- Joined
- Jul 13, 2015
- Messages
- 14,695
- Location
- Realms of chaos
- Gender
- Male
- Religious Affiliation
- Christian
- Marital Status
- Married
- Acceptance of the Trinity & Nicene Creed
- Yes
His interpretation is based on his conscience. Unless it is severely altered by evil, the conscience of each human finds killing to be wrong, and they would not do it if they were not pressured by external factors, such as hunger, peer pressure, social conditioning etc.
In a world in which meat would cease to be sold anywhere (it would be completely banned from the market), but hunting and access to weapons and bullets was legal, and the supermarkets were always full of every type of fruits, vegetables, nuts and seeds that are good for humans at cheap prices, how many people would choose to buy guns and go hunt in the forests?
Having a personal conviction to do (or not do) something specific is perfectly OK. If you feel, for whatever reason, that you do not wish to kill an animal you have every right to refrain from killing animals.
The problem is that the OP here is telling people that it is unlawful to kill animals - his claim is that this is a universal requirement rather than a personal conviction. If he chooses not to kill animals that is a decision for him but in his endless quest to claim that it is unlawful he is saying nobody else should kill animals either. If there were Scriptural support for such a stance that would be one thing but there quite clearly is no support, as many of us have pointed out. And yet he persists in presenting his one-man crusade as if he had anything useful to back it up.
If, in the course of a general discussion, he had merely posted something along the lines of "I personally don't eat meat because I feel convicted against the killing of animals" it would have been an opinion point and I suspect very little would have come of it.