»The Prophet« No.
15
Animals Lament
– The Prophet Denounces!
Two Cosmic
Gods,
the God of Moses and
the God of Jesus,
or One Changeable God?
For in the day that I brought
them
out of the land of Egypt,
I did not speak to your fathers or command them
concerning burnt offerings and sacrifices.
But this command I gave them,
‘Obey my voice, and I will be your God,
and you shall be my people;
and walk in all the way that I command you,
that it may be well with you.
’ But they did not obey or incline their ear,
but walked in their own counsels
and the stubbornness of their evil hearts,
and went backward and not forward.
From the day that your fathers came
out of the land of Egypt to this day,
I have persistently sent all my servants,
the prophets, to them, day after day;
yet they did not listen to me,
or incline their ear, but stiffened their neck.
They did worse than their fathers.
(Jer: 7:22-26)
„For I, the Lord, do not change
…"
(Mal. 3:6)
„The life in God includes not
only one’s neighbor,
but also all other forms of life like animals, plants,
minerals and stones; for all Being bears the life, God."
(This is My Word, p.788 )
Table of
Contents
Preface
God’s Word the Day before
Yesterday, Yesterday and Today –
Truth or Not? God Rehabilitates Moses Through Further Prophets
Church Teachings: A Dead End
"You shall ..." – God Respects
the Free Will of His Children
Jesus of Nazareth Spoke Up for
the Animals.
Testimonies from "This Is My Word"
The Spirit of the Books of
Moses Blows in the Churches Today.
Parallels to the Bloody Rituals of Voodoo Witchcraft
Jesus Was Opposed to All Forms
of Bloodshed
"... shall be cut off." The
Deadening of the Conscience. Or:
How to Become Servile to the Priest’s Power
Ceremonial Sacrifices "as the
Lord commanded Moses."
In the Old Testament the Causal Law Was Known.
Jesus Was Against Animal
Sacrifice
The New Testament "fulfills"
the Old and "sheds light" on It.
Both Are the "true word of God." Millions of Victims of the Church
Martin Luther – Life and
Teaching in the Christian Spirit
of Love for Neighbor?
What a Person Does to Another,
He Does to Himself."
What does the Animal Feel in Its Situation?
The Animal, a Basic Commodity and Consumer Good
The God of the Times.
"Fulfillment" of the Old Testament in Our Time:
Sexual Child Abuse by Priests. In the Footsteps of the Nazarene
or in Those of the Church Authorities?
"Kill" or "Murder?" Jesus
Fulfilled the Law and Deepened the Teaching
Instructions on Violence and
War in the Old Testament –
Jesus: "Love your enemies." Jesus Rebukes the Hypocrisy
of the Scribes and Pharisees
Pomp and Ceremony in Ordaining
and Clothing
Priests in the Books of Moses
The Sacrifice of Redemption
that Jesus Brought. The "Scapegoat"
The First Early Christians
Knew No Ceremonies
Paul Overset the Living
Original Christianity, Falsified the
Teachings of Jesus and Laid the Foundation for a State Religion
and Externalized Church of Rituals
Constantine: Collaboration of
Church and State. A Further
Departure from the Teachings of Jesus – The State Church,
an External Religion of Power.
The Holy Scripture – Old
Testament and New Testament –
"Inspired by the Holy Spirit"
"For I the Lord do not change
... " Divine Words
Against Animal Sacrifice Through the Prophet Moses
In the Catechism of the
Catholic Church:
"God has given man dominion over the animals ..."
Use of Animals – But "not
divorced from respect
for moral imperatives." "You should not love animals"
The Status of Animals in the
Protestant-Lutheran Faith
"Lamb of God" – The Butcher, a Secularized Priest?
Eating Meat – God’s Concession
to Human Weakness?
Did Jesus Eat Meat?
Statements About Animals in
the Protestant-Lutheran Catechism
Jesus of Nazareth on the
Subject of "Animals"
in the Christ-Revelation "This Is My Word"
Animals Lament – The Prophet Denounces
This Is Cruel Man
Preface
Anyone who reads
the title of this new edition of "The Prophet" will probably ask:
What does the question "Two gods or one changeable God?" have to do
with what the animals must endure in our time? Are not both aspects
of the subject on entirely different levels?
But anyone who
goes after the causes of the suffering of animals – which are
disdained, enslaved, reduced to a basic commodity and consumer good
– will certainly come upon roots that lie in the religious practices
of ancient times, of the Old Testament. The term "religious
practices" already gives us pause, for religion is the sphere of
communication with God and the divine. That this contact was aspired
to or achieved by those responsible for the "practices" of ancient
times must be put into question.
In what
you will read on the following pages, not only the prophet speaks
(although there is no
dialogue with a contemporary this time), but many facts speak as
well: many testimonies in word and image. They speak to us – and may
the one who has ears to hear, listen! They will give us much to
think about, and whoever uses his mind, for him a light may turn on.
They will put questions to us, and whoever has a heart that still
feels will sense the message. What lessons we draw from this and
whether we reach a decision that is followed by action is up to each
one of us.
God’s Word the Day before Yesterday,
Yesterday and Today –
Truth or Not? God Rehabilitates Moses
Through Further Prophets
2000 years have passed since Jesus of Nazareth. The
Son of God came to us as a human being, as the Son of Man, to bring
us the message of God, His Father, who is also our Father. The
message that Jesus brought us from God, His and our Father, is
love.
The path to love begins with the reconciliation among people and
between people and animals and Earth. This is the only path for man
to find unity with God and His entire creation, including the All,
the cosmos.
God is the love. And so, His infinite being is love. Jesus spoke to
the people that His Father and He, Jesus, the Christ, are
one. Jesus wanted to tell the people that His words
are the truth which comes from heaven, from God, His Father, who is
also the Father of all people. Jesus did not distance Himself from
the people, instead regarding them as equals, sons and daughters of
God. He said: You, therefore,
must be perfect, as your heavenly Father is perfect.
(Mt. 5:48). And He gave us the
prayer which begins with the address: Our Father, who art in
heaven … or, Our Father in Heaven …
Jesus gave us, among others, the following important pointer, which
is also handed down in the Bible:
Think not that I have come to
abolish the law and the prophets; I have come not to abolish them
but to fulfill them. For truly, I say to you, till heaven and earth
pass away, not an iota, not a dot, will pass from the law until all
is accomplished. Whoever then relaxes one of the least of these
commandments and teaches men so, shall be called least in the
kingdom of heaven; but he who does them and teaches them shall be
called great in the kingdom of heaven.
(Mt. 5:17-19)
In these words, Jesus spoke of the eternal law, and
therefore of the eternal, unchangeable God. He unequivocally
expressed that the prophets sent by God spoke truly, that in the
prophetic word they proclaimed the truth that is God.
Comparing the Books of Moses in the Old Testament
with the teachings of Jesus very quickly raises the question: Did
Jesus speak the truth – also when He said that He would fulfill the
words of the prophets? Or is the truth found in what can be read in
the "Books of Moses?" And what about the prophets who came after
Moses? Their statements differ in content in many instances from the
words of Moses handed down to us; at times they contradict them. Or,
do several different gods speak through the prophets of the Old
Testament? And Jesus taught us about another God, different from the
"God" who, for instance, spoke through "Moses."
Anyone who thinks that the "Christian" churches have
a convincing answer and that they can help him overcome confusion
and uncertainty in order to reach clarity and sureness will be
disappointed: The churches essentially explain that every word in
the Bible is the truth of God. This means that God’s words through
Moses are recorded authentically in the Bible. According to this
reasoning, "God" commanded us, among other things, to kill animals
in bloody, cruel sacrificial offerings and to present them to Him.
Certain people, the priests, were supposedly selected by Him, the
Lord, to perform the sacrifices in minutely prescribed rituals, "as
Moses was commanded by the Lord."
If we were following church teachings, this would be
the truth.
But what about the other Old Testament prophets – Amos, Isaiah,
Jeremiah, and many others – through whom God spoke against burnt
offerings, sacrifices, and the like? Jesus, the greatest prophet of
all times, also spoke against the statements and instructions that
God supposedly gave through the prophet Moses.The contradictions in
these different "statements of God" are clearly apparent. But church
teaching still insists that both are the truth?
Let us take a look at the different images of God:
Jesus taught us about the God of the Ten Commandments, who is a
kind, wise God, a God of love and reconciliation, a Creator who is
for the life of animals, yes, for all of nature.
The "God" of the Books of Moses by comparison is a hard, cruel and
brutal God, who inflicts heavy punishment upon people, even
punishment by death, above all who sees to it that the animals are
tortured and butchered in bestial ways, in order to then be appeased
by the smoke rising from the burnt offerings. Did the "God" of the
"Books of Moses" in the Old Testament with His instructions on cruel
practices ignore the God of the Ten Commandments?
Time and again the question is put to us: Is the God of the Old
Testament – above all the God of the "Books of Moses"– another God
than the God of the New Testament? If it is indeed one and the same
God then either the Old Testament – particularly the "Books of
Moses" – must have been falsified, or Jesus did not speak the truth.
Or is God perhaps changeable?
Issue No. 13 of
The Prophet (April 1998), a dialogue
between the prophet and experts on Catholic and Protestant theology,
has already explored this question. But the question is raised again
here with a particular view to animal sacrifices.
The first Original Christians
were not burdened by such questions. To them it was clear that the
word, the teachings, the message and life of God’s Son, Jesus, the
Christ, is the authentic word of God and the authentic will of God
for people and souls and therefore, the measure for all that had
been and would be presented as God’s word at other times and other
places.
Today, we would have no reason to ponder the question "God’s word
yesterday and today – truth or not?" – in fact, there would be no
need for God to send another teaching prophet to Earth – if, yes,
if, original Christianity had been able to sustain its orientation
toward Jesus, the Christ. But it was not able to sustain this
orientation for long and the result is that the demon in what has
been attributed to Moses, although corrected by Jesus in many
respects, is still effective today in a deeper and more "global" way
than many realize. But, what a person is not aware of can influence
and control him.
God is love, kindness and
gentleness. He does not need to be placated by cruel pagan customs.
But how then did it come to the false statements and instructions in
the Books of Moses? Who had an interest in falsely attributing to
Moses, for example, the orders for bloodthirsty pagan practices? God
Himself gives the answer; much later He spoke through the prophet
Jeremiah:
For in the day
that I brought them out of the land of Egypt, I did not speak to
your fathers or command them concerning burnt offerings and
sacrifices. But this command I gave them, ‘Obey my voice, and I will
be your God, and you shall be my people: and walk in all the way
that I command you, that it may be well with you.’
But they did not obey or incline their ear, but walked in their own
counsels and the stubbornness of their evil hearts, and went
backward and not forward.
From the day that your fathers came out of the land of Egypt to this
day, I have persistently sent all my servants the prophets to them,
day after day; yet they did not listen to me, or incline their ear,
but stiffened their neck. They did worse than their fathers.
So you shall speak all these words to them, but they will not listen
to you. You shall call to them, but they will not answer you. And
you shall say to them, ‘This is the nation that did not obey the
voice of the Lord, their God, and did not accept discipline; truth
has perished; it is cut off from their lips ...’ (Jer. 7:22-28)
Thus, through Jeremiah, God exposed the falsification of the "Books
of Moses" and with this, the prophet Moses was rehabilitated.
Moses is also being rehabilitated in our time, on the one hand by
modern Biblical research, which has proven that God’s word through
the mouth of Moses is not authentic as read in the Old Testament,
and that instead, the text was much more deliberately altered and
"edited"; the researchers agree in attributing to the priests large
parts of the Bible’s handed-down "final version."
But that is not the only point that speaks in favor of Moses. The
highest "authority," the primordial intelligence, all-wisdom and
justice, the Spirit of the Christ of God through His prophetess of
this time, gives clear testimony in Moses’ favor in the great work
of revelation: "This Is My Word. Alpha and Omega. The Gospel of
Jesus, The Christ-Revelation which the world does not know." Among
other things, the following is written there:
Moses neither ordered nor condoned the sacrifice of animals.
However, he did not interfere in the satanic will of those who
wanted to eat meat. He taught and instructed them that the
consumption as well as the sacrificing of animals is sin. But since
the stubborn Israelites insisted on doing it, Moses had to be
silent; for the Israelites, too, were children of God and had their
free will. They saw everything only through their sin and for this
reason, considered the silence of Moses as approval.
(p. 581)
The Spirit of God confirms
several times in His mighty revelation that Moses was a faithful
servant of God who faithfully gave the word of God to the people of
his time. God thus again rehabilitates Moses.
Those who read God’s words in Jeremiah with the heart will be
convinced that the "Books of Moses" must be the books of the caste
of priests at that time, who ascribed their ideas, their cruel,
murderous, pagan cults to the teachings of the prophet Moses.
Apparently, the priests wanted to continue to practice what was
common to the pagan religions of that time and what the Israelites
had brought with them from earlier times before their enslavement in
Egypt.
Church Teachings:
A Dead End
The question in the title of this
edition of The Prophet,
"Two Cosmic Gods, the God of Moses and the God of Jesus, or One
Changeable God?" clearly states:
For I, the Lord, do not change …
(Mal. 3:6)
From what has been said it follows that the Church’s
statement,
that the Bible is in all its
parts the direct, true word of God, must be wrong.
In the following extensive exposition the light of truth now shines
– as if through the varying facets of a cut and polished crystal. It
shines into the impenetrable mixture of truth and lies, which
produces confusion in many heads, and, in countless hearts, triggers
hopelessness, despair and a sense of being lost. This impenetrable
mixture was also the decisive influence in a development that
culminated in the mechanism of pressure and deceit that calls itself
the "Christian Church."
... the truth
will make you free (Jn. 8:32), said Jesus
of Nazareth. God’s word has always been the light of truth, which He
gave to people through light-messengers of heaven, so that they
could become free of their burdens, free from internal or external
servitude, from bindings and coercion. Since always, the opponent of
God has been the enemy of the truth and of the good. He was and is
trying to darken the light. To this end he did and does use any
means, and the abuse of the name of God and of Jesus, the Christ,
proved to be one of the most cunning means – today, we would say the
most psychologically effective means – to poison the hearts of
believing, God-fearing people, to bind their souls and to render
them vulnerable to lies and deceit, to the non-divine.
"You
shall …" –
God Respects the Free Will of His Children
God, the truth and the light, is
unchangeable. Jesus, the Christ, taught this time and again. In the
Ten Commandments, which God gave to the people through the prophet
Moses, we also experience the God that Jesus, the Christ, showed us,
and who said nothing of all those things supposedly commanded by the
"God" in the "Books of Moses."
In the Ten Commandments, God leaves everybody free to keep His
commandments, or not. God forces no one. God says: "You shall." In
the "Books of Moses," on the other hand, the "Old Testament God"
gives mandatory instructions; He does not respect His children’s
free will. In the Ten Commandments, God teaches us people neither
cruelty nor killing, neither the murder of human beings nor the
slaughter of animals. Had God, the Eternal, commanded all the things
contained in the so-called "Books of Moses," He would have sinned
against His own commandments, and He would consequently be a sinful
God.
Many people might object and say that killing is permitted, only
murder is not, because "You shall not kill," according to the latest
theological thought, means "You shall not murder." (The Ten
Commandments were changed accordingly in the 1985 edition of the
German New Jerusalem Bible. But if this were true, Jesus would have
given the wrong advice to a young man who asked him: Master, what
good deed must I do, to have eternal life?
Jesus told the young man in the same edition of the Bible: Why do
you ask me about what is good? There is only one who is good. If you
would enter life, keep the commandments. He then asked him, Which
ones? And Jesus answered: You shall not kill, You shall not commit
adultery, You shall not steal, You shall not bear false witness,
Honor your father and mother, and, You shall love your neighbor as
yourself. (Mt. 19:17-19)
Jesus said: "Keep the commandments" and admonished the young person:
"You shall not kill." Jesus did not say: "You shall not murder." He
also did not say: "You shall only kill under exceptional
circumstances."
Jesus of Nazareth Spoke Up for the Animals.
Testimonies from "This Is My Word"
Jesus made no distinction between human beings and animals; for the
commandment said and still says today: You shall not kill. It is a
general statement which means: We should kill neither human beings
nor animals.
In This Is My Word we read among other things what Christ said and
made clear to the people during His time on Earth, also regarding
the treatment of animals.
As Jesus of Nazareth, I spoke to many people about the law of life
as well as about the animals which, like human beings, feel pain,
grief and joy. Just as man should not be against, but for his
neighbor, so should he also be for the animals and bear
responsibility for them, because they serve man.
I taught people again and again that the animals, too, are creatures
of God, which man should not disdain, but should love. The one who
beats and tortures them will one day experience the same or similar
thing on his soul and on his body. For, what a person does to his
fellow men and to his fellow creatures, the animals, he does to
himself. (p. 421)
The Bible reports that during the "feeding of the five thousand,"
Jesus gave the assembled people bread and also fish. According to
Mark we read: And taking the five loaves and the two fish he looked
up to heaven, and blessed, and broke the loaves, and gave them to
the disciples to set before the people; and he divided the two fish
among them all. (Mk. 6:41)
Some may ask, "Are fish not also animals?" In This Is My Word we
read what really happened:
My disciples brought Me bread and grapes to be multiplied. On that
day, dead fish were also offered to Me in order to be multiplied. As
I took this dead substance into My hands, I explained to the people
that the power-potential of the Father, the high power of life, was
gone from it for the most part and that I would not create live fish
so that they be killed again.
I explained to the people that life is in all life forms and that
man should not kill them deliberately. The people, especially the
children, looked at Me very sadly. They could not understand Me,
because they lived from fish, bread and little else, for the most
part. And then I spoke to them in the following sense: The energies
of the earth are still maintaining the dead fish. And so I will not
give you living fish from the Spirit of the Father; but from the
energy of the earth, I will create for you fish that are dead, that
is, poor in vibration. They will never bear life and cannot be
killed. I will show you how living things taste – bread and fruits –
and in comparison with them, the taste of dead food.
And from the energies of the earth, I created for them fish which
bore little spirit substance. I gave them the dead fish and, at the
same time, I offered them bread and fruits to eat, so that they
could recognize the difference between living and dead nourishment,
between high-vibrating and low-vibrating food. In this and similar
ways, I taught the people. (pp. 371-372)
We can see how carefully, understandingly and sympathetically Jesus
approached His fellow man and how He brought the laws of God to life
for them in specific situations.
In This Is My Word Christ also gives us the following pointers:
The one who loves his neighbor selflessly will neither do violence
to him, nor kill him. And the one who loves his neighbor selflessly
will not deliberately kill animals either. The one who respects man
and animal has no warlike designs, because he respects the laws of
God to which belong the laws of nature, too. The one who strives to
actualize the laws of God will refrain from eating meat more and
more and will gratefully accept the gifts of the earth, that is,
that food which comes from God for His human children. (p. 467)
As Jesus, Christ spoke up for the animals wherever He could. It is
not surprising that little can be found about this in the Bible,
since it was not in the interest of the clergy that came after
Christ to teach the people in the spirit of Jesus of Nazareth, but
to teach them only according to their spirit, to the church
institution striving for earthly all-power. Therefore, the aspect
"animals" was not included in the New Testament of the "Holy
Scriptures," nor was Jesus’ commandment to abstain from eating meat.
Let us read on in This Is My Word how Jesus reacted to the suffering
of animals.
1. And it came to pass that the Lord departed from the city and went
into the mountains with His disciples. And they came to a mountain
with very steep paths. There they met a man with a beast of burden.
2. But the horse had collapsed, for it was overladen. The man struck
it till the blood flowed. And Jesus went to him saying, "You son of
cruelty, why do you strike your animal? Do you not see that it is
much too weak for its burden and do you not know that it suffers?"
3. But the man retorted, "What have You to do therewith? I may
strike my animal as much as it pleases me, for it belongs to me; and
I bought it with a goodly sum of money. Ask those who are with You,
for they are from my neighborhood and know thereof."
4. And some of the disciples answered, saying, "Yes, Lord, it is as
he said, we were there when he bought the horse." And the Lord
rejoined, "Do you not see then how it is bleeding, and do you not
hear how it wails and laments?" But they answered saying, "No, Lord,
we do not hear that it wails or laments."
5. And the Lord became sad and said, "Woe to you; because of the
dullness of your hearts, you do not hear how it laments and cries to
its heavenly Creator for pity; but thrice woe to the one against
whom it cries and wails in its torment!"
6. And He went forward and touched the horse, and the animal stood
up, and its wounds were healed. But He said to the man, "Go on your
way now and henceforth strike it no more, if you, too, hope to find
mercy." (pp. 200-206)
Jesus not only carried people and animals in His great heart, but
all of nature as well. He was linked to all the forms of creation,
including the celestial bodies and elemental forces. It is told that
He commanded the storm and that the water carried Him, so that He
could walk upon it. As He taught His brothers and sisters then, He
teaches us today, for example in This Is My Word:
Respect, cherish and honor the creative power in all Being! Behold:
In the innermost part of his soul, every person bears all that is
power and light. The spiritual body in the human being is the
substance of all Being, because God, the eternal Father, has given
every single one of His children everything as essence, as heritage.
The eternal Spirit is in all forms of life, and it also streams from
all life forms.
When the person has consciously become the child of God, the
omnipotence of God serves him through all life forms, through stone,
wood, fire and water, through flowers, grasses, plants and animals.
All stars serve the one who lives in Me, the Spirit of truth. When
the Creator-power is able to permeate the created one, because his
soul is full of light and power, then he is again consciously the
child, the son or daughter of infinity and has once again taken up
his heritage, the All-power.
Each earthly day is a gift to man, so that he may recognize and find
himself in it. The nature kingdoms offer themselves to man. Fire and
water serve him, and the heavenly bodies, too, by day and by night.
Realize how rich the day is for each individual! (pp. 177-178)
Before turning to the texts from the Books of Moses, one more
occurrence from the life of Jesus of Nazareth, reported in This Is
My Word:
1. And as Jesus was going to Jericho, He met a man with young doves
and a cage full of birds which he had caught. And He saw their
misery, as they had lost their freedom and, furthermore, were
suffering hunger and thirst.
2. And He said to the man, "What are you doing with these?" And the
man answered, "I earn my living by selling the birds which I have
caught."
3. And Jesus said to him, "What would you think, if someone stronger
or more clever than you would capture and shackle you, or would
throw your wife or your children and you into prison, in order to
sell you for his own profit and to earn his living from this?
4. Are these not your fellow creatures, only weaker than you? And
does not the same God, Father and Mother, care for them as for you?
Let these, your little brothers and sisters, go forth into freedom
and see to it that you never do such a thing again, but that you
earn your bread honestly."
5. And the man was astounded at these words and His authority, and
he let the birds go free. As the birds came out, they flew to Jesus,
sat upon His shoulders and sang to Him. And the man asked more about
His teachings and he went his way and learned basket weaving. He
earned his bread from this work and broke his cages and traps and
became a disciple of Jesus. (pp. 485-486)
The Spirit of the Books of Moses Blows
in the Churches Today. Parallels to the
Bloody Rituals of Voodoo Witchcraft
Jesus came, as He said, to fulfill God’s law. He did this through
His life and work. And He taught how the law of the heavens is to be
fulfilled in the individual steps of our everyday lives; the most
important testimony of this that has been handed down is His Sermon
on the Mount.
Before turning to the question of how it came to be that the true
Christian path, the path of following Jesus, was not taken by many
so-called Christians, we will go back one more time to the Books of
Moses. The teachings and instructions as well as the
social-religious system of government that were laid down in these
books continued in effect until the Christ in Jesus came to Earth,
despite the fact that God time and again sent His messengers, the
prophets, to enlighten the people and to move them toward the true
faith and life. The resulting blindness and burdening of the people
was one of the main reasons why Jesus was not accepted and received
by His contemporaries and had to take the path via Golgotha. And
even after His physical death, contrary currents soon crept in among
the first early Christians and eventually prevailed.
The new Christianity, which may well have taken its name from
Christ, but was not with Christ, now took on a different form from
the social-religious life described in the Books of Moses. But what
about the roots? These always bear fruit of the same kind, of the
same content. And Jesus said: "By their fruits you will recognize
them."
We can deduce from the following quote out of the third Book of
Moses, Leviticus, what spirit moved in the ceremonies that are
described in the Books of Moses:
If his offering is a burnt offering from the herd, he shall offer a
male without blemish; he shall offer it at the door of the tent of
meeting, that he may be accepted before the Lord. He shall lay his
hand upon the head of the burnt offering, and it shall be accepted
for him to make atonement for him. Then he shall kill the bull
before the Lord; and Aaron’s sons the priests shall present the
blood, and throw the blood round about against the altar that is at
the door of the tent of meeting. And he shall flay the burnt
offering and cut it into pieces.
The sons of the priest Aaron shall put fire on the altar and lay
wood in order upon the fire. And Aaron’s sons the priests shall lay
the pieces, the head, and the fat, in order upon the wood that is on
the fire upon the altar. But its entrails and its legs he shall wash
with water. And the priest shall burn the whole on the altar, as a
burnt offering, an offering by fire, a pleasing odor to the Lord.
If his gift for a burnt offering is from the flock, from the sheep
or goats, he shall offer a male without blemish; and he shall kill
it on the north side of the altar before the Lord, and Aaron’s sons
the priests shall throw its blood against the altar round about. And
he shall cut it into pieces, with its head and its fat, and the
priest shall lay them in order upon the wood that is on the fire
upon the altar; but the entrails and the legs he shall wash with
water. And the priest shall offer the whole, and burn it on the
altar; it is a burnt offering, an offering by fire, a pleasing odor
to the Lord.
