LAST WEEK'S WATCHTOWER... COMMENTS ANYONE?

by Billy the Ex-Bethelite 9 Replies latest watchtower bible

  • Billy the Ex-Bethelite
    Billy the Ex-Bethelite

    The comments for this week's Watchtower are already posted for your consideration. I'm just getting back on the Interwebs and wasn't prepared to consider last week's mish-mash of a "lesson" this week. So, I'll at least put the text from last week out there for your consideration. My few comments are in red.

    WHY KEEP YOUR INTEGRITY?
    "Judge me, 0 Jehovah, . . . according to my integrity, "-vs. 7:8.

    Q 1, 2. What are some common situations that present challenges to a Christian's integrity?

    PICTURE three scenarios: A boy is facing some of his schoolmates. They are trying to provoke him into losing his temper, perhaps to curse or to fight. Will he retaliate, or will he restrain himself and walk away? A husband at home alone is doing some research on the Internet. A box appears on his computer screen, advertising a lewd Web site. Will he be tempted and go to that site, or will he make sure that he avoids it? A Christian woman is conversing with a small group when the talk turns negative, becoming hurtful gossip about a sister in the congregation. Will she share in that, or will she try to change the subject?

    2 Varied though those situations are, they have something in common. They all involve the struggle to keep integrity as a Christian. Do you have your own integrity in mind as you face your concerns, needs, and goals in life? On a day-to-day basis, people think about their appearance, their health, the challenges of making a living, the ups and downs of their friendships, perhaps even romance. We may give such concerns considerable attention. What, though, particularly matters to Jehovah as he searches through our heart? (Ps. 139:23, 24) It is our integrity.

    "Integrity" appears 21 times in the NWT... only in the OT... mostly Psalms and Proverbs. If "integrity" is particularly important, why didn't Jesus mention the word? I'm guessing that "integrity" is more about appearances, not so much about motive.

    Q 3. Jehovah bestows what privilege on us, and what will we consider in this article?

    3 Jehovah, the Giver of "every good gift and every perfect present," has bestowed on each of us a variety of gifts. (Jas. 1:17) Thanks to him, we have such gifts as a body, a mind, a measure of health, and various abilities. (1 Cor. 4:7) However, Jehovah does not Simply force us to display integrity. He lets us choose for ourselves whether we will develop this quality. (Deut. 30:19) We need, then, to examine what integrity is. We will also consider three reasons why this quality is so profoundly important.

    What Is Integrity?

    Q 4. What does integrity involve, and what may we learn from Jehovah's law regarding animal sacrifices?

    4 Many people seem to have a hazy idea of what integrity is. For example, when politicians boast of their integrity, they often seem to mean honesty. That quality is important, but it is only a part of integrity. As used in the Bible, integrity involves moral completeness, soundness. The Hebrew words relating to "integrity" come from a root meaning sound, whole, or faultless. One of these words is used regarding the sacrifices to be offered to Jehovah. An animal for sacrifice gained his approval only if it was sound, or whole. (Read Leviticus 22:19, 20.) Jehovah strongly censured those who flouted his direction by offering lame, sick, or blind animals for sacrifice.—Mal. 1:6-8.

    Actually, after this Watchtower lesson, the meaning of "integrity" is still murky. Articles like this can be very challenging for translators when the English is rather unclear. Why don't they just say "Steadfast adherence to a strict moral or ethical code"? Instead, this paragraph makes it appear that someone crippled or injured doesn't have "integrity". The next two paragraphs don't clear up the definition.

    Q 5. 6. (a) What examples show that we often value that which is whole, or complete? (b) When it comes to imperfect humans, does integrity mean perfection? Explain.

    5 The idea of seeking and valuing that which is whole, or complete, is not strange. Imagine, for instance, a book collector who finds a precious volume after a long search, only to discover that it is missing several vital pages. Disappointed, he may put it back on the shelf. Or picture a woman walking on a beach, collecting some of the shells cast ashore by the waves. Fascinated by the variety and beauty of these creations, she now and again stoops to examine one. Which ones does she keep? The ones that are whole, intact. Similarly, God is seeking people who have this quality of wholeness, or completeness.-Chron. 16:9.

