Hi Earnest!
Good to hear from you again.
Sure, it'd be beneficial to continue this discussion of blood transfusions. However, in order not to hijack this thread, why not start up a new one? Then you can lay out your arguments, and see what happens as other posters add their two cents. I don't think you need be too concerned with influencing anyone on this board one way or another. If readers weren't already fairly independently minded, they wouldn't be here at all.
You quoted a point from the article I linked to and made some comments. Here's my response:
: My view is that it was not a case of God "giving permission" for gentiles to eat the blood of dead carcasses or that the Noachian Law applied to them, but that they were without law as far as God was concerned. Paul writes in Romans 2:12-14 "...all those who sinned without law will also perish without law; but all those who sinned under law will be judged by law...For whenever people of the nations that do not have law do by nature the things of the law, these people, although not having law, are a law to themselves."
Your comments are essentially the same that JWs make with regard to this argument about Deut. 14:21. And from a few other things I've seen on the Net, it appears that the Watchtower Society agrees with them. However, I have yet to see a clear response to the specific points raised in the article. For example, how can one claim that God is acting self-consistently if he gives explicit permission for Jews to enable gentiles to break such a supposedly major law? Can you imagine God giving permission for Jews to enable gentiles to, say, murder people whenever they please?
Of course, there are many other specifics that we can cover in your new thread, should you choose to start one.
: Although Paul is talking about Mosaic Law, I believe that is also true of the Noachian Law which is only binding on those that acknowledge it.
I had the impression that God's laws for humanity are binding on all humans, whether they acknowledge it or not. Can you provide scriptural proof of your claim?
: There is no suggestion in Deuteronomy or elsewhere that those who are not worshipers of God are obliged to keep his laws.
Certainly not the Mosiac Law, but certainly the supposedly everlasting laws given to Noah. I can't imagine God letting off murderers who say, "I don't acknowledge your law about murder."
: If worshippers of God had been told at any time that it was ok to eat the blood of animals found dead that would certainly change the picture but that is not the case.
No, it's not the case, but we have only two examples in the Bible: the Jews under the Mosaic Law and Christians under the strictures found in the New Testament. I already showed why the Jews were an exceptional case (and of course, the article I linked to discusses this at much greater length), and I argued that the point is undecideable in the case of Christians because of the obvious problem that gentile Christians were asked by the so-called "Jerusalem Council" to avoid offending their Jewish brothers by observing certain Jewish religiously based customs. The point is that just because you don't find explicit permission given in the Bible to do something doesn't mean that it's prohibited.
: So while I agree that pouring the blood out is showing respect to the Creator of life, I do not think that the Noachian Law was relevant to Deuteronomy 14:21 and so the conclusion that Genesis 9 only applies to an animal killed for food (in contrast to one found dead) is unwarranted.
You're going to have to deal with all of the specifics that I and, more importantly, the linked article, raise that show that your conclusion is unscriptural. Again I think that this would best be covered in a separate thread.
AlanF