God Made the Elk, God Made the Hunter

By Darryl Treat

Is it morally wrong to hunt, kill and eat animals? This is the question that animal rights activists have been asking and trying to get America to answer in the affirmative. As a Christian and a hunter, I’ve set out to see if my passion for hunting, passed down through my family for generations, is acceptable in the eyes of the Creator. Were my pioneer and Cherokee ancestors justified in passing down this time-honored aspect of their American culture?

An examination of this ethical question begins by defining the word “moral.” Webster’s dictionary says morals “are or are related to principles of right and wrong and conforming to a standard of right behavior.” As a Christian, I have always derived my standards and principles of morality from the Holy Bible. I wonder where the animal rights activists get their standards and principles?

Does the hunting, killing, and eating of animals stand up to the litmus test of Bible-derived morality? Let me share with you what I have found.

Before we examine specific biblical evidence on this topic, it’s important to know what God says about his own book, the Bible. In the last chapter of the book of Revelation verses 18 and 19 and in Galatians 1:7-10, God reveals his severe displeasure with those who would distort, add to, or delete from his word. The apostle Paul wrote the young preacher Timothy in 2 Timothy 2:15-17, that all the Holy Scriptures were given by inspiration of God to make one completely furnished unto all good works.

For those who fail to understand the reasoning of the Almighty, remember what God said in Isaiah 55:8-9. “For My thoughts are not your thoughts, neither are My ways your ways. For as the heavens are higher than the earth, so are My ways higher than your ways and My thoughts than your thoughts.”

Now that God’s authority on the matter is established, let’s examine his revealed will. A proper discussion must begin in the book of Genesis. In the first chapter, God created the earth and all its inhabitants and God saw that it was good. The last statement is important to note, especially those who needlessly and recklessly abuse God’s creation. God created the earth and saw that it was good.

Let’s keep it that way.

Near the end of the first chapter of Genesis, God ex-plains that man was set apart from the animals, made in God’s image, and told to have dominion over creation. The command from God included the instruction to be fruitful and multiply and subdue the earth. This has turned out to be a great responsibility for humans  one to be handled wisely and not emotionally. In Psalm 8:3-9, David repeated this theme by saying the Creator of all things made man a little lower than the angels and made him to have dominion over the works of God’s hands and put all things under man’s feet.

In Genesis 3:7 Adam and Eve covered their nakedness with fig leaves sewn together. Notice God’s response in verse 21. God, himself, made coats of skins and clothed Adam and Eve. If the Lord God could choose to clothe Adam and Eve with whatever he desired, but chose animal skins, what right do I have to protest another person’s desire to wear furs and leather products? Is wearing an elk robe morally wrong? Not if your morals come from the Bible.

God initially made man a vegetarian as we can read in verse 29 of the first chapter of Genesis. However, God gave new instructions to Noah and his family after the flood in Genesis 9:1-7. In these verses, God says the fear and dread of man will now be on every animal on earth and that every moving thing that liveth should be for food, with the exception of the blood. Remember, God destroyed the world, except for Noah and his family, because of their great wickedness. Now no longer would God require man to be a vegetarian. Is there a connection here?

Reading further, God even gave his chosen people specific instructions for hunters and the proper disposition of the blood of wild game (Lev. 17:13-14). To place a distinction between God’s people and the heathens, God also established food laws. In Deuteronomy 14:2-21, God listed the animals his people would now be allowed to eat, such as sheep and deer, and those forbidden, such as camels and eagles. These food laws remained for hundreds of years until the Christian age when God changed them again at the establishment of the New Testament.

We read of God’s change in the food laws in the book of Acts. In Acts 10:10-16 God tells the apostle Peter that he was no longer under the restrictive food laws of the old law and that once again all animals were clean to eat. The analogy was meant to show that as all animals would now be considered clean to eat, all people were now accepted into God’s family as had been the Jews. When the apostle Peter protested God’s instructions to “Rise, Peter, kill and eat,” God said that what he has declared clean to eat, do not call unclean. Are you going to tell God it’s morally wrong to hunt, kill and eat an elk, or that it’s wrong to raise chickens for our dinner table? I for one will not.

Not to be left out, the apostle Paul explained that no food is unclean unless it personally offends your conscience to eat it, or causes a brother to stumble (Rom. 14:13-15, 21-23). Paul says “Happy is he that condemneth not him-self in that thing which he alloweth.” I can second that statement as my family joyously partakes of the many culinary delights of wild game. Paul also explains in the same chapter in verse two that our vegetarian brothers are weak, and we should show the proper Christian spirit toward them.

