A horrifically bad argument to justify vaccination that you may have heard goes like this: “Since the Bible does not specifically condemn vaccination, we cannot condemn vaccination.” Let’s refute this.
Faith versus Disease Hysteria: George Muller and the Bristol “Smallpox Outbreak” (1872)
“Our only trust, I confess it frankly to the honour of the Lord, was in His pity and compassion, in His tender, fatherly heart; for He knew our case.” — George Muller
Refuting the Argument, “Vaccination is Loving your Neighbor”
Since vaccination violates God’s law, vaccination is an act of hatred towards God. Those who willingly get vaccinated are also involved in hatred towards themselves, since they are inflicting harm on themselves. In some cases (which we will discuss), willingly getting vaccinated may also be hatred towards one’s neighbor. And, those who promote or engage in vaccination are definitely involved in hatred towards their neighbor, as they encourage or inflict harm on their fellow man.
The Tragedy of Jonathan Edwards: When Christians Die from believing Vaccine Lies
“Unexpectedly, the cure became the killer, and he died from the inoculation on March 22 at the age of fifty-four, leaving Sarah to raise their large family alone. It was the last and worst of a series of heavy calamities that had befallen Sarah. … Sarah would never recover from her loss.” — Carolyn Custis James
Reaping and Sowing DEATH via Vaccination (Mary C. Hume-Rothery, 1881)
“Pro-vaccinators attack the healthy infant, break down the harmony of natural action, infuse filth into the blood, and set up inflammation or fermentation in the system, the consequences of which it is impossible to foretell or estimate; in a word they disease a child, and weaken, inevitably, its vital powers, in order to strengthen it to resist disease or to recover from it if attacked. Talk of common sense! This is positive imbecility. Again, it is one of the unmistakeable laws of order (revealed in natural phenomena no less than in written revelation) that “as a man sows so also shall he reap”; that it is vain to sow thorns and expect to gather grapes, or to sow thistles and look for figs.” — Mary C. Hume-Rothery (1881)