If his offering to the Lord is a burnt offering of birds, then he
shall bring his offering of turtledoves or of young pigeons. And the
priest shall bring it to the altar and wring off its head, and burn
it on the altar; and its blood shall be drained out on the side of
the altar. And he shall take away its crop with the feathers, and
cast it beside the altar on the east side, in the place for ashes;
he shall tear it by its wings, but shall not divide it asunder. And
the priest shall burn it on the altar, upon the wood that is on the
fire. It is a burnt offering, an offering by fire, a pleasing odor
to the Lord. (Lev. 1:3-17)
A pleasing odor to the Lord." Why is it necessary to appease the
Lord with this so-called "pleasing odor," which certainly was no
pleasant odor but rather a stench? According to the teachings of
Jesus, God is love, reconciliation, compassion and kindness, the
equanimity. Why, then, does He need to be appeased? Wild animals –
which we sometimes call beasts – are appeased or lured into a trap
using chunks of meat. Did people think, or did they wish to give the
impression, that God, the Absolute, All-Eternal One, could be
manipulated, as we men often may be manipulated or as we often
intend to manipulate others? Such an attempt would bear witness to
the distance from God.
God has no weakness. He cannot be manipulated.
The third book of Moses, Leviticus, continues:
When anyone brings a cereal offering as an offering to the Lord, his
offering shall be of fine flour; he shall pour oil upon it, and put
frankincense on it, and bring it to Aaron’s sons the priests. And he
shall take from it a handful of the fine flour and oil, with all of
its frankincense; and the priest shall burn this as its memorial
portion upon the altar, an offering by fire, a pleasing odor to the
Lord.
And what is left of the cereal offering shall be for Aaron and his
sons; it is a most holy part of the offerings by fire to the Lord.
(Lev. 2:1-3)
The rest of the cereal offering, belonging to Aaron and his sons,
would certainly have been the best part. Is it any different today?
The poor today eat the bread crumbs that fall from the tables of the
rich, among whom the Church dignitaries may be counted.
The "holy," even the "most holy" part is the priests’ due. Did God
grant them their office – through Moses, for example? They granted
to themselves the dignity of "holy ones" and at that, even on a
hereditary basis, regardless of the individual’s "worthiness."
Leviticus continues:
If a man’s offering is a sacrifice of peace offering, if he offers
an animal from the herd, male or female, he shall offer it without
blemish before the Lord. And he shall lay his hand upon the head of
his offering and kill it at the door of the tent of meeting; and
Aaron’s sons the priests shall throw the blood against the altar
round about. And from the sacrifice of the peace offering, and as an
offering by fire to the Lord, he shall offer the fat covering the
entrails and all the fat that is on the entrails, and the two
kidneys with the fat that is on them at the loins, and the appendage
of the liver which he shall take away with the kidneys. Then Aaron’s
sons shall burn it on the altar upon the burnt offering, which is
upon the wood on the fire. It is an offering by fire, a pleasing
odor to the Lord.
If his offering for a sacrifice of peace offering to the Lord is an
animal from the flock, male or female, he shall offer it without
blemish. If he offers a lamb for his offering, then he shall offer
it before the Lord, laying his hand upon the head of his offering
and killing it before the tent of meeting; and Aaron’s sons shall
throw its blood against the altar round about. Then from the
sacrifice of the peace offering as an offering by fire to the Lord,
he shall offer its fat, the fat tail entire, taking it away close by
the backbone, and the fat that covers the entrails, and all the fat
that is on the entrails, and the two kidneys with the fat that is on
them at the loins, and the appendage of the liver which he shall
take away with the kidneys. And the priest shall burn it on the
altar as food offered by fire to the Lord.
If his offering is a goat, then he shall offer it before the Lord,
and lay his hand upon its head, and kill it before the tent of
meeting; and the sons of Aaron shall throw its blood against the
altar round about. (Lev. 3:1-13)
Reading such and similar instructions for bloody ceremonies of
magical character, one is automatically reminded of voodoo
witchcraft. The "Duden" (a German dictionary) defines voodoo in the
following way: a secret cult practiced on Haiti, originating in West
Africa, that is magical-religious, syncretistic, and incorporates
elements of Catholicism. In "Meyers Lexicon" (a German encyclopedia)
it says: Name of syncretistic secret cult common in Haiti, in which
ecstatic dances – thought to permit the identification of cult
participants with deities – play a central role. Funk and Wagnalls
New Comprehensive International Dictionary has the following
definition: A primitive religion of West African origin, found among
Haitian and West Indian Negroes and the Negroes of southern United
States, characterized by belief in sorcery and the use of charms,
fetishes, witchcraft, etc.
If voodoo witchcraft incorporates elements of Catholicism, this
"enrichment" would surely not have come about by chance. Perhaps the
law of attraction of likes was at work here? Then everyone who
tithes at church has reason to wonder what he is paying for.
In Leviticus we read:
But the skin of the bull and all its flesh, with its head, its legs,
its entrails, and its dung, the whole bull he shall carry forth
outside the camp to a clean place, where the ashes are poured out,
and shall burn it on a fire of wood; where the ashes are poured out
it shall be burned. (Lev. 4:11-12)
Here we are told what a "clean place" is! Anyone who wants to read
further tales of horror about the darkest pagan tradition may
consider the following:
If anyone sins in that he hears a public adjuration to testify and
though he is a witness, whether he has seen or come to know the
matter, yet does not speak, he shall bear his iniquity. Or if any
one touches an unclean thing, whether the carcass of an unclean
beast or a carcass of unclean cattle or a carcass of unclean
swarming things, and it is hidden from him, and he has become
unclean, he shall be guilty. Or if he touches human uncleanness, of
whatever sort the uncleanness may be with which one becomes unclean,
and it is hidden from him, when he comes to know it he shall be
guilty. Or if any one utters with his lips a rash oath to do evil or
to do good, any sort of rash oath that men swear, and it is hidden
from him, when he comes to know it he shall in any of these be
guilty. When a man is guilty in any of these, he shall confess the
sins he has committed, and he shall bring his guilt offering to the
Lord for the sins which he has committed, a female from the flock, a
lamb or a goat, for a sin offering; and the priest shall make
atonement for him for his sin.
But if he cannot afford a lamb, then he shall bring, as his guilt
offering to the Lord for the sin which he has committed; two
turtledoves or two young pigeons, one for a sin offering and the
other for a burnt offering. He shall bring them to the priest, who
shall offer first the one for the sin offering; he shall wring its
head from its neck, but shall not sever it, and he shall sprinkle
some of the blood of the sin offering on the side of the altar,
while the rest of the blood shall be drained out at the base of the
altar … (Lev. 5:1-9)
Jesus was Opposed
to All Forms of Bloodshed
Jesus would never have shed blood or condoned bloodshed. The
sentence All who take the sword will perish by the sword (Mt. 26:52)
also refers to transgressions against the animal world and all of
nature, and is not confined to killing with a sword. There are many
gradations to the lack of love. Animals have very fine sensations,
while the emotions of humans are often crude and dull.
Nothing and no one can "absolve us of a transgression" except our
Redeemer, Christ, whose power and light of redemption dwells in each
of us. The prerequisite for Him to redeem our soul from a guilt is
the following: With all our heart, we must feel remorseful for our
unloving feeling, sensing, thinking, speaking and acting. In our
inner being, we must ask our neighbor and second neighbor, against
whom we have sinned, for forgiveness and, for our part, forgive what
he might have done to us. To the best of our ability, we must make
amends for the wrong we have done, if still possible. And what we
have recognized as not good in us we must not do again. Only then
will God forgive us, as we have been praying for the last 2000 years
in the Lord’s Prayer: Forgive us our debts as we forgive our debtors
…
Not only an animal sacrifice, but everything that emanates from us,
visibly or invisibly – be it malice, disdain or disrespect, be it
cruelty or even lack of understanding, inconsiderateness or
callousness – adds more to our existing debt. This applies to
humanity and to each individual.
Christ is opposed to all forms of bloodshed. When Christ, who again
reveals Himself to humanity through the prophetic word, speaks about
animal sacrifice, but also about animal experiments and other
transgressions of science against God’s all-wise creation, He often
uses the word "abomination."
We human beings should regard the animals, our second neighbors, as
our little animal brothers and sisters. Although, unlike
Fall-beings, they did not become guilty before God, the law, they
went along into the depths so that we human beings could rejoice in
the life of nature and be linked with it in love. Nature wants to
serve man. It does not want to be tormented, tortured and murdered
and then served up for cannibalistic meals.
The human being, in his inner being, a being from God, often proves
to be a creature of cruelty.
" … shall be cut off."
The Deadening of the Conscience. Or:
How to Become Servile to the Priest’s Power
In the following passage as well, the "God" of the "Books of Moses"
speaks against the teachings of Jesus and His own commandments. For
instance, it is written in Leviticus:
And if any one touches an unclean thing, whether the uncleanness of
man or an unclean beast or any unclean abomination, and then eats of
the flesh of the sacrifice of the Lord’s peace offerings, that
person shall be cut off from his people. (Lev. 7:21)
The fat of an animal that dies of itself, and the fat of one that is
torn by beasts, may be put to any other use, but on no account shall
you eat it. For every person who eats of the fat of an animal of
which an offering by fire is made to the Lord shall be cut off from
his people. (Lev. 7:24-25)
"Cut off from his people" most probably means stoning, the usual
form of capital punishment of that time. Stoning was common in
Israel even in the days of Jesus of Nazareth. Consider only the
adulterous woman that Jesus saved from stoning at the last minute.
Jesus’ contemporaries also wanted to kill Him at times in the
application of the "laws of God through Moses." "But He passed
through the crowd and went away."
In the third Book of Moses, Leviticus, chapter 11, it is laid out in
detail which animals are to be considered clean and which are to be
considered unclean. There, it says that the consumption of unclean
flesh will cause the person to be unclean until the evening of that
day.
Today, even people who consider themselves animal lovers often will
eat meat. They apparently do not realize that, for example, the veal
cutlet they buy from the butcher, already conveniently cut and ready
for frying, perhaps even seasoned, comes from a little calf which
only a few days ago grazed peacefully and harmoniously on the
meadow. Perhaps the calf let itself be petted by the children of
those who now ask for veal at the butcher’s. The children gazed into
its large, dark eyes fringed with long eyelashes and were delighted.
Rarely does anyone consider what the little animal, which did no one
harm, had to suffer before it arrived at the store counter as a
cutlet or sausage – the fright, the fear, the horror, the panic, the
pain, the dismay.
The animal lovers, we human beings, keep pets which bring us joy,
especially if they adapt easily, if they are "easy to care for." And
yet many animals are abandoned during vacation season. For instance,
in Germany in 1990 alone, half a million animals, mainly cats and
dogs, were abandoned. Today, ten years later, the number is probably
not less. Is that loving an animal?
From the divine world it was revealed to us:
Be … earnest and straightforward in your treatment of your second
neighbors. In their sensations they see you as their big
light-brother or light-sister … Therefore, respect your animal
brothers and sisters, your second neighbors, because they want to be
your true friends. Strive to treat them as you like to be treated.
Then you will soon learn to understand them, and they will be in
positive communication with you. (Life with Our Animal Brothers and
Sisters. You, the Animal – You, the Human Being. Who Has Higher
Values? p.114)
Man’s power to feel is dulled and his conscience is hardly active
anymore. But that does not apply only to the people of today.
The conscience of man watches over good and evil, over justice and
injustice. If it is sound, the conscience will react independently
of external legal views, ultimately according to the Ten
Commandments. But the habits of people and the imprinting by their
environment have also affected and shaped their conscience.
In reading about cruel animal sacrifices and the stoning of people,
we should not only think about how the animals will have felt.
In order to call to mind what may have taken place in a person back
then, we could consider the following scenario: Two young men from
among the people had eaten hare’s meat. They had caught a hare and
roasted it for their meal. According to chapter 10 and 11 in
Leviticus they were now unclean until the evening, which they were
prepared to accept. But when, out of thoughtlessness or
high-spiritedness, the friends entered the place where the "holy"
offerings were kept, one of them was seen and was condemned to death
by stoning. The other one remained undiscovered. The stoning was
carried out, for in Leviticus 22 it says:
And the Lord said to Moses: Tell Aaron and his sons to keep away
from the holy things of the people of Israel, which they dedicate to
me, so that they may not profane my holy name. I am the Lord. Say to
them: If anyone of all your descendants throughout your generations
approaches the holy things, which the people of Israel dedicate to
the Lord, while he has an uncleanness, that person shall be cut off
from my presence. I am the Lord. (Lev. 22:1-2)
Let us put ourselves in the place of the surviving young man after
his friend was stoned to death. He is tormented by feelings of
guilt. He rebels against the judgment and the heavy punishment that
should have been his as well. He revolts against the priests who
handed down the sentence and yet he must tell himself that they
carried out what "God commanded Moses." Thus his rebellion is
directed against God who laid down such a merciless law. But then he
calls to mind that God is considered "just," and that He is the
highest judge, who cannot err. The young man begins to doubt
himself. His observations tell him that apparently no one else has
qualms about stoning. He concludes that something must be wrong with
his own feelings and sense of justice, because both the priests
ordained by God and his fellow believers in the tribe feel and think
differently than he does. He decides to change his thinking and to
strictly follow the priests and fellow men in all things of the
future, instead of thinking independently and deciding freely. He
will no longer seek the measure of his actions in himself, but will,
even when his heart says differently, do as the others do because
"it is God’s will."
A process of adaptation takes place. This person’s character
changes. He now no longer lives himself, so to speak. His heart
grows cold and his feelings blunt and dull, his nature hard. His
image of God grows distorted and dark. He can no longer trust this
punishing and angry God, let alone love Him. His prayers become
untruthful and finally he is grateful that there are formulated
prayers that can simply be repeated …
After some time, the reversal into a conformist, a vassal, into an
obedient follower of the priests and of "tradition" is complete.
This person no longer trusts his inner gauge, his conscience, but
habitually thinks and acts against his knowing better. Now, he can
be relied upon – upon his following, his loyalty, his obedience and
his conformity.
This is how it could have happened back then. At least in principle
this is what could have occurred. On the other hand, it is
practically unlikely that a person could have reached adulthood
without already being filled with the contents of traditional
religious practices, blood sacrifices of animals and the stoning of
people.
This just described inner condition of a person has occurred
countless times and in many variations over the course of history.
Does it not seem familiar somehow?
Consider, for instance, the Middle Ages in Europe, where the
Inquisition caused many similar situations and conflicts of
conscience. The priests no longer slaughtered the animals themselves
– they had others do so, and still do today. They did not set fire
to the pyre themselves on which straightforward and upright people
were burned who had risen against the lies and answered for the one,
true, merciful and kind God who is the truth. The priests "merely"
stood there with their raised crosses, "blessed," and sang praises
in honor of God, forgiving sins and granting indulgences to those
who had gathered the wood for the pyre …
Ceremonial Sacrifices
"as the Lord commanded Moses."
In the Old Testament the Causal Law Was Known.
Jesus Was Against Animal Sacrifice
Back to the animal sacrifices of the Old Testament. Anyone wishing
to read more about magic of the voodoo sort can continue to read in
Leviticus:
Then he presented the ram of the burnt offering; and Aaron and his
sons laid their hands on the head of the ram. And Moses killed it,
and threw the blood upon the altar round about. And when the ram was
cut into pieces, Moses burned the head and the pieces and the fat.
And when the entrails and the legs were washed with water, Moses
burned the whole ram on the altar, as a burnt offering, a pleasing
odor, an offering by fire to the Lord, as the Lord commanded Moses.
Then he presented the other ram, the ram of ordination; and Aaron
and his sons laid their hands on the head of the ram. And Moses
killed it, and took some of its blood and put it on the tip of
Aaron’s right ear and on the thumb of his right hand and on the
great toe of his right foot. And Aaron’s sons were brought, and
Moses put some of the blood on the tips of their right ears and on
the thumbs of their right hands and on the great toes of their right
feet; and Moses threw the blood upon the altar round about.
Then he took the fat, and the fat tail, and all the fat that was on
the entrails, and the appendage of the liver, and the two kidneys
with their fat, and the right thigh. And out of the basket of
unleavened bread which was before the Lord he took one unleavened
cake, and one cake of bread with oil, and one wafer, and placed them
on the fat and on the right thigh. And he put all these in the hands
of Aaron and in the hands of his sons, and waved them as a wave
offering before the Lord. Then Moses took them from their hands, and
burned them on the altar with the burnt offering, as an ordination
offering, a pleasing odor, and offering by fire to the Lord. (Lev.
8:18-28)
If this macabre scene is not enough, read on in Leviticus:
So Aaron drew near to the altar, and killed the calf of the sin
offering, which was for himself. And the sons of Aaron presented the
blood to him, and he dipped his finger in the blood and put it on
the horns of the altar, and poured out the blood at the base of the
altar. But the fat and the kidneys and the appendage of the liver
from the sin offering he burned upon the altar, as the Lord
commanded Moses. The flesh and the skin he burned with fire outside
the camp. And he killed the burnt offering; and Aaron’s sons
delivered to him the blood, and he threw it on the altar round
about. And they delivered the burnt offering to him, piece by piece,
and the head; and he burned them upon the altar. And he washed the
entrails and the legs, and burned them with the burnt offering on
the altar. (Lev. 9:8-14)
Further on it says:
And the fat of the ox and of the ram, the fat tail, and that which
covers the entrails, and the kidneys, and the appendage of the
liver; and they put the fat upon the breasts, and he burned the fat
upon the altar, but the breast and the right thigh Aaron waved for a
wave offering before the Lord, as Moses commanded. (Lev. 9:19-21)
"As the Lord commanded Moses …" And today? Infants are baptized,
supposedly at Christ’s behest. Priests are set above the simple
believers, supposedly under power of authority granted by Jesus, the
Christ. One speaks of absolving sin, supposedly as charged by
Christ; one ordains a "Holy Father," and claims that Jesus Himself
had appointed him, and so on …
Jesus dissociated Himself from the tradition of sacrifice. Twice He
quoted the prophet Hosea to the Pharisees: I desire mercy, and not
sacrifice …(Mt. 9:13 and Mt. 12:7). Through Hosea, God had spoken in
the Old Testament: For I desire steadfast love and not sacrifice,
the knowledge of God, rather than burnt offerings. (Hos. 6:6)
In This Is My Word we read:
8. …"I have come to put an end to the sacrifices and feasts of
blood. If you do not cease to offer and consume the flesh and blood
of animals, the wrath of God will not cease to come upon you, just
as it came upon your ancestors in the wilderness, who indulged in
the consumption of flesh and were filled with rottenness and
consumed by pestilence. (p. 209)
On page 73 of that great divine revelation it says:
For the one who places his life in the sonship and daughtership of
God will not kill – neither men nor animals.
Jesus spoke with a clarity that was more than clear against the
instructions in the "Books of Moses." God spoke similarly through
the prophet Jeremiah, as we have already seen.
In the statements of Jesus, the Christ of God, we perceive that the
name of the prophet Moses was used for a cruel pagan cult. In the
book This Is My Word, Christ Himself reveals:
"I have come to put an end to the sacrifices and feasts of blood"
means that I have come to teach you the Gospel, the law of love, and
to live it as an example for you, so that you may recognize that
only the one who keeps the laws of God is rich in spiritual power in
his inner being. People who possess the inner values will not lack
in anything. For the one who is rich in his heart is with his
neighbor, not against him, thus being for God, the life, which is
the fullness. People who have inner values are also with the world
of animals and plants and are not against God’s creations. The one
who is against his neighbor will fight against him and kill him. And
the one who is against his neighbor will not be for other forms of
life – neither for the life of animals nor of plants or stones.
The one who is against the life in Me, the Christ, hungers and
thirsts for success, wealth, power and prestige. He kills animals
and consumes their flesh for his feasts and for the lusts of his
palate. Thus, he demonstrates that he is far from God.
Animal sacrifices, too, are an abomination before God, the Eternal.
He does not want animals to be sacrificed or consecrated to Him. God
has given life to all forms of Being and thus to animals as well.
Why should they be sacrificed to Him, since He Himself, the life,
dwells in them?
However, if man were to sacrifice his human ego, his passions and
cravings to Me, the Christ, and were to strive for and lead a life
that is pleasing to God, that is, devoted to Him, this would
contribute to the unity of all forms of life. God is the Spirit of
love and freedom. Therefore, every human being should voluntarily
sacrifice his ego. Only then will he become meek and humble of heart
and will find his way to the great unity: God. This development of
man towards Him is what God loves in His children.
And the one who devotes himself to the eternal Father-Mother-God, by
transforming his humanness into the divine, will not slaughter
animals or consume their flesh, nor will he kill any animal
deliberately. Such people will also treat the plant world with
selfless love, as this, too, is a gift of creation from God to His
human children. The plants and the fruits of the field and forest
give themselves willingly to man and want to serve him as
nourishment and as remedy for his sick body.
The "wrath of God" comes from the pagan world of conceptions which
was still very much alive in the Old Covenant. It was believed that
the "gods" would take revenge on people. It would be good if the
sinful person recognizes that it is he himself who has created the
so-called "wrath of God." The "wrathful God" is the human ego, which
takes revenge for what it itself has caused, for man will reap what
he sows.
The words "an eye for an eye, a tooth for a tooth" also were and are
wrongly interpreted. Man should not take revenge on his neighbor and
give tit for tat. He is called upon to forgive his neighbor, to ask
him for forgiveness and not to do the same or similar thing any
longer. The one who does not follow this commandment subjects
himself to the law of expiation. It reads, "An eye for an eye, a
tooth for a tooth." Then he will reap – "an eye for an eye, a tooth
for a tooth" – what he has sown. (pp. 209-211)
Already through the old prophets, God taught us the law of sowing
and reaping, which lets us recognize the causes of our own fate. In
Isaiah, for instance, we read: Woe to those who draw iniquity with
cords of falsehood, who draw sin as with cart ropes. (Is. 5:18) In
the Old Testament book of Wisdom it says: That they might learn that
one is punished by the very things by which he sins. (Wis. 11:16)
God does not punish and he does not give instructions that are sins.
Our sin is the punishment that we have created for ourselves, our
personal judgment.
Jesus wanted to do away with cruelty to people and animals. Today’s
representatives of the church institutions, however, permit that
cruelty to people and animals continue. Only the methods are
different, however, even more cruel. In this way, they affirm what
is happening. The efforts of few in the interests of animals are the
exception that proves the rule.
The New Testament "fulfills" the Old
and "sheds light" on It.
Both Are the "true word of God."
Millions of Victims of the Church
In the Catechism of the Catholic Church,* No. 140,the Roman clergy
has put down the following: … The Old Testament prepares for the New
and the New Testament fulfills the Old; the two shed light on each
other; both are the true Word of God.
The cruelty to animals continues; the slaughterhouses remain open.
Today animals are being sacrificed, the carcasses hacked to pieces
and cut up for the benefit of the human "gods" to satisfy their lust
for culinary pleasures.
People as well were tortured and killed in cruel and bestial ways.
And yesterday may become today.
What this "fulfillment" that has been prepared in the Old Testament
looks like may be clearly seen by the fruits that the so-called
Christian Churches have brought forth over the centuries.
A few days ago I came across a brochure, documentation by an
initiative called "A Memorial to the Millions of Victims of the
Church." The following is written there:
The Millions of Victims of the Church:
Inquisition: 13th-18th century, between 1 and 10 million dead and
countless tortured, maltreated or terrorized people. (Der Spiegel,
6.1.1998 [The Mirror])
Crusades: 11th-13th century, up to 22 million dead, among them
thousands of German Jews. (Hans Wollschläger, "Die bewaffneten
Wallfahrten nach Jerusalem" [The Armed Pilgrimages to Jerusalem])
"Heathens": 9th-12th century. During the Middle Ages tens of
thousands of Germanic or Slavic "heathens" are forcefully converted
to "Christianity" or cruelly slaughtered. The Church gives its
blessing or calls for "crusades" against the Slavs. (Karlheinz
Deschner, Kriminalgeschichte des Christentums, vol. 4–6 [Criminal
History of Christendom]).
Jews: During the Middle Ages, between the 11th and 14th century
there were numerous bloody pogroms with several thousands dead, the
result of centuries of Church propaganda. The prominent Nazi Julius
Streicher justified the holocaust during the Nuremberg trials by
explicitly citing Martin Luther’s speeches of incitement against the
Jews. (Friedrich Heer, "Gottes erste Liebe" [God’s First Love])
The conquest of America: During the first 150 years after the
Spanish conquest, 100 million people died "in the name of God" – the
"greatest genocide of all time." (Theologe Boff, Publik-Forum,
5.31.1991)
Cathari, Waldensians, Hussites, Baptists: Thousands with different
beliefs die at the behest of the Church (including the
Protestant-Lutheran Church).
"Witches:" 16th-18th centuries, between 400,000 and 1 million
people, mostly women, die cruel deaths, roughly half of them in
Germany. Luther has witches burned as well. The instructions, the
"Witch-Hammer," are written by two German Dominican monks (cf.
Hubertus Mynarek, "Die Neue Inquisition" [The New Inquisition]).
And how is it today? The roots of the Old Testament, mainly the
"Books of Moses," according to the Catholic Catechism, "shed light"
on the New Testament, that is, on our times. In the quoted brochure
we read further:
Genocide in Croatia: In the middle of the 20th century, between 1941
and 1943, roughly 750,000 orthodox Serbs were murdered with the aid
of Catholic clergymen and with the Vatican’s approval … The Vatican
is informed about everything, but treats the bloody regime with
considerable benevolence. The Catholic hierarchy, foremost the
military vicar and archbishop Stepinac (beatified by the pope in
1998), gives the regime moral support to the very end. (Compare
Deschner, "Ein Jahrhundert Heilsgeschichte," vol. 2, 1983 pp. 210
ff., [A Century of the History of Salvation?] and Vladimir Dedijer,
"Jasenovac – das Jugoslavische Auschwitz und der Vatikan," 1988
[Jasenocvac – the Yugoslavian Auschwitz and the Vatican])
Child abuse by priests and ministers: The victims of child abuse
often suffer for years and decades from the humiliation. Experts
estimate that in the USA 2,000 of the 51,000 Catholic priests have
been accused of sexual abuse over the last twenty years (Hanauer
Anzeiger, 7. 13.1998 [Hanau Gazette]). That is approximately four
percent, even without unreported cases. In Germany, Prof. Hubertus
Mynarek also estimated a share of 3-5 percent of pedophile priests.
