Christianity, Ethics

Vaccine Ethics: Biblical versus “Costs/Benefits”

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by Steve Halbrook

The crux of the vaccine debate is morality, or ethics. That is, “ought we to vaccinate?” This must be decided by Scripture, as Jesus is King of kings, and has all authority in Heaven and on Earth. Therefore, He must be obeyed in all areas of life; Scripture equips for every good work (2 Timothy 3:16, 17).

Now, in the vaccine debate, both sides often raise the idea of “costs and benefits” when deciding whether one should vaccinate. That is, one must determine whether by vaccinating the possible benefits to one’s health are more likely to exceed the possible detriments to one’s health.

Thus, pro-vaxxers hold that the disease protection that one gets from a vaccine is more beneficial than the possible side-effects of the vaccine. And anti-vaxxers hold that the dangers from vaccines far outweigh any supposed protection that a vaccine gives.

However, to the extent that these are the foundational moral arguments, neither side at this point assumes a proper ethic. Biblically speaking, to whatever degree “costs and benefits” may be weighed in an ethical decision, they are not foundational. Rather, God’s law is.

Scripture teaches we are not to do evil that good may come

And why not say, “Let us do evil that good may come”?—as we are slanderously reported and as some affirm that we say. Their condemnation is just. (Romans 3:8, NKJV)

Thus, we must approach the vaccine issue this way: by vaccination, do we endanger ourselves — and thus violate the Sixth Commandment — in order to receive a possible benefit (no matter how beneficial a vaccine seems to be)?

Considering that vaccination

then the answer is obvious: vaccination endangers one in order to receive a supposed benefit. Vaccination, then, is doing evil that good may come.

(I myself doubt whether vaccines have any benefit to begin with; so much of the pro-vaccine narrative is built on lies. For instance, polio was redefined to make the polio vaccine look effective, and death certificates omit vaccine-caused deaths.)

One may say, “What about life-saving surgery? Aren’t you taking a risk here in order to receive a benefit?” 

Not that I consider vaccines life-saving anyway — but there is a difference between jumping out of a second story window to escape a fire than doing so in the mere possibility that a fire may come. 

The first scenario I liken to necessary life-saving surgery; the fire is in your house (that is, you already have a physical problem raging inside of you), and thus you may need to “jump out of a second story window” via risky surgery.

The second scenario I liken to vaccination. There is no fire in your house (that is, you have no physical problem, i.e., a disease, or a “fire” inside of you); you are simply endangering yourself by jumping out of a window for a problem that you may never encounter. 

And all this for a benefit that may very well be fabricated; moreover, considering that vaccines can actually spread the very disease that they purportedly protect against, being vaccinated may also be likened to a spark that could set the whole neighborhood on fire.

Thus, again, vaccines are doing evil that good may come. The issue in vaccine ethics is not whether there are good results, but whether the action itself is morally lawful.

So, since God’s law should be our ethical standard, I would not encourage my fellow anti-vaxxers to make the “cost/benefit” argument the basis of vaccine ethics. (However, it is fine to use it in the context of reducing the pro-vaccine side’s “cost/benefit” argument to absurdity by showing that there is a much greater cost to vaccination than any perceived benefit.)

“The plea of the advocates of these [vaccination] abominations when cornered is, it is right to kill a few in order to save many. What a plea! Kill a few to save many! In reality it is killing many to save none. The commandment of the God of the
universe is ignored, whose commandment is,
‘Thou shalt not kill.'” — Reverend Isaac L. Peebles

Also, while it is indeed true that anti-vaxxers win (handily) in the cost/benefit debate, relying on costs/benefits as the primary basis to vaccinate may influence others into becoming pro-vaxx.

For instance, say an anti-vaxxer promotes the use of the “cost/benefits” moral argument, and someone who is undecided is influenced to use the same moral philosophy. He may research material on vaccination, and comes to think he has read both sides of the debate thoroughly enough; but, being swayed by pro-vaxx propaganda, decides that the “benefits” to vaccination exceeds the risks.

And so, since he holds to the “costs/benefits” philosophy as the basis for vaccine morality, he logically concludes that vaccination is good and moral.

But, if he held to the biblical approach, then he might otherwise see that vaccines should be opposed, even if he had reason to think (incorrectly) that vaccines have more benefits than dangers; the dangers would be enough to see that it would be a violation of Scripture to engage in vaccination.

Some pro-vaxxers not only do evil that good may come on an individual level (by putting themselves at risk via vaccination for a perceived benefit); they also do so on a societal level. Many fully realize that vaccines kill people, but hold that it is acceptable to save a greater number of lives; the “benefits,” so it is said, exceeds the “costs”.

In short, this philosophy says, “kill a few to save many; do evil that good may come.” To such a twisted, evil philosophy, the words of Reverend Isaac Lockhart Peebles in 1902 are relevant :

The plea of the advocates of these [vaccination] abominations when cornered is, it is right to kill a few in order to save many. What a plea! Kill a few to save many! In reality it is killing many to save none. The commandment of the God of the universe is ignored, whose commandment is: “Thou shalt not kill.” (Ex. xx. 13; Rom. xiii. 9.) O killers of the people, an awful day awaits you! And may you realize this awful truth before it is forever too late! ]ust simply open your eyes and behold your diseasing, tormenting, unmerciful, and deadly work, and repent most sincerely of it, and cease it at once and forever before our God shall call you before him to account for it!

Reverend Isaac Lockhart Peebles, Unanwerable Objections to Vaccination (Nashville, TN: South Bigham & Smith, 1902), 50.

The Bible, then, does not teach situational ethics. God’s law is eternal and fixed. It doesn’t matter how much vaccines are believed to be beneficial. Vaccination, being a poison that endangers one’s health and life, stands condemned by Scripture (Romans 3:8); it is doing evil that good may come.

The duty is ours; the results are God’s.

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4 thoughts on “Vaccine Ethics: Biblical versus “Costs/Benefits”

  1. Ithink this is super important, and feel you should add that many justify the evil of the aborted babies who were used in the making of a number vaccines, because of the good that comes from preventing disease. But we should. Or do evil that good may come!

  2. You didn’t mention another evil in making vaccines, and that is the human cells of aborted babies in many of them.

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