Permission to Eat Meat/2/en
Permission to Eat Meat
Exegetical Approaches
Overview
Commentators differ regarding both how to resolve the textual question of when man was given permission to eat meat, and in how to interpret the theological significance of that directive. On one end of the spectrum, Ralbag asserts that meat was always permitted and is the natural food choice of humans. On the other end, R. Yosef Albo claims that vegetarianism is the ideal, and that meat was only allowed after the Flood as a concession to human frailties and degraded morality. According to his position, in the future, the prohibition will be renewed.
Others suggest that although meat might not have always been permitted, there is nothing fundamentally wrong with killing for food. Thus, R. Saadia asserts that killing animals was prohibited at the beginning of time only for practical reasons, lest a species become extinct, while Radak asserts that eating meat was saved to be a reward for Noach. Rashba uniquely suggests that although Adam was allowed to eat meat, he lost the privilege when he sinned by eating of the Tree of Knowledge, and it was restored only after his sin was atoned for though the Flood.
Never Prohibited
Eating meat was permitted from the beginning of time, and even Adam was always allowed to eat animals.
- Speaking of the norm – R. Saadia explains that Hashem mentioned only vegetation and fruits because these are mankind's major food source, while meat is a luxury eaten only much less often.
- Description rather than command – Ralbag1 asserts that these words are not a command to man at all but rather a further description of man's creation and a statement of natural law.2 Hashem is simply saying that He created humans with the capacity to eat vegetation, even though grasses and plants are far from man's nature and one might have not expected him to possess this capability.3
- Contrast to animals – Shadal asserts that the verse serves to contrast man, who is given seeds and fruit to eat, with animals who were given only grasses to consume. The difference highlights man's greater intellect (only he had knowledge to sow and plant) and flows from the prior blessing regarding man's dominion over the animal kingdom.
- Minority discounted – According to R. Saadia, this case is similar to many others in which people focus on the majority and make no mention of a minority, even though they do not intend to exclude it.
- Obvious – For Ralbag, the ability of man to eat meat was obvious and thus did not need to be stated. It was his capability of eating vegetation which was surprising and needed to be mentioned.
- Prevent unnecessary killing – Shadal asserts that Hashem only alluded to the permission to eat meat rather than making it more explicit so as not to encourage man to spill blood.
- Way of Torah – Yefet the Karaite suggests that sometimes the Torah mentions something only at a later point, even though it was applicable earlier. He compares the situation here to the lists of pure and impure animals which are provided only in Devarim 14 but not in Parashat Noach, even though already Noach in Bereshit 7:2 needed to differentiate between them.5
Prohibited After Adam's Sin Until the Flood
Adam was initially allowed to eat meat, but he lost this privilege after his sin in the Garden of Eden. Permission was restored after the Flood atoned for all of mankind's sins.
First Permitted Only After the Flood
Man was not given permission to eat meat until after the Flood. Commentators differ in their understanding of the reason for this change:
Permission as a Reward
As a reward for caring for the animals in the ark, Noach and his descendants were granted permission to eat meat.
- Saved for later – According to Radak, there was no fundamental reason for the original prohibition. Hashem simply wanted to save meat as a future reward for Noach.20
- Prevent suffering – Ran asserts that since animals can feel pain, man was not allowed to kill them. He says that this is the reason why, even later, when eating meat is permitted, one is not allowed to cause animals undue suffering.
- Equal Status – Ramban assumes that man was prohibited from killing animals since the two were similar in nature (both are able to feel pain and desire to escape death).21
- Radak views the permission to eat meat as simply compensation for Noach's labor and good deeds. Ran adds that Hashem might have also wanted to ease Noach's pain and loneliness in losing his world through the Flood.
- R"Y Bekhor Shor and Ramban suggest that there was a more fundamental change. R"Y Bekhor Shor says that in saving the animals, Noach gained certain rights over them and they became his to do with as he pleased. Ramban implies that Noach's righteous conduct revealed that man was in fact superior to the animals, thus removing the original reason for the prohibition.22
- According to Radak, there is nothing wrong with eating meat, and the existence of predators is built into nature. In fact, it would seem that Hashem considers meat, rather than vegetables, the more lofty food, and He thus saved it as a reward.
