The use of animals for food
I can explain Christian views on using animals for food, including biblical and ethical perspectives.
The use of animals for food
I can explain Christian views on using animals for food, including biblical and ethical perspectives.
These resources will be removed by end of Summer Term 2025.
Lesson details
Key learning points
- Animals are used for food, research, clothing, work and companionship; views depend on their value.
- Many Christians allow eating animals (Genesis 9:3), stressing stewardship and humane treatment.
- Some promote plant-based diets, citing Genesis 1:29 as God's original plan for humans.
- Views differ: most denominations allow eating animals with ethical treatment; Adventists encourage vegetarianism.
- Christians use conscience, reason and biblical teachings (Genesis 1:29, 9:3) to guide their views on animals.
Keywords
Humane - showing compassion, kindness and care for others, particularly in the treatment of animals or people
Stewardship - duty given by God to humankind to look after the created world and all life within it
Vegetarian - someone who does not eat meat, but may consume other animal products like dairy or eggs
Common misconception
Christians within the same tradition or denomination have the same views on using animals for food.
In reality, even within the same denomination, Christians can have different views based on personal beliefs, scripture interpretations and culture. Some follow official teachings, while others make their own ethical choices.
To help you plan your year 11 religious education lesson on: The use of animals for food, download all teaching resources for free and adapt to suit your pupils' needs...
To help you plan your year 11 religious education lesson on: The use of animals for food, download all teaching resources for free and adapt to suit your pupils' needs.
The starter quiz will activate and check your pupils' prior knowledge, with versions available both with and without answers in PDF format.
We use learning cycles to break down learning into key concepts or ideas linked to the learning outcome. Each learning cycle features explanations with checks for understanding and practice tasks with feedback. All of this is found in our slide decks, ready for you to download and edit. The practice tasks are also available as printable worksheets and some lessons have additional materials with extra material you might need for teaching the lesson.
The assessment exit quiz will test your pupils' understanding of the key learning points.
Our video is a tool for planning, showing how other teachers might teach the lesson, offering helpful tips, modelled explanations and inspiration for your own delivery in the classroom. Plus, you can set it as homework or revision for pupils and keep their learning on track by sharing an online pupil version of this lesson.
Explore more key stage 4 religious education lessons from the Religion and life unit, dive into the full secondary religious education curriculum, or learn more about lesson planning.