I know our nephew who is pretty smart considering his disability thinks that he is bad or evil because they won't let him be dunked.
How very different from other Christians who see the sacrament of baptism as a welcome into God's inclusive family.
A while ago, someone asked me what was the one outstanding thing that finally made me see the light. I think it is this concept that anyone is unworthy of baptism. To turn it onto its head, it is the concept that anyone at all, by their own efforts, can make themselves "worthy". In fact, the whole concept encapsulated in the book "Keep yourselves in God's Love".
I got about three quarters into that book before I finally balked, and although the book itself wasn't the precipitating cause; I just knew that its whole fundamental premise was so very wrong.
How could any human being make themselves worthy, by their own deeds? God, if he exists, is God. He is divine. He is the ultimate in all love and perfection. Such a being could not possibly react in all the petty, small-minded ways of spite and vengeance that the WT, and indeed much of the Old Testament, would have us believe. Jesus in the New Testament makes it very clear that his teaching supersedes those attitudes. Yes, we are called to repent of our sins, but it is God who in his mercy gives us his grace or, in WT words, his undeserved kindness and loves us.
To me, a religion that by its own admission resists baptising someone because they don't wash their car often enough, or because they don't wear the right clothes, or, as above, most horrifically of all, because of a disability, has explicitly condemned itself.
I think that is so whether or not one believes in any God or none. To exclude a human being because of a disability is very, very shocking.
Well, that's my view anyway. Sorry if that offends anyone, but it just made things even clearer for me.