Coredump said:
I don't agree with this:
Where does it end? I don't 'own' this trained warhorse, I just borrow it. I don't 'own' this set of full plate armor, I am just 'using' it. And don't mind the 5 sets of fine garments...they are on loan only.
Can't use it, no indeed. Not the armor, not the clothes. You could ride the warhorse, if you were offered the ride ("Brothr Coredump, while I know you cannot OWN a horse, I want you to ride one of MINE ... we'll reach our destination at least twice as swiftly, than if we must hold ourselves to yoru pace").
Using a technicality to 'get away' with something is against the spirit of the Vow, and is quite a slippery slope. Soon it will be "Here, this is my wand, but I give it to you to use during this encounter. (ala a potion)"
No, if you can't have it, you can't have it...
If I hand you a potion, and say "here, drink this", and you do ... youhave
not voided the Vow of Poverty. That is
explicitly covered in the Vow itself (BoED, page 48).
And I fail to see how "My good friend Pax lets me ride one of his pack animals rather than walk, so long as I look after them and see to their meager needs" is against the Vow of Poverty.
And there's
no prohibition against carrying things
on other people's behalf ("Good Coredump, I know you are on your way to the townof <insert name here>, where my sister resides; would you be so kind as to carry thisletter to her?" ... or "My good friend, I know you cannot OWN anything, but I wonder if you would do me a bit of a favor - carry this healing potion, and in the event I should fall in combat, but still be alive ... would you help me to drink it, that I might delay my death just a bit longer?" ... and so on).
You cannot borrow magic items, you cannot OWN anything except the few meager things listed in the Vow itself, and under no circumstances (even to benefit someone else) mayyou cast a spell from a wand, staff, or scroll (note the lack of prohibition against administering potions to fallen comrades).
I have no problem with you having the mule. Especially since it has been with you. Better that you riding someone elses horse... You may end up giving it away to someone that needs it more, who knows.
The instant the mule is "his" ina property-ownership sense, his Vow is broken - irevocably. Yes, owning a mere mule is
MUCH worse than riding someone else's warhorse ... because of that one, wee little word ...
"owning".