Paul writes further on this subject in 1 Timothy 4:1-5. The apostle of God said every creature of God is good and nothing is to be refused, if it be received with thanksgiving. This is a responsibility we should not take lightly.

Those of us who hunt elk or deer with a bow have our own set of antagonists who declare our methods to be cruel. What does God say? In Genesis 21:20, Abraham’s son, Ishmael, was described as an archer and God dwelt with him in the wilderness. When I too am in the wilderness hunting elk, I’m comforted to know that God is with me. However, only Nimrod received the title from God as “a mighty hunter before the Lord” in Genesis 10:9.

We all remember the famous Bible story of Jacob and Esau in Genesis 27. Isaac had plenty of livestock to eat, but had a special love for the taste of venison and commanded his son Esau to take his bow and arrows and hunt and kill venison and prepare it for his last meal before he died. I sure can’t think of a better last meal than venison. Under the old law, God specifically mentioned the native middle eastern deer as a clean animal to eat in Deuteronomy 12.

Just like Isaac, we today could find other things to eat besides animals. We could eat a strictly vegetarian diet and live, but as the Bible shows us, meat is a gift to man from God to be received and enjoyed with thanksgiving. This is explained in Ecclesiastes 5:18-19. The wise man Solomon, who had wealth and wisdom provided to him by God, had meals prepared consisting of both domestic animals and wild game (1 Kings 4:23). Able to eat anything on earth he wanted, King Solomon often chose venison. It was a blessing from God.

Do animals have the same rights as man? Some extremists say it is morally wrong to use animals for pets, in zoos, in agriculture, or as beasts of burden. We don’t have the space to examine the use of animals in the Bible as sacrifices, livestock, beasts of burden, and personal property, but anyone with even a passing knowledge of the word of God knows that these uses were a part of life in the Bible. Did Jesus as a Jew believe in animal sacrifice? Didn’t his heavenly Father initiate the practice?

The Bible doesn’t say if Jesus hunted or not, but we do know that he helped Peter catch fish and then recruited several fishermen to be apostles (Luke 5:1-11). When Jesus fed the 5,000 in Matthew 14 with only five loaves and two fishes, we see his nature revealed. He was not a vegetarian, but the perfect Son of God who followed all the commandments of his father. It’s becoming apparent, that the morality of the Bible and of the animal rights movement are at polar opposites.

In Matthew 6:26 Jesus proclaims the special place of man in the heart of God by saying that we are much better than the animals. After all, the animals were not created in the image of God, only we were. This contradicts the notion that animals have equal or greater rights than man, as some proclaim.

Finally, I’d like to temper our enthusiasm by remembering that God’s creation was created good from the beginning for the use of man, but not the abuse. To wantonly destroy God’s created plants and animals would be a violation of the responsibility God gave us when we were given dominion over creation. The apostle Paul says we can understand God’s creation from seeing it ourselves (Rom. 1:20). Standing high in the Colorado Rockies in pursuit of the majestic elk, I’m in awe of the power of God and his wisdom. Man-kind is so fortunate to have been granted dominion over this beautiful tapestry of life. To destroy it would be to deny future generations the ability to fully understand the greatness of God.

In Proverbs 12:27, King Solomon said the “slothful man roasteth not that which he took in hunting, but the sub-stance of a diligent man is precious.” I couldn’t agree more. Great care is taken in my household when taking the kill from the field to the pot. Our finest cuts of wild game are reserved for our most special guests.

In the same chapter of Proverbs Solomon made another observation, this time about those who own animals. The wise king said that “a righteous man regardeth the life of his beast, but the tender mercies of the wicked are cruel.”

Psalms 104 should be mandatory reading for those who study nature. Verse 24 says, “0 Lord, how manifold are Thy works! In wisdom hast Thou made them all, the earth is full of Thy riches.” No one who makes frequent trips to the deer woods or elk country could dispute that pearl of wisdom. The wise man in Ecclesiastes said there is a time to kill and a time to heal (3:1-8). This poetic truth from God stresses moderation and balance in the world. Extremism on either side of this important issue is out of step with God. I for one want to stay in step with God when I teach my children to hunt, to respect nature, and to practice wise conservation. That’s not too much to ask of oneself. After all, God is watching.

