
Is eating animals actually a moral good—not just “permissible”? In this episode of the Circle Dwellers podcast, Matt and Tim Krell dismantle the viral vegan documentary Christpiracy and offer a bold Christian, philosophical, and ecological case for why humans not only may eat animals, but in many cases have a moral duty to do so. Drawing on Roger Scruton’s On Hunting, the arguments of philosopher Nik Zangwill, biblical teaching (from Acts 10 to Old Testament sacrifice), and real ecological data, they explain why domesticated animals like cows, sheep, and goats only exist because humans steward them—and why good animal husbandry creates far more flourishing than suffering. They expose the flawed hermeneutics of “Jesus was vegan” claims, discuss consciousness arguments, factory farming vs. regenerative farming, and why treating animals like moral agents ultimately harms both animals and humans. If you’ve ever wrestled with ethical eating, vegan claims, Christian stewardship, or the meaning of dominion, this episode will give you a clear, compelling, and surprisingly compassionate framework for why eating meat is good.