- Jan 8, 2011
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One of our SDA friends asked how eating fish fits into the paradigm of having no meat on Fridays. I thought that was one of those interesting quirks of modern thought that deserved a reply and a thread of its own. Historically meat was a general term for foods of all kinds including vegetables, though meat also could be used to mean flesh. Saint Paul in his first letter to the Corinthians makes a distinction between different kinds of flesh. Here's what he says:Thus we can see that the flesh of animals was not considered to be the same as the flesh of fish and of birds in ancient times. Fish on Fridays is indeed meatless when meat is taken to be the flesh of animals. Even today many vegetarians eat fish and dairy products and eggs. Though some call those who eat fish piscatarians.
Now, how many of you reading this thread think that one can be a vegetarian and eat fish? And do you think there's any kind of religious rule or law that prohibits Christians from eating fish and meat and bird's flesh?
This isn't about the law, by the way, just an inquiry into one's views about things allowed and things forbidden on a religious basis.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RGB2E0NzO2A
1 Corinthians 15:39 NAB (39) Not all flesh is the same, but there is one kind for human beings, another kind of flesh for animals, another kind of flesh for birds, and another for fish.
Now, how many of you reading this thread think that one can be a vegetarian and eat fish? And do you think there's any kind of religious rule or law that prohibits Christians from eating fish and meat and bird's flesh?
This isn't about the law, by the way, just an inquiry into one's views about things allowed and things forbidden on a religious basis.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RGB2E0NzO2A