(Akte [File] 97, 9/14/1999)
Martin Luther – Life and Teaching
in the Christian Spirit of Love for Neighbor?
Most of the murders and other crimes "in the name of God" mentioned
above were committed by the Catholic Church. Does that mean that the
Protestant-Lutheran Church should be regarded more positively?
How humane, freedom-loving and tolerant was the Church-founder
Martin Luther? How did he regard his fellow men, and did he love his
neighbor – which should be the highest commandment?
A man like Martin Luther is still highly regarded today. His Church
follows in his footsteps, as was confirmed by Hermann von Loewenich
(until 1999 the Lutheran bishop for Bavaria) on internet: We want to
preserve the historic heritage of the Lutheran tradition as our
cultural and spiritual homeland.
A Lutheran theologian compiled Luther’s demands in an extensive
brochure, The Theologian, No. 3:
Luther called on the ruling princes to kill the rebellious peasants:
Lunge, strike, and throttle whoever can do so. If you be killed in
doing so, salvation to you: a more blessed death you will never
attain. For you die in obedience to the divine word and commandment.
(Wider die stürmenden Bauern, Weimarer Ausgabe der Lutherschriften
[Against the Rebelling Farmers, Weimar Edition of the Luther
Writings])
Luther demands the persecution of preachers who hold other beliefs:
…and if they were to teach the pure gospel, yes even if they were
like the angels and Gabriel from the heavens … If anyone wants to
preach, let him prove his calling or order … If he refuses, may the
superior command he be turned over to the proper master, called
Master Hans [the executioner] …
Luther slanders and libels the Jewish population and demands their
persecution:
If I could I would strike him [the Jewish citizen] down and pierce
him with the sword in my rage.
… that their synagogues or schools be set on fire and may all that
will not burn be heaped and covered with earth, that no person
should ever see a rock or stone of it ever again. And this should be
done for the glory of our Lord and of Christianity so that God may
see that we are Christians.
… that also their houses be broken and destroyed …
… these worthless fellows and plunderers deserve no mercy and no
pity.
… that they be forbidden to publicly praise God, to give thanks, to
pray, to teach on pain of death … (Martin Luther, Von den Juden und
ihren Lügen, Wittenberg 1543 [About the Jews and Their Lies])
Luther: It is such a desperate, viciously evil, vilely poisonous,
thoroughly diabolical thing with these Jews, who for 1,400 years
have been our plague, our pestilence, and all our misfortune, and
still are today. In sum, we have righteous devils in them.
Luther even claimed that Moses, were he alive today, would be the
first to set fire to the "Jewish houses and schools."
Luther further demanded that one should take away from the Jews
their entire religious literature, put them under house arrest, take
all their money and goods, and send them into forced labor.
Luther also called for war and the "murder" of Turkish opponents in
war: ... and with joy raise the fist and strike in comfort, murder,
rob, and do as much damage as ever they may …
Luther wanted the death of "usurers": ... so if one takes the
highway robbers and murderers and breaks them on the wheel and
beheads them, how much more should all usurers be broken on the
wheel and bled and all misers be driven out, cursed and beheaded …
Luther demanded the death of unfaithful partners: Why are adulterers
not killed? and wanted to torture prostitutes to death: If I were
judge, I would want to have such a French poisonous whore broken on
the wheel and bled.
Women with magical skills should be tortured and killed according to
Luther: The sorceresses you should not permit to live … It is a just
law that they be killed … If they will not convert, they will be
handed over to the torturers.
Luther, about handicapped children: But when people tell about the
devil-like children … so I say that they were either disfigured by
the devil or that they are true devils. Many disabled persons who
had been entrusted to Lutheran homes for the handicapped (for
instance, in Neuendettelsau, Bavaria), were handed over to the state
authorities in 1940/41, ultimately making reference to Luther’s
teachings on the state (obedience toward authority). Those
responsible knew that the handicapped would be killed.
In the end, Luther wanted to kill the pope: The pope is the devil;
if I could kill the devil, why would I not do it?
The Lutheran Church also calls itself "Christian." But where is the
Christian spirit, the spirit of love for God and love for one’s
neighbor in what Luther said? His instructions and maxims were put
into bloody practice by the people and the regional rulers, down to
the despots of the Third Reich.
The one who gives such bestial and murderous instructions to his
fellow man, which reach into the present day in different form,
cannot be expected to have a sympathetic heart or compassion for
animals. Whether it is war, the destruction of many people, animals
and land, or whether it is animal experiments or genetic
engineering, the ethics and morals of both denominations are hardly
different. To put it clearly: both church institutions are
un-Christian.
"What a Person Does to Another,
He Does to Himself."
What Does the Animal Feel in Its Situation?
The Animal, a Basic Commodity
and Consumer Good
Let us take another look at the testimony of the Old Testament. In
Leviticus (supposedly the true word of God), where instructions are
given also to the church officials of our day about which animals
they may eat and which animals they should avoid, it says:
Whatever parts the hoof and is cloven-footed and chews the cud,
among the animals, you may eat. (Lev. 11:3)
And three verses down, there is an appeal to hunters:
And the hare, because it chews the cud but does not part the hoof,
is unclean to you. And the swine, because it parts the hoof and is
cloven-footed but does not chew the cud, is unclean to you. Of their
flesh you shall not eat, and their carcasses you shall not touch;
they are unclean to you. (Lev. 11:6-8)
In addition to that last quote, it says in Leviticus 11:26–27:
Every animal which parts the hoof but is not cloven-footed or does
not chew the cud is unclean to you; every one who touches them shall
be unclean. And all that go on their paws, among the animals that go
on all fours, are unclean to you; whoever touches their carcass
shall be unclean until evening …
Those who are obedient to the Churches should keep the instructions
of the Old Testament, because, according to church teaching, it is
the word of God. If the believers obeyed, the hares and swine at
least would stand a chance of escaping without buckshot or bullets
in their bodies.
To justify hunting it is often said that hunting is necessary to
"decimate" the numbers of certain animals to prevent
over-proliferation. But the Spirit of God has taught us: God has so
arranged His creation, nature on the Earth, that it will take care
of compensating and maintaining its balance. God has not given this
task to the hunters!
To the fishermen and all those who tear from the sea what belongs to
the sea, "God’s" instructions through "Moses" were the following:
But anything in the seas or the rivers that has not fins and scales,
of the swarming creatures in the waters and of the living creatures
that are in the waters, is an abomination to you. (Lev. 11:10)
Anyone who eats creatures of the sea, such as lobster and the like,
becomes unclean. Readers may ask themselves whether they have become
"unclean" already today.
Where will all those clergymen be after this life on Earth, all
those who want to fulfill the Old Testament in the New Testament and
who sit at beautifully laid tables, and eat of the carcasses of the
hare, of wild pig and the like, or consume shellfish without fins
and scales, and who then, in this state of uncleanness, perhaps
perform sacred rites? Today they will no longer be stoned for
sinning against the "holy" and the Holy One, God; but is the
passed-down "word of God" still taken to be the truth, according to
the statements of the clergy?
If there really were unclean animals that were an "abomination,"
then a justifiable question would be: Why did God create such
animals, if He is absolute purity?
Jesus did not speak of any of this. Jesus loved all animals. Not
only did He never hurt an animal, on the contrary: He was the great
friend of all creatures. He spoke and acted for the animals.
Many people, on the other hand, do not think twice when animals are
being treated cruelly or are killed. In This Is My Word on page 421,
Christ explained that animals have feelings and sensations, similar
to human beings:
As Jesus of Nazareth, I spoke to many people about the law of life
as well as about the animals which, like human beings, feel pain,
grief and joy. Just as man should not be against, but for his
neighbor, so should he also be for the animals and bear
responsibility for them, because they serve man.
I taught people again and again that the animals, too, are creatures
of God, which man should not disregard, but should love. The one who
beats and tortures them will one day experience the same or similar
thing in his soul and on his body. For, what a man does to his
fellow men and his fellow creatures, the animals, he does to
himself.
Many people recognized their callousness and began to actualize My
teachings. They repented and accepted the animals as their friends.
And so, many a one understood My words and followed Me. (p. 421)
I repeat the words of Jesus, the Christ: "What a man does to his
fellow human beings and his fellow creatures, the animals, he does
to himself." Let us follow His words and apply what happens to the
innocent animals to ourselves. In our thoughts, let us take their
place and share their fate in feelings, images and thoughts.
For example, you could ask yourself in the place of an animal: Would
you rather be killed or murdered? Anyone who seriously considers
this question or situation with his feelings, where he is asked
whether he would rather be killed or murdered, would surely not make
a choice, because being killed or being murdered means to give up
life, regardless of any difference.
And how would we react, if someone were to catch us, lock us in a
cage and decide when we could get out from time to time?
Just imagine you were in the skin of a hamster, which by nature
needs a lot of movement. See yourself locked up for some weeks in a
tiny room. For movement you have only a wheel that turns quickly
under your feet so that you remain in place, running and running and
running, without moving forward. How long would you enjoy it? In
this way you will quickly comprehend how the hamster must feel who
must numbly run day after day in his cramped wheel.
Or feel yourself into the situation of a cow in a feeding pen. There
you are, locked in, rubbing against your fellow sufferers, doped up
with fattening feed full of chemicals, knowing that any second the
butcher may come to slaughter you and cut your body up in pieces as
a sacrificial meal, for example, for the corpulent clergy. You hear
your brothers and sisters, the other cattle, mooing dully from time
to time and you feel that they are moved by the same fear. But your
impending fate is inevitable. You are in the hands of butchering
man, at the mercy of his egomania, callousness and greed, including
greed for profit.
Many people will walk over the dead bodies of people and animals, if
they are not affected personally. For this reason, people presume it
is permissible to kill people in certain cases, and of course much
more so with animals. Who has the right to deliberately take the
life of his neighbor, or of the animal? Who has created the human
soul, which is immortal? Who gave it breath? And who has given the
animals breath and thus life? Not man, but God, the Eternal, the
Creator-Spirit of infinity. God does not take the life of man or of
animals, for God is the giver. And God does not coerce. He never
uses violence. He never influences anyone against their will. He is
the freedom and He grants freedom. Only man, who gave life neither
to the human soul nor to the animals, kills the house of the soul,
the body, and kills the animal. Who gave man permission? Jesus did
not speak of this!
Anyone who distinguishes between "killing" and "murder" is in my
opinion a paranoiac who does not value the life of others according
to the All-law, which is life, and who therefore forfeits his own
life. For, what a person does to another, he does to himself.
The same applies when animals are kept in cages. God gave animals
nature as their habitat, in which they may move freely according to
their kind, just as the spiritual forms of animals do in the eternal
Being. He did not create cages for His creatures. Only man presumes
to cage animals and to have them pass their days in the most cramped
spaces.
Jesus, the Christ, spoke in the following sense: So whatever you
wish that men would do to you, do so to them! (Mt. 7:12) We can also
understand Jesus’ statement in the following way: Do not do unto
others what you do not want them to do unto you. Does this apply
only to other humans, or does it apply also to animals, given Jesus’
love for animals?
God gave to people and animals the whole Earth and thus He gave them
freedom. But people divide this world into lots. Everyone seeks –
legally or illegally – to gain the largest piece. That land then is
"his property." It is what "belongs to him," with everything that
lives on and in the land. But everything that we acquire on Earth is
illusion, a deception, for death will take from us what we have
taken from the Earth.
For many human beings, animals are only objects that may be bought
or sold, used or also consumed – like items from the store. They
cram the animals into the world of their conceptions, into cramped
pens, where they also waste away their existence.
Anyone who has learned to feel into people senses that animals, too,
have feelings and sensations, similar to us human beings. They feel
joy, sorrow and pain. An old Native American saying may help us
learn to understand the animals. It says: Do not judge your neighbor
until you walk two moons in his moccasins. With regard to animals,
we may say: Before you capture animals and abuse them for your
purposes and torment them, forcing upon them confining and unnatural
living conditions, try it on yourself first. Let yourself be forced
into the hamster’s wheel as mentioned above, and you will feel what
your little second neighbor must be going through. The one who wants
to gain a living insight into the plight of animals could put
himself in the role of a fattened calf, or of a chicken on a chicken
farm, or of a baby seal that is lying comfortably in the sun when
the men come with clubs in their hands, wanting to skin it for its
fur. Perhaps you will also imagine what the mother seal must feel
when she returns from fishing and finds instead of her baby a raw
lump of meat …
The God of the Times.
"Fulfillment" of the Old Testament in Our Time:
Sexual Child Abuse by Priests.
In the Footsteps of the Nazarene
or in Those of the Church Authorities?
Jesus, the Christ, is the truth. He said: I and the Father are one.
(Jn. 10:30) Let us consider again the following words of Jesus:
Think not that I have come to abolish the law and the prophets; I
have come not to abolish them but to fulfill them. (Mt. 5:17) In
many cases Jesus did not fulfill what the "God" of the Old Testament
had commanded through the prophet Moses. Jesus rarely and only
indirectly referred to the "God" of the "Books of Moses." Rather He
said: You have heard that it is written … but I tell you … Or: You
have heard that it was said to the ancients … but I tell you … He
who has ears to hear, listen: Jesus rarely mentions the "God" of the
"Books of Moses."
Jesus thus sought to dissociate Himself from that mistaken concept
of God, from that false image of God. He spoke of the "Father in
heaven," of His Father, of "God, your Father." He spoke from the
truth that is the eternal reality, the law of the heavens.
One might object that what was said at that time applied to the
people then, and that it is no longer valid today, that today it
would be entirely different. This raises the question: Were the
people worse back then, did they have a more wicked character than
people do today? Surely we need not research what people were like
back then. Everyone who still has a spark of conscience knows
without analysis and based on the facts on page 32 ff. that people
today are worse by far than people were back then. That this is true
also in regard to their brothers and sisters in nature, the animals,
is evidenced by the fate of animals in nature and in the
laboratories of science, etc.
Many are of the opinion that they believe in God. Especially those
who display their faith in churches and official functions, presume
to act like super-gods who not only tolerate but condone that living
animals are subjected to the most cruel and brutal experiments that
put the practices in the "Books of Moses" in the shade. The Roman
clergy, of course, does not mention the shade. They proclaim: "The
Old Testament prepares for the New and the New Testament fulfills
the Old; the two shed light on each other …" (Catholic Catechism No.
140) For example, do the burning pyres of the Middle Ages shed the
light of the Old Testament on the New? On the other hand, do the
bloody practices of the Middle Ages and the serious alterations that
were done during the past 2000 years to the teachings of Jesus, the
Christ, shed light on what happened to the word and the message of
God in the Old Testament? It could be worth it to pursue this
question … what forces, also called powers, might this be today? If
it cannot be God – for He is the law and this law is love, kindness,
peace and the good of everyone and everything – then who is it?
Just now I am reading how the Old Testament finds fulfillment in the
New Testament, but with different characteristics, tailored to our
present times. It is the transcript of a television program that was
aired on Sept. 2, 1999 on German television (Auslandsjournal,
[Foreign Journal] ZDF), under the title "Child Abuse in Ireland."
Here are some excerpts:
A scandal is shaking Ireland. Its focal point is the Catholic
Church, the pillar of Irish society. Over the course of many years,
the state has entrusted children to a Catholic Order. Today public
indignation is great on the island because a documentary film shows
what no one wanted to believe at first: abuse instead of care,
violence instead of love. Not single cases, but apparently hundreds
of children have lived through hell on Earth in the custody of the
Church. Now the pact of silence is being broken, and the truth is
brought to light.
At age three, John Prior is assigned to a home by the state because
his parents supposedly were neglectful in their care of him. The
home is run by the Catholic Order of Christian Brothers. Here, the
children are supposedly raised to believe in God.
John, who is 54 years old today, tells his story: For seven years he
was sexually abused by two Brothers of the Order and by a Catholic
priest.
The worst beating that I ever received was when I told a nurse that
I had been sexually abused by a Brother. I was nine and a half or
ten. She first beat me and then she told the Brother. He then took
me away and then two of the Brothers beat and beat and beat me. I
had wounds everywhere …
We had group showers. Twenty boys had to get in there. The Brother
(of the Order) got undressed … and he abused some boys in front of
the eyes of others and he forced them to touch each other. He once
raped me, he threw me on his bed and took me, tearing me open. I was
bleeding so badly that the nurse used iodine and I screamed with
pain.
In March 1998 the Brothers of the Order publicly apologized for the
child abuse in the school homes. Together with other Orders they set
up a support telephone line for the victims. There were more than
8,000 calls and the Church referred 600 victims to therapists.
1999: A documentary accuses the state and proves that the
authorities knew for years about the child abuse in the church
schools and that they nevertheless continued to finance them. As a
result, the government established a fact-finding committee,
promised to change the law, and provided $5 million for the victims’
therapy.
Today, John is in psychotherapy. He suffers from paranoia, cannot
sleep, trusts no one. Almost all his relationships have failed, and
he has never accomplished anything professionally.
Therapist: John suffers unceasingly; he has inferiority complexes;
he feels useless; he has no self-confidence …
John is not a singular case. Thousands of children were placed in
the care of Catholic foster homes … John tells about the fate of his
best friend, Joseph:
He had a long leather belt and he hit Joseph with it on both
shoulders and on the head. Joseph fell from his chair and the
Brother struck every part of his body, and then kicked him with
those heavy army boots that the Brothers wore to work in the fields.
And he kicked him and kicked him and kicked him, until Joseph could
no longer move. Joseph had lost consciousness and was taken to the
hospital. There he died. This was generally known. They said here
that he had died of leukemia, but he did not die of leukemia.
Narrator: Since then, John no longer believes in God.
This report speaks for itself …
In a recent edition of "Kirche Intern" [Inside the Church, Austria]
the following appeared under the heading "Sexual Abuse. Therapy in
the Monastery:"
More and more often priests and members of Orders are being
suspected of taking part in sexual abuse. Reason enough for the
abbot of monastery G., in J.A., to take action. Still this year, he
wants to establish a therapy center in the monastery P. for the
clergy, members of Orders and pastoral workers.
It might be advisable to read what the "God of Moses" said about
such and similar things. If this old law, which can look back on a
long tradition and which is esteemed by the Church as a part of the
"Holy Scriptures" were to be applied, there would very quickly be
fewer people around.
The transgressions of man today are not only directed against
individuals, against people and animals, but it is a global strategy
against people and animals. He is even convinced that he should
improve on God’s creation. Cruel and domineering people interfere in
manifold and the most brutal ways and means in the life of animals –
and the world of plants and minerals is not spared either. Others,
the great mass of people, leave the tormented creatures to their
fate without protest, being deaf and blind in their egotism and dull
indifference. In a similar fashion, people treat each other.
The caste of priests today has put together their own God, just as
during the time of Moses. Only the "God" of today does not concur
with either the "God" of the Old Testament or with the teachings of
Jesus. Church dignitaries at all times adapted their god or their
gods to their times – that is, to their conceptions, needs and aims.
The true God, on the other hand, is not the Church
spirit-of-the-times "God," but the unchanging God whom Jesus taught
us. The Church spirit-of-the-times "God" is inconstant and
unreliable. It does not help to formulate statements in absolute
terms, pretending stability. Untruth is not of eternal duration,
even if the cracks and holes in the structure of untruth may be
patched for a while by claiming these are "the mysteries of God."
The light of truth will bring everything to light.
Why do church dignitaries not abide by their own statements? If they
would let the Old Testament be brought to fulfillment in all details
in the New Testament, they themselves would be the first that the
"God" in the "Books of Moses" would have killed.
The people of today, especially church believers, walk in the
footsteps of church authorities, who proclaim a changing God who is
subject to the changing spirit-of-the-times, so that their neck will
not be caught in the noose of the Old Testament – a noose that the
"God" of the "Books of Moses" would have long since put around their
necks and pulled tight. And so, they need their spirit-of-the-times,
whom they call "God."
This "God" is flexible and adapts to the requirements of those
currently in command, so that there is little difficulty in
presenting him to the believers, so that in their lethargy,
egocentricity and dissipation they will be disturbed as little as
possible. This way, the believers are happy to remain in the folds
of this comfortable Church, which takes the burden of many a
decision of conscience away and provides an alibi for atrocities of
many kinds.
The true eternal One is absolute. He is the all-wise law of the
cosmos, which is love. I repeat, God, the love, does not punish or
discipline. He does not condemn, kill, or murder. God will not hand
over people or animals to other people. Jesus taught us this. He
lived the law of His Father and is the example by which to live.
If we learn to understand the depth of His teaching and His
statement: Follow me! (Mt. 4:19), then we will know why Jesus urged
us to follow in His steps. Did Jesus want to tell us, among other
things, that we should not walk in the footsteps of the priest caste
which teaches a God of the times, a spirit-of-the-times God that
unavoidably leads people into destruction – something which our
world today is showing us? The Seer of Patmos recognized this,
because we can read in the revelation of John: Come out of her, my
people, lest you take part in her sins, lest you share in her
plagues … (Rev. 18:4)
Again let it be clearly and unmistakably said: Jesus spoke against
the brutal, bestial slaughter of animals and the killing and murder
of people. We should keep asking questions of ourselves until we
have received enlightenment and have recognized deep within us why
Jesus proclaimed a God who is different from the "God" of the "Books
of Moses" and from the "God" of today’s church officials. Or do we
believe in several gods of differing quality? In that case, it is
the personal philosophy of each individual, who does not require a
church authority for this – unless the individual lacks imagination
in this respect: then the Church is the right place for him as a
"religious" member. But if the one God should be changeable, then
woe unto the people who have turned from the state Church of pagan
rituals!
We should consider carefully, and wisely weigh everything! God gave
not only people a heart – the stirrings of which are not so reliable
if we have lost our conscience – but also a mind. We are well
advised to make use of it and to reawaken our perhaps long-unused
ability for independent thinking.
To come to clarity, a good approach is to question oneself – or God
in deep prayer. For: Whoever asks sincerely may receive guidance.
After 2000 years it is time that those people who believe in Jesus
and who want to follow Him make a decision: to either follow in the
steps of Jesus, the Christ, and to thus apply His teaching; or to
follow in the steps of today’s church authorities, who in no way
fall short of the caste of priests in Moses’ times.
"Kill" or "Murder?" Jesus Fulfilled the Law
and Deepened the Teaching
Even though the adversary of God managed to fundamentally falsify
the words of the prophet Moses, the words of the Ten Commandments –
which are an excerpt of the eternal and absolute law of the heavens
– have remained mostly untouched down to our time.
The fifth commandment reads and has always read: You shall not kill.
But, in a new 1985 unity translation of the German New Jerusalem
Bible it says: You shall not murder. This version should be
attributed to the God of the spirit-of-the-times. It represents an
attenuation of the encompassing statement "You shall not kill." In
His Sermon on the Mount, Jesus even said: You have heard that it was
said to the men of old, ‘You shall not kill; and whoever kills shall
be liable to judgment.’ But I say to you that every one who is angry
with his brother shall be liable to judgment; whoever insults his
brother shall be liable to the council, and whoever says, ‘You
fool!’ shall be liable to the hell of fire. (Mt. 5:21-22)
Jesus did not qualify the absolute statement "You shall not kill."
He did not restrict its meaning to specific cases: on the contrary,
Jesus deepened it. He taught that against-the-neighbor not only lies
in the accomplished act of killing, but is already contained in
hurtful or pejorative words, and the feelings and sensations that
lie in them. He called our attention to the fact that every fine
stirring of rejection of neighbor, perhaps of our animal brothers
and sisters, our second neighbors, as well, is a sin before God. In
this way, Jesus called on us to sensitize our conscience.
And Jesus explicitly spoke of "killing," not "murder."
Jeremiah had already told the people about the falsification of "the
scriptures." In Jeremiah 8:8 he spoke of "the false pen of the
scribes" who have made the law of the Lord "into a lie."
Whose "false pen" has now again falsified the word of God through
Moses? Whom do those serve who would do such a thing? What should be
justified by the statement "You shall not murder?" Is this statement
again meant to appease the conscience of people, so that they will
not react when injustice is being done?
The un-spirit of the Old Testament prepared the way and demonstrated
the method; and in the New Testament the falsifications were
successfully carried through until today, using a clear method, plan
and purpose. Under the eyes of many millions of people gifted with a
thinking mind – abracadabra! – white turns into black. Are these the
miracles of today?
Anyone indifferent to the radical divergence between these two
statements, killing and murder, sits on two chairs and tries to
serve two masters: the spirit of the cruel "God" of the "Books of
Moses," and thus the institutional churches, and on the other hand a
little bit of Jesus, the Christ, who taught the God of merciful
love.
Jesus said in the following sense: My Father and I are one. Where
two are one, they speak the same language. May the one who has ears
to hear, listen!
What did Jesus teach in His Sermon on the Mount? Anyone who simply
gets angry with his neighbor will be liable to the court. And
whoever insults another will be liable to the council. (Mt. 5-22)
May the one who has ears to hear, listen! And the one who has a
conscience will follow Jesus, the Christ, and will do what is
written in the Revelation of John: Come out of her, my people, lest
you take part in her sins, lest you share in her plagues … (Rev.
18:4)
Instructions on Violence and War in the
Old Testament – Jesus: "Love your enemies."
Jesus Rebukes the Hypocrisy
of the Scribes and Pharisees
Jesus did not soothe our conscience. Nor did he call on us to lull
our conscience with tricks and ruses and hair-splitting
formulations, and silence it. Only those who are against God do
this, those who work against Him, and who have already turned the
word of Moses into its opposite. Of this, there is another example:
In the second Book of Moses, Exodus, we read: Whoever strikes a man
so that he dies shall be put to death. (Ex. 21:12) Whoever strikes
his father or his mother shall be put to death. Whoever steals a
man, whether he sells him or is found in possession of him, shall be
put to death. (Ex. 21:15-17)
In Exodus 21:24 we continue: ... eye for eye, tooth for tooth, hand
for hand, foot for foot, burn for burn, wound for wound, stripe for
stripe.
