Soon, on this forum, I'll only be repeating what I've already written and linking to my previous messages. You keep writing the same things over and over. And you ask questions after I've already answered them.
I explained this clearly—see posts #372
Where did you get the idea that if you don't call the police, let a criminal kill you, rape your daughter, rob you, and escape—then you'll definitely go to heaven?
The apostles never prohibited self-defense, military service, or going to court. On the contrary: the Apostle Paul himself went to court and demanded Caesar's judgment (Acts 25:11). And in his Epistle to the Romans, he said directly:
"The authority is God's servant... he does not bear the sword in vain; he is God's servant, an avenger to execute wrath on the one who practices evil" (Rom. 13:4).
And further: "For rulers are not a terror to good works, but to evil... for he is God's servant to you for good."
This one quote alone—and Tolstoyan non-resistance collapses. Tolstoyan doctrine teaches: "Do not resist evil, love everyone, do not judge, do not call on authority."
But the Apostle Paul says: authority is from God, the sword is not in vain, evil is punishable.
Self-defense is not a sin. Protecting one's family is a duty. Appealing to courts and authorities is a biblical norm. And "love for all" without distinguishing good from evil is heresy.
Tolstoyan non-resistance is not evangelical love. It is a trap.