Guardian of Truth XL: No. 15, p. 20-22
August 1, 1996

Under Law To Christ

By Dan King

As a precaution against the possibility that he might be misunderstood on his views about man and his position relative to God’s law, (“as without law,” 9:21), in 1 Corinthians, Paul wrote: “being not without law to God, but under the law to Christ.” He wanted no one to get the impression that man was free from divine rule in his life. Although we have been made free from the bondage of keeping Moses’ law, yet we are still “under the law to Christ.”

One of the sins of man, as viewed from a Bible perspective, is his tendency to break from the yoke of divine law. Jesus portrayed the judgment as a day of great surprise, even of shock, to those who refused to be restricted by God’s government of their lives: “Not every one that saith unto me, Lord, Lord, shall enter into the kingdom of heaven; but he that doeth the will of my Father which is in heaven” (Matt. 7:21). In this same context, he isolated and identified their true crime, that of “iniquity” or “lawlessness” (anomia: a, negative, nomos, law).

As Christians, we are indeed “under the law to Christ.” Our decisions in life must be made in harmony with our king’s will, as he rules us through his law. However, we cannot think that we will be able to live out our lives without some amount of conflict, whether within or without, over this allegiance we have to Jesus. In many and varied ways our loyalty to him and his law is challenged as we make our journey from earth to heaven.

Here are some areas wherein the modern Christian must be on guard.

The Christian Must Not Submit Himself To Human Religious Laws

The world has always been peopled by religious tyrants who would lay claim to our obedience. Charles Manson, Jim Jones, and the Ayatolla Khomeini, are good examples of the most ruthless of such folk. But they come in kinder and gentler forms also. Paul said, “Wherefore, if ye be dead with Christ from the rudiments of the world, why as though living in the world, are ye subject to ordinances, (Touch not; taste not; handle not; which all are to perish with the using;) after the commandments and doctrines of men?” (Col. 2:20-22). Man-made religious laws and strictures which do not derive from the Bible, or which come out of the Old Testament (Gal. 5:1-4) can never properly be the law that directs our lives. Sacred Scripture is the only thing that is “profitable for doctrine, reproof, instruction in righteousness, that the man of God may be complete.” (2 Tim. 3:16ff). We are under law to Christ!

The Christian Must Not Make His Human Family The Final Determinant In His Life

The Lord gave warning, knowing that the closeness and affection which properly exists within the family, can be taken too far: “I am come to set a man at variance against his father, and the daughter against her mother, and the daughter-in-law against her mother-in-law. And a man’s foes shall be they of his own household. He that loveth father or mother more than me is not worthy of me: and he that loveth son or daughter more than me is not worthy of me” (Matt. 10:35-37). We would hope that every family were set upon doing what is right and pleasing to God. But we know that it simply is not always that way. A family may be attached to a false religion, both by membership and by affection. If that is so, then the person who learns the truth must decide to do what he or she knows they must, regardless of what this may mean within the family. God is ultimately our Father, and Jesus Christ our elder brother. Faithful Christians everywhere are our spiritual family. We may hope that our physical family ultimately may come to know and obey the truth, but regardless of their decision, we know what ours must be. We are under law to Christ!

The Christian Must Not Permit Himself To Be Influenced By A Changing Moral Climate

The moral atmosphere in all of Western civilization is rapidly changing for the worse. Every day, it seems, sees some new and more disgusting move in the direction of evil within our society. The people around us have become progressively more lax in their attitudes about honesty, integrity, drugs, sexual license, homosexuality, etc. If we are not careful, we will also be infected by these changing mores of society. Let us re-member that God overthrew the cities of Sodom and Gomorrah and others like them because of these very sins. Moreover, he cursed the Gentiles, and “gave them up to uncleanness through the lusts of their own hearts, to dishonor their own bodies between themselves” and “unto vile affections” and “a reprobate mind” (Rom. 1:24, 26, 28). It would be very easy for us to yield to the temptation to go along with this change taking place in the thinking of our neighbors and friends. But remember: We are under law to Christ!