Many times this was taken literally and was used to justify all
sorts of acts of vengeance.
Jesus did not speak such in His Sermon on the Mount. There it says:
You have heard that it was said, ‘An eye for an eye and a tooth for
a tooth.’ But I say to you, Do not resist one who is evil. But if
anyone strikes you on the right cheek, turn to him the other also;
and if any one would sue you and take your coat, let him have your
cloak as well; and if any one forces you to go one mile, go with him
two miles. Give to him who begs from you, and do not refuse him who
would borrow from you. (Mt. 5:38-42)
The words of Jesus are thus very different from those of the "God"
of the "Books of Moses." Whoever wants to be an upright Christian,
ought to make the decision: Either for God through Jesus, the
Christ, or for the god of the institutional churches, because one
cannot serve two masters. At some point the false god will cause us
to fall. Our indifferent, callous society is the best proof of this.
In the fifth Book of Moses, Deuteronomy, we can read among other
things about retribution:
Your eye shall not pity; it shall be life for life, eye for eye,
tooth for tooth, hand for hand, foot for foot. (Dt.19:21)
War and the warriors. When you go forth to war against your enemies,
and see horses and chariots and an army larger than your own, you
shall not be afraid of them; for the Lord your God is with you, who
brought you up out of the land of Egypt. And when you draw near to
the battle, the priest shall come forward and speak to the people
and shall say to them, ‘Hear, O Israel, you draw near this day to
battle against your enemies. Let not your heart be faint! Do not
fear, or tremble, or be in dread of them; for the Lord your God is
he that goes with you, to fight for you against your enemies, to
give you the victory.’ (Dt. 20:1-4)
Today it is the same, as if Jesus, the Christ, had not been on Earth
in the meantime. Today’s priests bless war and its weapons in the
belief that those who receive the blessing will have God on their
side against the "enemies."
In the same book of Moses, we continue to read:
Conquering the cities: When you draw near to a city to fight against
it, offer terms of peace to it. And if its answer to you is peace
and it opens to you, then all the people who are found in it shall
do forced labor for you and shall serve you. But if it makes not
peace with you, but makes war against you, then you shall besiege
it.
And when the Lord your God gives it into your hand you shall put all
its males to the sword, but the women and the little ones, the
cattle, and everything else in the city, all its spoil, you shall
take as booty for yourselves; and you shall enjoy the spoil of your
enemies, which the Lord your God has given you.
Thus you shall do to all the cities which are very far from you,
which are not cities of the nations here. But in the cities of these
peoples that the Lord your God gives you for an inheritance, you
shall save alive nothing that breathes. (Dt. 20:10-16)
In the Middle Ages, the crusaders waded through the blood of those
whom they had conquered in the name of the cross. Between 1941 and
1943 in Croatia it was not much different. The Church does make it
true: The Old Testament "sheds light" on the New Testament – but not
with the light of God, which Christ proclaimed and is again
proclaiming today!
God is peace. Christ came in Jesus to bring peace to all human
beings. He will return – in spirit – as the Prince of Peace, that is
certain.
Jesus spoke in His Sermon on the Mount about loving one’s enemies.
In Matthew we read:
You have heard that it was said, ‘You shall love your neighbor and
hate your enemy.’ But I say to you, Love your enemies and pray for
those who persecute you, so that you may be sons of your Father who
is in heaven; for he makes his sun rise on the evil and on the good,
and sends rain on the just and on the unjust. For if you love those
who love you, what reward have you? Do not even the tax collectors
do the same? And if you salute only your brethren, what more are you
doing than others? Do not even the Gentiles do the same?
You, therefore, must be perfect, as your heavenly Father is perfect.
(Mt. 5:43-48)
Again we recognize: Jesus said, You have heard … He did not say "You
have heard from God through Moses," and He did not say "You have
heard from the prophet Moses." He said: You have heard …
Jesus spoke of God’s love and about reconciliation – the so-called
"God" through Moses spoke of destruction, plunder and killing.
In Leviticus, the third Book of Moses, things are summed up as
follows:
And you shall chase your enemies, and they shall fall before you by
the sword. Five of you shall chase a hundred, and a hundred of you
shall chase ten thousand; and your enemies shall fall before you by
the sword. And I will have regard for you and make you fruitful and
multiply you, and will confirm my covenant with you. ( Lev. 26:7-9)
But Jesus said: All those who take the sword will perish by the
sword. (Mt. 26:52)
Moses supposedly ordained priests at God’s bidding. The ceremony
began with the usual sacrifice of a ram. Jesus taught just the
opposite with regard to priests. In the gospel of Matthew He put it
very clearly: But you are not to be called rabbi, for you have one
teacher, and you are all brethren. (Mt. 23:8)
In Matthew 23, Jesus rebuked the scribes and pharisees for their
hypocrisy:
Then said Jesus to the crowds and to his disciples, The scribes and
the Pharisees sit on Moses’ seat; so practice and observe whatever
they tell you, but not what they do; for they preach, but do not
practice.
They bind heavy burdens, hard to bear, and lay them on men’s
shoulders; but they themselves will not move them with their finger.
They do all their deeds to be seen by men; for they make their
phylacteries broad and their fringes long, and they love the place
of honor at feasts and the best seats in the synagogues, and
salutations in the market places, and being called rabbi by men. But
you are not to be called rabbi, for you have one teacher, and you
are all brethren. And call no man your father on earth, for you have
one Father, who is in heaven. Neither be called masters, for you
have one master, the Christ. He who is greatest among you shall be
your servant; whoever exalts himself will be humbled, and whoever
humbles himself will be exalted.
But woe to you, scribes and Pharisees, hypocrites! because you shut
the kingdom of heaven against men; for you neither enter yourselves,
not allow those who would enter to go in.
Woe to you, scribes and Pharisees, hypocrites! for you traverse sea
and land to make a single proselyte, and when he becomes a
proselyte, you make him twice as much a child of hell as yourselves.
Woe to you, blind guides who say, ‘If any one swears by the temple,
it is nothing; but if any one swears by the gold of the temple, he
is bound by his oath.’ You blind fools! For which is greater, the
gold or the temple that has made the gold sacred? And you say, ‘If
any one swears by the altar, it is nothing; but if any one swears by
the gift that is on the altar, he is bound by his oath.’ You blind
men! For which is greater, the gift or the altar that makes the gift
sacred? So he who swears by the altar, swears by it and by
everything on it; and he who swears by the temple, swears by it and
by him who dwells in it; and he who swears by heaven, swears by the
throne of God and by him who sits upon it.
Woe to you scribes and Pharisees, hypocrites! for you tithe mint and
dill and cummin, and have neglected the weightier matters of the
law, justice and mercy and faith; these you ought to have done,
without neglecting the others. You blind guides, straining out a
gnat and swallowing a camel!
Woe to you, scribes and Pharisees, hypocrites! for you cleanse the
outside of the cup and of the plate, but inside they are full of
extortion and rapacity. You blind Pharisees, first cleanse the
inside of the cup and of the plate, that the outside also may be
clean.
Woe to you, scribes and Pharisees, hypocrites! for you are like
whitewashed tombs, which outwardly appear beautiful, but within they
are full of dead men’s bones and all uncleanness. So you also appear
righteous to men, but within you are full of hypocrisy and iniquity.
Woe to you, scribes and Pharisees, hypocrites! for you build the
tombs of the prophets and adorn the monuments of the righteous,
saying, ‘If we had lived in the days of our fathers, we would not
have taken part with them in shedding the blood of the prophets.’
Thus you witness against yourselves, that you are sons of those who
murdered the prophets. Fill up, then, the measure of your fathers.
You serpents, you brood of vipers, how are you to escape being
sentenced to hell?
Therefore I send you prophets and wise men and scribes, some of whom
you will kill and crucify, and some you will scourge in your
synagogues and persecute from town to town, that upon you may come
all the righteous blood shed on earth, from the blood of innocent
Abel to the blood of Zehari´ah the son of Barachi´ah, whom you
murdered between the sanctuary and the altar. Truly, I say to you,
all this will come upon this generation. (Mt. 23:1-36)
Jesus said, among other things: And call no man your father on
earth, for you have one Father, who is in heaven. (Mt. 23:9)
Why then, is there a "Holy Father" on Earth? All Catholics who
believe in the words of Jesus ought to ask themselves the question
whether they are not cheering for a Roman Catholic figurehead, thus
agreeing to defame the name of Jesus and His teachings, in order to
ridicule the greatest prophet of all times, who became our Redeemer.
Jesus called himself master, that is, teacher of wisdom. The
Catholic Church, contrary to His teachings and His will, turned Him
into a priest. In the Catholic Catechism, No. 1548, it says: "In the
ecclesial service of the ordained minister, it is Christ himself who
is present to his Church as Head of his Body, Shepherd of his flock,
high priest of the redemptive sacrifice, Teacher of Truth."
In the Catholic Catechism it says: "…and Teacher of Truth." In this
way, today’s church officials are again scorning Jesus, the Christ.
They talk about the teacher of truth, but they don’t do what Jesus
taught and wanted.
Pomp and Ceremony in Ordaining
and Clothing Priests in the Books of Moses
Jesus, the simple man among the people of Israel, a Jew in a simple
linen garment, the Son of Man, as He is called, son of a carpenter,
was a stark contrast to the caste of priests back then and today.
The priests back then wore robes befitting their position and their
claim, and today, cardinals, bishops, priests and ministers also
display themselves in splendid robes. But God let his Son, the
Co-Regent of heaven, walk the Earth in simple garments, without
property, as a carpenter. Why did God not dress Jesus, His Son, in
the robes of a priest and why did He not let Him serve in the Temple
of Jerusalem? Does God make exceptions? Let us read what "God
through Moses" said and how "He" gave Aaron and his sons the
priesthood and clothed them as priests. In Exodus it says:
The robe of the ephod. And you shall make the robe of the ephod all
of blue. It shall have in it an opening for the head, with a woven
binding around the opening, like the opening in a garment, that it
may not be torn. On its skirts you shall make pomegranates of blue
and purple and scarlet stuff, around its skirts, with bells of gold
between them, a golden bell and a pomegranate, round about on the
skirts of the robe. And it shall be upon Aaron when he ministers,
and its sound shall be heard when he goes into the holy place before
the Lord, and when he comes out, lest he die. (Ex. 28:31-35)
And it continues:
The crown. And you shall make a plate of pure gold, and engrave on
it, like the engraving of a signet, ‘Holy to the Lord.’ And you
shall fasten it on the turban by a lace of blue; it shall be on the
front of the turban. It shall be upon Aaron’s forehead, and Aaron
shall take upon himself any guilt incurred in the holy offering
which the people of Israel hallow as their holy gifts; it shall
always be upon his forehead, that they may be accepted before the
Lord. (Ex. 28:36-38)
The instructions of "God through Moses" that are in stark contrast
to the statements, the teaching and way of life of the Son of God
among the people should be passed on in detail according to the
following, so that the one who reads it with his heart can more
easily reach a decision: for the church officials or for the
following of Jesus, the Christ.
On the clothing of the priests it says:
And you shall weave the coat in checker work of fine linen, and you
shall make a turban of fine linen, and you shall make a girdle
embroidered with needlework. And for Aaron’s sons you shall make
coats and girdles and caps; you shall make them for glory and
beauty. And you shall put them upon Aaron your brother, and upon his
sons with him, and shall anoint them and ordain them and consecrate
them, that they may serve me as priests. And you shall make for them
linen breeches to cover their naked flesh; from the loins to the
thighs they shall reach; and they shall be upon Aaron, and upon his
sons, when they go into the tent of meeting, or when they come near
the altar to minister in the holy place; lest they bring guilt upon
themselves and die. This shall be a perpetual statute for him and
for his descendants after him. (Ex. 28:39-43)
Cleansing, clothing, and anointing. You shall bring Aaron and his
sons to the door of the tent of meeting, and wash them with water.
And you shall take the garments, and put on Aaron the coat and the
robe of the ephod, and the ephod, and the breastpiece, and gird him
with the skillfully woven band of the ephod; and you shall set the
turban on his head, and put the holy crown upon the turban. And you
shall take the anointing oil, and pour it on his head and anoint
him. Then you shall bring his sons, and put coats on them, and you
shall gird them with girdles and bind caps on them; and the
priesthood shall be theirs by a perpetual statute. Thus you shall
ordain Aaron and his sons.
Then you shall bring the bull before the tent of meeting. Aaron and
his sons shall lay their hands upon the head of the bull, and you
shall kill the bull before the Lord, at the door of the tent of
meeting, and shall take part of the blood of the bull and put it
upon the horns of the altar with your finger, and the rest of the
blood you shall pour out at the base of the altar. And you shall
take all the fat that covers the entrails, and the appendage of the
liver, and the two kidneys with the fat that is on them, and burn
them upon the altar. But the flesh of the bull, and its skin, and
its dung, you shall burn with fire outside the camp; it is a sin
offering.
Then you shall take one of the rams, and Aaron and his sons shall
lay their hands upon the head of the ram, and you shall slaughter
the ram, and shall take its blood and throw it against the altar
round about. Then you shall cut the ram into pieces, and wash its
entrails and its legs, and put them with its pieces and its head,
and burn the whole ram upon the altar; it is a burnt offering to the
Lord; it is a pleasing odor, an offering by fire to the Lord. You
shall take the other ram; and Aaron and his sons shall lay their
hands upon the head of the ram, and you shall kill the ram, and take
part of its blood and put it upon the tip of the right ear of Aaron
and upon the tips of the right ears of his sons, and upon the thumbs
of their right hands, and upon the great toes of the right feet, and
throw the rest of the blood against the altar round about. Then you
shall take part of the blood that is on the altar, and of the
anointing oil, and sprinkle it upon Aaron and his garments, and upon
his sons and his sons’ garments with him; and he and his garments
shall be holy, and his sons and his sons’ garments with him.
Ordination of priests. You shall also take the fat of the ram, and
the fat tail, and the fat that covers the entrails, and the
appendage of the liver, and the two kidneys with the fat that is on
them, and the right thigh (for it is a ram of ordination), and one
loaf of bread, and one cake of bread with oil, and one wafer, out of
the basket of unleavened bread that is before the Lord; and you
shall put all these in the hands of Aaron and in the hands of his
sons, and wave them for a wave offering before the Lord. Then you
shall take them from their hands, and burn them on the altar in
addition to the burnt offering, as a pleasing odor before the Lord;
it is an offering by fire to the Lord.
And you shall take the breast of the ram of Aaron’s ordination and
wave it for a wave offering before the Lord; and it shall be your
portion. And you shall consecrate the breast of the wave offering,
and the thigh of the priests’ portion, which is waved, and which is
offered from the ram of ordination, since it is for Aaron and for
his sons. It shall be for Aaron and his sons as a perpetual due from
the people of Israel, for it is the priests’ portion to be offered
by the people of Israel from their peace offerings; it is their
offering to the Lord. The holy garments of Aaron shall be for his
sons after him, to be anointed in them and ordained in them. The son
who is priest in his place shall wear them seven days, when he comes
into the tent of meeting to minister in the holy place. You shall
take the ram of the ordination, and boil its flesh in a holy place.
Holy meal. And Aaron and his sons shall eat the flesh of the ram and
the bread that is in the basket, at the door of the tent of meeting.
They shall eat those things with which atonement was made, to ordain
and consecrate them, but an outsider shall not eat of them, because
they are holy.
And if any of the flesh for the ordination, or of the bread, remain
until the morning, then you shall burn the remainder with fire, it
shall not be eaten, because it is holy. Thus you shall do to Aaron
and to his sons, according to all that I have commanded you; through
seven days shall you ordain them.
Consecration of the altar of burnt offering. And every day you shall
offer a bull as a sin offering for atonement. Also you shall offer a
sin offering for the altar, when you make atonement for it, and
shall anoint it, to consecrate it. Seven days you shall make
atonement for the altar and consecrate it, and the altar shall be
most holy; whatever touches the altar shall become holy. (Ex.
29:4-37)
And of the blue and purple and scarlet stuff they made finely
wrought garments, for ministering in the holy place; they made the
holy garments for Aaron; as the Lord had commanded Moses.
And he made the ephod of gold, blue and purple and scarlet stuff,
and fine twined linen. And gold leaf was hammered out and cut into
threads to work into the blue and purple and the scarlet stuff, and
into the fine twined linen, in skilled design.
They made for the ephod shoulder-pieces, joined to it at its two
edges. And the skillfully woven band upon it, to gird it on, was of
the same materials and workmanship, of gold, blue and purple and
scarlet stuff, and fine twined linen; as the Lord had commanded
Moses. The onyx stones were prepared, enclosed in settings of gold
filigree and engraved like the engravings of a signet, according to
the names of the sons of Israel. And he set them on the
shoulder-pieces of the ephod, to be stones of remembrance for the
sons of Israel; as the Lord had commanded of Moses.
He made the breastpiece, in skilled work, like the work of the
ephod, of gold, blue and purple and scarlet stuff, and fine twined
linen. It was square; the breastpiece was made double, a span its
length and a span its breadth when doubled. And they set in it four
rows of stones. A row of sardius, topaz, and carbuncle was the first
row; and the second row, an emerald, a sapphire, and a diamond; and
the third row, a jacinth, an agate, and an amethyst; and the fourth
row, a beryl, an onyx, and a jasper; they were enclosed in settings
of gold filigree. There were twelve stones with their names
according to the names of the sons of Israel; they were like
signets, each engraved with its name, for the twelve tribes.
And they made on the breastpiece twisted chains like cords, of pure
gold; and they made two settings of gold filigree and two gold
rings, and put the two rings on the two edges of the breastpiece;
and they put the two cords of gold in the two rings at the edges of
the breastpiece. Two ends of the two cords they had attached to the
two settings of filigree; thus they attached it in front to the
shoulder-pieces of the ephod. Then they made two rings of gold, and
put them at the two ends of the breastpiece, on its inside edge next
to the ephod. And they made two rings of gold, and attached them in
front to the lower part of the two shoulder-pieces of the ephod, at
its joining above the skillfully woven band of the ephod. And they
bound the breastpiece by its rings to the rings of the ephod with a
lace of blue, so that it should lie upon the skilfully woven band of
the ephod, and that the breastpiece should not come loose from the
ephod; as the Lord had commanded Moses.
He also made the robe of the ephod woven all of blue; and the
opening of the robe in it was like the opening in a garment, with a
binding around the opening, that it might not be torn. On the skirts
of the robe they made pomegranates of blue and purple and scarlet
stuff and fine twined linen. They also made bells of pure gold, and
put the bells between the pomegranates upon the skirts of the robe
round about, between the pomegranates; a bell and a pomegranate, a
bell and a pomegranate round about upon the skirts of the robe for
ministering, as the Lord had commanded Moses. (Ex. 39:1-26)
The crown. And they made the plate of the holy crown of pure gold,
and wrote upon it an inscription, like the engraving of a signet,
‘Holy to the Lord.’ And they tied to it a lace of blue, to fasten it
on the turban above; as the Lord had commanded Moses. (Ex. 39:30-31)
And they brought … to Moses … the finely worked garments for
ministering in the holy place, the holy garments for Aaron the
priest, and the garments of his sons to serve as priests. According
to all that the Lord had commanded Moses, so the people of Israel
had done all the work. And Moses saw all the work, and behold, they
had done it; as the Lord had commanded, so had they done it: And
Moses blessed them. (Ex. 39: 41-43)
And you shall set up the court round about, and hang up the screen
for the gate of the court. Then you shall take the anointing oil,
and anoint the tabernacle and all that is in it, and consecrate it
and all its furniture; and it shall become holy. You shall also
anoint the altar of burnt offering and all its utensils, and
consecrate the altar; and the altar shall be most holy. You shall
also anoint the laver and its base, and consecrate it. Then you
shall bring Aaron and his sons to the door of the tent of meeting,
and shall wash them with water, and put upon Aaron the holy
garments, and you shall anoint him and consecrate him, that he may
serve me as priest. You shall bring his sons also and put coats on
them, and anoint them, as you anointed their father, that they may
serve me as priests. And their anointing shall admit them to a
perpetual priesthood throughout their generations. (Ex. 40:8-15)
The last bit shows that one did not qualify for the office through
such qualities as nearness to God, high moral maturity or the like;
one just had to be born into the right family.
A soul that has enjoyed a good life in one incarnation will often
follow the pull to live again as a human being where comfort, wealth
and prestige will be offered, and where honors fall into one’s lap.
Many parallels may be drawn between the life of ecclesiastic
officials today and the pomp and effort it must have taken to clothe
Aaron and his sons in precious garments according to their special
position and to honor their prestige in magnificent ceremonies.
The church authorities of today no longer sacrifice animals to
appease or honor "God." Today’s clergy sacrifices animals for more
immediate and tasty purposes. As mentioned before, they have the
animals killed by butchers in slaughterhouses, have their carcasses
sawed and hacked to pieces, and the flesh prepared by cooks for the
pleasure of the "glorified" palate as tasty morsels offered up for
the well-being and fullness of the body. All this has nothing to do
with the teachings of Jesus, the Christ, the Son of God, the
Co-Regent of heaven, who walked on Earth as the Son of Man, and who
taught and lived as an example that which is true and will remain
eternally.
The Sacrifice of Redemption that Jesus Brought.
"The Scapegoat"
Today’s church authorities speak of the "sacrifice of redemption"
that Jesus brought. Supposedly Jesus took upon Himself past, present
and future sins, and suffered on the cross for them. The Catechism
of the Catholic Church reads at No. 605: "There is not, never has
been, and never will be a single human being for whom Christ did not
suffer" (Synod of Quiercy, 853: Densinger 624). Who saw to it that
He suffer? Did Jesus take up the cross voluntarily or was He driven
to the cross by the people whom the priests had incited?
Both "Christian" churches offer misinformation about redemption
through the Christ of God when Jesus spoke the "It Is Finished" on
the cross. According to the Catechism of the Catholic Church, Jesus
accomplished the substitution of the suffering Servant, who "makes
himself an offering for sin," when "he bore the sin of many," and
who "shall make many to be accounted righteous," for "he shall bear
their iniquities." (Is. 53:10-12) Jesus atoned for our faults and
made satisfaction for our sins to the Father. (No. 615)
In the Creed of the Protestant-Lutheran Church, Martin Luther even
writes that He alone "is the lamb of God which bears the sins of the
world," Jn. 1:29 and "the Lord has laid on him the iniquity of us
all." Is. 53:6, item: "since all have sinned … they are justified by
his grace as a gift, through the redemption which is in Christ
Jesus, whom God put forward as an expiation by his blood" etc., Rom.
3:23-25.
And since such must be believed and cannot be attained by any work,
law, nor merit, nor be grasped by us, therefore it is clear and
certain that it is such belief alone that will make us righteous …
(Martin Luther, at Schmallkaldener, II, art. 1)
The Church Father Ambrosius writes: For because all the world became
guilty, therefore he has taken sin from all the world. (Apologie IV)
People today rely on logic, so let us think logically here. God
cannot have anything mysterious, because He is, in everything, the
revelation; His law is the logos and therefore logical.
If Jesus, the Christ, had "taken the sin from all the world," and
had thus cancelled sin, the soul burden of human beings – then why
is the world, humanity, so different from this, often showing in
itself the most iniquitous of sins? Why then is Earth and nature not
the paradise, the Being of heaven, that the Christians seek to pray
down to the Earth in the Lord’s Prayer?
And what really happened? Jesus, the Christ, tells us in His divine
revelations at this time. With the words on the cross "It Is
Finished" a part of His spiritual heritage, the part power of the
divine primordial power, called the Redeemer-light (also called the
Redeemer-spark), flowed into all burdened souls.
In This Is My Word we read for example:
Although the light of salvation, the redemption, shines in all
souls, nevertheless only the one who purifies his soul and also
keeps it pure becomes perfect. My Redeemer-deed did not wipe out the
sins of this world, the sins of all souls and men. It is the power
and the source of power for all those who repent and no longer sin.
Redemption is the support of the soul and the protection from the
dissolution of the soul. It is also the light on the path to the
heart of God. … Merely believing in Me, the Redeemer of all souls
and men, does not bring about the purity of soul and person. (p.
889)
No one comes to the Father in the heavens but through Me, the Son of
God and Co-Regent of the heavens, who became the Redeemer of all
souls and men. (p. 852)
But the Church, elevating itself to the "bringer of salvation,"
taught and teaches: Only those who are reborn in Christ through the
sacrament of baptism receive the benefit of His sacrifice. The
Church in this manner seeks to act like a sieve that will let only
their sheep pass through.
Although he died for all (II Cor. 5:15), not everybody receives the
benefit of his death, but only those who are given share in what his
suffering brought. (Neuner-Ross, Der Glaube der Kirche, 12th ed.
1986, No. 793 [The Belief of the Church])
This share human beings gain through baptism:
…for through this rebirth they are given, by virtue of the benefit
of his suffering, the mercy by which they become virtuous. (No. 793)
Instrumental cause is the sacrament of baptism, that is the
sacrament of faith, without which no one becomes righteous. (No.
799)
Instead of leading the believers to Christ, the Church has bound and
continues to bind the believers to itself through sacraments such as
baptism and others, dispensed by priests who were supposedly
appointed by Jesus. But Jesus was opposed to priesthood. He said:
But you are not to be called Rabbi. (Mt. 23:8) He never elevated
Himself to the priesthood.
Reading of the "sacrifice of redemption" and of Jesus taking all the
sins of humanity upon himself, I am reminded of the sin offering in
the third Book of Moses, Leviticus:
The Lord spoke to Moses, after the death of the two sons of Aaron,
when they drew near before the Lord and died; and the Lord said to
Moses, ‘Tell Aaron your brother not to come at all times into the
holy place within the veil, before the mercy seat which is upon the
ark, lest he die; for I will appear in the cloud upon the mercy
seat.
