Dystopian ratburger dreams
Last night I dreamt I was at a barbecue. The atmosphere was festive. People were eating burgers. I went to the prep area to see how the burgers were made. With a set of tongs, the cook would pick up a live rat—a very large rat the size of a big domestic cat. He would immobilize the rat, pressing her down firmly against the table with the tongs, then electrocute her with a curling iron pressed against her neck. The rat’s body would then go through a meat grinder, the shredded meat seasoned and pressed into burgers, and the burgers barbecued. People were happily eating the burgers as they came off the grill, enjoying the company, laughing and playing games in the summer sunshine. I told people about how the burgers were made, about what was being done to the rats to make the burgers. Nobody appeared to care, or to find the information of any interest. It was like I was speaking but no sound was coming out. There was sound coming out, but no one seemed to hear my words or pay any heed. The message was bouncing off a wall of momentum, a steady rush of fun that nothing was going to stop.
When I woke up, I opened the Bible and turned to the book of Isaiah. In chapter six, I read God’s instructions to the prophet:
Go, and say to this people: “Keep on hearing, but do not understand; keep on seeing, but do not perceive.” Make the heart of this people dull, and their ears heavy, and blind their eyes; lest they see with their eyes, and hear with their ears, and understand with their hearts, and turn and be healed (Isaiah 6.9-10).
I realized that Isaiah was contending, some 2,700 years ago, with the same dullness of conscience that today enables us to enjoy, without regret or contrition, foods derived from processes that inflict relentless suffering on our fellow creatures of flesh. The field of psychology has granted a name to the dulling of conscience and hardness of heart described in the book of Isaiah: “psychic numbing”.
Psychic numbing is an interruption in psychoemotional processing which leads to diminished or blunted feeling. It is facilitated by and manifested in various ego defense mechanisms. Psychic numbing is thought to allow one to participate in violent practices without experiencing apparent cognitive-affective disturbance (Lifton, 1986). The ideology of meat production and consumption has been referred to as carnism (Joy, 2001). The collective and individual defenses observed in carnistic culture suggest that psychic numbing may play a role in meat consumption. This carnistic numbing may be expressed through the defense mechanisms of denial, avoidance, rationalization, justification, and dissociation. (…) Carnistic numbing might help to explain why an individual can consume meat without experiencing any overt distress. (PhD dissertation abstract, Melanie Joy, Psychic numbing and meat consumption: The psychology of carnism, 2002).
When we persist in indulging our appetites regardless of the cost to others, not only do we harm those others, we harm ourselves. Psalm 78 provides a compelling object lesson on the price of insisting on eating what we want, in defiance of what is right:
They tested God in their heart by demanding the food they craved. (…) He caused the east wind to blow in the heavens, and by his power he led out the south wind; he rained meat on them like dust, winged birds like the sand of the seas; he let them fall in the midst of their camp, all around their dwellings. And they ate and were well filled, for he gave them what they craved. But before they had satisfied their craving, while the food was still in their mouths, the anger of God rose against them, and he killed the strongest of them and laid low the young men of Israel (Psalm 78. 18, 26-31).
The passage describes the inbuilt mechanisms of cosmic judgment that afflict a community bent on indulging its appetites in violation of universal laws set in place by the Creator. The very language — “he rained meat on them like dust” — evokes Moses’s account of the third plague unleashed on the Egyptians in which dust became a mass of gnats that tormented the people and the animals.
Now that we’re experiencing our own transgression-induced plague, will we ‘see with our eyes, hear with our ears, understand with our hearts, and turn and be healed’, or will we persist, like the ancient Egyptians under Pharaoh, on the path to collective self-destruction?
Kathy Dunn
May 21, 2020 @ 12:53 am
Thanks Lisa for sharing this in the Shepherding All God’s Creatures Prayer Group. Glad you are also a member! I am an author at SAGC, and an admin of the group. I was just thinking about Pharaoh the other day; it took 5 plagues for him to turn. I often wonder if we moderns will ever learn, and wonder what number (plague) this one is? We have had foot and mouth disease and others, yet, we just don’t seem to turn…. I really enjoyed your article, thank you! Well written, thanks for writing it! Blessings and love in Jesus.
Lisa
May 25, 2020 @ 10:28 pm
Thank, Kathy! I’m delighted to have found your facebook group, Shepherding All God’s Creatures. I look forward to participating in the online exchanges.
Liza
May 23, 2020 @ 1:59 am
Nice article, true true true, every bit of it. So where does that leave us? Is God the only one who decides whose ears and eyes will be opened. What is our role if people are going to do what they are going to do. We can pray that their eyes and ears open…but like in the Old Testament, how many people really listened to the messages of the prophets? Just a few?
I actually spoke with my pastor about animal rights and factory farming and mentioned the verses you quoted about God getting angry with the people for their gluttonous behavior with their meat idols. He had actually just preached that same morning where he mentioned that verse! He did not seem to get it. When preaching he only focused on the first part really and gave it a different meaning unrelated to our grotesque cruel diets. I admire this pastor for many other reasons but not his response in this discussion I had with him. In his own words he said to be weary of making food a “religion”, and that people have freedom in Christ to eat what they want.
Also, you post remind me that after a few weeks into this pandemic, I was brought to some verses in the Bible about the plagues. Seemed a direct correlation to what is going on.
Lisa
May 25, 2020 @ 10:26 pm
Hi Liza. Thanks for your comments. I really liked this article by Marcello on 14 common Christian objections to veganism. Sounds like some of them are relevant to the conversation you had with your pastor. https://shepherdingcreation.com/2019/11/04/the-bible-and-veganism-14-answers-to-14-objections/