Quote:
Originally Posted by
ktea79
Does anyone know if Mother Teresa was a vegetarian or spoke out for loving animals?
Any resources you find would help. I am a vegetarian and in a debate about this with a religious meat-eating family member.
Thanks!
You could ask this person why God created us to be vegan (according to the bible).
I'll quote a couple of my recent posts:
Actually your literal interpretation of the bible is faulty. Animals were not created for our use, according to the bible. I suggest you reread Genisis. And note that right after God gives humans dominion over animals God gives humanity a vegan diet. Right after that God says it's "very good". Read it.
The first time God explicitly allows for the killing of animals for food was in Genisis 9 and at that time the animals were made to be very fearful of humans, a marked departure of the paradise God created in the Garden of Eden. Isaiah envisions a time when paradise will return (the wolf will lie down with the lamb...) -- shouldn't Christians be trying to live out that peacefullness that God created in the Garden of Eden and that God told us would return in time? We cannot be perfect yet Jesus urges us to "be perfect even as your heavenly Father is perfect".
Now you'll say "but Jesus ate fish". Yes, Jesus lived the lifestlye of the people around him. Jesus challenged the people in some areas but not in other areas. Why would he do this? He tells us in John 16:12-13 "I have much more to tell (teach) you but you cannot bear it now". Perhaps that wasn't the right time for Animal Rights teachings. Just as Jesus never once spoke out against slavery. In fact he healed the centurian's slave without demanding the slave's freedom. And for some 1400 years the Christian church also argued in favour of slavery. But then I think the Holy Spirit went to work and changed the hearts and minds of many Christians and an anti-slavery movement gained momentum. And yet all through the bible there is never any teaching that forbids slavery in every form.
and this one where I quote mainly from the Christian Vegetarian Assocation:
Does the Bible support vegetarianism?
The Bible depicts vegetarianism as God's ideal, and the diet conforms to the central biblical principle of steward-ship. In Eden, all creatures lived peacefully, and God told both humans and animals to consume only plant foods (Gen. 1:29-31). Several prophecies, such as Isaiah 11:6-9, foresee a return to this vegetarian world, where the wolf, lamb, lion, cow, bear, snake, and little child all coexist peacefully. Christian vegetarians, while acknowledging human sinfulness, believe we should strive toward the harmonious world Isaiah envisioned-to try to live in accordance with the prayer that Jesus taught us, "Thy kingdom come, Thy will be done, On earth as it is in heaven" (Matt. 6:10).
...
Why did God give Noah permission to eat meat (Gen. 9:2-4)?
Virtually all plants were destroyed by the Flood. Alternatively, God may have allowed Noah limited freedom to express human violence, since unrestrained violence was responsible for the Flood itself (Gen. 6:11-13). Importantly, this passage neither commands meat eating nor indicates that the practice is God's ideal. Indeed, eating meat came with a curse-animals would no longer be humanity's friends: "The fear of you and the dread of you shall be upon every beast…" (Gen. 9:2). While eating meat was not prohibited, it represented a complete break from God's ideal of animals and humans living peacefully together, as depicted in Eden and by the prophets.
and they make the same health point as you do:
Your Health
The  apostle Paul wrote that our bodies are temples of the Holy Spirit (1 Cor. 6:19), and it follows that we should care for our bodies as gifts from God. The largest organization of food and nutrition professionals in the United States, the American Dietetic Association, has endorsed well-planned vegetarian diets. In 2003, the ADA noted, "Vegetarians have been reported to have lower body mass indices than nonvegetarians, as well as lower rates of death from ischemic heart disease; vegetarians also show lower blood cholesterol levels; lower blood pressure; and lower rates of hypertension, type 2 diabetes, and prostate and colon cancer."
http://www.all-creatures.org/cva/honoring.htm