I have 2 sons who live close to each other. Thankfully, they are emotionally close despite the fact that the oldest never was baptized and therefore not bound by WT standards.
The youngest, the JW, had a birthday on the 1st of the month. I wished him a happy one -- but, of course, only in my mind knowing that he would dismiss such a wish if he even talked with me on the phone. He can't, of course, because of their shunning policy.
I asked the oldest non-JW, jokingly, if he'd wished his brother a happy birthday. They talk almost daily. He said, "Dad, we did talk about his birthday this morning and G then told me something startling -- you're not going to believe this but Mom calls him every birthday and to 'acknowledges that special day'".
To me, that was nearly unbelievable but at the same time, ironic. I recall years ago when we were all together my ex-wife's (wife at that time) mother phoning her on her birthday and actually wishing her a happy birthday. Being the party-liner, I would chastise my wife for participating in that small celebration and she would dismiss it quickly. After all, that was her mother and we need to excercise a little empathy at times.
So here, ex was merely passing it down as it was passed down from her mother, now deceased. This all makes me wonder -- have the JW's morphed into the Catholic mode where there are mortal sins and there are venial sins? Talking to a disfellowshipped father -- that's me -- is a mortal sin but acknowleging birthdays a mere venial sin?
Is acknowledging a birthday kind of like taking blood in fractions? Is celebrating birthdays in fractions somehow okay?
Len Miller