But thus shall Aaron come into the holy place: with a young bull for
a sin offering and a ram for a burnt offering. He shall put on the
holy linen coat, and shall have the linen breeches on his body, be
girded with the linen girdle, and wear the linen turban; these are
the holy garments. He shall bathe his body in water, and then put
them on. And he shall take from the congregation of the people of
Israel two male goats for a sin offering, and one ram for a burnt
offering.
And Aaron shall offer the bull as a sin offering for himself, and
shall make atonement for himself and for his house. Then he shall
take the two goats, and set them before the Lord at the door of the
tent of meeting; and Aaron shall cast lots upon the two goats, one
lot for the Lord and the other lot for Aza´zel. And Aaron shall
present the goat on which the lot fell for the Lord, and offer it as
a sin offering; but the goat on which the lot fell for Aza´zel shall
be presented alive before the Lord to make atonement over it, that
it may be sent away into the wilderness to Aza´zel. Aaron shall
present the bull as a sin offering for himself, and shall make
atonement for himself and for his house; he shall kill the bull as a
sin offering for himself …’ (Lev. 16:1-11)
In the Commentary of the German Jerusalem Bible it says:
Aza´zel is the name for a demon who, according to the belief of the
ancient Hebrews and Canaanites, dwelt in the desert, the unfertile
land in which God did not do his work of fertilization … Note that
the animal is not sacrificed to the demon but that the "scapegoat"
carries the sins of the people to the desert, where Aza´zel dwells.
The transfer of sins and rite of atonement take place "before the
Lord," mediated by the priest. Thus, the cult of Yahweh takes an old
folk custom, but it is transformed and purified. (note 16a)
Consider the blasphemy of it! The goat "for Aza´zel" should be
"presented live before the Lord to serve as atonement, that it may
be sent away into the wilderness to Aza´zel." But the law of cause
and effect, as mentioned before, was known in the Old Testament, the
law that Jesus, the Christ, called "sowing and reaping." God
certainly taught it through every prophet. For, in the end, without
knowledge of this fundamental law, no one can finally recognize his
guilt and become free from it. It will also hardly be possible to
understand that God loves him and that He is just. Thus, everyone
should have known that people will reap what they sow. This harvest
no one can take away from them.
The "old folk custom" using a scapegoat among the people of God,
who, after all, had received the Ten Commandments from God, is in my
opinion even worse than comparable practices among pagan peoples
done out of ignorance. And with astonishment we read that such a
custom was "purified" when taken up by the cult of Yahweh.
The poor animal, the scapegoat, alone in the desert! But the animal
cannot burden itself. People however can, by performing or
participating in this old custom – but purified, of course! And
anyone who takes action against his neighbor or his second neighbor,
the animal, will encounter the same or similar thing.
May the one who has ears to hear, listen. And the one who has a
heart for Christ, our Redeemer, will orient himself to John: Come
out of her, my people, lest you take part in her sins, lest you
share in her plagues ... (Rev. 18:4)
According to "Moses," God Himself set up the priests. But Jesus
said: I am the way, and the truth, and the life; no one comes to the
Father, but by me. (Jn. 14:6) And He said, ... the Kingdom of God is
in the midst of you. (Lk. 17:21)
And: If any one keeps my word, he will never see death. (Jn. 8:51)
And: Follow me. (Mt. 4:19)
Again we hear from Jesus that He, who is one with the Father, is the
way, and the truth, and the life, and that no one comes to the
Father but through Him. This means that we do not need church
authorities and external churches; we should orient ourselves to the
teaching of Jesus, the Christ, and walk in His footsteps.
The First Early Christians
Knew No Ceremonies
Before His death on the cross, Jesus had taken several preparatory
steps to spread His teachings to many people in all the world. For
instance, He sent men and women out to announce the tidings of the
coming Kingdom of God. He taught and instructed some apostles who
founded the Christian communities after His passing. In these
communities, later original communities, the prophetic Spirit spoke
and guided the first Christians. Christ thus led His communities via
the prophetic word. At the Last Supper (of which we also have only a
partial account), when Jesus broke the bread as He had done many
times when they sat together, He said: Do this in remembrance of me.
(Luke 22:19). This means that those in His following should share
the bread.
What does it mean, to share the bread?
In a community of inner life, in which all are equal, in which all
are free because they are not tied down by envy, by the desire to
have or to be, and so forth, but in which all gladly do as God has
called on them to do, there is brotherliness – one is the other’s
brother, sister and friend; and there is unity, a link coming from a
common goal. The one who has gives; everyone works and contributes
for the benefit of the whole according to his or her abilities. This
creates a balance that favors no one. This is the impersonal life,
the life in the spirit of God, an Original Christian community life.
The Church has turned the occasion of the breaking of bread in
Jesus’ life into a ceremony. A sin offering really, to bind the
believers to the Church and the sacraments that are "necessary for
salvation." This binding at the same time prevents a person from
turning to God in his inner being and receiving liberation from his
sins through the redeeming power of the Spirit of the Christ of God
– on the basis of recognition, remorse and actively clearing things
up.
Only an active, lawful life will bring us inner gain, will fill our
heart and strengthen us, make us free, joyful, healthy and dynamic.
This gives meaning to our life, substance – but never gestures,
rites or ceremonies. This does not change, no matter how often we
repeat gestures, rites and ceremonies.
The first Christians, and a little later the Early Christians, who
felt spiritually at home in the first original community in
Jerusalem under the guidance of some apostles who, in turn, were
guided by the prophetic Spirit, knew neither ceremonies nor rites,
and no cult. They killed no animals to sacrifice them to a god; they
also killed no animals for consumption – they ate no meat. They
strove to live according to the commandments of God and the Sermon
on the Mount of Jesus: to cleanse the inner church, the temple of
the soul and body, so that the Spirit of the Christ of God might be
effective in soul and body. Their early Christian meal consisted of
the breaking of bread and prayer. They shared the bread among
themselves.
Paul Overset the Living Original Christianity,
Falsified the Teachings of Jesus
and Laid the Foundation
for a State Religion and an
Externalized Church of Rituals
A theologian tells us that Saul of Tarsus in Asia Minor, a Jewish
Pharisee, was a bitter enemy of Jesus of Nazareth and persecuted the
early Christian community. Saul one day declared that he had heard a
revelation of Christ within himself. He also said that he had seen
Him in a vision. So Saul changed his orientation. Supposedly, Saul
now wants to fight for Him, and no longer against Him. But the
Jewish Pharisee Saul did not become a member of the early Christian
community; rather, he started giving sermons without first preparing
himself, without speaking to the apostles, and without knowledge of
what the prophetic Spirit was revealing in the early community.
Soon it became evident that Saul, called Paul after his supposed
conversion, mixed the teachings of Christ with his Roman conceptions
and that he had a falling out with some early Christian groups which
had formed here and there. Saul, now supposedly Paul, allows neither
the early Christians, nor the prophetic Spirit in the early
Christian communities to correct him. On the contrary, he reports
his own "revelations." And through an argument with Peter, whom Paul
openly accused of hypocrisy (Gal. 2: 11–13), new disagreements were
ignited concerning the consumption of meat* and early Christian
meals.
The issue was also whether Jewish rules of faith applied in the
early Christian communities, including the rules about food. Paul
accuses Peter of not having shared the communal meal with converted
heathens because of Peter’s Jewish notions and that he had also led
Barnabas astray, who was Paul’s companion. Did Peter accordingly
keep the Jewish food laws with reduced meat consumption? Or did he
eat no meat at all, as he and the other apostles had learned from
Jesus?
Paul on the other hand had not known Jesus and did not know how
Jesus had taught His apostles. Paul may have been a Jew, but he was
also a citizen of Rome; and he ate meat, as others did, above all
wealthy Romans – without limitation. He had no awareness of the fact
that some will forgo the enjoyment of meat out of love and respect
for our second neighbors, the animals. It did not bother him if the
meat had first been sacrificed to pagan "gods" before it was offered
for sale at the market, because, according to Paul, there are no
gods. Paul also favored meat for the early Christian communal meal
and probably also for the Lord’s Supper, as long as no one objected.
This was the only reason he would forgo meat. He wrote: Eat whatever
is sold in the meat market without raising any question on the
ground of conscience. (I Cor. 10:25) Again, he was not considering
the suffering of the animals, but the sacrifice to pagan deities.
In the Lord’s Prayer, Christians pray: Your kingdom come, Your will
be done. If the Kingdom of God is to come to the people, then the
people have to prepare for it. In the Kingdom of God there is no
consumption of meat.
But the Church makes it easy for itself and for its believers, by
claiming: The coming new world and thus peace with nature are
according to the Christian faith the work of God. Human beings
cannot produce the conditions of the Kingdom of God. (Evangelische
Kirche Deutschlands, in: Zur Verantwortung des Menschen für das Tier
als Mitgeschöpf (1991) p. 9 [Lutheran Church of Germany, in: About
Man’s Responsibility for the Animal as a Fellow Creature]).
Back to Paul:
It became increasingly clear that Paul was falsifying the teachings
of Jesus of Nazareth, because the differences between Paul on the
one side and the apostles and Jesus of Nazareth on the other became
more and more pronounced. The apostles had been trained and taught
by Jesus directly, while Saul, now supposedly Paul, did not know
Jesus. Paul hardly had an inner relationship to true original
Christianity. Instead of letting others tell him about Jesus and
orienting himself to Him as an example as far as possible, Paul
simply declared that his lack of instruction from Jesus simply did
not matter. He believed that he was united with Christ internally
(Gal. 2:20) and writes in a self-assured manner about the situation
of the early Christians of his day: Even though we once regarded
Christ from a human point of view (meaning the other apostles), we
regard him thus no longer. (II Cor. 5:16) Saul, now self-styled
Paul, re-programmed the teachings of Jesus through his intellectual
Roman background of rituals. For example, Paul thought that the
blood that ran during Jesus’ crucifixion received once and for all
the redemptive power in God (Rom. 3:25, 6:10), so that animal
sacrifices were no longer necessary. And so, Jesus was the
"sacrificial lamb," so to speak. In his letter to the Romans, Paul
writes: But God shows his love for us in that while we were yet
sinners Christ died for us. (Rom. 5:8) The words while we were yet
sinners show that Christ’s sacrifice of redemption meant atonement
once and for all, to Paul.
This is what the theologian tells me.
Jesus’ teachings on the other hand were entirely different. He
wanted no "expiatory sacrifices," but wished that all people keep
the commandments of God and the Sermon on the Mount of Jesus, in
order to thus be there for their neighbor. Among other things, Paul
said that simply the belief in Jesus’ death as the energy of
salvation "without merit" raised people to true life. That is nice
to hear, of course, for people who let others do their thinking for
them, who are satisfied with words, but do not follow through with
deeds.
A large part of the teachings of Paul is a motley collection of his
concepts that have nothing to do with Jesus, the Christ. Jesus
taught about keeping the commandments of God and the Sermon on the
Mount, that people should open up the Kingdom of God within
themselves. Whoever does so, by following the teachings of Jesus,
the Christ, will find God in the very basis of his soul, without
priests, that is, spiritual superiors; he has no need of
intermediaries.
For whatever reasons, Paul felt compelled to assume responsibility
in the early communities. He brought his intellectual notions into
the community of fishermen, carpenters and apostles. The simple
believers, who used Jesus, the Christ, for orientation, apparently
had no practice in disputing and could not stand up to the
self-important scribe "Paul." Trained in the rhetorical arts, Paul
drew on his Jewish theological knowledge, thus imperceptibly
altering the Christian teachings, the teachings of Jesus of
Nazareth. He undermined them.
Because Paul placed himself above the early Christian communities
and imported his ideas into them, ideas that were full of Roman
rituals, he laid the foundation for the state and people’s religion
of the Roman Empire, in which the central teachings of Jesus of
Nazareth, the Ten Commandments, and the Sermon on the Mount, no
longer played a role.
And so, Paul overset the living, original Christianity, in which the
prophetic Spirit was active. He laid the foundation for a church of
rituals with priests and bishops, in which the old rituals came to
life again, the rites, ceremonies, robes, pulpits and altars, just
what people were used to in their old religions. The pagan cult
continued to build on an external religion in which the individual
no longer strove to purify his or her own temple, the soul and the
body, but would take part in rituals and listen to those who had
themselves celebrated and honored as shepherds of a ritualistic
church.
The church of rituals, the externalized church, triumphed – the
church of inwardness, of inner reflection, faltered.
On the foundations of the church of rituals, Paul built a concept of
the state: in an intellectually adept speech, he made the
"Christians" believe that they were to obey worldly authorities,
since these authorities were set up and appointed by God, and who,
as "servants of God," execute the just "wrath" of God with the
sword. (Rom.13:4)
In the nearly 2000 years that followed, this teaching of Saul,
"Paul," had and still has a devastating effect. But it has nothing
to do with Jesus of Nazareth and the living Original Christianity.
Jesus and the apostles taught: Render therefore to Caesar the things
that are Caesar’s and to God the things that are God’s (Mt. 22:21),
but also: We must obey God rather than men. (Acts 5:29)
Constantine: Collaboration of Church and State.
A Further Departure from the Teachings of Jesus –
The State Church, an External Religion of Power
The theologian now sketches the further development of Christianity
up to Constantine: During the first three centuries there still was
much persecution of Christians, but by depending on Paul, many
Christians responded by fitting in and subordinating themselves to
the state, in order to show that injustice was being done to them.
Responsible for the leadership of the communities were at first
elders, prophets, and an "angel" who, through a life in the
footsteps of Jesus without compromise, maintained the connection to
God (cf. Rev. 2 and 3: letter to the "angels" in the communities).
But angels and prophets could only hold out a few years. Paul did
mention "apparitions and revelations of the Lord," but increasingly
turned attention to his person and took a threatening stance against
possible revelations that might question his teachings: But even if
we, or an angel from heaven, should preach to you a gospel contrary
to that which we preached to you, let him be accursed. (Gal. 1:8)
Paul (or a student using his name) finally empowered the followers
of Paul, Timothy and Titus, to name a bishop, in addition to the
elders, as leader of the community. In the first letter to Timothy,
it says: If any one aspires to the office of bishop, he desires a
noble task. (I Tim. 3:1)
Already at the beginning of the second century, these measures
developed into a fixed hierarchical institution, headed by a bishop,
below him the elders, below the elders the deacons. The bishops soon
ruled the communities like kings – one speaks of "monarchical
episcopacy." The bishops were soon followed by metropolitan bishops,
or "patriarchs," responsible for larger regions, and the bishop of
the capital turned into the "pope."
More and more the holders of these offices tried to achieve
recognition and social acceptance for their communities, probably to
prevent possible persecutions, as well. Original Christian
principles receded into the background or were given up. It was even
Paul, for example, who condoned slavery, and in the communities
there were slaveholders. The result of this authoritarian mindset
was that increasing numbers among the members of the communities
supported military service for Christians.
The following development is summed up by a reader of Karlheinz
Deschner’s books:
This development was welcomed by Emperor Constantine, born in 285.
He soon allied himself with the Church. This symbiosis of church and
state, a classic case of chumminess – according to the principle,
you scratch my back and I’ll scratch yours, or birds of a feather
stick together – proved to be an extraordinarily effective and
long-lived association of intent for the domination and manipulation
of subordinates. The might, the "authority," of the state combined
with the authority of "God" to form an unbeatable tool of pressure
and discipline, for enforcing one’s will upon the people.
Karlheinz Deschner writes an extensive chapter about this
development in his Kriminalgeschichte des Christentums [Criminal
History of Christianity] (vol. 1, pp. 213 ff.): Constantine was born
in 285 in what is today Bulgaria. His father was a military tribune
and, after 305, emperor in the western part of the Roman Empire,
which had been divided into four parts by Diocletian to make it
easier to rule.
Constantine like his father delighted in warfare and was also very
cruel. He was always waging war against several Germanic tribes. He
had great numbers of defeated enemies thrown to the lions in the
circus, and had two defeated princes torn apart by bears.
Then Constantine, in a ten-year civil war, subdued his three
co-emperors. For some time he sided with Licinius, one of the other
emperors, until Licinus had done away with co-emperor Maximin, at
which point, Constantine turned on Licinius. Before this,
Constantine had first eliminated his competitor Maxentius, in the
famous battle of Milvic bridge (312) where, supposedly, Constantine
had a vision: "In this sign you will be victorious."
The followers and families of his defeated opponents in battle were
mercilessly exterminated. Constantine swore that he would spare
Licinus, the last to be defeated, but only a year later, Constantine
had Licinus strangled.
Constantine’s cruelty did not stop at his own family. The British
historian Shelly writes: "This cold-blooded and hypocritical brute
cut his son’s throat, strangled his wife, murdered his father-in-law
and his own brother-in-law …"; but this does not mean that
Constantine did so by his own hand. He had his wife killed, because
she was accused of adultery (but not proven) – he himself however
was a notorious adulterer.
Constantine had a splendid palace built; he dressed in the highest
luxury and pomp, had himself addressed as "representative of God,"
or as "our deity" (nustrum numen), and had himself celebrated by the
clergy as "Messiah" and "Redeemer."
With this, we come to this mutual usefulness: Constantine granted
privileges to the Church and the Church, in turn, justified his
excessive power.
During his whole life, until right before his death (337),
Constantine was not officially a Christian. He only accepted baptism
at the very end, and then not Catholic, but "heretical," namely,
Aryan. In the early years of his reign, while he still ruled Gaul,
Constantine promoted paganism. Later he did not commit himself to
Christianity, and had coins minted, for instance, that bore the
image of the sun god.
It therefore cannot have been inner conviction that caused
Constantine to seek an alliance with the Church.
The decisive point was that in Gaul there were few Christians. But
then Constantine started conquering Italy, where there were many
Christians. In some regions of Asia Minor, which he conquered last,
half the population was Christian. Therefore, the aid of the Church
was welcome.
Deschner writes: Constantine, who had traveled from his early years
on, was well informed, including in matters of religious policy –
especially when it came to the strict, almost military ranks of the
Catholics, spanning the entire empire, as the most disciplined and
most self-contained organization of late antiquity. And in this
church he perceived a model of his own empire, a prefiguration of
it. (p. 242)
The collaboration between Constantine and the Church stamped by Paul
was a success from the very beginning. The Church unleashed a
defamatory campaign against Constantine’s first opponent, Maxentius.
To this day, Maxentius is considered a bloodthirsty persecutor of
Christianity and the epitome of wickedness and tyranny. In reality,
Maxentius was a competent and moderate ruler; he was not prone to
war and he tolerated the Christians. But he sent two Roman Christian
bishops into exile, because there had been a great argument among
the "Christians" after the bishops’ election. Maxentius levied taxes
equally, also among the rich, and the Church even then was not on
the side of the poor, or the less war-mongering, and therefore less
powerful, politicians.
As soon as Constantine had established himself in Rome after
defeating Maxentius, he showed his gratitude: The Church received
large gifts of property and was given back church property. The
Church of Rome alone received "in excess of one ton of gold and
almost ten tons of silver" (p. 236). From the state coffers, which
he filled by exploiting his subjects, Constantine financed huge and
magnificent church buildings everywhere in the empire. But not only
that: He dispensed the clergy from taxes and gave them the right to
be named heirs (which before, only pagan cults had enjoyed and only
in exceptional cases). He even gave the Church legal jurisdiction:
Against the judgement of a bishop there was no appeal.
Deschner: Not a few bishops could already imitate the character and
ceremony of the imperial court. They had claim to special titles, to
incense, were greeted with genuflection, and sat on a throne that
was the likeness of God’s throne. To others they preached humility!
(p. 238)
In a very short time, the Church became so rich and privileged that
Constantine had to take measures. For instance, he limited the
possibilities of the rich to become clerics – because in this way
they wanted to evade taxation! Under Constantine’s subsequent
successors, the right of the Church to inherit was again limited,
but not permanently.
You scratch my back and I’ll scratch yours. Already in 314 the
Church decided that Christians who refused military service had to
be banned from the Church – a complete turnabout, as it had been
those who took up arms who were banned before.
The distribution of roles was clearly defined: The emperor had the
say-so, even in religious matters. For instance, he called the
Council of Nicaea in 325 and dictated the creed which has been valid
ever since. The emperor was the highest god-like ruler. The church
dignitaries followed right behind, often living in the same
splendor. And they showed their gratitude by justifying the
emperor’s power and his wars, by covering up his cruel deeds, and by
constantly flattering him.
Constantine – the original image of the symbiosis between church and
state. Deschner writes: Constantine’s predecessors had feared
Christianity and had at times fought it. He turned it to his ends by
granting a plethora of favors and privileges … In fact he used the
clergy and forced his will upon it … The church became powerful but
it lost all freedom …He and they[Constantine and the bishops] turned
the church into the state church … (p. 242 f.)
Constantine, even though he was not a believing Catholic, gave the
Church free rein in the early persecution of dissidents, when, for
example, pagan temples were destroyed by the "Christian" mob.
Apparently under the influence of the clergy, Constantine passed
anti-Jewish laws, among them the death penalty for converts from
Christianity to Judaism. At times, for political expediency and
tellingly not consistent, Constantine persecuted the heretical
movements of the Donatists in North Africa and the Marcionites. The
Donatists were opposed to a union of throne and altar and combined
with rebellious farm workers against the large landowners. Of
course, this was not what church and state had in mind!
Under Constantine’s rule, the term "Catholic" appears for the first
time – certainly no coincidence – to separate the Church from
so-called "heretics."
This will do as a historical flash-black. May the one who has ears
to hear, listen. And may the one who has a heart for Christ follow
the advice in John’s Revelation: Come out of her, my people, lest
you take part in her sins, lest you share in her plagues ... (Rev.
18:4)
The church of pagan rituals was built through Paul, who
misinterpreted the teachings of Jesus by integrating it into the
pagan tradition of Rome and by providing it with all the
power-hunger and truculence of Roman power structures.
Paul denigrated women as the reflection of the man, but the man is
the reflection of God according to Paul. This gave rise to the
Christian church management as the men’s domain, which persists to
this day. On the other hand, Jesus taught that man and woman are
equal. He made no difference; He did not raise the man to be the
reflection of God and did not reduce the woman to be the reflection
of the man. Again, this is Saul, the same as Paul, but not Jesus,
the Christ.
Constantine turned the church of pagan rituals into a state church,
or state religion, which to this day, with its bloody and cruel
roots, is still interwoven with pagan rites. The bloody, cruel and
barbarous religious cults started developing soon after Moses and
continued in the former Roman Empire. Today, the state churches,
offshoots of the Roman church of rituals and power, are external
religions of power, which have little in common with Jesus, the
Christ. They use, that is, abuse, the name of Jesus, the Christ. The
undertow from the Old Testament and Constantine’s brutal and
arrogant presumption remain.
The Holy Scripture –
Old Testament and New Testament –
"Inspired by the Holy Spirit"
The true Christian religion, the religion of inward striving to
develop the kingdom of the inner being, that is, to open the heart
to all people and all animals, to the world of plants and minerals,
was sacrificed by the priests, by Saul, and by Constantine, the
pagan. And all this and further horrible deeds throughout the Middle
Ages and into our times, God supposedly commanded. This is confirmed
by the Vatican in the Second Vatican Council:
God is the author of the Sacred Scripture. "The divinely revealed
realities, which are contained and presented in the text of the
Sacred Scripture, have been written down under the inspiration of
the Holy Spirit."
For Holy Mother Church, relying on the faith of the apostolic age,
accepts as sacred and canonical (meaning: belonging to the revealed
word of God) the books of the Old and New Testaments, whole and
entire with all their parts, on the grounds that, written under the
inspiration of the Holy Spirit, they have God as their author and
have been handed on as such to the Church herself." (2nd Vatican
Council: "Dei Verbum" 11, quoted from Catholic Catechism, No. 105).
God inspired the human authors of the sacred books. "To compose the
sacred books, God chose certain men who, all the while he employed
them in this task, made full use of their own faculties and powers
so that, though he acted in them and by them, it was as true authors
that they consigned to writing whatever he wanted written, and no
more." (No. 106).
The Holy Scripture is supposedly revered by the Church. Furthermore,
the Catholic Catechism contains the following statements:
The Church has always venerated the Scriptures as she venerates the
Lord’s Body. She never ceases to present to the faithful the bread
of life, taken from the one table of God’s word and Christ’s Body.
(No. 103)
In the Sacred Scripture, the Church constantly finds her nourishment
and her strength … (No. 104).
Since therefore all that the inspired authors or sacred writers
affirm should be regarded as affirmed by the Holy Spirit, we must
acknowledge that the books of Scripture firmly, faithfully, and
without error teach that truth … (No. 107)
That the Church "constantly finds her nourishment and her strength"
in the Holy Scripture is supported by the words: "In the sacred
books, the Father who is in heaven comes lovingly to meet his
children, and talks with them." (2nd Vatican Council: "Dei Verbum"
21, No. 104) But concerning the Books of Moses, from which we have
already quoted many passages, it is doubtful that it is the heavenly
Father whom we encounter there, and who could hardly be considered
"loving" given the cruel instructions, macabre demands, and hard
threats of punishment.
It is not possible to discuss all the statements that mock the truth
and God, the All-One, who is truth. The absurdity of such church
teaching is so obvious that is it a wonder that so few have
recognized it as such, while so many have quietly accepted it
without protest.
