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As
a former smoker, I know how easy it is to ignore messages from the
news media and the pulpit that discourage smoking. It is difficult
for most of us to be objective in considering that which condemns
what we want to practice. As someone as well noted,” Affection
is a briber of the judgment; and it is hard for a man to admit a
reason against the thing he loves, or to confess the force of an
argument against an interest." Convincing Christians to give
up tobacco wouldn't be nearly so hard if they could first be
convinced to face the issue objectively and with an open mind. And
yet, of all people, the Christian should recognize the difficulty
of dealing with prejudiced and closed minds. As a follower of
Christ, he knows that personal preferences must be subordinated in
seeking to please the Lord. The smoking Christian owes it to
himself and to the Lord to consider the evidence relative to
smoking.
When
he does, he will certainly consider such facts as those recently
released by the Surgeon General's office in The Health
Consequences Of Smoking. In The Forward section of that
report, Dr. E. N. Brandt, Jr., Assistant Sec. for Health, writes:
"Cigarette smoking is the major single cause of cancer
mortality in the U.S. Tobacco's contribution to all cancer deaths
is estimated to be 30 percent... Cigarette smokers have total
cancer death rates two times greater than do nonsmokers. Heavy
smokers have a three to four times greater excess risk of cancer
mortality... There is no single action an individual can take
to reduce action risk of cancer more effectively than quitting
smoking..." According to statistics released from the
Public Health Service research, lung cancer, emphysema, chronic
bronchitis,
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and coronary heart disease
are the principal causes of death attributable to cigarette
smoking, but they are not the only ones. They have concluded that
the rate of early death from all causes ranges from 40 to 120
percent higher for smokers than nonsmokers, depending upon the
amount smoked daily. It is not without good reason that the word
"Warning" appears on the cigarette package. Those who
are told to glorify God in the body (1 Cor. 6:20) should seriously
consider the health hazards of smoking.
Equally
important for the smoking Christian to consider is the possibility
of enslavement to tobacco. To be brought under the power of a
habit is to violate the principle of 1 Cor. 6:12. For the smoker
who wants to know, "What about the glutton, the coke-aholic,
the coffee-holic?"— the same principle applies
equally to them! With Paul, every Christian must resolve,
"...I will not be brought under the power of any."
Rather, "I buffet my body, and bring it into bondage..."
(1 Cor. 9:27).
Finally,
the Christian smoker must consider the possibility that smoking
may hurt his influence. Shouldn't every Christian be "an
ensample to them that believe, in word, in manner of
life..."? (1 Tim. 4:12) Justified or not, many are offended
by the smell, the pollution, and being forced to inhale
second-hand smoke. Honestly now — everything considered,
wouldn't it be better if Christians didn't smoke?
Dan S. Shipley Lindale, TX 75771
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