As an old timer former JW, I remember well the tobacco prohibition.
When I came in during the mid 50's it was looked down upon. I'd already started smoking in my early teens and didn't actually quit till I was 20. My motive? Interestingly, it wasn't the JW's negative spin, or the medical community's cautionary messages. My first-born came along and I made up my mind that I didn't want him to see me with a cigarette hanging out of my mouth.
Before that, I was a young MS at the time but was still a closet smoker. Another brother happened by my workplace and I knew he spotted me in the act while I was loading a truck. That evening I resigned my position with the utmost guilt. The CO (called congregation servant then) encouraged me to stay on with my promise that I would quit. I didn't want the pressure. I wanted to do it on my own terms -- which I did several months down the road, during a long weekend that followed my son's birth.
Then came the early 70's (I think) when the disfellowshipping penalty for tobacco made its debut. Yes, I was free by that time but I recall the feelings of anger at the WT and empathy for the chain-smoking ones, especially the elderly. Anger at the WT for imposing such a severe penalty. Yeah, kick out the very ones who need emotional help. Yeah, we know God won't allow tobacco on the new earth so let's get a head start -- help HIM out with our own pre-screening process. Yeah, we can legislate human behavior.
My question now, as I reflect on the Tobacco prohibition is, who was first? What religious group took the lead as trying to guide its flock away from tobacco use? I understand Seventh Day Adventists are included. Who else? Any estimated dates on when such warnings took place?
Fats
JWs, 7th day Adventist, etc. -- who was first to prohibit tobacco?
by Fatfreek 17 Replies latest watchtower medical
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Fatfreek
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blondie
The WTS discouraged smoking but did not make it a DFing offense until 1973. Supposedly, people appointed to be congregation servants, pioneers, etc., could not be smokers.
The SDA discourages it too but I don't know if the DF/shun SDAs that continue smoking.
Blondie
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Double Edge
Mormons have had a prohibition that goes back to the 1800's, however, it's considered a "weakness" and the person is neither shunned or prohibited from attending or socializing with the congregation. I think now days, for the general public, smoking has become so "pedestrian"....
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Fatfreek
This, from TIME Mar. 3, 1923, archives, is interesting. It shows (by inference) that the Witnesses adopted what some U.S. state governments (not Ohio) had tried many years earlier:
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KANSAS: A bill is before the Legislature to make the possession of cigarettes or material for making cigarettes an offence punishable by imprisonment. Kansas already has a law against selling, or giving away cigarettes, but none against smoking them.
OHIO: An anti-cigarette bill was killed by the Legislature.
UTAH: Ernest Bamberger, Republican Senatorial candidate in 1922, and three of his friends were arrested for smoking in a Salt Lake City cafe. Other arrests were also made. Utah has a law prohibiting smoking in public and the sale of cigarettes. The Freeman's League is agitating for the repeal of the law. The Mormon Church is in favor of the anti-tobacco legislation.
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Fats -
billyboy
I have to say that any religion that claims to be Christian but allows smoking is certainly not Christian. It is the most disgusting habit & breaks at least 2 fundamental scriptural principles - love of neighbour and sanctity of life. I have walked out of restaurants when people lit up beside me. Thankfully , in my country it will shortly be banned.
To me the prohibition of smoking is one of the most attractive beliefs of JWs - it is fantastic walking around at conventions & no-one is smoking.
Incidentally - I've known many who have left JWs & started smoking as a reaction against what they feel was a "control" mechanism ("nobody tells me what I can or cannot do anymore"). My 30 year old relative (who had never smoked before) did this - he is now a 40 a day man. I know many ex-JWs & apostates post on this board - does this often happen?
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Fatfreek
Welcome to the board, BillyBoy. It is good to have fresh thinking.
"... smoking is certainly not Christian. It is the most disgusting habit & breaks at least 2 fundamental scriptural principles - love of neighbour and sanctity of life. ..."
If your list of most disgusting starts there, ummmm, where do you list the sexual predator situation, you know -- elders hiding behind the two witness rule -- the whole reason behind the Silent Lamb movement? Like not allowing DNA as being a second witness?
Fats -
billyboy
Smoking is the single most preventable cause of cancer & other diseases, resulting in millions of premature deaths per year.
Sexual abuse is another issue - sorry , I don't buy into the SilentLamb movement - I think they are quite awful and their motives are corrupt - they have as much interest in protecting children as the Animal Rights movement have in protecting animals. I know that most of the posters on this site disagree - tough!
An elder in my congregation was removed after wild & bizarre allegations of child abuse & the Silent Lamb people got involved , looking to make $$$ out of the situation. After 2 years , the complainent (a 14 year old girl) admitted that she had made the whole thing up - after destroying the whole family. This is the side of the issue that you will never hear discussed on anti-JW & apostate websites.
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ackack
BillyBoy, so then do you feel its hypocritical of the JW's not to df obese people?
Yes, I don't really like the idea of giving wild accusations too much power. Its odd actually, I knew another elder who was removed because of an accusation that turned out to be false as well (wtg, hypnotherapy). Is DNA evidence not permitted as a "second witness"? I hadn't heard that. Thats particularly disgusting (through not surprising) if its true. After all, "worldly" evidence is given a lower weight
ackack
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Fatfreek
"This is the side of the issue that you will never hear discussed on anti-JW & apostate websites."
Well, now, I guess we're hearing it right now. And, guess what -- nothing exploded, nobody got injured or killed. One thing we have here is freedom of expression -- something some organized religions will not tolerate. And you know exactly who I'm referring to.
I made an earlier comment, "Like not allowing DNA as being a second witness?", that you made no reference to. Is there something about DNA you don't trust as evidence in sexual cases? Or other rape kit evidence?
Fats -
billyboy
Sorry , I was of the view that DNA is allowed as a second witness. Please correct me if I'm wrong.
The argument that JWs should DF obese people if they DF smokers doesn't follow - obese people are not voluntarily engaging in a habit which kills other people. In the UK there was a famous trumpeter called Roy Castle - he died from lung cancer despite never having smoked & this was attributed to him playing the trumpet in smoky enviroments.