    6 You may wonder, though, whether integrity demands perfection. Because we are damaged by sin and imperfection, we may tend to think of ourselves as being a bit like an incomplete volume or a damaged shell. Is that how you feel at times? Rest assured that Jehovah does not expect us to be perfect in the absolute sense. He never expects more of us than we can do.* (Ps. 103:14; Jas. 3:2) Still, he does expect us to keep integrity. Is there a difference, then, between perfection and integrity? Yes. To illustrate: A young man loves a young woman whom he is going to marry. He would be foolish to expect her to be perfect. Yet, he would be wise to expect her to be wholehearted in her love for him, that is, to
    have romantic love for him alone. In a comparable way, Jehovah is "a God exacting exclusive devotion." (Ex. 20:5) He expects us, not to be perfect, but to love him wholeheartedly, giving worship to him alone.

    Footnote:
    * Jesus did say: "You must accordingly be perfect, as
    your heavenly Father is perfect." (Matt. 5:48) He evi-
    dently understood that even imperfect humans can be
    complete, or perfect, in a relative sense. We can fulfill
    the command to love others generously, thereby pleas-
    ing God. Jehovah, however, is perfect in the absolute
    sense. When applied to him, the term "integrity" also
    involves perfection.—Ps. 18:30.

    Q 7, 8. (a) Jesus set what example regarding integrity? (b) What is the essence of integrity in the Scriptural sense?

    7 We might be reminded of Jesus' answer when he was asked what was the most important of all laws. (Read Mark 12:28-30.) Not only did Jesus give the answer; he lived it. He set the ultimate example in loving Jehovah with his whole mind, heart, soul, and strength. He showed that integrity is expressed, not in mere words, but in positive actions that spring from pure motives. Our keeping integrity calls on us to follow in Jesus' footsteps.—1 Pet. 2:21.

    "Integrity" doesn't appear in 1 Pet. 2:21.

    8 Here, then, is the essence of our integrity in the Scriptural sense: wholehearted devotion to one heavenly Person, Jehovah God, and to his expressed will and purpose. Keeping integrity means that in our day-to-day life, we will seek above all to please Jehovah God. Our priorities in life will reflect his priorities. Let us consider three reasons why this is so important.

    This is the intent of the paragraph and lesson: "Here, then, is the essence of our integrity in the Scriptural Watchtower sense: wholehearted devotion to one heavenly Person, Jehovah God, Sacred Corporation, Watchtower, and to his its expressed will and purpose. Keeping integrity means that in our day-to-day life, we will seek above all to please Jehovah God the Governing Body. Our priorities in life will reflect his their priorities."

    1. Our Integrity and the Issue of Sovereignty

    9. How does our personal integrity relate to the issue of universal sovereignty?

    9 Jehovah's sovereignty does not depend on our integrity. His sovereignty is just, eternal, and universal. It will always be so, regardless of what any creatures say or do. However, God's sovereignty has been grossly maligned in the heavens and on the earth. His rulership thus needs to be vindicated—confirmed as right, just, and loving—before all intelligent creatures. As Jehovah's Witnesses, we love to discuss God's universal sovereignty with anyone who will listen. How, though, can we take our own stand on the issue? How do we show that we choose Jehovah as our own Sovereign? By keeping integrity.

    Ah, yes, the "issue of universal sovereignty". Something so important that it doesn't even appear in the Bible. The phrase "issue of universal sovereignty" doesn't appear in the NWT. The two words "universal sovereignty" don't appear together either. Actually, neither "universal" nor "sovereignty" appear in the NWT scripture text. Although the word "issue" does appear in the Bible, it's not used in relation to anything directly about God's "right to rule".

    Q 10. What charge has Satan made regarding the integrity of humans, and how would you like to respond?

    10 Consider how your integrity is involved. Satan has in essence claimed that no human will stand up for God's sovereignty, that no one will serve Jehovah out of unselfish love. In front of a vast assemblage of spirit creatures, the Devil said to Jehovah: "Skin in behalf of skin, and everything that a man has he will give in behalf of his soul." (Job 2:4) Notice that Satan did not limit that slur to the righteous man Job but stated it as a general rule regarding mankind. The Bible accordingly calls Satan "the accuser of our brothers." (Rev. 12:10) He taunts Jehovah with the claim that Christians—including you—will not remain faithful. Satan claims that you would betray Jehovah in order to save your own skin. How do you feel about such charges being heaped upon you? Would you not welcome an opportunity to prove Satan a liar? By keeping your integrity, you can do just that.

