than one conservatism at work in America. Given the diversity in political communities I know well, it should have come as no surprise to me to find vast diversity among those concerned with animal welfare. But instead it set me on my heels. In 2009, at the first conference put on by Flourish, the nonprofit I cofounded to help churches embrace and practice environmental stewardship, I was delighted to find in attendance a handful of Christian conservatives that the secular world would have considered anti-environmentalists, particularly in regard to climate issues and energy policy. I chatted in the corridor with Dr. Barrett Duke from the Ethics and Religious Liberty Commission (ERLC) of the Southern Baptist Convention. Duke is a conservative’s conservative. I was grateful he came to our gathering, but I was also feeling a warm glow of self-satisfaction at organizing an event he would attend. Then he asked me what Flourish was doing about animals. Well, I said, protecting the environment certainly includes protecting endangered species, conserving valuable habitat, helping people appreciate biodiversity. But he gently pressed me about our

A Different Shade of Green work on animal cruelty. Cruelty to individual animals. We didn’t have any such work I could point to. In fact, I had made every effort to put plenty of daylight between our work and the work of animal rights activists. I had actively discouraged nascent creation care groups in churches from making an issue of animal welfare, warning them that there was no wetter blanket than criticizing someone’s diet. I had seen it as stereotypically liberal, and I felt creation care needed to escape that label. But here was one of the most outspoken Christian conservatives in the nation, asking me whether we were doing anything about actual animals and not just “species.” He identified a gaping hole, not just in our variety of environmentalisms, but in others as well. Dr. Duke is neither a radical animal rights advocate nor a vegetarian. He is crystal clear on the distinction between humans, created in the image of God, and animals. But over the next two years he introduced me to people who taught me a great deal about the human obligation to mitigate cruelty and show kindness to individual animals, and how it is a necessary part of the creation stewardship mandate I so loudly proclaim. One thing Duke had noticed was that the remaining states where cockfighting was not a felony were states where his organization had significant influence. Through the work of the ERLC, a number of those states now have stronger laws on the books. Through the network of commonsense animal stewardship advocates that Duke introduced me to, I met Randy Craighead, executive pastor of Church of the King, whose New Orleans medical and dental ministry added veterinary services to its urban outreach. Low-income residents lined up around the block to get care for their pets, and the church showed in tangible ways that it cared for whole people—people who love their animals. I visited dog trainers in Atlanta who helped inner-city youth train their pit bulls for obedience and for showing instead of for fighting. I met Wayne Pacelle, head of the Humane Society of the United

States (HSUS), who had befriended Michael Vick, former quarterback of the Atlanta Falcons and a convicted dogfighter. Pacelle and Vick have travelled the country together, as Vick talks with at-risk youth about his former pastime, about being brought low, and about being restored. I met Ben DeVries, graduate of Trinity Evangelical Divinity School and Moody Bible Institute, who runs the blog site NotOneSparrow.com, which has outstanding resources for evangelical Christians who want to understand the biblical basis for animal stewardship. Christine Gutleben, faith outreach director for HSUS, gave me a copy of Dominion: The Power of Man, the Suffering of Animals, and the Call to Mercy (St. Martin’s Griffin, 2003) by Matthew Scully, a Christian conservative and speechwriter for George W. Bush and Sarah Palin. Scully peels back the fig leaves of euphemism and rationalization from the factory farming system, revealing the scandalous abandonment of tradition, honor, and decency that characterizes the industry. Evangelical Christians were among the first to recognize animal cruelty as a modern problem. Anti-slavery statesman William Wilberforce made the prevention of cruelty to animals one of his Parliamentary priorities. Far from a radical liberal cause, animal stewardship is part of an evangelical heritage worth claiming and conserving. HSUS has produced Animal Protection Ministries: A Guide for Churches and a DVD called Eating Mercifully, which includes study guides. They are outstanding resources for churches that want to begin to engage this issue (watch the trailer, download guides, and order at tinyurl.com/293uko7). A natural resource economist, Rusty Pritchard is the cofounder and president of Flourish (FlourishOnline. org), a national Christian ministry that serves Christians as they grow in environmental stewardship, healthy living, and radical discipleship.

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