Predictions about the end of the world are older than Christianity ...
Arkansas Democrat-Gazette (subscription), AR - 1 hour ago
... Charles Taze Russell, whose followers would eventually become the Jehovah’s Witnesses, pegged 1874 as the year of Christ’s return and Armageddon. ...
Todays News Oct 22 2005
".. A Baptist preacher named William Miller attracted perhaps 100,000 followers with his predictions that the world would end in 1843. Or 1844. When his final Rapture date came and went, so did most of his followers. Those remaining eventually formed the Second Day Adventists, some of whom later started the Seventh-day Adventists.
Charles Taze Russell, whose followers would eventually become the Jehovah’s Witnesses, pegged 1874 as the year of Christ’s return and Armageddon. When it passed, he claimed that Jesus did come — but He was invisible to those whose faith was weak. And, as in the story of the emperor’s new clothes, who wants to admit they’re too common or faithless to see the truth? Russell later predicted the world would end in 1914, then 1915, then 1916, the year it ended for him; he died on Halloween. When Halley’s Comet came around in 1910, so did apocalyptic panic. A cult in Oklahoma planned to save the world by sacrificing a virgin. Luckily, law enforcement found out in time to prevent it..."
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SHOCKING VIDEO CLIP EXPOSES JEHOVAH'S WITNESSES AS A MODERN MAN MADE ADVENTIST SECT
From Here http://www.dannyhaszard.com/cultvideos.htm
The Millerites: Armageddon (History Channel) 4 min clip must see
modem (low bandwidth) version
DSl/Cable (high bandwidth) version
This is the highly credible HISTORY CHANNEL not "apostates" exposing Jehovah's Witnesses as a spin-off of the William Miller movement of 1840
Open your eyes,always do a regression analysis this is where the Watchtower came from.
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Danny Haszard Bangor Maine
JW ORIGIN LAID BARE todays newspaper
by DannyHaszard 12 Replies latest watchtower beliefs
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DannyHaszard
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Ianone
The International Financiers through Wall Street created JW, Mormon, and Seventh Day Adventism....Groups like Worldwide Church of God and others are later break off cults. A trail of money to the lenders in New York is the key.
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sf
The International Financiers through Wall Street created JW, Mormon, and Seventh Day Adventism....Groups like Worldwide Church of God and others are later break off cults. A trail of money to the lenders in New York is the key.
Please provide proof. sKally
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AuldSoul
sf, your standards are unreasonably high .
Why can't my unfounded claims just sit there and create popular slander and libel against these organizations? LOL
AuldSoul
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steve2
Thanks for the info, Danny. The JWs will feel awfully "picked on" about this, but really, they ought not feel persecuted over this expose. They are just one of a long, predictable line of false prophets who need to be held to account for their string of prophetic failures.
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Nate Merit
Hi Danny
I watched the three and a half minute clip of Roger Mudd's documentary of The MIllerites. Do you offer the entire video for purchase?
If so, let me know here or drop me a line at [email protected] with the details. Thanks!
Nate -
avishai
Ianone, please stop hijacking threads with your anti-semitic, jew bashing bullshit.I know you won't stop, but I just wanted to name what you are doing for the newbies.
Ianone is a conspiracy theorist of the worst, and probably oldest kind. He blames all the problems of the world on a small sect that is'nt even double that of the JW's. He claims a religion that numbers somewhere around 13 million people controls everything.
Let's put this in perspective. Muslims, somewhere around the neighborhood of a BILLION people. Christians? Even more of them. Yet, according to Iaonone, a secret cabal of a people who have had their collective asses kicked around the world for at least the last 2,000 yrs? Yeah, their in control.......
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steve2
I know you won't stop, but I just wanted to name what you are doing for the newbies.
Avishai, you should credit others with having the ability to decide for themselves. It's one thing to tell another poster to stop expressing his or her views; it's another to add little rejoinders that provoke further comment. I do share your view to a certain extent, though: whenever I see anything resembling a conspiracy theory, I tend to be extremely wary.
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Deputy Dog
Danny
The only problem I have with that clip is that it implies that all premillenialists are descended from Miller's movement. When they have been around from the time of Christ. Some of the early church fathers were premillenial.
D Dog
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TheOldHippie
This is nothing new at all - it is common knowledge that 7th Day Adventism is the foundation, it is even stated in the JWs' own history book. Remember Swingle's statement that they got it all, "lock, stock and barrell" from them - ref. Ray Franz?