.Deeje, and I'm about to write this with all respect and honor for you and for your beliefs, I do not fault you for a choice you would make. As well, I'm not attempting to talk you out of your beliefs in any way. if I were given the same choice, where it was the difference between getting killed and abandoning my principles and beliefs, I would choose to uphold my principles and beliefs. However, I would uphold MY principles and beliefs, not yours.
With all due respect to you and your beliefs as well, I don't think I attempted in any part of this thread to suggest otherwise. My point was not the beliefs of JW's per se, but to inform people about the dangers inherent in the practice of unnecessary blood transfusions. I don't believe that patients are given all the facts and this video confirms that doctors in this field of medicine are sounding a warning and stressing that attitudes towards this routine procedure need to be changed without delay. If you have any doubts about that please watch the video again. Listen for the words "increased risk of morbidity and mortality" and you will understand their concerns. Blood transfusions cause more problems and complications than any other procedure, according to these doctors.
https://www.blood.gov.au/media
As those early believers were rounded up and sent to the lions, some were indeed given that choice. Those who believed, and chose to save their lives rather than uphold their own principles were truly hypocrites. However, those who did not belong among those early Christian believers, who were caught up in a culture and group they did not actually share...did they sin by casting a 'pinch of incense' upon the altar of a deity they DID believe in, especially if doing so saved their lives? I don't think so, and I think that some people hold to beliefs and principles held by others, not because THEY believe, but because they love the company of those who do.
Do you believe that there are ways to circumvent the laws of God? Do they have loopholes? Can we offer excuses to him as to why we wanted to save our lives by breaking his law? Would we apply the same criteria to a situation where we were told to kill another person or be killed ourselves....if God's law says
"you shalt not kill", could we sacrifice someone else's life to save our own? The principal is the same to my way of thinking. Christian or not, we all know that it is wrong to take someone else's life.The law wasn't ambiguous.
Consuming blood was against God's law too and it was restated to Christians in Acts 15:28, 29. Are we free to break it to save our lives? Its a rhetorical question, asked in our own heart.
The Biblical principal is made clear by Paul....
Romans 2:12-15 NKJV:
"For as many as have sinned without law will also perish without law, and as many as have sinned in the law will be judged by the law 13 (for not the hearers of the law are just in the sight of God, but the doers of the law will be justified; 14 for when Gentiles, who do not have the law, by nature do the things in the law, these, although not having the law, are a law to themselves, 15 who show the work of the law written in their hearts, their conscience also bearing witness, and between themselves their thoughts accusing or else excusing them)"
So even though a person who does not profess belief in God and has no regard for his laws, if they break them, they will still "perish". Those who willingly come under God's law will be judged according to that law. Those who through circumstance have no knowledge of God's laws, are judged by the workings of their own God-given conscience,
"doing by nature the things of the law" and they are thus are either 'accused' or 'excused' by God for their actions.
Hypocrisy is 'a feigning to be what one is not, or to believe what one does not,' according to the dictionary. If I had been, way back then, a closet believer in Diana, I would have been hypocritical indeed to have REFRAINED from putting that pinch of incense on the altar, and I, three years ago, would have been hypocritical if I had allowed the Jehovah's Witness view of blood products to color my decision regarding bone marrow transplants and platelet transfusions.
It is not JW's view of blood that is the point of this thread....it is the medical profession's own specialists sounding this warning from a purely medical viewpoint. It just happens to validate our stand....that we are not religious fanatics who want to 'commit suicide' or refuse medical treatment, but that we are sincere Bible believers who want to be obedient to God's laws, regardless of what others think, and no matter the cost to us personally. Faith in God and obedience to his commands is all he has ever asked of his worshippers.
It is not my place to judge the individual actions of any person other than myself. But if there is medical and biblical knowledge that can assist people in making informed choices about something as important to God as the lifeblood in us, then I think the information should be shared so that those choices are made with all the facts, not just the convenient ones.
"Sin" is a very subjective concept; personal and between oneself and God, or between oneself and one's own personal stated ethical code, for those who don't believe in a deity. It is, when one comes down to it, hypocrisy writ in action. Those things which are sin for you are not for me, and vice versa. I am not sinning by using blood products, and you are not sinning by drinking coffee, or tea.
I am confused by this stance. Where is the command to abstain from alcohol, tea or coffee found in the Bible? Jesus turned water into wine as his first miracle. All cultures have their warm drink of choice. Do you take aspirin for a headache? Is that wrong? What about other drugs? Do you abstain from them too?
I see clear commands to abstain from blood, however. This to me appears to be
"straining at gnats whilst gulping down camels"...or tea and coffee.
But your OP isn't about sinning. You attempted to make a scientific 'proof' of religious beliefs; to support your religious objection to using blood products with science...and frankly, very selective science. It is only because of that intent that I chimed in with my own experience. The FACT is, had I not done what I did three years ago, I wouldn't be here now. That's fact. I can't argue with you about the religious aspect of it, just the scientific one.
I think it is beneficial to consider all the facts when analyzing any dilemma, especially where life is involved. There was no such thing as a blood transfusion when the Bible was written. So more modern methods of treatment still have to meet the Bible's criteria, don't they?
Can you shelve the laws of God on SSM or homosexuality for example, to make gay people feel accepted? And since it is so common these days for people to live together without marriage, can we as Christians then put aside Christ's teachings about fornication and adultery to make those breaking those laws feel better? Don't we first have to ask how God feels? Has he left us in any doubt about those moral issues?
We see the consumption of blood as a moral issue. It isn't the delivery system that makes it more acceptable....it is taking blood into one's body against the direct command of our Creator. If it wasn't important to him, why did he keep repeating it all through the Bible?
Just out of curiosity, (and please no offense) if you had lost your battle in this life three years ago, and 'you wouldn't be here now'....where would you be?
Would it really have been better had I chosen to die (and that's the choice it would have been) rather than to violate YOUR religious beliefs? What I did didn't harm anybody at all, and helped me a great deal. It didn't violate any of my principles and beliefs.
That is a moot point because as you can see from Paul's words, we are all under the laws of God whether we acknowledge them or not. YOUR religious principles have nothing to do with this topic. Either blood a "life-saving" medical treatment or it is the cause of more medical problems than it solves. And either blood is sacred to God and his law states that we are to avoid consuming it...or it isn't. The issues are very clear cut in my view. "Have we broken God's law?" is a question we must all ask of ourselves.
Now it might happen (as it might happen that the sun stopped shining four minutes ago) that I suddenly convert to the Jehovah's Witness way of thinking. If that happens, THEN I would be sinning if I did a second transplant. As it is, however, I won't be.
Again, as you have said...that is between you and your Maker....nothing to do with me.
On the other hand, I won't be drinking the coffee they serve at breakfast.
Do camels taste better than gnats? LOL