The Catholic Catechism continues: The Old Testament is an
indispensable part of the Sacred Scripture. Its books are divinely
inspired and retain a permanent value, for the Old Covenant has
never been revoked. (No. 121)"The economy of the Old Testament was
deliberately so oriented that it should prepare for … the coming of
Christ, redeemer of all men." Even though they "contain matters
imperfect and provisional," the books of the Old Testament bear
witness to the whole divine pedagogy of God’s saving love: these
writings are a storehouse of "sublime teachings on God and of sound
wisdom on human life, as well as a wonderful treasury of prayers";
in them, too, the mystery of our salvation is present in a hidden
way." (No. 122)
True enough: hidden, very hidden …
In the last paragraph we read: Even though they "contain matters
imperfect and provisional," the books of the Old Testament bear
witness to the whole divine pedagogy of God’s saving love …
According to this statement, God, who should be absolute and
perfect, inspired something that was imperfect. Also, God supposedly
revealed something that was "provisional." If so, then God’s laws
would also be temporal and God would be a changeable god of the
times. According to God’s words through Jeremiah, however, it was
the caste of priests at work, taking over the name of Moses and
infusing it with the spirit of their times that blows and is
effective even to this day. It is the pagan cult, the barbarity
against and slaughtering of animals and people, who, for example, in
the Middles Ages or in Croatia, did not let themselves become tied
to the Catholic Church.
To gain an understanding of the words of the priests of today, we
must read with our heart and mind. In the Catholic Catechism it
says:
We can distinguish three stages in the formation of the Gospels:
1. The life and teaching of Jesus. The Church holds firmly that the
four Gospels, "whose historicity she unhesitatingly affirms,
faithfully hand on what Jesus, the Son of God, while he lived among
men, really did and taught for their eternal salvation, until the
day when he was taken up (into heaven)." (No. 126)
Note how the Church refers to the affirmation of what the Son of God
taught to the people, but the Church does not say that it applies
the teachings of Jesus, that the Church embodies the teachings.
The text continues:
2. The oral tradition. "For, after the ascension of the Lord, the
apostles handed on to their hearers what he had said and done, but
with that fuller understanding which they, instructed by the
glorious events of Christ and enlightened by the Spirit of truth,
now enjoyed." (No. 126)
Supposedly, after the ascension, the apostles passed on to their
listeners a deeper understanding of what the Lord Himself spoke.
That could hardly have been possible once Saul, "Paul," interfered
in the Church, bringing his views into what later became the
Catholic and Protestant churches, for both Catholics and Protestants
follow Paul more than they do the apostles. If the apostles
transmitted what Jesus said and did with a deeper understanding,
which they received through the glorification of the Christ and the
light of the Spirit of truth, why was Paul, who was no apostle,
necessary? Instead of looking to the apostles, the institutional
church looks to Paul, the "saint," who supposedly received
instructions from Jesus, the Christ. It was Paul who undermined
original Christianity, in which the prophetic Spirit spoke, with his
"wisdom," and Paul who brought it into church history. In the end,
the "Christian churches" do not have the right to call themselves
"Christian," for they are predominantly "Pauline."
Besides, there is the question of why in Rome there is the Chair of
Peter and not the Chair of Jesus, the Christ? Does Peter come before
Christ, or Christ before Peter? From Rome, the Pauline teachings
spread, even though Peter and Paul rarely agreed; did Peter have to
give way to Paul, or Paul to Peter – or did both find an arrangement
by which they could distort the teachings of Jesus, the Original
Christian life, in which the prophetic Spirit blew?
More than anything else the following statement in the Catholic
Catechism should alarm us:
… The Old Testament prepares for the New and the New Testament
fulfills the Old. (No. 140)
This documents that the Church may at anytime continue with its
cruel deeds. If the New Testament fulfills the Old Testament, then
the Old Testament, especially the "Books of Moses," was only the
start of all brutality, cruelty and violence. If the New Testament
fulfills the "Books of Moses," the future will only be worse than
the past and the present.
If Jesus, the Christ, were living as a human being among us, would
Jesus agree with these documents of the Church and with the life of
church Christians, or would He repeat what He said 2000 years ago:
You hypocrites! Well did Isaiah prophesy of you, when he said, ‘This
people honors me with their lips, but their heart is far from me. In
vain do they worship me, teaching as doctrines the precepts of men.’
(Mt. 15:7-9) Or, He would repeat the following calls of woe: Woe to
you, scribes and Pharisees, hypocrites! for you are like whitewashed
tombs, which outwardly appear beautiful, but within they are full of
dead men’s bones and all uncleanness. So you also appear outwardly
righteous to men, but within you are full of hypocrisy and iniquity.
(Mt. 23: 27-28)
A document from the post-Reformation period proves that the
officials of the Catholic Church know very well they have falsified
the teachings of Jesus and that therefore no one among the people
should be permitted to read the Bible. Three bishops prepared a
report for Pope Julius III, in which it says: Truly not even a trace
of the Apostles’ teachings remains in our church … a different
teaching and discipline we have produced. It is the most important
goal to allow no one to read even the tiniest part of the Gospel,
especially in the vernacular. The little that is read during mass
suffices. Anyone who studiously considers what is wont to happen in
church and who regards it in detail will find that our teachings are
different from the Gospel, and even opposed to it … (Hans-Jürgen
Wolf, Sünden der Kirche [The Sins of the Church], EFB
Verlagsgesellschaft, 1995, p. 151)
They know therefore what they are doing …
"For I, the Lord, do not change …"
Divine Words Against Animal Sacrifice
Through Prophets after Moses
Let us call to mind again what God spoke through Malachi: For I, the
Lord, do not change … He is eternally the same; His nature was
brought closer to us by Jesus. God revealed Himself as the one that
He is, through all true prophets of God. Following, we read some
words of God from the Old Testament:
Through Isaiah He speaks:
What to me is the multitude of your sacrifices? says the Lord. I
have had enough of burnt offerings of rams and the fat of fed
beasts; I do not delight in the blood of bulls, or of lambs, or of
he-goats. (Is. 1:11)
And further: Bring no more vain offerings; incense is an abomination
to me. (Is. 1:13)
Or would Jesus, were He among us as a human being today, quote
Isaiah? When you spread forth your hands, I will hide my eyes from
you; even though you make many prayers, I will not listen; your
hands are full of blood. Wash yourselves; make yourselves clean;
remove the evil of your doings from before my eyes; cease to do
evil. (Is. 1:15-16)
In the first book of Samuel we read: Has the Lord as great delight
in burnt offerings and sacrifices, as in obeying the voice of the
Lord? Behold, to obey is better than to sacrifice, and to hearken
than the fat of rams. (I Sam. 15:22)
God spoke through Hosea: For I desire steadfast love and not
sacrifice, the knowledge of God, rather than burnt offerings. (Hos.
6:6) And: Because E´phraim has multiplied altars for sinning, they
have become to him altars for sinning. Were I to write for him my
laws by ten thousands, they would be regarded as a strange thing.
They love sacrifice; they sacrifice flesh and eat it, but the Lord
has no delight in them ... (Hos. 8:11-13)
God through Amos also spoke in plain and strong words against the
instructions in the "Books of Moses:" I hate, I despise your feasts,
and I take no delight in your solemn assemblies. Even though you
offer me your burnt offerings and cereal offerings, I will not
accept them, and the peace offerings of your fatted beasts I will
not look upon. Take away from me the noise of your songs; to the
melody of your harps I will not listen. But let justice roll down
like waters, and righteousness like an ever-flowing stream.
Did you bring to me sacrifices and offerings the forty years in the
wilderness, O house of Israel? You shall take up Sakkuth your king,
and Kaiwan your star-god, your images, which you made for
yourselves; therefore I will take you into exile beyond Damascus,
says the Lord, whose name is the God of hosts. (Am. 5:21-27)
Through Jeremiah, God spoke the following: To what purpose does
frankincense come to me from Sheba, or sweet cane from a distant
land? Your burnt offerings are not acceptable, nor your sacrifices
pleasing to me. (Jer. 6:20)
And: For in the day that I brought them out of the land of Egypt, I
did not speak to your fathers or command them concerning burnt
offerings and sacrifices. But this command I gave them, ‘Obey my
voice, and I will be your God, and you shall be my people: and walk
in all the way that I command you, that it may be well with you.’
But they did not obey or incline their ear, but walked in their own
counsels and the stubbornness of their evil hearts, and went
backward and not forward.
From the day that your fathers came out of the land of Egypt to this
day, I have persistently sent all my servants the prophets to them,
day after day; yet they did not listen to me, or incline their ear,
but stiffened their neck. They did worse than their fathers.
So you shall speak all these words to them, but they will not listen
to you. You shall call to them, but they will not answer you. And
you shall say to them, ‘This is the nation that did not obey the
voice of the Lord their God, and did not accept discipline; truth
has perished; it is cut off from their lips ...’ (Jer. 7:22-28)
In Micah we read: With what shall I come before the Lord, and bow
myself before God on high? Shall I come before him with burnt
offerings, with calves a year old? Will the Lord be pleased with
thousands of rams, with ten thousands of rivers of oil? Shall I give
my first-born for my transgression, the fruit of my body for the
sins of my soul?
He has showed you, O man, what is good; and what does the Lord
require of you but to do justice, and to love kindness, and to walk
humbly with your God? (Mic. 6:6-8)
In Psalm 50 it says: I will accept no bull from your house, nor
he-goat from your folds. For every beast of the forest is mine, the
cattle on a thousand hills. I know all the birds of the air, and all
that moves in the field is mine. If I were hungry, I would not tell
you; for the world and all that is in it is mine. Do I eat the flesh
of bulls, or drink the blood of goats?
Offer to God a sacrifice of thanksgiving, and pay your vows to the
Most high; and call upon me in the day of trouble; I will deliver
you, and you shall glorify me.
But to the wicked, God says: "What right have you to recite my
statutes, or take my covenant on your lips? For you hate discipline,
and you cast my words behind you. If you see a thief, you are a
friend of his; and you keep company with adulterers. You give your
mouth free rein for evil, and your tongue frames deceit. You sit and
speak against your brother; you slander your own mother’s son. These
things you have done and I have been silent; you thought that I was
one like yourself. But now I rebuke you, and lay the charge before
you. (Ps. 50:9-21)
Since the time when Constantine raised the externalized Church,
which was put together by Paul with all its bishops, to the status
of state church, the Church has remained to this day a Roman, state
church of pagan rituals with few Christian fragments. Today’s
ecclesiastical officials are just as power-hungry as the officials
back then. They are the greatest danger to those who are not true to
the Church. According to its documentation in the Catholic
Catechism, they pledge to carry out what the Old Testament contains.
Let us recall the following: "The Old Testament prepares for the New
and the New Testament fulfills the Old; the two shed light on each
other; both are the true Word of God."
Let us once more become aware that the representatives of today’s
institutional churches presume to fulfill the Old Testament in the
New. For all those who do not follow the Church, this means
persecution, slander, discrimination, and the loss of all rights, if
necessary, even through the state. Both in the past and in recent
times, they have proven that they are willing to make true what they
have written in the Catechism. The atrocities of the Old Testament
have long since been outdone by all that which has happened during
the time of the New Testament. In the Old Testament, hundreds of
thousands of people were killed and countless animals were cruelly
tortured. In the New Testament there are millions upon millions of
people on the conscience of the Church – not to mention the animals,
which are only objects to the Church, sacrificed in the
slaughterhouses of this world, for the enjoyment of the Baal-god
man.
The Little Prince said: You can see well only with the heart. I want
to add: You can read well only with the heart. Jesus of Nazareth
often said: May the one who has ears to hear, listen. And the voice
of the heart says: All those who listen, read, and weigh with the
heart may follow their heart – if they so choose.
In the Catechism of the Catholic Church:
"God has given man domination
over the animals …"
A person searching for a heart for animals in the so-called
"Christian" churches will search in vain, just as when searching for
a heart for people. In the Catechism of the Catholic Church of 1993,
a book from Rome that has about 800 pages, we find animals mentioned
only on pages 640 and 650: The seventh commandment enjoins respect
for the integrity of creation. Animals, like plants and inanimate
beings, are by nature destined for the common good of past, present
and future humanity. Use of the mineral, vegetable, and animal
resources of the universe cannot be divorced from respect for moral
imperatives. Man’s domination over inanimate and other living beings
granted by the Creator is not absolute; it is limited by concern for
the quality of life of his neighbor, including generations to come;
it requires a religious respect for the integrity of creation. (No.
2415)
Animals are God’s creatures. He surrounds them with his providential
care. By their mere existence they bless him and give him glory.
Thus men owe them kindness. We should recall the gentleness with
which saints like St. Francis of Assisi or St. Philip Neri treated
animals. (No. 2416)
God entrusted animals to the stewardship of those whom he created in
his own image. Hence it is legitimate to use animals for food and
clothing. They may be domesticated to help man in his work and
leisure. Medical and scientific experimentation on animals, if it
remains within reasonable limits, is a morally acceptable practice
since it contributes to caring for or saving human lives. (No. 2417)
It is contrary to human dignity to cause animals to suffer or die
needlessly. It is likewise unworthy to spend money on them that
should as a priority go to the relief of human misery. One can love
animals, one should not direct to them the affection due only to
persons. (No. 2418)
The domination granted by the Creator over the mineral, vegetable,
and animals resources of the universe cannot be separated from
respect for moral obligations, including those toward generations to
come. (No. 2456)
Animals are entrusted to man’s stewardship; he must show them
kindness. They may be used to serve the just satisfaction of man’s
needs. (No. 2457)
It seems paranoid to read, for example: Animals, like plants and
inanimate beings, are by nature destined for the common good of
past, present and future humanity. God, who is life, has never
created anything lifeless. In all of creation, there is no
"inanimate being" and no "inanimate nature." This is, like so many
things, the interpretation of human beings who do not grasp the
life, who themselves presume to play the role of creator and who
play their games with simple-minded believers – with those who do
not use their brains to get to the bottom of the whole paranoid
hypocrisy. If God had created lifeless beings or inanimate aspects
of nature, then there would be no all-encompassing life that is God,
but a part that is "lifeless matter." But there is no form, no
substance, no mass without life. The life maintains the form. If the
form, that is, the mass, decays, the life changes to a different
aggregate state.
God is limitless, eternal life. God is love. He expressed His love
in the following or similar words: Subdue the earth. – Nature is
God’s creation. It serves us for our joy. It should be a concern of
ours to see ourselves as one with nature and to live accordingly.
But the so-called common good, mentioned by the Churches, means
exploitation at the cost of animals, plants and minerals for the
enjoyment of human beings.
Use of Animals – But "not divorced
from respect for moral imperatives."
"You should not love animals"
The Catholic Catechism continues on page 640: Use of the mineral,
vegetable, and animal resources of the universe cannot be divorced
from respect for moral imperatives.
What might the Church mean by "moral imperatives?" Perhaps the
slaughterhouses of today, which are charnel houses of the tortured
and killed animals, serving the "highly moral" society, as
carcasses.
Perhaps with "moral imperatives" is meant that the animals are not
killed right before the eyes of the consumer, thus avoiding his
having to listen to the death cries, instead hiding these murderous
procedures behind the thick walls of slaughterhouses?
Imagine that a hotel guest who orders "beef Stroganoff" would first
have to look into the eyes of a young bull, wide with fear, and
witness how the animal is slaughtered, butchered, cut open while
still twitching, skinned, sawed and hacked apart, while the
penetrating odor of blood wafts about the fine guest, until finally
the appropriate pieces of carcass, well-aged, are handed to the chef
for the preparation of a tasty meal.
Perhaps then the hotel guest would prefer not to have the meal,
after all? This is truly respect for a justified "moral imperative!"
Perhaps the guest’s aesthetic sensibility would be troubled, or he
could consider such exposure contrary to all rules of decency?
Perhaps not only the guest’s stomach would turn over, but "moral
sensibility" might also be stirred? For this reason the "respect for
moral imperatives" should rightly not be disregarded in the "use of
animals" or their carcass parts.
A moral imperative might also be that the use of animals for
laboratory experiments, for mass husbandry or to supply fur, or
other common forms of use, exploitation and consumption should take
place with as little intrusion on the weak nerves and sentimental
inclinations of people as possible?
Perhaps respect for moral imperatives would also be that the vocal
chords of animals, such as dogs, monkeys or pigs, be cut when they
are used in laboratories and scientific experimentation rooms? Their
cries, weeping, lamentations, sighs and other sounds might offend
the passers-by in the street. Or the cries of the "used" animals
might even irritate the keepers, laboratory assistants, doctors and
other employees working for scientific progress – who surely have
strong nerves and iron guts, little touched by any stirrings of
conscience – if they just happen to be having a nerve-wracking day.
That might happen to anybody from time to time, right?
It continues: Animals are God’s creatures. He surrounds them with
his providential care. By their mere existence they bless him and
give him glory. And: God entrusted animals to the stewardship of
those whom he created in his own image. If this paranoid
sanctimoniousness had not come from the church institution, one
would have had to ask whether God did not lose sight of mankind and
the animals. Who but the institutional churches would place the
animals under the stewardship of humans, in the face of a senseless
and uptight society that murders, kills, bestially tortures animals
and cruelly butchers them.
God created man in His image, so that he would become His image
again. As Jesus said: You, therefore, must be perfect, as your
heavenly Father is perfect. (Mt. 5:48)
Let us continue to read in the Catholic Catechism. There it says
that it is legitimate to use animals for food and clothing.
Have you ever heard a thrush sing? Its singing is beautiful. Some
find that the thrush might be equal to the far more famous
nightingale.
In Southern Europe traps are set and nets spread for songbirds that
are considered a delicacy for gourmets. These animals are used "for
food." Therefore "it is legitimate" to catch them, kill them and eat
them in good conscience. With the permission of the Church, the
thrush that we see in the picture, "legitimately" died after long
agony, throttled by a horsehair snare.
"What you would not have done to you, do unto no other." Will the
law of cause and effect make a big difference, depending on whether
it was a person or an animal that had to suffer because of us? Our
second neighbor, the animal, is also our neighbor, a fellow
creature. The law of cause and effect does not look to the person;
it is impersonal. Suffering is suffering, pain is pain, murder is
murder, cruelty is cruelty.
And the gourmet, who savors dead little bird, does he know what it
is that he has on his plate? A lethargic heart and coldness of
feelings do not come out of nowhere. The person has consciously and
purposefully disregarded many warning impulses before his conscience
became silent.
Whoever does not aspire to fulfilling the law of God, which is love,
should not make reference to the words of the Lord: Be fruitful and
multiply, and fill the earth and subdue it. (Gen. 1:28) The paranoid
person often deliberately violates the law of God, going against the
love for God and for neighbor.
In Genesis, the first Book of Moses, it says: And God saw everything
that he had made, and behold, it was very good ... (Gen. 1:31) How
can we human beings presume to step on, to torture, to kill, or to
wantonly alter what God affirmed as His creation and considered
good?
People are fond of quoting the words, Subdue the earth, to justify
their inhumanness. Have not also the scientists and researchers long
discovered that in the great cycle of giving and receiving
everything is joined as one? But man doesn’t even think about giving
the Earth love; instead they presume time and again to exploit the
Earth for the comfort of their bodies, causing suffering to the life
in and on the Earth, in the air, and in and on the waters.
The Church, of course, thinks it proper to not only use animals for
food and clothing, but they may be domesticated to help man in his
work and leisure. Note well: This is the Church speaking, not God.
The church institutions call themselves "Christian." To their
believers, they offer many exceptions, much that is pagan and little
that is Christian. The word "Christian" is lost in the intense
turning of the propeller of the state ship of pagan rituals. The
crew of this ship recruits all those who are weak thinkers. The
"help at man’s leisure time" includes extreme "entertainment" like
dogfights, cockfights, bullfights and so forth – reaching an end
with the slaughter of these creatures.
The crew of the state ship of pagan rituals, and all those who
stroll the decks and enjoy themselves, has the butchered carcasses
prepared in order to eat them at beautifully laid tables, using
knife and fork or the hands, fingers decorated with gold and silver
rings, to tear apart chickens or geese or the like, for their
gourmet palates and to fill their stomach, so that the fullness of
the body, the "image of God," will be ever more expansive. If the
old valuable fur coat should grow a little tight, a new one is to be
had, for the benefit of the society person. The minks who will have
to give up their pelts and their lives, in the meantime are still
suffering in the cramped cages of the "fur farm."
The Churches surely meant by "domestication," the beating and
hitting of animals, breaking their will in order to place them at
the service of man in his leisure time, so that they may be kept
like spineless animal-slaves and be put to work. This is church
instruction, but not divine will. Jesus did not speak of this!
We continue to read: Medical and scientific experimentation on
animals, if it remains within reasonable limits, is a morally
acceptable practice since it contributes to caring for or saving
human lives.
We must ask, what does that mean, "within reasonable limits?" and
what is "morally acceptable?"
Is it "morally acceptable" to torment animals, to kill them in order
to heal and save human life? God gave us human beings healing plants
and minerals that help and heal. For food he gave us the fruits of
the fields and of the forest. The true God gave us no commandment
that says: Kill your fellow creatures and eat their carcasses. Or:
Torture them in bestial ways by using them for your experiments in
order to help and heal each other. – Whoever orients himself by the
words of the church officials is against God.
Further we read: It is contrary to human dignity to cause animals to
suffer or die needlessly. This is in crass contradiction to what was
said before, that medical and scientific animal experiments are
"morally acceptable" if they are held "within reasonable limits
since it contributes to caring for or saving human lives." Every
animal experiment has animals suffer and be killed. To "use animals
for food and clothing" is to have animals suffer and be killed.
Aside from this, so it continues in the Catholic Catechism: It is
likewise unworthy to spend money on them (the animals) that should
as a priority go to the relief of human misery. The concern with
"human misery" is apparent from these words. Whether with regard to
this, the representatives of the Churches would start using their
immeasurable wealth for the benefit of the poorest of the poor? And
where was the concern for human misery when the Church more or less
condoned the war in Bosnia? Consider also the cost of the medical
machines that are necessary to conduct animal experiments, and not
least, the high salaries of those who also count on church opinion
that animal experiments are permissible within reasonable limits in
order to heal and to save human life. Is this worthy? Since God, the
Eternal, did not speak of such things, those who support justice and
love, also toward animals, and who thus turn to God, should make a
clear decision concerning their relationship to the Church, for one
cannot serve two masters.
There is another blasphemy in the Catechism. In it, we read about
the respect for the integrity of creation: One can love animals, one
should not direct to them the affection due only to persons. (No.
2418) Did God command this? Dear reader, do you have the sense that
you are committing a sin if you feel love in your heart for your pet
– when you do not just like them superficially, but love them? When
you care that the animal is well; when you are glad that the animal
is happy to see you; when you like doing something for your animal
brother or sister; when you understand the animal, and when the
animal knows how you feel and acts accordingly – why should this be
wrong? Dear brother, dear sister, you can see and know well only
with the heart. God gave us no command that says: You may like
animals, but you should not love them; love is reserved for human
beings.
The Protestant Lutheran Church of Germany states in its
pronouncement "Zur Verantwortung des Menschen für das Tier als
Mitgeschöpf, 1991" [On the Responsibility of Human Beings for the
Animal as a Fellow Creature]: Love for animals and love for people
may come into conflict with each other. (p. 6) And in a "Pastoral
Letter of the German Bishops" (Zukunft der Schöpfung – Zukunft der
Menschheit, 1980 [The Future of Creation – the Future of Mankind]) –
and these are Catholic bishops – it says: In contrast to man as a
person, plants and animals have no inviolable individual right to
life …We human beings have the right to make use of the work and
life of animals. Now there follows a limitation: But responsibility
cannot be accepted if animals, who are beings that feel, are
tortured and killed without serious reasons, for example, merely for
entertainment or the production of luxury goods. – But where is this
followed up in the deed?
People have many excuses and they marshal "serious reasons" slyly
and eloquently, if their own advantage is at stake. And who answers
for the injustice that is done to animals? All those, who commit the
injustice, but also all those who know about it and remain silent,
as well as those who admonish against it, but do not themselves keep
to what they say. And all those who have been the major cause for
the loss of a living conscience in so many people.
How far things may go, if ethics and morals are kept at a
traditionally low level and the conscience of many is deadened is
shown by the following information taken from the Schwäbische
Zeitung, Mar. 12, 1991 [Swabian Newspaper]). These are examples of
Spanish cruelty to animals that are maintained as part of
"tradition" and which are often witnessed with indifference by local
Catholic clergy or police.
Here we find an example of death by stoning, although committed on
an animal: Donkey Riding in V.: On the last day of Carnival, the
oldest and weakest donkey is taken from the stable. The heaviest
inhabitant of the village will ride the donkey, until the animal
collapses from exhaustion. Then it will be stoned and beaten to
death.
In C. bulls are driven through the alleys. Hundreds of people,
lining the sides of the alleys, beat and kick the animal, and use
long iron hooks to tear open deep wounds. The bull may be driven
through the alleys for up to eight hours, after which it is finally
released from suffering by death.
In G. the custom is similar: Festival guests aim a blow gun at a
bull that is being driven onto the village square. Colorfully
decorated steel arrows are driven into the bull’s body, the head,
the eyes. When the animal is weakened by the loss of blood, men with
pocket knives "dare" to approach the animal.
T.: Young bulls are chased by men with long lances who try to pierce
the animal sideways.
C. in the province of G.: Oil-filled containers are tied to the neck
and horns of bulls and lit with a torch. The burning animals, out of
their minds with the pain, are driven to the market square where men
are waiting to finally kill the animals with daggers and scissors.
What about the question of who will have to answer for all this?
Certainly not only those who take part in the macabre and downright
perverse form of entertainment. Here, man is "more bestial than any
beast."
I repeat: God, the Eternal, has no law among His eternal laws that
says: "Like animals, but do not love them." God is love. From His
law of love He created the animals, which He loves because He is
love. This term to "like" corresponds to church morals which cannot
be particularly high, because if the church leaders and their
followers would at least only like the animals, animal-cannibalism
would be ended.
The Church says: One should not direct to animals the affection due
only to persons. If we compare the colossal riches of the Churches
to the poverty in Third World countries, we get a sense of how great
the church clergy’s affection due to people is. What did Jesus say
to this? It is easier for a camel to go through the eye of a needle
than for a rich man to enter the Kingdom of God. (Mt. 19:24)
According to this statement, neither the church leaders nor their
power apparatus, the Church, will enter the Kingdom of God. The
church officials and their state church must first become thin, very
thin to fit through the eye of a needle.
