patio34
I believe this is the 1st time we've ever directly posted to one another. Thank you for your thorough explanation of the JW view.
I'll be pleased to take your word for that, as I can't remember for sure after now having made so many posts to various ones here. (I'm getting old and senile.)
However i was a JW for 28 years until last year, so i'm intimately familiar with it.
That's a lot of years out of a person's life, true. But years in themselves do not guarantee wisdom and understanding for a person. I think if that were so I'd be smarter than what I am, given that I'm near to being 63.
But i disagree with it and consider it unethical and immoral to take advantage of another person's willingness to lay their life on the line to save you, especially when you consider their action to be sinful.
I fail to see exactly how you figure Jehovah's Witnesses "take advantage" of soldiers who on their own accord "lay their life on the line" in what they think to be their duty, particularly since we JWs didn't ask them to do so in the first place.
And you say, "to save you". What is it that you feel that I've been saved from?
And insofar as you saying that JWs "consider their [military personnel] action to be sinful", that's a strange twist of the matter. Isn't that leaving what the Bible says out of the equation?
JWs should be willing to face the consequences of their decision to not bear arms, imo.
Of course you're entitled to your opinion. But I believe that JW history is filled with experiences of them having done just that, that is, shown themselves willing to face the consequences of their decision to not get involved in the conflicts of the world. Certainly they've had to face the bear innumerable times, very much like Mordecai did after having refused to bow before the Amalekite Haman; or like the three Hebrews who refused to bow before the image that Nebuchadnezzar had set up in the plain of Dura. Those faithful servants of Jehovah stood their ground, and it wasn't easy. So, yes, I'd say that they, and we JWs today, have shown ourselves willing to face the consequences of our decisions -- decisions, BTW, which make us stand out in sharp contrast to the "world" in general.
I don't believe the Bible anymore after investigation, so that rationale doesn't excuse the JW weak action.
I'm sorry to hear that, and, that that's YOUR decision. Perhaps you will face the consequences of having made such a decision ... what do you think?
With regards to your saying "so that rationale doesn't excuse the JW weak action", what you appear to be saying is that since the Bible is meaningless to you then it should likewise be meaningless to Jehovah's Witnesses. Of course that's not for you to dictate, is it?
As far as paying taxes, that's what everyone else does too. It's the law.
Not only man's law, but for those who believe in the Bible it's God's law ... which is first and foremost of importance to a Christian.
It seems curious to me that JWs are so quick to point that out as if it's an extraordinary thing.
I pointed it out in order to show why all who pay taxes are entitled to the things those collected taxes furnish, which includes the police force and the protection it provides the public.
Yadirf