I stumbled across this cartoon
illustrating Christianity's (and to an extent, Judaism's) silence, via
their god's supposed word, on one ethical issue humanity is
increasingly beginning to grapple with -- the treatment of non-human
animals.
This
cartoon obviously refers to the contribution of Western religions to
the issue of 'the ethical treatment of animals' and is slightly
inaccurate even there, exaggerating a little (the bible does ask that
we not hurt animals for fun), and does not recognise the doctrine of
ahimsa (non-harm, or non-violence) propounded in Hindu, Buddhist and
Jain scriptures. Ahimsa, as laid out in those traditions, does not
pertain only to human relationships, but also to our relationship to
all other beings.
There are, of course, many ethical
issues -- regard and treatment of women, treatment of children,
slavery, labour law, sexuality, aggression, genocide, ethnocide, among
others -- we, as evolving, modern humans have thought about, studied,
discussed, debated and, recognising that certain universal rights exist
and that these rights must be protected, have enshrined in law. We have
accomplished most of this in spite of religion, with religion(s) being
dragged, kicking and screaming into the modern age, rather than because
of or through religion. And we have much work left to do.