The Catholic Catechism continues on page 650, No. 2456: The
domination granted by the Creator over the mineral, vegetable, and
animal resources of the universe … This is an outrageous presumption
on the part of church officials, considering how Earth and the
nature kingdoms must suffer under the bestial exploitation of
society.
The words just quoted are supplemented by the following, ethically
challenging statement: The domination granted by the Creator over
the mineral, vegetable, and animal resources of the universe cannot
be separated from respect for moral obligations, including those
toward generations to come.
What are these "moral obligations"? Obligations toward generations
to come are named. Does this mean that mankind may exploit and ruin
nature – but not so radically that future generations have no food
to eat, no water to drink, no air to breathe?
But thanks to the inventiveness of scientists now people no longer
need to restrain themselves in this respect, for everything will be
new anyway, so we read and hear. The dilemma – every dilemma, that
is – can be solved by virtue of the marvelous accomplishments of
genetic engineering! And so, mankind may continue unperturbed,
exploiting and draining Mother Earth, letting her dry up, poisoning
nature, torturing, infecting, murdering. Genetic engineering will
allow life to continue on Earth, even better than before, or so they
say. But perhaps it will be precisely through genetic engineering
that mankind will reap what it has sown.
No. 2457 continues: Animals are entrusted to man’s stewardship; he
must show them kindness. They may be used to serve the just
satisfaction of man’s needs. How can an animal even serve man, if
man respects neither animal, plant, nor mineral? Human beings in
their arrogant egoism have cut down everything that they have laid
hands on.
At some point – according to the immutable law of cause and effect –
mankind will feel the whip it has braided for itself, its fate. This
will continue to hit human beings so long, until they have again
found their way back to the cosmic laws of love for God and for our
neighbor and have thus again become the image of God.
The Status of Animals
in the Protestant-Lutheran Faith.
"Lamb of God" –
The Butcher, a Secularized Priest?
According to a scholar of Protestant-Lutheran theology, animals do
not play a significant role in the Protestant faith. In the Creed of
the Protestant-Lutheran Church of 1530 which is still binding today,
animals are not even mentioned.
Martin Luther himself is accused of gluttony by his opponents. Only
the upper class could afford meat in those days, for the poor it was
the exception, not the rule. It is likely that Luther ate a lot of
meat. His corpulence and his illnesses would indicate it. With each
meal four pints of Southern wine were served and he drank plenty of
beer.
When his fellow reformer, Philipp Melanchton came to Nuremberg, he
was fed the following: Pig’s head and tenderloin roast in sour
sauce, trout, partridges with capon, roasted wild boar with pepper
sauce … This is how it went when Master Philipp came … everyday fare
was more modest. (Veranstaltungen in Luthers Landen, Kulturmagazin
für Sachsen und Thüringen, [Events in Luther’s Regions of Influence,
Culture Magazine for Saxony and Thuringia] 1997, p. 12)
What did the "Little Prince" say again? You see well only with the
heart. Perhaps today he would say to us: You read well only with the
heart, for instance an article in the German weekly, die ZEIT [Time]
of April 2, 1998, under the heading The Lamb of God. The article
discusses the connection between butchers and priests. It concludes
with the following sentence: Christian theology, in its tradition of
forgotten creatures that excludes the non-human creation from the
Good News, has not done its part.
Here are some excerpts from the text: The Brotherhood of
Butcher-Journeymen is celebrating its 100-year anniversary in the
Friedenskirche in Federwardergroden, a section of Wilhelmshaven. The
highpoint of the ecumenical worship service is the blessing of the
brotherhood’s new flag, which depicts the Christian Easter lamb and
the flag of resurrection. The congregation had sung "Christ, you
Lamb of God, you bear the sins of the world, have mercy on us"
moments before.
But the butchers’ guilds anniversary service caused some offence.
The animal rights movement of the neighboring town of Schortens
confronts the minister and priest with an unexpected question: How
can the churches tolerate the fact that the symbol of the
Christ-Lamb adorns the flag of animal murderers? At their wits end,
the clerics pass the question on to the butchers, who defend
themselves by pointing to the old age of their guild symbol.
Only an episode. But it raises the tough question: What does a
butcher have in common with a man of God?
Interestingly, the butcher’s guild cites the ritual slaughter
committed by the priests. The words of an old butcher-guild song,
reprinted in the anniversary brochure of the Heilbronn butchers’
guild go: "If there is a guild deserving of fame and praise, then it
is the butchers’ guild, which is highly-praised even in its origins;
because it has been shown that it stems from the order of Leviticus
who in the Old Covenant butchered the animals for sacrifice,
offering them to the Lord at the altar."
The author of the article then poses the question: Are butchers
secularized priests? …
The oldest preserved guild flag, that of the 15th-century Bern
butchers shows both symbols: The Christ-lamb with the resurrection
flag and a bull with two hatchets hovering threateningly above.
The following description of an "individual public slaughter" will
tell a lot to those who read with the heart: A shot rings out. A
metal bullet pierces the pig’s brain. The light goes out of the
eyes. The animal collapses on the floor. Two butchers roll the body
to the side, one holds the jerking hind legs, the other, the master,
holds the front legs and the head. Quick as lightning he punctures
the animal’s throat. The butcher’s wife comes with a metal basin to
catch the animal’s gushing blood. The body, while being drained of
blood is still violently jerking and kicking.
The butcher caresses the pig’s head and explains to the group of
watching vegetarians and TV-reporters: "The animal cannot resist. It
is completely in my power. I feel in my hand how the life is flowing
from it. Meanwhile, his wife, with an expression of tension and
compassion, dips her hand in the dark red liquid of life that is
still restlessly foaming in the butcher’s basin. After half an hour,
the animal is already hanging upside down from a butcher rack,
shaved and dressed. The tension among the surviving participants is
broken with a round of clear liquor. "Now it is no longer an animal,
now it is meat! Cheers!" The butcher, "master of life and death:" …
He "caresses the pig’s head." "I feel in my hand how the life is
flowing from it."
Let your feelings speak to you.
In meat factories, where 700 pigs are slaughtered in an hour, the
conditions for this comparatively "humane" approach to a process
that is unavoidable for the "use" of animals for food are, of
course, not there. The article continues: It is enlightening to
consider the connection between butcher and church in the Fifth
Regulation of the Wurttemberg Butchers’ Code of 1651 (printed 1701
in Stuttgart). On pain of a one-guilder fine it is prohibited to
"lead animals to the slaughterhouse or to the butcher during a
sermon, or especially during the night." This is not an ethical
question, but concerns the resulting noise. The death cries of the
butchered animal shall disrupt neither the sermon nor the night’s
rest.
The Easter lamb with the flag of resurrection is the official seal
of the butcher’s guild.
Eating Meat – God’s Concession to
Human Weakness? Did Jesus Eat Meat?
The article The Lamb of God contains the following significant
sentence: Eating meat is God’s concession to human weakness. That is
close to the truth. We know, from the Christ of God in This Is My
Word and from other revelations, that the Prophet Moses, who had to
contend with a headstrong people, some of whom longed to return to
the "meat pots of Egypt," clearly taught "You shall not kill," but
that he finally silently accepted the fact that meat was
nevertheless being eaten among the people. It is therefore true: a
concession to human weakness – but not God’s concession.
Many who like to eat meat use the argument in their defense that
Jesus ate the Easter lamb, as is told in the Bible. But let us hear
what He has to say on this Himself:
Neither the apostles nor the disciples gave the order to slaughter a
lamb. But as a gift of love, parts of a prepared lamb were offered
to Me as well as to the apostles and disciples. With this, our
neighbors wanted to make a gift for us, for they did not know
better. I blessed the gift and began to partake of the meat. My
apostles and disciples did the same. Afterwards, they asked Me in
the following sense: We should refrain from consuming meat. This is
what You have commanded of us. Now You, Yourself, have consumed
meat.
I instructed My own that man should not willfully kill an animal nor
should he consume the meat of animals which were killed for the
consumption of their meat. However, when people who are still
unknowing have prepared meat as nourishment and make of it a gift to
the guest, offering it with the meal, then the guest should not
reject the gift. For there is a difference whether a person consumes
meat because he craves for meat or as a token of gratitude to the
host for his effort.
However, when it is possible for him and outer circumstances and
time permit, the knowing person should give general indications to
the host, but should not want to set him right. When the time is
ripe, the host, too, will understand these general indications.
In this world, understanding and tolerance, too, are aspects of
selfless love. Leave to each person his free will whether or not he
wants to understand and accept your general indications. If you
always think, speak and act selflessly, you abide in love and love
will bless you. What is then offered to you, as a gift of love, is
blessed. (This Is My Word, pp. 786-787)
And so, Jesus did not eat meat, for He lived the law of God.
Statements About Animals
in the Protestant-Lutheran Catechism
In the Protestant-Lutheran Catechism little is said about animals.
For the institutional churches animals are little more than an
object and thus not worthy of in-depth consideration. This is
apparent from the article "The Lamb of God" in ZEIT. Here I quote
the few remarks about animals from the German Protestant Catechism
for Adults (translated from the German Evangelischer
Erwachsenenkatechismus, 5th ed. 1989, [Lutheran Catechism for
Adults] to which the page numbers also refer):
Man is charged with "working and keeping" the garden. And so, work
is a part of mankind from the beginning. Through work man should
develop and at the same time preserve the environment that has been
entrusted to him (animals, plants, water, air). In this context also
belongs the story of the creation of animals. God brings man the
animals and entrusts them to his care … Love and honor for the
Creator should also be visible in the way that creation is cared
for. Man remains responsible to the Creator for his entire conduct.
(p. 40) These statements in the Protestant Catechism are probably
meant to ridicule God, if they are contrasted with the article in
ZEIT.
The Protestant Catechism continues: ... The animal in particular
makes profanity of conception, birth and death in the lack of
inhibitions or taboos concerning these, which appear as most inhuman
and alien to our nature. It is only the sense of shame and the
burial rites of people that mark the beginning of the history of
mankind. No animals conceal their genitals, none honors and buries
their dead (p. 508).
It is ironic that the Lutheran Catechism would choose to speak of
profanity, of the lack of inhibitions or taboos concerning
conception – while the revered founder of this religion used
incredibly vulgar language, for example: Why do you not belch and
fart, did you not like the food? [table talk]. Or from his slander
of the Jews: The devil has shit in his pants and emptied the belly
once again. That is a right holy shrine that the Jews and those who
would be Jews should kiss, eat, drink and sanctify, and in turn the
devil should also eat and drink what such disciples will vomit,
throwing out from above or below … The devil now eats with his
English snout and devours with lust what the upper and lower mouth
of the Jews retches and spews out. (Luther Writings XXXII, p. 282,
Erlang Edition) Or: Here in Wittenberg, a sow is hewn in stone at
our parish church; there lie young piglets and Jews below it who
suckle; behind the sow there stands a rabbi, who lifts the sow’s
right leg, and with his left hand he draws the tail over himself,
stooping forward and looking with great industry below the tail into
the sow’s Talmud, as if he would read and spy upon something sharp
and peculiar … For this is how one speaks among the Germans of one
who claims great wisdom without basis: Where did he read it? Bluntly
put, in the sow’s ass. (ibid. at p. 298)
Reading about the lack of inhibitions or taboos concerning these
(conception, birth and death), which appear as most inhuman and
alien to our nature, we are reminded of the sexuality without taboos
or inhibitions of people who advertise their promiscuity on
television and in the internet, or publish it in newspapers. Animals
mate at certain times, human beings revel in their physical drives
with whom and where they please.
There is nothing more alien to our nature, namely, to our original,
spiritual being, than the human being. He has become what he is
through his godlessness. The main responsibility for this is borne
by church dignitaries who are as God does not want them to be. The
birth of an animal in my opinion is one of the most noble things.
The animal gives birth according to the laws of nature. Rarely, it
cries or complains at giving birth, as, for example, human beings
do. And what about death? The animal lags behind the herd, finds a
quiet place, and dies. It dies in dignity, according to the laws of
nature, compared to some people who go through a death-struggle
because during their entire lives they struggled against the love
for God and for neighbor.
Where is there still a sense of shame? Certainly not in man! The
animal does not need a sense of shame because it lives according to
the laws of nature. And the animal does not need funeral rites.
Nature does not dictate these, only the Church does. And the animals
do not need to conceal their genitals because they do not sin with
them, unlike man. Or should animals wear drawers in order not to
tempt the "devil" even more, who takes his off without shame anyway?
The Protestant Catechism gives us the chance to look even "deeper":
A comparison of the social behavior of human beings and animals
shows that no animal goes through such a comparatively long
childhood – a period of development and of differentiated processes
of learning and socialization – before it becomes sexually mature,
as human beings do. (p. 509)
What label and what "dignity" does a human being bear, despite such
a lengthy childhood? What is triggered in human beings with the
onset of sexual maturity would fill volumes. The sexual show-off
should in no way be compared to the animal. The animal would not act
this way, anyway. If the values and perversions of man and animals
were compared, in whose favor would the scales tip?
The Protestant Catechism further enlightens us: Considering the
great success of space travel one will ask: How is it possible that
man alone is capable of such accomplishments? Man is by nature
endowed with the predispositions to grow beyond himself (p. 640).
Human beings have in fact grown beyond themselves. They do
everything to destroy their environment, which is also that of the
animals.
Technological and scientific progress so far has not brought mankind
unity, peace, prosperity for everyone, health, or true happiness. If
we take mankind’s growing beyond itself to refer to the hubris and
sheer madness that utterly holds human beings and creation in
contempt, then we may well agree that man has gone way beyond his
limits in more ways and more excessively than ever before.
That man should be so inherently inclined toward this by nature is
the view of the Churches but not the will of God, who spoke through
Jesus of Nazareth, for instance: If you do not become like little
children …(Mt. 18:3) and: You must be perfect, as your heavenly
Father is perfect. (Mt 5:48) With these words He wanted to tell us
that we should come into our divine heritage by overcoming the base
human aspects in us, the non-divine. He did not speak of the
conquest of space through mankind, nor of the creation of new human
beings in test tubes and the creation of a new nature and a new
Earth through genetic engineering and other assaults on God’s wise
order of creation.
Those who read all this and more should automatically ask themselves
whether they still want to belong to the Lutheran Church.
Jesus of Nazareth
on the Subject of "Animals" in the
Christ-Revelation "This Is My Word"
The Church is silent but Jesus, the Christ, speaks and is revealing
Himself again today. In the book This Is My Word, He reveals among
many other things the eternal law of love in relation to the
animals. From the many remarks, teachings and instructions about
animals, I choose only a few to pass on here.
Therefore be considerate, kind, sympathetic and friendly not only to
your own kind, but also to every creature which is within your care,
for you are as gods to them, whom they look up to in their need.
Beware of anger, for many sin in anger and repent of it when their
anger is past. (p. 180)
Never slaughter an animal for your personal use. Behold, nature, the
life of creation, provides for you. The fruits of the fields, of the
gardens and the forests should be sufficient for you. And never
trample on life intentionally, neither that of the animals nor that
of the plants. The one who intentionally tramples on life creates
causes. It is as if he tramples on his own life, and he will suffer
from it. (p. 181)
Blessed are you in the inner circle, who hear My word and to whom
the mysteries are revealed, who do not imprison or kill any innocent
creature, but seek the good in all, for to such belongs eternal
life. (p. 195)
Only the soul and the person who are filled with My Spirit keep what
I have commanded them. People of the Spirit will not take or hold
captive innocent creatures, much less kill them. The one who lives
in the truth knows that infinite love operates and is active in
every creature. People in the Spirit of truth live with nature and
all its creatures. (p. 197)
The egocentric person, the domineering man, expects his fellow man
to serve him. He also demands that an animal serve him beyond its
capacity and strength. He gives orders – and does not serve. For
this reason, he inflicts unspeakable torment on people and animals.
If a person makes his fellow men dependent on him – as if they were
slaves – he will also enslave the animals. The one who no longer
listens to his conscience becomes hard-hearted towards man and
animal. … Nor does he sense anymore what his neighbor and the animal
need. When a person’s senses have become brutal, the whole person is
poor in feeling. (p. 202)
Jesus went to Jerusalem and came upon a camel with a heavy burden of
wood. The camel could not haul its load up the hill and the driver
beat it and treated it cruelly, but could not get the animal to
move. And as Jesus saw it, He said to him, "Why do you beat your
brother?" And the man retorted, "I did not know that it is my
brother. Is it not a beast of burden, made to serve me?"
And Jesus said, "Has not the same God created this animal and your
children who serve you from the same material and have you not both
received the same breath from God?" (p. 420)
Is it not written in the prophets: Take your blood sacrifices and
your burnt offerings, and away with them. Stop eating meat; for I
did not speak of this to your forefathers, nor have I commanded them
to do so when I led them out of Egypt … (p. 431)
In the law of God, nothing is written about blood sacrifice nor
about burnt offering, nor about the deliberate killing of animals,
nor even about the consumption of the flesh of animals …
It is a law that man should practice justice and mercy and walk
humbly to the Kingdom of God of the inner being, where the true and
eternal home of the soul is … From the beginning, God gave man the
fruits, the seeds and the plants for nourishment … (p. 433)
The one who sheds innocent blood, who consumes flesh is merciless
and will have to suffer his own lack of mercy on himself. (p. 434)
Jesus came into a village and saw there a stray kitten, and it
suffered from hunger and cried out to Him. And He picked it up,
wrapped it in His robe and let it rest at His breast.
And when He went through the village, He gave the cat to eat and to
drink. And it ate and drank and showed Him its thanks. And He gave
it to one of His disciples, a widow called Lorenza, and she took
care of it. (pp. 337-438)
And some of His disciples came to Him and spoke to Him about an
Egyptian, a son of Belial, who taught that it is not against the law
to torment animals if their suffering brings profit to people … (p.
461)
The one who hunts animals will himself be hunted one day. The one
who torments animals will himself be tormented one day ...
The hands of the one who torments or kills animals are stained with
blood. The one who consumes the flesh of animals, who pollutes and
violates nature is impure. Such people can neither deal with holy
matters nor experience the so-called "mysteries" of the heavens, nor
even teach or explain the law of the heavens. (p. 462)
The so-called clergy, which speaks against nature, against love for
animals, which consumes meat and fish, cannot treat holy matters nor
fathom the "mysteries" of the heavens nor teach the law of heaven
and interpret it. They are the blind guides, who in turn lead other
blind people into the pit. They are the spiritually dead, who in
turn only deal with other spiritually dead who then surround them.
And again I say to you: Anyone who seeks to possess the body of any
creature for food, for pleasure or for profit thereby defiles
himself. (p. 543)
For the one who does violence to man or animal and disregards life
sins against the life of the person or of the animal. The same holds
true for plants, stones and minerals. All forms of life bear in
themselves the life from God. They sense what their neighbors intend
to do with them and feel it as joy or pain. What man does to his
neighbor or to a form of life falls back on him. (pp. 543-544)
"Do you not know what is written? Obedience is better than
sacrifice, and to hearken is better than the fat of rams. I, the
Lord, am weary of your burnt sacrifices and your vain offerings, for
your hands are full of blood. And is it not written: What is the
true sacrifice? Wash and cleanse yourselves and remove the evil from
before My eyes; stop doing evil and learn to do good. Do justice for
the fatherless and the widows and to all those who are oppressed.
And in this way, you will fulfill the law. The day will come when
everything that is in the outer court and is part of the blood
sacrifices will be taken away, and the pure worshippers will worship
the Eternal in purity and in truth." (p. 561)
The bloodthirsty one remains blood-thirsty and seeks revenge and
wants to continue to shed the blood of his neighbor … In their
madness, they even consider the shedding of the blood of others to
be honorable, and do not hesitate to offer animals, too, as burnt
sacrifices to the Eternal. Every blood sacrifice is satanic and is a
desecration of the life from God. Through such revengeful darklings,
the darkness wants to ridicule God. (p. 562)
I say to you: Love your enemies, bless those who curse you, give
them light in their darkness, and let the Spirit of love dwell
within your heart and overflow to all people. And once more, I say
to you: Love one another and all the creatures of God. (p. 801)
People who have attained higher degrees of purity will love one
another and all creatures of God, as I have loved and love them. (p.
802)
Jesus, the Christ, spoke out against the regulations and behavior
patterns of the priest caste that are described in the "Books of
Moses" and also spoke against the instructions of ecclesiastic
authorities today. Nothing, but nothing, in the teachings of Jesus
suggests that He wanted to fulfill the Old Testament in the New
Testament. That is only the narrow thinking of today’s priest caste.
Whoever subscribes to this way of thinking has sold his freedom to
the egotistical church rulers of the pagan state religion of
Constantine.
The Church not only kept slaves in the past but it also does so
today. Today’s slavery is much more subtle. Those who do not do as
the Church demands are subject to anathema and eternally damned. The
common people are afraid of this and those in the upper echelons of
the state sin publicly against what the Church has hitherto
condemned. For those who are great in the eyes of the Church, the
Church will turn not one but two blind eyes.
Animals Lament –
The Prophet Denounces
Dear reader, what you will now read will oblige you to make a
decision – depending on whether you have a heart for the animals:
for God or for the church institutions; one cannot serve two
masters.
In the name of God or in the name of the church institutions.
To the degree that people have exaggerated notions of themselves,
they fail to appreciate the animals.
Many people believe that they are free people. The so-called freedom
of a person, however, corresponds to his state of consciousness
which is often like a wall beyond which he cannot see.
According to the cosmic laws, man is the microcosm within the
macrocosm.
In our innermost being we are beings of the light, fully mature
spirit beings that we people should once again become, for Jesus of
Nazareth said: You, therefore, must be perfect, as your heavenly
Father is perfect. (Mt. 5:48) The animals also bear the life of God,
but in their spiritual body the forces of life, of the law, God, are
not yet fully developed and active. Animals are on a lower
evolutionary step in the process of growth toward the filiation of
God.
On our way to becoming man, we have shadowed ourselves through
unlawful sensing, feeling, thinking, speaking and acting, enveloping
ourselves with a cloak of transformed-down energies and our own
self-created burdens. But the connection to the eternal Being, the
pure spiritual macrocosm, remains despite its weakened state. The
life, God, to which we once belonged, is unity, freedom, cosmic
boundlessness.
The animals, our second neighbors, cannot burden themselves. Unlike
human beings, they live according to their spiritual degree of
development.
Those who become aware of the cosmic realities will realize that the
microcosm, man, not only lives in limitation, but whiles away his
days in a dungeon that is nothing but his narrow world of desires
and needs. According to the individual’s capacity to comprehend, he
looks only to his limitation, which he calls "the world."
A person speaks of "freedom" by referring to his greater or smaller
possessions, which he calls his property. His "property" is his
little world – and ultimately his "personality" with its opinions
and notions, prejudices, envy, conceit, self-righteousness and the
belittlement of others – which he desperately defends.
Metaphorically, man erects thick walls of defensiveness and
rejection around himself, and through the narrow embrasures he
distrustfully shoots thought-energies and emotions at anyone who
might contest the one thing or the other. His "free space," his
so-called "property" is restricted by him with corresponding stop
signs like field markers, fences and hedges. His "property" gives
him a "sense of freedom"; but this "freedom" has nothing to do with
the cosmic freedom.
Animals, on the other hand, are free. The Creator left to them the
entire Earth, nature, which knows no demarcations. The objection
might be made that animals, especially the more highly developed
living beings, mark their territory and limit themselves to a
particular area. But consider the following: On the one hand, the
markings of animals are messages to others of their kind. An
animal’s territory is at the same time the habitat of many other
species of animals. On the other hand, not all potential aptitudes
from creation have developed in the spiritual animal form, that is,
not all aspects of the spiritual consciousness of life, we could
also say, of the divine law. The degree of unfoldment of
consciousness we might call the state of consciousness. The
territories and habitats of animals, including the animals in their
physical bodies, correspond to their current state of consciousness,
which carries within itself further evolutionary steps.
Each evolutionary step of an animal therefore corresponds to its
state of consciousness, which the macrocosm, the All-Law, slowly
builds up and expands in the animal. This means that each animal
continues to develop according to its life cycles, which are active
in the macrocosm and accompany the animal’s evolutionary steps.
God, the All-Spirit is life, and life is constant evolution. Because
God is infinity, there can be no standstill, but continuous
evolution. This means that infinity is constantly in motion, in
never-abating evolution.
If the behavior of animals is the subject matter here, then it is a
description of the fundamental, natural conditions. What is meant is
the animal which is still unspoiled and not yet wrongly programmed
by people. No further mention need be made in this context of the
fact that in terms of energy and from the very beginning man has
affected the animals, imposing upon them his own negative programs –
not only directly through training, and breeding and cross-breeding,
but also indirectly through his "example," through his whole
behavior, his sensing, feeling, thinking, speaking and acting.
We human beings call the animals’ state of consciousness which
imposes certain limits on them "instinct." But the state of
consciousness of animals has not developed through wrong behavior,
as it did in human beings. Instead, it is the natural present state
of evolution, the evolutionary step, of this life form.
The negative behavior of people, on the contrary, is directed
against our true consciousness and reduces this consciousness more
and more. We limit ourselves though wanting to have that which we
call our property, but which is only an illusion. This illusion is
removed by death, because as souls we can take nothing earthly with
us, neither goods, nor money nor other possessions.
Our ego, which is our little world, is our "property"; it has many
variants.
Our so-called "property" might, for example, be our obsession for
power, our avarice, brutality, tyranny, or delight in tormenting
people and animals. Every person reacts according to what lies in
the scale of his human predispositions, in his ego, which became his
state of consciousness through his thinking and acting. Animals on
the other hand live according to their evolutionary state, according
to what is presently active in their consciousness. It is the
animals’ present state of evolution or consciousness.