    The book of Job is pure fiction. Of course if the heavenly events of Job were true, it would endorse speaking to 'disfellowshipped' persons.

    Q 11, 12. (a) What examples illustrate how our decisions in day-to-day matters relate to the issue of personal integrity? (b) Why is keeping integrity a privilege?

    11 The issue of your integrity thus makes day-to-day conduct and choices quite important. Consider again the three scenarios we mentioned earlier. What would be the course of integrity? The boy being taunted by his schoolmates is sorely tempted to lash out at them, but he remembers this admonition: "Do not avenge yourselves, beloved, but yield place to the wrath; for it is written: 'Vengeance is mine; I will repay, says Jehovah.'" (Rom. 12:19) He walks away. The husband who is using the Internet could look at sexually arousing material, but he recalls the principle reflected in Job's words: "A covenant I have concluded with my eyes. So how could I show myself attentive to a virgin?" (Job 31:1) Similarly, the man refuses to let his eyes rest on unsavory images, avoiding such material as if it were poison. The woman conversing in a group where she might hear a bit of hurtful gossip holds back, recalling the direction: "Let each of us please his neighbor in what is good for his upbuilding." (Rom. 15:2) The gossip she could repeat is not upbuilding. It would not reflect well on her Christian sister; nor would it please her Father. So she controls her tongue and changes the subject.

    12 In each of those cases, the Christian makes a choice that, in effect, says: Jehovah is my Ruler. I will try to do what pleases him in this matter.' Do you view your personal choices and decisions in that light? If you do, you can truly live up to the heartwarming words recorded at Proverbs 27:11: "Be wise, my son, and make my heart rejoice, that I may make a reply to him that is taunting me." What a privilege we have in making God's heart rejoice! Is it not well worth our every effort to keep our integrity?

    So, exactly when is Jehovah going to make anyone else's heart rejoice?

    2. The Basis for Divine Judgment

    Q 13. How do the words of Job and David show that integrity is the basis on which Jehovah judges us?

    13 We see that integrity enables us to take our stand for Jehovah's sovereignty. It is thus the basis on which God can judge us. Job well understood this truth. (Read Job 31:6.) Job knew that God weighs all mankind in "accurate scales," using His perfect standard of justice to gauge our integrity. David similarly said: "Jehovah himself will pass sentence on the peoples. Judge me, 0 Jehovah, according to my righteousness and according to my integrity in me.... And God as righteous is testing out heart and kidneys." (Ps. 7:8, 9) We know that God can look into the very depths of the inner person, the figurative "heart and kidneys." We need to remember, though, what he is looking for. As David said, Jehovah judges us according to our integrity.

    In turn, how shall Jehovah be judged? Has he maintained integrity, or did he let his favorites get away with murder? I guess he's just to be taken at his word as the "rightful universal sovereign". Just be a good sport and ignore the whole "Ancient Israel/Mosaic Law" fiasco.

    Q 14. Why should we never assume that our imperfect, sinful nature prevents us from keeping our integrity?

    14 Imagine Jehovah God searching the billions of hearts of mankind today. (1 Chron. 28:9) How often does he find someone keeping Christian integrity? It is relatively rare indeed! However, we should not assume that we are too flawed to maintain integrity. On the contrary, we have good reason to trust, as did David and Job, that Jehovah will find us maintaining integrity, imperfect though we may be. Remember, perfection does not guarantee our keeping integrity. Only three perfect humans have walked this earth, and two, Adam and Eve, failed to keep integrity. Still, many millions of imperfect humans have succeeded in doing so. You can too.

    The terms "perfect" and "imperfect" aren't used in the Scriptures the way Watchtower publications use them. "Imperfect" only appears in footnotes refering to verb tenses, not in reference to "imperfect humans". Is the Word of God so flawed that Watchtower Corporation has to invent new verbage to "channel" the message of God to condemn humankind?

    3. Essential to Our Hope

    Q 15. How did David show that integrity is essential to our hope for the future?

