I am very sorry, it wouldn't let me save when I edited that post, and I lost it all. Here is the cleaned up version, hope it was worth it..
[Fisherman, I appreciate your honesty in admitting that there is no justification for the amount of suffering that animals have had to endure. You have clearly given the topic some thought.]
FISHERMAN said "..who am I to judge God?"
Who are you to judge? Let me tell you something, YOU CAN JUDGE the God that you have chosen to believe in.
In fact, you already have done, if you think about it.
As a believer, you have trusted your judgement before, and you are trusting your ability to make a judgement every day that you continue to believe in him.
Can I ask you some questions, please?
Do you believe in a God?
Then you have already judged that he exists. (perhaps based on your experiences, and your view of the physical evidence that is available).
Do you believe in a God that is good?
If so, then you have already judged him, in a moral sense.
If you pray to and worship a God, you must see him as kind and just, otherwise you would not worship him?
That is how you judge his character.
Do you think that God's creation is good and worthy of praise?
If so, you have already judged his works.
You don't believe in a callous, malicious, incompetent God, do you? So you trust your judgement, as that is the basis for your beliefs.
A theist has (at the very least) judged that God exists, and that he has created us. Generally speaking, they often believe that he has good qualities. Also, they have generally judged for themselves that his creative works were good, at least to some extent.
These are judgements that many believers in a God have made, for different reasons.
So why are they cautious of judging the seemingly unloving qualities of God, or anything that makes it seem that God (if he existed) does not care for his creatures?
You can only judge whether the God that YOU have CHOSEN to believe in exists based on the available evidence, and the experiences of yourself and others throughout history.
There is no evidence of a God that cares for each of his creatures, and countless experiences that prove beyond doubt that he is either indifferent to the immense suffering of so many animals throughout history, or he designed them in that way and chooses to see them suffer.
Cofty brought up the point of species extinction. Would a caring God have allowed that to happen? Or would a caring God sit and watch as animals starve to death and die of cancer?
What evidence is there that he cares for, or takes care of, animals at all?
Take a look at the God you have chosen to believe in, with his total lack of concern for animals and so-called 'lesser species'... and decide whether he/she/it is worthy of worship, if a God were to even exist.
TO ALL THEISTS WHO BELIEVE IN A PERSONAL GOD, AND ESPECIALLY BELIEVERS IN THE 'LOVING' GOD OF THE BIBLE:
You don't need to go along with the views of your family or friends.
Unless you were brainwashed or brought up in a high control religious group, you've already judged for yourself that God exists, and also that he created us and cares about what happens to his creatures.
You have no doubt already used your own judgement to decide that God is good, and has created all things in a loving way, in order that they can live a good life according to his fair and just standards... unless you merely worship him out of fear.
Now take another step.
Look at the countless examples of animals that have suffered and died throughout history without doing anything wrong or 'sinful', then use YOUR OWN sense of morality to make YOUR OWN independent judgement of YOUR concept of God, no matter which one that you've chosen to believe in.
Write a list of your morals and principles, such as never leaving a person or animal to suffer and die when you could act, for example.
Would you cure an animal of cancer if you had the cure? Would you feel compelled to rescue an animal in pain from being abused?
Remember..
There is never any need to hold back from JUDGING either the character, morality, or the potential existence of the particular God that you believe in.. Because at some point, you already have done.
Unless, of course, you are afraid to face the conclusion that you may come to.