- R"Y Bekhor Shor and Ramban suggest more simply that there is a hierarchy to living beings, and thus, as long as man is superior to animals, he has the right to slaughter them for consumption.
Permission as a Concession
After the Flood, mankind was allowed to eat animals as a concession to human frailty.
- No death yet – The Midrash Aggadah asserts that originally (before Adam's sin in the Garden of Eden) no one was supposed to die, so killing even for food was prohibited.26
- Sanctity of life – R. Kook and Cassuto explain more simply that the prohibition stems from the sanctity of all life. Though man might rule over animals, he cannot ignore their vitality. All life is sacred, even that of animals.
- Unethical to animals – R. Kook also maintains that this prohibition is similar to others which try to minimize the pain or suffering of animals.
- Killing leads to cruelty – Ibn Kaspi and R"Y Albo focus instead on the deleterious effects on man's moral fiber, asserting that the act of killing leads man to become cruel.27 R. Albo adds that the consumption of animals tarnishes the soul while the Tzeror HaMor speaks of its detrimental effect on the intellect.
- Practical necessity – Abarbanel maintains that the permission was granted out of necessity. Since the Flood had destroyed all produce, Hashem had to allow Noach to eat of animals, or they would have perished from famine. Abarbanel does not explain, why then, the prohibition was not renewed after vegetation regrew.
- Man weakened – Sforno and Tzeror HaMor assert that the people who lived after the Flood were weaker than Adam's generation. Sforno maintains that the quality of the world's atmosphere and vegetation had deteriorated during the Flood, while Tzeror HaMor points to the shortened lifespans of humans. To compensate for this frailty, Hashem allowed humans to eat meat.
- Teach humans their proper status – R. Albo maintains that one of the problems of humankind had been that they did not realize that they were different from animals, leading to the principle that "might is right". To ensure that man recognized their higher stature, Hashem allowed man to eat of the animals.
- Degraded morals – R. Kook and U. Cassuto suggest that due to man's degraded morality, Hashem decided to hold him to a lower standard than the earlier ideal. If man was to have an a violent nature and an inclination to kill, better that he channel it into killing animals than fellow humans.
- Sforno, R. Kook, and Cassuto all suggest that, in the future, the world will revert back to the ideal of creation. Cassuto points to Yeshayahu 11 to prove that in Messianic times even animals will become herbivores, and no longer eat one another.29
- Abarbanel agrees but limits this to the Land of Israel.30 He posits that predatory animals were created as punitive tools of Hashem. In the era of the Mashiach this will not be necessary as evil will have disappeared and the Mashiach himself will mete out justice.
Original Prohibition was only a Practical Necessity
Adam was not prohibited from eating meat for any fundamental reason, but only due to the scarcity of animals at the time, or because he simply lacked knowledge of how to cook them.
- Scarcity of animals – R. Saadia posits that Hashem prohibited man from eating meat at the beginning of creation only due to the scarcity of animals.31 Had men been predators, there was a real possibility that many species might have become extinct.32
- Lack of technology – Hoil Moshe asserts that though Hashem prefers that man's intake of meat be limited, He nonetheless allows it in moderation. In the beginning of the world, though, man had not yet learned to cook or roast meat, and raw meat did not appeal to his palate, so he naturally ate mainly vegetation.33
- According to R. Saadia's approach, it is surprising that permission to eat meat would be granted immediately after the Flood, considering that at that point, too, there was a scarcity of animals.34
- Hoil Moshe maintains that by this point civilization had progressed enough that man had learned how to cook meat.
- No – According to R. Saadia, animals, too, were originally prohibited from killing one another to ensure their survival.
- Yes – According to Hoil Moshe, from the beginning, animals were able to eat one another since they had no problem eating raw meat.35 As proof he points to Noach's sending of the raven outside the ark, which he assumes was for the purpose of finding carcasses to eat.