Yes. They don't live in a country where if they don't eat meat, they will starve.
2007-03-14 07:46:15
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answer #1
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answered by Marg 2
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I know a lot of Christian vegetarians, but, I have never met a vegan who professed to be a Christian. A lot of Theologians believe that when God created man, He made them vegetarians. It was not until after Adam and Eve had sinned that God told them that they could eat meat. Before then he told them that they could eat of every tree in the garden except one. Most of the vegans that I have met live a very liberal and anti-biblical lifestyle. Just because said it is okay to eat animals does not mean that we have to. However, if a vegan says that it is wrong to eat animals then they are in direct contradiction with the Word of God. I mean, when man was in the Garden of Eden he was also naked, but, we cant just walk around like that today.
2007-03-14 07:57:00
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answer #2
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answered by mudge741 1
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Not all Christians interpret the Bible the same way.
Besides, I would think the Ten Commandments supersede anything else in the Bible, and they directly say DO NOT KILL, which could include animals. This is a more persuasive argument than another passage claiming animals are food, so therefore we should eat animals - the Bible has lots of passages that are open to interpretation, so you can twist them to mean whatever you want.
2007-03-14 07:49:11
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answer #3
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answered by teresathegreat 7
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I have no idea where you got this idea from but it wasn't from a Bible. I know that and I'm a Buddhist. To choose to be vegan or vegetarian might be for health reasons but for some of us there are ethical issues. I am causing violence and suffering in another being thus causing suffering in myself so I have chosen to be a vegetarian. Not everyone reaches their decision in this manner. I would think that any loving God would respect a decision not to cause harm or commit an act of violence.
2007-03-14 07:47:37
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answer #4
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answered by Yogini 6
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Yeah, yet Jesus replaced right into a chippie too. i'm in college to be a librarian, no longer a chippie, i do not imagine that's an ethical capture 22 problem so a procedures because the church is in contact. In different words, i do not imagine that we are required to stay as Jesus did precisely to no longer be seen incorrect. truly, if Jesus toured a production facility farm at present, i do not see him being down with that. also, those who want to make the point that the Bible condones eating meat oftentimes ignore concerning the section in Leviticus about no longer eating shellfish, beef, and meat and dairy at the same time as cooked/served at the same time. particular some human beings save kosher, in spite of the undeniable fact that the overall public of Christians savour their 1st Baron Beaverbrook cheeseburgers. that's a double whammy if ever there replaced into one. i do not imagine that those 2 worlds have a lot to do with one yet another, truly. fanatics on both area for particular, yet truthfully no longer mutually unique.
2016-12-02 00:13:00
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answer #5
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answered by camargo 4
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lol Being a vegan isn't against God's word ... God says animals are food, but nowhere does it command that you eat meat, just that you may eat it. Oh, and of course, what kind you should and should not eat.
2007-03-14 07:46:51
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answer #6
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answered by arewethereyet 7
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If some Christians are hypocrites, and most hypocrites are vegans, and all vegans are holy then the following sentence is true:
Hypocritical Christians always eat fish on Friday.
This statement is:
A. True
B. False
C. Neither true nor false
D. R-Tarded
2007-03-14 07:46:29
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answer #7
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answered by monkey tuesday 3
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Some yes
2007-03-14 07:45:56
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answer #8
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answered by Pantherempress 7
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by the law of probability, I'd say yes.
2007-03-14 07:44:25
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answer #9
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answered by Anonymous
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Lol.
2007-03-14 07:44:21
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answer #10
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answered by remy 5
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