Whew! Makes me feel better. I had sauvignon blanc with my prime rib the other day, and thought I was hellbound.The old rule was "white wine with white meat and fish/red wine with red meat". That's not true any more.
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Whew! Makes me feel better. I had sauvignon blanc with my prime rib the other day, and thought I was hellbound.The old rule was "white wine with white meat and fish/red wine with red meat". That's not true any more.
Whew! Makes me feel better. I had sauvignon blanc with my prime rib the other day, and thought I was hellbound.
That's true. It goes with football, baseball, hockey, basketball...You can always drink beer. Goes with everything.![]()
Whatever. It's the kill that drives them to the woods. Many of them go alone and sit in tree stands for hours in the hopes of making a kill.I understand Webdog's concern here, but I think people are polarizing on the topic just for the sake of polarizing. Any mature Christian who hunts does not do so because it feels good to kill something. Hunting doesn't just involves the death of an animal. It involves the hunt. Hunting is difficult, requires patience, discernment, and fortitude. Getting food from hunting, fishing, etc, gives one a greater appreciation for how we get food in the first place. It used to be the norm that people had this appreciation. But in the day when most people buy meat products that don't remotely resemble the animal it came from, that appreciation is lost.
To reiterate, a mature Christian who hunts does not do so because it feels good to kill something. Even though it is a sin to take pleasure in killing something indiscriminately, it is not a sin in and of itself to enjoy hunting. There is indeed a difference. That said, there are no doubt some people who hunt because they want to kill something. If they're doing it for that reason, they're doing it for the wrong reason.
None of this pleasure requires a kill, so all these are irrelevant to the topic.So let's look at how the killing of an animal gives humans pleasure.
First of all we will look at hunters...
It is pleasurable to get out into nature
It is pleasurable to have bonds with your fellowman
It is pleasurable to actually "hunt"... the act of finding the animal
Without which the other affore-mentioned pleasures would be rendered anticlimactic and frustrating—this has already been dealt with. Haven't you been paying attention?It is pleasurable to succeed in the hunt... the actual killing
Who's troubled? I'm only evaluating the activity and the motivation thereof according to the Scriptures.(Which may be the only aspect so far that is troubling you, right?)
Like I said, of the twenty-five or so hunters with whom I'm acquainted, only one is in it solely for the meat. It's the idea of a freezer full of venison and the regular partaking thereof that is his motivation. He's not in it for the kill.It is pleasurable to eat the meat... (Can't eat the meat without killing the animal)
You can do that camping, or building a treehouse. Don't gotta kill things for fun for male bonding.It is pleasurable to retell the story of the hunt because of the different aspects of the hunt (for instance, read one of my former posts about my first squirrel hunt with dad... to me, every dad should do something like that with their sons... and in this culture, WV, this is what we do. Also mounting the animal or making a rug, falls under this for it then becomes a talking piece allowing us to talk about the hunt, and raise the fond memories)
Completely off topic.NOW...Non hunters who are not vegans are no different... although you can give me examples of every one except one, of the above by not killing the animals, It is impossible for you to enjoy, get a thrill, or take pleasure in a meal that includes meat unless SOMEONE Kills the animal you are about to partake in.
So, again, the butcher should get a thrill out of sticking pigs? You're sick. I don't think I'd buy meat from a man like that. Would you?So let's say it is a sin to enjoy killing an animal... then this verse would apply to non-hunters who eat meat...
Again, it is impossible to get pleasure from steak, ribs, hamburgers, or any meat unless the animal is killed.. So if it is a sin to get pleasure from killing an animal, it is equally a sin by enjoying the benefits of the kill.
PD: I sure hope your butcher hates his job.
JDF: No, that's different. It's OK for Webdog to pay somebody else to kill animals for his enjoyment, it's just not OK for us to harvest animals to feed our families.
Is that why you take your kills to the locker, because it's run by men who really get a thrill out of cutting them up?
Whatever. It's the kill that drives them to the woods. Many of them go alone and sit in tree stands for hours in the hopes of making a kill.
Let me ask a question: How many of you "hunters" actually track your prey?
That's because I'm closer to it and can see it more clearly.You see a mountain, I see a molehill.
You obviously have a problem with reading comprehension.If hunting or butchering or boiling live Maine lobster disturbs you so much, don't do it.
Whatever. It's the kill that drives them to the woods. Many of them go alone and sit in tree stands for hours in the hopes of making a kill.
Let me ask a question: How many of you "hunters" actually track your prey?
And what of those hunters? What are they in it for? Charity?There are programs where hunters who hunt but do not want to make use of the meat to donate the meat so that it can go to needy families.
And what of those hunters? What are they in it for? Charity?
You just can't get yourself to say that they're in it for the sheer pleasure of killing, can you? Not even when it's painfully obvious.
Google some hunting videos and you might not find it so "weird". To whisper "yyeeesss" while watching a deer with an arrow through it's neck stumble around until it dies is sick. To kill squirrels "to pass the time" waiting for a deer is sick. To wait until 2 raccoon are lined up so you can kill both with one arrow is sick. Justify it how you wish, but the motives of all hunters are not as pure as you claim.I find it very weird to think that hunters have some twisted sadistic motivation to kill animals. That idea reminds of how serial killers get their start....
Google some hunting videos and you might not find it so "weird". To whisper "yyeeesss" while watching a deer with an arrow through it's neck stumble around until it dies is sick. To kill squirrels "to pass the time" waiting for a deer is sick. To wait until 2 raccoon are lined up so you can kill both with one arrow is sick. Justify it how you wish, but the motives of all hunters are not as pure as you claim.
I think it's important to discern between taking satisfaction in hunting, and taking satisfaction in watching an animal suffer. I don't pretend to equate one to another. I've taken my son fishing, and wouldn't think that the satisfaction felt when pulling a fish out of the water is in any way akin to having joy over a fish suffering.
We need to discern between the tow so as not to falsely accuse the brethren. But we also need to discern between the two so as not to take pleasure in an animal's suffering as well.