ethical question - maybe you can help

by besty 42 Replies latest watchtower beliefs

  • sammielee24
    sammielee24

    As an outsider, we can never know what went wrong inside a marriage and I believe that it is the 2 people inside the marriage that make it or break it and not anyone outside so for that reason, I wouldn't condemn anyone who is disfellowshipped because of a marital breakdown. I might not agree with actions but I wouldn't think I know all the facts from any of those involved.

    It sounds as if the couple shunned you once you were disfellowshipped and so if that is the case, how can you pledge your allegiance to the person who remains insde - if they shun you, they already think you are unworthy and have condemned you without mercy and by their actions, how can you know what they think or hear their side of the story? They won't let you.

    If the person who has left the marriage is now disfellowshipped, why would you not speak to them and hear their side - depending on how strong your friendship was, the marital breakdown or actions may have little effect on you. You may choose to believe or disbelieve them and start your friendship new as people outside the organization. People coming 'out' are often in need of some support just from exiting the cult - I would see no need to refuse contact based on that context alone.

    Once shunned by the organization and JW friends and family, it is always questionable as to how far many ex JW's will allow themselves to feel the same level of affection they had for the people while still 'in', as people are forced to face the facts that friendship ends at the word disfellowshipped and thus the basis of the friendship was never 'real'. There is always a level of hypocrisy when the shunner, for whatever reason, decides to accept you back into their lives..and we have to decide how much we overlook and how far we are wiling to extend our hand. sammieswife.

    sammieswife.

  • sammielee24
    sammielee24

    But ask yourself, what if the mate that was innocent didn't do anything really bad and was a pretty decent person? Then you're offering support to the one who broke up a family. I'd have a problem with that regardless of a person's religion.

    -----------------------------------

    You could never know if the person didn't do anything really bad - you have to accept the relationship for what it is now. What is manageable and acceptable to one person in their life, doesn't necessarily mean that another person can live the same way. There are two people in a marriage and nobody breaks up that marriage but them. I don't adhere to the belief that people just swoop in and break up a marriage - the cracks already have to be there and if left unchecked, those cracks become crevices until no amount of patching will fix them. Each party has their own story to tell and the truth often lies somewhere in the middle...sammieswife.

  • Witness 007
    Witness 007

    The best friend a bastard can have is more bastards.

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