    15 Because integrity is at the core of Jehovah's judgment of us, it is essential to our hope for the future. David knew this to be true. (Read Psalm 41:12.) He cherished the hope of receiving God's favorable attention forever. Like true Christians today, David hoped to live forever, continuing to draw ever closer to Jehovah God while serving him. David saw the role that his maintaining integrity would play if he was to see the fulfillment of that hope. Similarly, Jehovah upholds us, teaches us, guides us, and blesses us as we keep our integrity.

    David was an adulterer and murderer. What does he know about "integrity"?

    Q 16. 17. (a) Why are you resolved always to hold fast to your integrity? (b) What questions will the next article discuss?

    16 Hope is essential to our present happiness. It can give us the joy we need to get through difficult times. Hope can protect our thinking too. Remember, the Bible likens hope to a helmet. (1 Thess. 5:8) As a helmet protects a soldier's head in battle, hope protects our mind from the negative, pessimistic thinking Satan promotes in this dying old world. Life is poor, indeed, when we are bereft of hope. We need to examine ourselves honestly, carefully considering the state of our own integrity and the hope linked to it. Do not forget that by keeping integrity, you are upholding Jehovah's sovereignty and safeguarding your precious hope for the future. May you always hold fast to your integrity!

    Wow, there's some loaded language "...hope protects our mind from the negative, pessimistic thinking Satan promotes in this dying old world. Life is poor, indeed, when we are bereft of hope." Really it is the negative, pessimistic thinking promoted by Watchtower Corporation who are selling the fantasy of a "new, perfect world" coming "very, very soon" but only to those "right-hearted integrity-keepers" who toe the Watchtower line. Talk about trying to sell their own version of salvation.

    17 Since integrity is so important, we need to consider some further questions. How do we build integrity? How can we maintain it? And what could be done if someone for a time did not keep it? The next article will take up these questions.

    How Would You Answer?
    • What is integrity?
    • How does integrity relate to the issue of universal sovereignty?
    • How does integrity provide a basis for our hope?

    Sorry I wasn't able to gut this carcass more thoroughly for y'all last week. Just remember, if anyone asks you what "integrity" means, don't refer to this hideous article and all the Writing Department gibberish. Just say, "Steadfast adherence to a strict moral or ethical code". That's its primary definition.

    B the X

  • wobble
    wobble

    Thanks Billy,

    Incisive stuff as usual from your good self,this will be helpfull to me in writing a letter to my Nephew,he is WT overseer in a nearby Congo. to the one I left.

    I wish to explain to him that I have not left God,or his organization,just a publishing company based in NY.

    I can now add ,what I think will challenge him in his view of matters,that "I have maintained my integrity"

    Thanks for your work,and the clear definition.

    Love

    Wobble

  • BluesBrother
    BluesBrother

    I know that I posted something similar last week, but the two articles are similar.

    The WT is doing a job here , disguising "integrity" as loyalty to the WTC.

    it-1 p. 1211 Integrity (extract of quote)

    "Moral soundness, completeness, one’s being blameless and faultless..............

    In a few cases the Hebrew tom conveys simply the idea of honest motive, innocence as to wrong intention. (Compare Ge 20:5, 6; 2Sa 15:11.) But mainly these related Hebrew terms describe unswerving devotion to righteousness. Biblical usage and examples emphasize unbreakable devotion to a person, Jehovah God, and to his expressed will and purpose as the course of vital importance......... Whereas no exact word for "integrity" appears in the Christian Greek Scriptures, the idea pervades this entire portion of the Bible"

    Note their own definition, which is something like the dictionary's,, but the word is used in this article to substitute for devotion to the cause. I guess we knew that they view devotion to them, as the same as devotion to God

    I note that the Insight book admits that the word does not appear in the Greek Scriptures [NT] ***

    Same old formula, take a scripture, expand on it and weave in whatever 'counsel' is the order of the day...easy really....

  • passwordprotected
    passwordprotected

    Thanks Billy.

    Re. this;

    9 Jehovah's sovereignty does not depend on our integrity. His sovereignty is just, eternal, and universal. It will always be so, regardless of what any creatures say or do. However, God's sovereignty has been grossly maligned in the heavens and on the earth. His rulership thus needs to be vindicated—confirmed as right, just, and loving—before all intelligent creatures. As Jehovah's Witnesses, we love to discuss God's universal sovereignty with anyone who will listen. How, though, can we take our own stand on the issue? How do we show that we choose Jehovah as our own Sovereign? By keeping integrity.

