To address the case of the beggar, why is smoking bad? I might look at some food you like to eat and conclude it is bad for your health, if I give you a food you like that I think might cause you to live a few fewer days, is that a bad act if my only aim is to accommodate what you like and respect your choices? What if my opinion of the food is completely wrong? We are all going to die, and every day we make choices that move that date closer or further away from our present. Perhaps you feel guilty giving the beggar some cigarettes, I think it is reasonable to consider guilt an unsuitable compass for good and bad acts. If I smoke cigarettes and I share with the beggar, same outcome, or end and object, but very different circumstance. This might be why the Bible calls on you to not pass judgement. Ergo, intent and outcome is the only suitable metric to measure a good or bad act in that order of magnitude, as good intent often results in bad outcomes. The opposite is also true, though happens less frequently. Comment on the war part to follow. As always, I enjoy this dialogue and hope you do too.
Discussion
Given a well-formed conscience, guilt is actually a pretty good guardrail against bad acts. The intellect has to be the ultimate guide, but the gut feeling of guilt can kick in and give us a warning when we don't have time to deliberate.
For what it's worth, I don't personally think smoking is the worst thing. It's damaging to the health, yes, but so are a lot of things, including, say, alcohol and sugar. Arguably, smoking, drinking, and sweets also have their benefits as well. The key is moderation. The bigger problem with the cigarette addict isn't that he is engaging in a damaging habit, rather, the bigger problem is that he is an addict, that is, he is unable to moderate the habit. The same applies to the drunkard: his enjoyment of drink isn't the problem so much as his inability to control it.
This is why I am so convinced of the value of virtue ethics. Assuming our instincts are relatively healthy (not always the case, they can become damaged), then it is generally good to partake in that which we enjoy. However, partaking in excess, or rejecting the good altogether, are bad extremes. Enjoying a drink or two on occasion with friends, for example, is a good act, done for a good purpose, done in moderation, and with a positive outcome. Smoking a pack of cigarettes a day by yourself is an act done in excess, with a negative outcome. Maybe smoking a single cigarette on occasion, in a social setting, could be a good act. There are always a lot of factors to consider.
Obviously there are cases where the act in question is more serious by nature, such as murder. Having a smoke could, perhaps, go either way, but some acts, I think are always wrong.
Is assuming the beggar who spends money you gave him on cigarettes to be an addict an unjustified judgement on your part? This is a slippery slope that gets impossible to navigate from some arbitrary self appointed high ground. I personally think we should tend to our own affairs, you know the spec of sawdust in your eye vs log in your eye thing. 😏 I think there are circumstances where murder is justified, eg. If I positively identified a man raping my wife or daughter, people who I know and trust to not be deceptive, I would kill the offender with my hands and feel fully justified in putting a bad animal to sleep either immediately or in a pre-meditated painful way. Is this a scenario where satan and hell finally find their justified function in Christian dogma? In wrath and revenge?