Man should be the image of God: love, kindness, unity, goodwill and
freedom. In this consciousness, man would be one with animals and
plants, with the entire nature kingdoms, including the elementary
forces, the stars and planets, the cosmos, the All – and with
himself. His egotistical attitude has made man discordant, perverse
and unfree. Man seeks to tack onto the animals his own base behavior
against nature. But the animal is free, because it is "normal" and
lives according to the laws of nature, true to itself. Every animal
consciously carries within itself the divine freedom, which
continues to open up to it with each evolutionary step. The
macrocosm guides the microcosm, the animal, in pre-determined
cycles, no matter what the animal’s state of consciousness may be;
this is why the animal feels free.
Man as well carries the cosmic freedom within himself. But it is
covered up by the narrowness of the ego, by the world of the
externalized senses, for example, and by the muddled labyrinth of
thoughts that some call intelligence.
Love is the highest fount of Being. Love, which the Creator-Spirit
also placed into the animals, can be recognized, for instance, in
the maternal love of mammals. With how much care and consideration
the cat cares for her young, or how much maternal instinct, how much
tenderness and care a lioness has for her cubs, even though she
might be hunting a gazelle! The cubs may climb all over her body, as
much and as long as they like – the lioness remains still and is
happy with the cubs’ liveliness. A blackbird as well shows her
maternal feelings for a long, long time. She will feed the blackbird
baby, without limitation, until it can find food itself. I am also
thinking about the loyalty of animals, like horses which give
themselves completely and may sacrifice their lives to carry people
for miles and miles. Or the devotion of a dog which leads a blind
person or tries to rescue someone buried in an avalanche.
You might object that we human beings have trained animals to
perform these feats. But how come such training can succeed? Why can
we train dogs as seeing-eye dogs? This is possible only because
these animals and many others have an instinctive intelligence to do
justice by man, to serve him. Anyone who is mindful of what the
animals do for people, how they make many sacrifices in order to
serve and help them, should be filled with gratitude. But all those
who have fallen victim to the desires of their ego will merely use
people and animals for their purposes. Whether they can be
considered the image of God, must be placed in doubt.
In every animal, but in every plant as well, the mighty
creator-force is present: God, the omnipresent universal eternal
Spirit, the All-intelligence. Anyone who has a heart for nature may
sense in the expression of an animal, or in the beauty of a plant,
in the shape of a rock, or in liquid substances that Earth could be
a paradise.
To justify the boundless exploitation of nature, the following words
of the Creator are often quoted: Subdue the earth (Gen. 1:28). The
word "subdue," however does not mean that animals may be tormented,
forests and plants annihilated, or that everything may be destroyed
that is within mankind’s grasp. The word "subdue" means the
commandment of preserving the nature kingdoms and the entire Earth.
We are called upon to treat animals with love and to care for them.
We are called upon to respect, cherish and love all life forms on
Earth, even Earth as a whole, because everything in all things is
the work of the Almighty – the love for mankind, animals, plants and
rocks, for the entire Earth.
Anyone who has ever cared for an animal feels that he has grown
internally richer and more conscious of nature. But anyone who
builds meat factories and slaughterhouses, or who condones these by
consuming the flesh of his second neighbors, such a person’s
consciousness will grow more and more narrow because such a person
is impoverished in his inner being.
Everything that we do out of egotism will take its revenge on us
according to the law: Whatever a person sows is what he will reap.
God is love. Out of love for us human beings, God gave us the Earth,
the Mother, who nourishes us. Those who meet the Earth with love,
that is, selflessly and with devotion and care, will receive in
plenty and therefore will reap in plenty.
Feasting at St. Andrews:
Were people to understand the language of animals, they would hear,
for instance, the lamentations of the pigs that were executed in the
slaughterhouse for the renovation of the "St. Andrews" chapel. Their
lamentation, which expresses their sorrow, could be the following:
Why are you not content to ask for donations from the heart for your
chapel? Why do you kill us for the renovation of your house of God?
What would the priest of the chapel reply to the animals, if he
could understand them, who are repeating the following: Why are you
not content to ask for donations from the heart for your chapel? Why
do you kill us for the renovation of your house of God?
The heartlessness and unpredictability of human beings is our fear.
We are terrified of the cruel two-legged man.
The prophet denounces:
The church authorities of "St. Andrews" sent out invitations for the
barbecue feast which will take place after the church service. There
will be blood and liver sausages, cabbage soup, barbecued
fresh-killed pork and beer. Many will think: That is not unusual –
it is what people are used to. Killing is permissible, both of
people and of animals.
The one with a heart will consider. The blood sacrifice of pigs is
made for the renovation of the chapel. On the one hand, the blood
and cries of fear of the animals, who sense for what purpose they
are being killed, will cling to the chapel "St. Andrews," and on the
other hand, the seasoned and prepared flesh, steeped in
death-fright, is absorbed in the intestines of the believers. This
means that the murderous death of the animals permeates both chapel
and believers. They may be called spiritually dead, because whoever
promotes such a thing for the renovation of a "house of God" can
only be seen as spiritually dead.
They are truly great examples, the church leaders of "St. Andrews"
and their believers. The church leaders have animals killed rather
than simply asking for funds from the faithful to renovate their
chapel. The culinary qualities of pigs apparently raises more money
than the request for gifts from the heart for the chapel. The hearts
of church leaders and of believers has been left behind. The pigs’
hearts bring in more money.
The animals lament:
Their eyes are broken by suffering, pain and fright. They sense why
they are being held. Their gazes accuse human beings.
Why do you kill us? Why do you cook, fry and cut up our body? Did
the Creator not give you the herbs and the fruits of the fields and
forests? What have we done to you that you keep us in prisons and
feed us your waste products?
Your hearts are poor in feeling and merciless. A stone contains
life; but your hearts are made of stone by comparison. In your
breasts there beats only a muscle for yourself and your welfare.
Learn to be compassionate by putting yourself in our position. Even
though we are animals, we live and feel, like you do, for life is
feeling, sensing and perceiving. We perceive the purpose of your
keeping animals.
The prophet denounces:
Man has become a brute, heartlessly butchering, tearing down and
locking up everything that may serve his heartless avarice. He
forgets that one day he, too, will live in the tightest and
filthiest space or even in prison – for what a person sows, he will
reap. The crimes against animals are the same as crimes against man,
because man and animals have the same breath, which is the life, and
it is God. The keeping of economically useful animals is like wanton
killing. It is a sin against life, that is God.
The animal laments:
Why all this? Why do you torture me? Why do you want to train me for
dogfights? I am the Creator’s creature, not an animal for the sake
of your wantonness, for the sake of your games. My whole body aches,
my muscles and bones are about to burst – pain, pain everywhere. Why
all this, what have I done to you?
The prophet denounces:
Man, the murderous bull, has bred himself a "bull-terrier" to train
for dogfights so that over-satiated, sensation-lusting people can be
amused by dogfights. The many sad pictures, each and every one, all
symbolize the execution of the person according to the law of sowing
and reaping.
Jesus said: As you did it to one of the least of these my brethren,
you did it to me. (Mt. 25:40) Not only people are among His
brethren, but also our fellow creatures, the animals, our animal
brothers and sisters, because they also, like people, were given the
life by God. What people do to fellow humans or animals, they do to
Christ.
People intrude in the omnipotence of God and torment the animal
world. This means that all those who torture animals, train them, or
let them run on a treadmill like the dog-brother in the picture,
will one day suffer the same or similar things on their own bodies.
Do not complain, you heartless, cruel tormentors of animals, when
one day you will be chased for miles, as if hunted through the
desert, when you will be attacked and torn apart by an animal that
you have trained to tear apart its kind. Do not complain when your
limbs ache and your body is covered with wounds and pustules. Do not
complain when your fellow men have no compassion for you because
they treat you as you have treated and treat the animals. Do not
accuse God; you have caused it; you suffer as you have made people
and animals to suffer.
The animal lamented,
before it was forced to run in the murderous military horserace. I
do not have the strength to go through what you people are demanding
of me. I do not have the bones or muscles in my body to sustain
this!
Have mercy! The Creator of all beings has entrusted us animals to
you so that you may give us the love which the Creator also breathed
into you. Where has the compassionate love for your fellow creatures
gone? Have you traded love and compassion for cruelty, brutality and
murder?
I go to an early death because of your murderous behavior. How will
you end one day and where will you be one day when life has passed
from you, the human being?
The prophet denounces:
Where will all those be one day who have ridden an animal to death
in such a manner? When and how will they meet death on the racetrack
of their lives? According to the law of cause and effect, those who
have produced such causes will have to feel the pain of the animals
in their own body or on the body of their soul after their physical
death. All our actions, preceded by our thoughts and desires, are
recorded in our soul and in the cells of our body.
Do not be surprised, you fellow men, when your back is broken for no
apparent reason. Do not be surprised, and do not accuse God, when
you suffer a complicated fractured leg that will not heal. Do not be
surprised when, as souls, you are hunted by the world of your
desires just as you rode animals to death. Do not be surprised when,
as human beings or as souls, you have to suffer and bear the pain of
those whom you have tormented, chased and murdered, whether they
were animals or humans. Do not be surprised and do not accuse God,
or human beings, or animals – you yourself are the accused, for it
is only the seed sprouting in your body and in your soul, which you
have sown yourself.
And if you should call upon God’s mercy and compassion, then
remember the Our Father, which you prayed from time to time. There
it says: … and forgive us our debt as we forgive our debtors. But if
the person does not achieve forgiveness, because he does not feel
remorse for his cruelty, what will be his lot? Only what he has
sown. God’s mercy and compassion can be received only by those who
are remorseful and ask for forgiveness and no longer do the same or
similar things. Those who believe that they suffer innocently will
remain in their suffering, even as a soul after death.
The animals lament:
I do not accuse my fellow creatures who have hurt my coat of
feathers. Desperation and suffering and the confinement of the cages
drive every animal to vie for more space. It is deceptive. When one
or the other fellow creature turns around, it seems as if there were
more space.
Our life is nature. The life of nature gives us our food. We do not
want your ghastly feed that is all doped-up to put on more weight,
and for your craving for profit. We want to move freely under the
open sky and eat – not devour – what nature gives us.
Do you human beings not know that whatever you do to us will come
back to you? The Creator, who is the life and whose creatures we all
are, has not arranged for you to treat us like this. Who called upon
you to do so?
The prophet denounces:
Who has called on us people to commit such and similar atrocities?
The Creator of infinity has not issued such a commandment, but Satan
has. Evil crept into the heart and the senses of human beings. It is
the Satan of the senses, who wants to torment and murderously kill
God’s creation. For this purpose he uses heartless people who are
like him, and their number is increasing. Because whoever no longer
has a conscience also has no heart for people or animals.
When one day, the seeds they have sown sprout for such persons, the
"master" of torment will let them fall. Then the "master" will no
longer supply the orgies for the taste buds, the intoxication of
gluttony and the sexual lust that has been enticed in exchange and
as reward for further negativities. He, the Satan, the evil, uses
people only as long as they are of service to his designs. Once the
seed that was sown sprouts in such a person, he has become useless
and worthless to evil. Then he sinks into oblivion.
Do not complain, you human beings, when it is with you as has been
with the many animals you have tormented and treated murderously. Do
not be surprised when your body is overrun by boils and pustules. Do
not be surprised when others show you no mercy. Do not be surprised
when your clothing is torn from your body and you are violated. Did
you not have the feathers plucked for you? Did you not have the
cockerel killed and barbecued? Did you not tear the thighs from
their dead, barbecued bodies and eat them, even noisily devour them?
The question is, who eats, and who devours? Is "devouring" innate to
animals or to human beings who think they personify higher values
than animals do?
Dear fellow brothers and sisters, take time to watch a horse, a cow
or a donkey as it grazes in the pasture. And then watch in the
mirror as you tear the legs from the roasted bodies of ducks, geese,
or barbecued chickens, and see whether you eat or "devour"? Whose
ethics and morals are higher when it comes to eating or devouring –
those of people or animals?
Who may claim in face of these facts that people are ethically or
morally superior to animals? In view of these excesses, who has a
higher quality of life, the obese human beings who "eat" the
carcasses of their fellow creatures, or the animals who must be
sacrificed in stables, slaughterhouses, grills, and frying pans for
the pleasure and corpulence of "ethically-morally high-standing"
human beings?
The animals lament:
Why, why these cruel deeds? Has the spirit of nature, the
Creator-Spirit, taught you people this? We suffer in unspeakable
agony, for who wants to be butchered or even hung yet living by the
legs? When will human beings understand that we feel and because of
this, suffer? You only ascribe instinct to us. But instinct also is
a part of perception. We perceive what you do to us and who or what
approaches us. It is not without knowing why that we flee from
people. We instinctively perceive who the person is and what many of
them intend.
The prophet denounces:
These turkeys are alive when they are hung by the legs. Dear fellow
humans, to test how these your fellow creatures may feel, hang from
the beams of your attic. You can see how it is for you and what you
feel before unconsciousness sets in. If you then still want to eat
the meat of turkeys and other fowl, do not call yourself a human
being anymore, but a perverse two-legged animal of prey.
Now some may object by saying that human beings are in the image of
God and not perverse two-legged animals of prey. One possible answer
might be: Many of these "images of God" have subscribed to evil
which has no purpose but to torment and kill God’s creatures and to
alter animals and plants through cross-breeding. The so-called image
of God, the human being, permitted himself to be changed by evil, so
that the image of God became the image of evil, in the face of whom
animals flee and plants turn away.
In the long run, evil will not prevail because the core of good
remains, even in the evil. Good will overcome evil – even if it is
only after a person has tasted his evil seed, for many earth lives,
after wading through it, so to speak, to realize that he should
become the image of God that he is deep in his soul, in the very
basis of his soul. The one who realizes that he is the image of God
will begin to love animals, plants and minerals, too; and then the
Earth will sigh in relief.
The animals lament:
I am not a dumb goose, whatever they say about me. The spirit of
nature equipped me with intelligence. I sense instinctively what
happens to me. Often my kind is only "kept" to be slaughtered for
the feeding trough of human beings. We animals ask time and again:
Why do you humans torment your fellow creatures? Has evil entered
into all the hearts of human beings? We animals also want to live
our lives just as every person wants to.
You people receive many gifts from nature, through the entire year.
Why do you have to fatten up geese, to eat their liver as liver
pâté?
The cruelty of mankind is our lot. We do not fear death when our
life is fulfilled and draws toward another existence. It is our
terror to be killed indifferently and coldly by our fellow
creatures, the human beings, who should preserve the Earth and love
all that the Earth bears. We animals, your fellow creatures, want to
meet you as friends, like brothers and sisters, so to speak. And
you? We have done nothing to you. Why do you do this to us?
The prophet denounces:
Animals have done no harm to people. Why do people cause animals
such unspeakable suffering? Most people today no longer have guiding
examples. The church dignitaries, who ought to be examples of ethics
and morality, became heinous and slid down the slippery slide of the
ego. On Christmas, for example, they bless their faithful with goose
liver in their bellies. They speak of exercising moderation in
keeping animals, in slaughtering animals, but any measure is already
too much when an animal suffers; then one cannot speak of exercising
moderation. Who wants to justify the "moderation," the suffering
animal, before his Creator? The dignitary or the "Books of Moses"?
The "Books of Moses" contain in large part not the word of God
through Moses, but cruel instructions of the priest caste of that
time, who falsely attributed their excesses, their pagan rites to
Moses. The bloodthirsty notions of the priest caste of that time are
outdone by far by the notions of people today, including their
examples, the ecclesiastic dignitaries. What ecclesiastic
authorities revealed in their teachings and instructions, the
catechism, exceeds in practice the measure of cruelty found in the
Old Testament. The Old Testament, the Catholic Catechism teaches us,
is fulfilled in the New; the Old Testament sheds light on the New,
and the other way around. However, no person of character could
imagine that shedding light could be so dark, of such gloom.
The animal laments:
You have implanted death into me, misery and ever greater misery,
affliction, ever greater affliction, pain, pain and unbearable
agony. What do you get from this? Do you humans not hear? Do you not
see? Do you not feel? You humans, put yourself in my place; feel
into me. I am not alone in my fate. Millions of rats and mice cry
out with me. Do you not hear the crying, the screaming, the wailing,
the pain of your animal brothers and sisters?
What will be your lament one day?
Remember that cruelty will bring people who are cruel nothing but
cruelty in return. I am frightened by people with hard hearts.
Now you use my abused, skinned, dead body for your "research" to
prove what you have thought up. What will the result of your life
be?
The prophet denounces:
People should be the image of God. A large part of mankind has
become the image of its fate, for the torment and suffering of the
second neighbor, the animal, becomes the agony, the suffering and
the often cruel deaths of people.
Those who have no conscience are spiritually dead. Their hearts have
become unfeeling, deaf, and apathetic toward the life that is, in
truth, a part of every person. The scales of life weigh very
precisely and they weigh justly. Tomorrow, what will be the fate of
the killers and tormenters of animals?
What drives people to act so inhumanely? Do people believe that
cruelty will bear good fruit? Those who think that fame and honor in
research will bring lasting benefit to their soul are deceiving
themselves. Perhaps today the famous scientist will receive a
doctorate degree, but tomorrow a black shroud – black as his soul
has become.
Many have "sacrificed" the warmth of the heart to "science." But if
it were their own little kitten or lap dog that should be sacrificed
for science, what would the "owners" say? They would certainly be
outraged, because you cannot do that to these animals. Those who
believe that the feelings of all animals are different from those of
the kitten and the lap dog have left their hearts by the wayside for
the sake of their self-centeredness.
Let us finally realize that every person will reap his fruit and
will be forced to eat it as well. For many, it will be very, very
bitter fruit.
The animal laments:
Do you human beings think that we do not sense what is about to
happen to us when you cram us into wagons to take us to the
slaughterhouse? Do you know the horror, the fright, the panic of
that which surpasses all comprehension? Do you people think at all
when you see an animal transport? Do you still feel at all what it
means to be delivered into the hands of super-powerful domineering
people in order to be killed?
Many people have become harbingers of horror, with brutal violence,
coldness and mercilessness glittering in their eyes. We are afraid
of those who ought to love the Earth and everything it bears – the
life. What all will people perpetrate for a piece of meat? What is
it like to consume my battered body for a meal? Have you no feeling
at all? Do you not know that you are eating part of an animal that
was tormented and tortured to death, that was forced by you to
become an animal carcass, so that you could be delighted at a meal,
with a hearty appetite and the urgings of the body to savor its
taste? To your health!
You also consume all that still clings to the seasoned and
well-prepared meat, for instance, fright, panic, suffering and pain.
Whatever enters you will settle in your body. Someday our fright
will be your fright, our suffering will be your suffering. You will
someday feel what panic means. Perhaps then one or the other
tormentor and killer of animals will understand what he today
dismisses as mere objects.
The prophet denounces:
The feelings and sensations of humans are energy, just as thoughts,
words and actions are. These energies do not simply dissipate. They
remain in those who have created them. The creators, for instance,
the perpetrators, but also the accomplices of animal tormentors and
murderers will feel it in their own bodies according to the law:
What a person sows, he will reap.
All those are accomplices who silently tolerate the tormenting and
butchering of animals and who profit by it. I repeat – perhaps some
repetition may soften a hardened heart: The meat of tormented fellow
creatures is permeated with their fright, their misery, their pain,
their despair, their horror. Cooking the meat will not dissolve
these energies and make them vanish. The energies are absorbed in
the intestines of meat-eaters and affect other parts of the body,
for example, blood, nerves, muscles, organs, bodily fluids and the
temperament of the person as well. At night when the person is in
deep sleep, where will the souls of the perpetrators and
accomplices, of the violators and those who benefit from all this
be? Perhaps some will wake soaked in sweat, hunted down in a dream,
threatened by a mysterious power.
Some may think: "a nightmare." Today, as a person, he may shake off
the impressions conveyed by the dream. As a soul in the beyond that
will no longer be possible. The situation that took place in the
dream will be reality; the soul must learn from the transgression of
the person. What was once a nightmare has become reality that must
be expiated in suffering.
The animal laments:
Did God not give people everything they need to live? Are there not
plant fibers and wool for clothing against the cold? Human robbers,
who torment and kill in atrocious ways have savagely taken my life.
For what? My clothing, my fur, was necessary for my life – is my
pelt necessary for your life, too?
I would have loved to live my life as it was given to me by the
Creator-Spirit of nature. You have taken it brutally from me. How
can man answer to this? The Earth and everything it bears was
entrusted to man to love and respect. The greater light was meant to
serve the lesser light. In many people, we sense hardly any light at
all; only dark shadows and the strident sparks of aggressive
feelings, thoughts and passions. When will the tormenting and
killing of animals have an end?
The prophet denounces:
Man, "endowed as a rational being!" The "endowed as a rational
being," man, could have the following excuse for tormenting and
killing animals: Some species of animals even eat those of their own
kind, that is, other animals. But let us be aware that no animal
kills to get the fur of an animal brother or sister. This is done
only by "ethically and morally superior" man, who considers himself
the crown of creation, but who has become a rapacious wolf in
sheep’s clothing.
Those who have learned to see are not surprised that it is
especially the rich, enveloped by mink coats, who often feel so
little warmth in their cold splendor. Many people, especially those
who must flaunt their "cold splendor," their possessions, because
they have little to show in the way of inner virtues, also lack the
ability to think clearly. And so, it is hardly possible any longer
to appeal to common sense in order to grasp logical processes and
cosmic principles. For the few who may still grasp it, may the
following be said:
The life of animals – as with the life of human beings – is the life
that is God. God is life and God has given it to all human beings,
animals and plants. The Earth is the life from God. People are
called upon to keep the Earth in love, including all that it
carries. God has not called upon people to violate the planet and to
torture and kill everything that lives on it, sacrificing it to the
ego. It is the responsibility of the person how he treats the life
of nature and his own life. The actions of each individual will
become his joy or sorrow – for whatever a person sows, he will reap.
Our physical existence and that of all life forms of nature is a
gift from God. Man takes much, much more than he gives, for
instance, to Mother Earth. This must inevitably mean the
exploitation of Earth and the death of a self-glorifying human race,
a society that has truly become a brutal, despicable society of
robbers, thieves and murderers.
Let us be aware of the fact that animals live in consonance with the
Earth, with nature. A great part of mankind behaves like a beast,
spawned from the refuse of the ego, killing and devouring
everything.
All those who find what I write presumptuous should ask themselves
the following question, and should answer it as well: What does
mankind give to Mother Earth in love and kindness? The photos
reflect what mankind does. Most human beings rob, pillage, kill and
seize everything for the sake of their egos; to the Earth they then
give the waste products, the "rest" that is useless to the ego,
waste that might still have been alive yesterday, as in the picture.
The dead body of the mink, for example, is it the waste product of a
killing or of a murder? Decide as you wish. One thing is certain:
The young mink cannot live its mink-life as it was meant to by
nature and the Creator. It cannot play its part in the unfoldment of
forces. Mother Earth is still giving and giving – chances upon
chances for us human beings. But for how long?
This little calf was only born to be immediately killed. The "Herod
premium" of the European Union makes it possible: For every calf a
premium of DM 225 (about $100) is paid if it is killed within the
first twenty days of its life.
Since Germany will not pay this premium (yet finances it through the
European Community coffers), the little calves must suffer through
long, tortuous transports to France or Spain. Since 1993 nearly 2
million calves have been killed in this way.
This cow is being loaded onto a ship in the port of Triest on its
way, for example, to a slaughterhouse in Lebanon.
Eyewitnesses report: When the animals are unloaded in the port of
Beirut after several weeks of transport, one can only talk about
barely surviving or half-dead. Many of them have suffered untreated
and bloody wounds, injured eyes, or bruised and broken legs from the
many times they were loaded and unloaded. In the port of Beirut –
the final stop – the severely injured cattle, which are completely
exhausted and hardly able to walk, are driven off the ships in the
most brutal manner. Often they are beaten with iron rods and are
poked in the eyes with these rods. A popular instrument of torture
to make the poor animals obey is electric shock. It is used mostly
on the animals’ genitals or their eyes. Many of the cattle collapse
during this torture and only want to die. But the right to die is
denied them because they must be delivered somehow to one of the
surrounding slaughterhouses – no matter how badly hurt – while still
"alive" or, more exactly, "dying."
The dying cattle, no longer able to walk after this torture, are
heaved from the ship by a rope. The leg by which they are lifted
tears and breaks under the weight of their own body. The following
pictures show how it continues after the unloading: The animals are
slaughtered by cutting their throats so that they slowly bleed to
death, fully conscious.
Europeans or Americans who are incensed might quiet their conscience
by remembering that in their countries animals are given anesthetics
before they are slaughtered. Otherwise their slaughterhouses look
just the same as in these pictures. This murder continues with knife
and fork on finely laid tables where no one considers what the
"filet mignon" looked like shortly before.
This Is Cruel Man
This is the beastly man, this is what we are, and this will be the
suffering of mankind until it has learned to truly love nature – and
not just to "like them" for themselves, personally, as Catholicism
instructs.
The word "to like" is in stark contrast to love for God, which is
love for neighbor. "To like" means to make distinctions between one
and the other. "To like" may also mean to regard the animals, our
second neighbors, as inferior.
If human beings do not strive for the love for God and for neighbor,
then the inferior, for instance, the animals that we should only
"like," will be beaten, tormented and killed … "I like pigs because
I like to eat roast pork." Or: "I like tearing a leg from a
barbecued chicken because I like to eat it."
The love for God, that wants nothing for itself but bears both
neighbor and second neighbor in the heart as a part of itself, this
love for God is the commandment of true life: without pain, without
suffering, without spiritual death.
The Old Testament is fulfilled in the New, according to the Catholic
Catechism. When will it be fulfilled? When people suffer what they
have done to the animals? Then the end of mankind is accomplished,
the animals live in freedom, and the lion lies with the lamb.
The one or the other might ask himself again, who is at fault? On
the one hand, it is the brutal caste of priests, right down to our
times, who do not teach the people what God and Jesus wanted. On the
other hand, it is the lack of feelings and the limited awareness of
man – a narrowness that permits others, for instance the caste of
priests, to rule over them.