The Christian Will Not Allow Modern Man’s Loose Government Of Society To Set His Standards For Him

Another thing that is very rapidly changing about us are our laws. Several years ago murder, rape and crimes of violence were punished very harshly in this country. Today the liberalistic thinkers have taken over in our national and state governments. They control our court system, slap-ping the wrists of violent offenders and career criminals. We are afraid to walk the streets in many of our cities, and even feel unsafe in our homes, be-cause we know that these animalistic predators are free to roam and pillage almost at will. To the humanistic elites of our day these people are “poor, hapless victims of society” who de-serve almost endless opportunities at rehabilitation. To God-fearing men and women they are “mere brute beasts who deserve to be taken out and destroyed” (2 Pet. 2:12). The deeper issue is a true lack of respect for human life (Gen. 9:5, 6), and God, in whose image men are made (Gen. 1:27).

In a similar vein, the law has changed with respect to marriage and the family. Laws against adultery, fornication, homosexuality, etc., are rapidly disappearing. Homosexuals are being permitted to adopt children born of normal sexual relationships and raise them up in an environment which is an “abomination” in God’s sight. Divorce laws have become so loose, that families break apart upon every whim of two people. Couples with financial assets have to assume the possibility that they will divorce, and draw up “pre-nuptial” agreements to protect themselves in this likely event! Even members of the church in our time are given to excusing every divorced and remarried individual, ignoring the decree of the Lord Jesus: “Whosoever shall put away his wife, except it be for fornication, and shall marry another, committeth adultery; and whoso marrieth her which is put away doth commit adultery” (Matt. 19:9). The law of man and the Law of God, are sometimes at variance! Remember: We are under law to Christ!

Guardian of Truth XL: No. 16, p. 6-7
August 15, 1996

They Became Fools

By Norman Midgette

“Professing themselves to be wise, they became fools . . .” (Rom.1:22). It may not be the cool thing today to call someone a fool, but if God calls one a fool he is a fool. Fool, in this verse, is a translation of moraino, and you can probably tell what English word comes from that.

Three groups of people are called fools by God in Romans 1. They all became that way when they “refused to have God in their knowledge” (1:28). People who do this do not glorify God, or give him credit or thanks for anything (1:21). In the process of replacing God with their wisdom, “they exchange the truth of God for a lie” (1:25) and “hinder the truth” in every conceivable way through their unrighteousness (1:18). If God was to write a description of the Secular Humanist, as he exists in our day, he could not do a better job than he did 2000 years ago when he revealed Romans 1.

The Idolater/Humanist

The first group of fools is those who worship and serve the creature, rather than the Creator (1:25). Paul wrote, “they changed the glory of the incorruptible God for the likeness of an image of corruptible man …” (1:23). The god of the humanist is man. The gods of ancient idolaters were the images of birds and four-footed beasts, creeping things and some-times a man-like creature. The secular idolaters of today sweep away the stone images and enthrone themselves with their wisdom as the only god there is. They have a controlling grip on the world of education, entertainment, science, and many liberal and secular oriented religions and churches. Evolution is their sugar stick and social revisionism is their aim. Guard yourselves and your children against these fools. They parade in a veneer of wisdom and authority while their life’s work is a crumbling structure of unfounded theories and unprovable assumptions and as empty of truth as the rotting wooden statues of the ancient gods. Let ring in your ears this truth concerning the modern and ancient idolaters, “God gave them up” (1:24). See that you avoid their pride and arrogance also.

The Homosexual

The second group identified as fools by God is the morally reprehensible male and female homosexual. They gave themselves up to “vile passions” or “passions of dishonor” and according to 1:26, 27 they had control of and wilfully directed their life in that path. It is a hollow and baseless claim to try to justify this conduct with, “This is just the way I was born.” God says, “their women changed the natural use unto that which is against nature” (1:26). If you have no control over it you are not responsible for changing it. They had control and chose to change their role which was their’s by the design of their creation.

If one is called a fool by God because of his immoral homosexual conduct, what would one be who tries to justify that conduct as accept able and just an alternate normal lifestyle? Such thinking now permeates our society and our schools. Will your child be told by some teacher this year or next that a homosexual lifestyle is acceptable? Already the media defends it; the theater, television, and stage plays portray it as good and strongly ridicule any criticism of it. Such immorality of fools is self destructive in many ways but greater destruction will be inflicted by God. Look at the conclusion of verse 27. “And likewise also the men, leaving the natural use of the woman, burned in their lust one toward another, men with men working unseemliness, and receiving in themselves that recompense of their error that was due.” God says they are fools and he “gave them up” (1:26). Be careful you do not fall victim to this conduct of thinking.

