Mary Albert Darling, SARX: For
All God's Ceatures
August 2018
We are to remember what is importing by telling the stories that are real, not the stories we want others to believe are real. There is a theory called “persuasion via mere exposure” which states that we can be persuaded simply by continuing to see and hear the same message again and again. Advertisers know this and implement it every day. We can do the same. We must not forget to remember to tell the stories that lead to more loving, ethical treatment of animals.
Years ago, I was with a group for an early American educational weekend. We were to experience part of life as early settlers did, including the making of meals from start to finish. In preparation for supper, our group was told we had to kill a chicken. We were all expected to be there, whether or not we were directly involved in the killing and prepping of the chicken for the evening meal.
There were a variety of immediate reactions from the group, ranging from
I’ll do it to I can’t watch. I won’t go into the details, except to say that
after the chicken had been killed, there was mostly silence, except for two
group members who had moved away from the group, and were quietly crying.
After a few minutes, some group members expressed how troubling it was to
watch the chicken be killed and that they would not be eating any of it at
supper. Because of the preparation involved in readying the chicken, it
would be several hours before we ate. When supper time came, much later than
the group had anticipated, those who were adamantly opposed to eating the
chicken, ate it.
Even though this weekend experience was several years ago, I have thought
about it several times since. Those who said they would not eat the chicken,
made it clear it was because the killing was so hard to watch. What they had
previously experienced with eating chicken had not included all that was
actually involved in farm to table processes, much less the visual and
auditory experiences of slaughterhouse to table processes.
But, as the afternoon went on, they changed their minds. Why? I propose
that it was because they forgot to remember. They forgot to remember what
they saw, heard, thought, felt, and decided during a significant learning
event. Instead, other competing desires surfaced in the time that elapsed.
In this case, it was hunger. The further away the group members got from
this possible value-shifting event, the easier it became to downplay the
event, and even forget.
Remembering is crucial for any kind of change and has strong implications
for the well-being of God’s creation. It is so important, that is shows up
early in Biblical accounts. In Deuteronomy 6:4-9 (NIV) we read:
Hear, O Israel: The Lord our God, the Lord is one. Love the Lord your God with all your heart and with all your soul and with all your strength. These commandments that I give you today are to be on your hearts. Impress them on your children. Talk about them when you sit at home and when you walk along the road, when you lie down and when you get up. Tie them as symbols on your hands and bind them on your foreheads. Write them on the doorframes of your houses and on your gates.”
These verses tell us that after giving the people of Israel the
commandments, God didn’t expect them to remember. There were too many
competing values and desires for God’s people to stay focused on what was
most important for living out what it means to love God and others. The same
is true today. We can strongly desire to love, and therefore care for all of
God’s creation, and that desire can manifest itself in a sincere commitment
to not eat meat. But then time passes, and we can forget to remember the
importance of our commitment and why we made it.
It is not only making a commitment to remember that is key to how we care
for animals: how we remember is crucial to staying committed. In the
Deuteronomy verses above, God gave very specific ways to remember: talk
about them—all day. Talk about them when we get up, when we go about our
day, and when we sit at home, including when we eat together. Because the
oral tradition of storytelling was historically how people best remembered,
we can assume that telling stories played a crucial role in talking about
how to keep God’s commands.
I wonder what would have happened that day if our group had continued to
talk about the killing of the chicken, bringing in all of our senses, as any
good story does. What would have happened if together we remembered what we
saw, and heard, and smelled? I wonder if the retelling of the story as we
got closer to the meal would have reminded those who did not want to eat the
chicken to keep that commitment.
We are to tell stories—including, and at times especially, the
uncomfortable ones—not only for others, but for ourselves. Our stories help
us remember what is important to us and thereby stay with the reality of our
choices. Recently I saw a semi-truck with a beautiful, serene landscape
painted on the side, a carton of eggs highlighted in the foreground. Viewers
were invited to buy those particular eggs through association with the
visuals surrounding the carton. Nowhere on the carton did it say the eggs
were from free range chickens, which most likely means they were not. As the
truck went by, I wondered how many people would buy those eggs if instead,
the picture was of an unsanitary piece of land with thousands of chickens so
crowded together that they could not move.
We are to remember what is importing by telling the stories that are real,
not the stories we want others to believe are real. There is a theory called
“persuasion via mere exposure” which states that we can be persuaded simply
by continuing to see and hear the same message again and again. Advertisers
know this and implement it every day. We can do the same. We must not forget
to remember to tell the stories that lead to more loving, ethical treatment
of animals. If we tell these stories when we get up, when we go out, and
when we prepare to sit at the table together, we will help God’s intended
vision for loving, peaceable relationships–among all of God’s creation–to
come on earth, as they are in heaven.
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