Upvote:0
Santeria is kind-of sort-of a Christian denomination, and they practice animal sacrifices.
Upvote:3
I personally know of a Christian Church in Conyers, Georgia, USA that participates in animal sacrifice ( sacrificial lamb/goat) before the Masters Supper during Passover. This year the holy day will fall on March 12, 13, or 14th. The church is Ministers of the New Covenant - Pastor Matthew Janzen. Children are encouraged to participate in the slaughter.
Upvote:6
The Armenian Orthodox Church has practiced animal sacrifice since its inception in 301 AD and still does until this day. It is referred to as Matagh and performed outside of the church on holy days such as Easter or to ask for forgiveness. The practice was instituted by St. Gregory the Illuminator in his efforts to convert pagans, so it is an example of adapting a pagan practice to further conversion efforts. Please refer to the following article:
http://www.jstor.org/stable/3154334
Please note that the Armenian Orthodox Church was the first nationally established church, the country officially converting in 301 AD. The second was its neighbor, the Kingdom of Georgia, which was officially declared Christian in 337 AD. Georgian Christians also occasionally perform animal sacrifices. The Armenian Orthodox Church is one of the Oriental Orthodox Churches which rejected the ruling of the Council of Chalcedon in 451 AD, over the definition of the Trinity, so it has split with the larger Eastern Orthodox community.
Also for a history of animal sacrifice within Eastern Orthodoxy, see the following:
http://www.academia.edu/1183305/The_Encaenia_of_St_Sophia_Animal_Sacrifice_in_a_Christian_Context
Upvote:12
According to this article, there are local churches in Israel that still practice animal sacrifice. It says:
Although slaughter for sacrifice contradicts a basic belief of Christianity, it is practiced by local Catholics, Greek Orthodox and other Christians at the ruined Byzantine church of Saint George in the village of Taybeh, 20 miles from Jerusalem. "Around 70 to 80 lambs are sacrificed here each year," said the Roman Catholic priest, Father Raed. Similar sacrifices are also made in the towns of Lodd, Jaffa, al-Khadar and elsewhere in the Holy Land.
Unlike traditional sacrifices, the meat is then distributed to the poor rather than to the priests, but the purpose is very similiar.
From the article:
"The sheep are always facing east when a sharp knife goes through their necks," Khoury explained. "Sometimes sacrifices are offered as gratitude for the birth of a healthy child, help with a relation surviving a deadly illness or a major operation, or thanks for survival from a car accident."
During the killing, prayers are offered in the name of the father, son, and holy ghost and accompanied by entreaties to al-Khader (Saint George) to act as an intermediary.
Qleibo, although a Muslim himself, insists that Christian blood-sacrifice cannot be explained away as a Muslim influence: "Blood sacrifice was an important part of the ancient Canaanite religion and numerous pagan cults. Semitic blood sacrifices have persisted."
All this said, it seems to be a peculiar practice of a place, not so much as a denomination. Syncretism is apparently not the sole province of the Samaritans...