RedhorseWoman
Active Member
You should have been disgusted. Interestingly, of the many I have known, I can´t imagine one of them making a statement like that.
I pinned them down on this issue once. I asked a couple of them if they ate meat, they said yes. I asked them if they bought kosher meat exclusively, they said no.
Of course the conclusion was that if an animal is not slaughtered in the kosher manner, there will be residual blood in the meat.
My question, if you knowingly eat meat with blood in it, how can someone receiving blood to save their life be criticized ? ( I had recently got out of the hospital, where I received 6 pints of blood over a period of 35 days)
There response was quite good I thought. First, they said no one should criticize anyone for having blood transfusions. Further, they said they interpret the the command in the NT to avoid blood to include blood transfusions.
Finally, they said they wished I hadn´t brought up the meat in the supermarket !
We all laughed.
And yet, JWs will accept almost all fractions of blood, and they will also accept an organ transplant, which will almost inevitably contain some amount of whole blood. They eat meat, frequently cooked rare, and declare that the blood they are consuming is not blood, but "meat juice."
When the initial ban on blood transfusions was put into effect (sometime in the 60s, I think) no fractions were allowed, and organ transplants were also not allowed (the WTS declared transplants to be a form of cannibalism.) Blood in any form was forbidden, and we were instructed to check any pet food we bought to ensure that no blood products were being given to our pets. We also were instructed not to use any fertilizer in our gardens that contained blood meal (which I never understood, since the command indicated that the animal blood should be poured out on the ground.) And, of course, what were we to do if we caught our cat or dog consuming a mouse or some other creature that hadn't been bled? Such a dilemma!
Many JWs at that time were freaked out by candy bars...yes, candy bars...because many candy bars contained lecithin. I often tried to reason with my fellow JWs by telling them that blood lecithin would not be used in candy bars and that the lecithin in those items was plant based, but they generally preferred to stay away from candy bars so that they wouldn't "offend Jehovah."
Their stance now is really, in my opinion, quite hypocritical.