T
Texas_Roofer
Guest
Thanks fix
That is a great analogy. When you were about to receive the code did you take an oath to spread this information? Did you take and implied, written, or verbal oath to restrict this information? Now if you receive a call and the caller claims he is the police acting in an emergency rescue and do you as a bank officer have the code? In fact you sense the call may not be genuine. Assume you can think of no way to verify this call in a reasonable time window. Do you break your oath and risk sin via lie, and if not and a genuine victim dies have sinned by participation in their untimely death?
I tell you over and over both answers are the same. As you do not wish to do either (release code or refuse emergency request) you are an unwilling participant regardless of your choice and action. However before you think I am too light on sin I actually see the reverse as equally true. Example if a man is driving to kill/steal and the car breaks down. This man is just as guilty. The car problem may even be divine intervention but the man through no fault of is own did all he could reasonably do to consummate his sin.
In the OP post I see no reason to believe the doctor who probably took a verbal, written, and implied oath has shown a willing intent to participate in promoting birth control pills, regardless of the physical actions. Similarly if I were the doctor I would never do an abortion because my oath did not cover killing anyone, nor medical practices which result in negative consequences as over prescribing drugs. See any ethic or moral which is not upheld both ways was never an ethic or moral to begin with.
BTW - if the doctor advises a different patient to use birth control pills for contraception, he falls in the later writings regardless of the patient’s actions, that is of course my opinion.
That is a great analogy. When you were about to receive the code did you take an oath to spread this information? Did you take and implied, written, or verbal oath to restrict this information? Now if you receive a call and the caller claims he is the police acting in an emergency rescue and do you as a bank officer have the code? In fact you sense the call may not be genuine. Assume you can think of no way to verify this call in a reasonable time window. Do you break your oath and risk sin via lie, and if not and a genuine victim dies have sinned by participation in their untimely death?
I tell you over and over both answers are the same. As you do not wish to do either (release code or refuse emergency request) you are an unwilling participant regardless of your choice and action. However before you think I am too light on sin I actually see the reverse as equally true. Example if a man is driving to kill/steal and the car breaks down. This man is just as guilty. The car problem may even be divine intervention but the man through no fault of is own did all he could reasonably do to consummate his sin.
In the OP post I see no reason to believe the doctor who probably took a verbal, written, and implied oath has shown a willing intent to participate in promoting birth control pills, regardless of the physical actions. Similarly if I were the doctor I would never do an abortion because my oath did not cover killing anyone, nor medical practices which result in negative consequences as over prescribing drugs. See any ethic or moral which is not upheld both ways was never an ethic or moral to begin with.
BTW - if the doctor advises a different patient to use birth control pills for contraception, he falls in the later writings regardless of the patient’s actions, that is of course my opinion.