The Reprobate Mind

These are the fools whose general lifestyle is consistent with refusing “to have God in their knowledge” (1:28). When you look at the catalogue of activities engaged in by these people you have a clear picture of reprobate minds and of many in our generation. Isaiah warned, “Woe unto them that call evil good and good evil; that put darkness for light and light for darkness; that put bitter for sweet and sweet for bitter! Woe unto them that are wise in their own eyes and prudent in their own sight!” (Isa. 5:20, 21). Just as a field, left on its own, becomes filled with weeds so does the mind of one who accepts no direction from God. Justice flounders, morality vanishes, righteousness is mocked and integrity and truthfulness become a bur-den. The criminal becomes the victim and the victim is forgotten. The covenant of marriage becomes a target for puns and frivolity, and the practice of children disobeying and trashing their parents becomes the plot of prime time sit-coms on television. In the reprobate mind the right of abortion on demand becomes law and a public prayer in our schools becomes criminal.

Here is more of the conduct of the fool with the repro-bate mind who refuses to have God in his knowledge. He is “. . . filled with all unrighteousness, wickedness, covetousness, maliciousness; full of envy, murder, strife, deceit, malignity, whisperers, backbiters, haters of God, insolent, haughty, boastful, inventors of evil things, disobedient to parents, without understanding, covenant breakers, with-out natural affection, unmerciful” (Rom. 1:29-31). Many in high and low places consider much of this conduct acceptable. Surely this is no surprise, because when God is erased from the picture who is left to set the standards of morality in society? The answer is, man, of course, and he is going to figure out as many ways as possible to give approval to what he wants to do. Those who are so foolish as to become entangled in this web of secular thinking should remember, “God gave them up.” One with a repro-bate mind is the enemy of God, then and now.

To escape this depraved lifestyle God gives his twofold plan for you in Romans 1:16, 17. The gospel must be believed and obeyed to save you from your past sins (1:16; 2 Thess. 1:7, 8). Then accept this gospel as the standard of righteousness for the rest of your life (1:17; Phil. 1:27).

Before you are two paths: the path of the fool and the path of the gospel. Only you can choose which you will take.

Guardian of Truth XL: No. 16, p. 3-4
August 15, 1996

He Died In My Place

By Gary D. Perry

It was a hot day in South Vietnam in the summer of 1968. I was a young infantry soldier who had been there for three weeks and was beginning only my second day in combat. It was early in the morning when we broke camp. My squad was the last to leave as we walked single file through the jungle. I was the last man until a more “experienced” young soldier came to me and said, “You haven’t been here long enough to bring up the rear, go ahead and move up the line.” So I yielded my position to him and moved until I was three men from the rear. A few minutes later, as we proceeded down a hillside, gunshots rang out. We all took cover and began returning fire. But it was too late the sniper was gone, he had accomplished his purpose. He had killed the last man in the squad.

At the time I was a scared 20-year-old with a whole year of war ahead of me. I found it hard to believe that this young man, who didn’t even know me, took my position and died in my place. As the year went by I had many other close calls and considered myself lucky to get home alive in July of 1969. Over the years I have tried not to think too much about the Vietnam War, but I thought I would al-ways remember the young man who died in my place. But now almost 30 years later I am ashamed to admit that I have for- of God, who died not only for me gotten his name.

There is another man, the Son of God, who died not only for me but for each one of us. “For God hath not appointed us to wrath, but There is another man, the Son to obtain salvation by our Lord Jesus Christ, Who died for us …” (1 Thess. 5:9-10). We par-take of the Lord’s supper upon the first day of each week so we won’t forget him. As Jesus said, “this do in remembrance of me.” Even so there are many who do forget Jesus and what he did for them. Even when Jesus was here on earth some of his followers chose to forget him, “From that time many of his disciples went back, and walked no more with him. Then said Jesus unto the twelve, Will ye also go away? Then Simon Peter answered him, Lord, to whom shall we go? Thou hast the words of eternal life” (John 6:66-68).

Likewise there are many to-day who were Christians, who have heard the words of eternal life and have gone back into the world. They have fallen away, they have forgotten Christ and what he did for them, ” . . . they crucify to themselves the Son of God afresh, and put him to an open shame” (Heb. 6:6). Let us never forget “our Lord Jesus Christ, Who died for us,” “the Son of God, who loved me, and gave himself for me” (Gal. 2:20).

Guardian of Truth XL: No. 15, p. 6
August 1, 1996