With deep respect, my statement was a paraphrase of the argument presented in the June 15th, 2004 issue of The Watchtower. In the article, Rightly Value Your Gift Of Life, the progression of thought which I described is explicitly laid out.
OK, lets backup a little bit.
My intent on this thread has simply been to illustrate the impropriety of lifting one law out of an entire body of law and interpreting it outside of the framework in which it was given.
Since the context of this thread is WT interpretation of BIble laws on blood, you have not shown that Bible laws on blood as wt sees it should not be taken out of the framework in which it is was given.
Apologies, Fisherman. I did not realize that was necessary. Jehovah's Witnesses (via church literature) interpret the Torah's requirements on blood in the context of sacrifice; interpret sacrifice in the context of atonement; interpret atonement under the context of Messianic prophecy; interpret Messianic prophecy in the context of Jesus' sacrifice; interpret Jesus sacrifice in the context of the Ransom. Based on that concatenation it is inferred that any use of blood not specifically set forth elsewhere in the Torah should be understood as forbidden and an act of disrespect towards the Ransom.
Is the cultural and contextual backdrop of the Torah's requirements on blood only relevant when it is incorporated into an argument in support of the JW position or are the rest of us allowed to incorporate it into our reasoning as well? Is the flimsiness of this concatenation sacrosanct or am I allowed to point it out?
Jehovah's Witnesses (via church literature) interpret the Torah's requirements on blood in the context of sacrifice;
So does the Torah. and the NT
interpret sacrifice in the context of atonement
So does the Torah. and the NT
interpret sacrifice in the context of atonement
So does the Torah. and the NT
interpret atonement under the context of Messianic prophecy
So does the NT
interpret Messianic prophecy in the context of Jesus' sacrifice
So does the NT
interpret Jesus sacrifice in the context of the Ransom
So does the NT
Based on that concatenation it is inferred that any use of blood not specifically set forth elsewhere in the Torah should be understood as forbidden and an act of disrespect towards the Ransom.
The above statement does not truly represent wt teachings because wt position on blood transfusion is based upon the application of BIble laws on blood and not based upon what they believe is the significance of the laws on blood. So, it is not actually based on what you describe as a concatenation that WT teaches that BT violate God's Law. The related "concatenation" which evidently was meant to allude to the wt literature you latter posted attempts to explain why the law makes sense but the reason for wt position is because they figure that God's law as they see it should be applied to BT, and is not a conclusion based upon a concatenation.
I'm confused. If I'm understanding correctly, you don't seem to believe that a conflict between two or more of God's requirements can be created by unique circumstances. (?)
I am sure that you agree that in ancient Israel language was never a problem because all they had to do at that time was to simply to ask God. The reason they got into trouble was because either they did not ask God or their motive was bad and not because they did not understand with their mind.
Suppose that a fetus was harming its mother; according to modern Jewish law, a fetus (an unborn developing human creature) becomes an intruder when it threatens the life of its mother and an abortion to save the mother is allowed. WT teaches that taking the human life is not allowed by God. In our modern time, how does one actually know what God requires if or when God is silent. Wt has claimed in their literature that Jehovah God communicates with the wt. Un-like the holy rollers, JW also claim to experience clear convincing evidence in their lives. BT are not like the miraculous healings that the NT records that Jesus performed on on the Sabbath- but have backfired and I can personally attest to cases that resulted in devastating infection of the liver. Medically speaking, when the other option is certain death, some people would choose to risk infection and whatever else because under such extreme circumstances the benefits (probable survival) outweigh the risks (possible or certain death.) But the mental attitude of a Christian is not based upon survival but based upon the clear convincing evidence of their relationship with God. Would a JW if faced with death commit idolatry, go to war or break any of God's laws? Out of weakness , yes, and maybe cave in faced with torture but not out of fear. JW survival is not based upon breaking God's Law.
Many of the laws in the Torah incur the penalty of death if deliberately violated (concocting anointing oil for personal use for example.) That is a hefty fine to pay; mixing a couple of ingredients to manufacture an object is more valuable to God than life. Also, in the Bible, it was not ok to break God's law, and a person was required to be executed for deliberately breaking God's law, Obedience to God's law was more important to God than life.
In principle and in theology JW is the best because JW survival depends on Jehovah. The big question for JW is: does God require you personally to say no to a BT even in an emergency?, and how do you know for sure?