    Ah, yes, the "issue of universal sovereignty". Something so important that it doesn't even appear in the Bible. The phrase "issue of universal sovereignty" doesn't appear in the NWT. The two words "universal sovereignty" don't appear together either. Actually, neither "universal" nor "sovereignty" appear in the NWT scripture text. Although the word "issue" does appear in the Bible, it's not used in relation to anything directly about God's "right to rule".

    Is this verifiable? I'm going to blog about this for FreeMinds, but I don't have access to the WT Library right now.

  • Mary
    Mary

    For example, when politicians boast of their integrity, they often seem to mean honesty.

    And if anyone can empathize with crooked politicians boasting of their "integrity" while being a bunch of sleazoid pimps behind the scenes, it's the Governing Body members.

    The idea of seeking and valuing that which is whole, or complete, is not strange. Imagine, for instance, a book collector who finds a precious volume after a long search, only to discover that it is missing several vital pages. Disappointed, he may put it back on the shelf.

    This paragraph shouldn't surprise me I guess, but I can't help but wonder what the idiot who wrote it was smoking before he put pen to paper. A book collector knows full well that just because a manuscript may be missing some pages does not mean it's not extremely valuable. Good case in point is the Dead Sea Scrolls. They are not a "complete" document by any stretch of the imagination, yet you cannot put a price on it's value. On the flip side, just because you have a "complete" document doesn't necessarily mean that it's valuable. What would you value more: An tattered piece of the original Gettysburg Address or the speech where George Bush told us there were WMD in Iraq?

    Rest assured that Jehovah does not expect us to be perfect in the absolute sense. He never expects more of us than we can do. (Ps. 103:14; Jas. 3:2) Still, he does expect us to keep integrity. Is there a difference, then, between perfection and integrity?

    While in theory this is true, in Dub dumb world, we all know that the slightest slip up can land you in front of a 3 man kangaroo court after the Service Meeting on Thursday night. Good example is some poor sod of 18 or 19 who has a "problem" with masturbation. He admits his "sin" to the elders who counsel him on "pummelling his body" (isn't that what he was doing all along?) and how selfish he is, wanting something that is only meant to be fulfilled in marriage. He tries desperately to control himself but fails miserably. He thinks it's because he's "weak" and begins to feel miserable and worthless before God. No one's bothered to tell him that a man is at his sexual peak at his age and that masturbation is neither condemned in the bible, nor "abnormal", yet that is exactly how the WTS has portrayed it as seen in their literature:

    June 8 1995 Awake! p. 16 Bible Literature Appreciated in the Former Soviet Union: A 26-year-old man said: "I am very grateful for the article ‘Is Suicide the Answer?' in the April 8, 1994, Awake! Because of my inclination toward depression and the habit of masturbation, I have many times considered suicide. But God's Word and prayers to Jehovah held me back from ending my life. This article strengthened my belief in God's mercy and my belief that God will help me handle my problems. He sees my repentance. He wants me to live. I thank him for his support given by means of this article."

    If making their followers feel suicidal over something like masturbation, then it's not rocket science to figure out how they make you feel over something major.

    The woman conversing in a group where she might hear a bit of hurtful gossip holds back, recalling the direction: "Let each of us please his neighbor in what is good for his upbuilding." (Rom. 15:2) The gossip she could repeat is not upbuilding. It would not reflect well on her Christian sister; nor would it please her Father. So she controls her tongue and changes the subject.

    I have yet to meet a sister who refused to listen to gossip.

    Imagine Jehovah God searching the billions of hearts of mankind today. (1 Chron. 28:9) How often does he find someone keeping Christian integrity? It is relatively rare indeed!

    Really? Wow!! I didn't realize that the Writing Department could also ‘search billions of hearts' and come to the conclusion that it's ‘relatively rare' to find someone maintaining integrity. Of course, we all know that this is going on their preconceived notion that only Jehovah's Witnesses are really "Christian" and out of them, it's sort of touch and go as to whether those who make up the "great crowd" can be really classified as ‘Christians' in the first place. It is, of course, an absurd concoction brewed by the delusional goons within the cloistered walls at Bethel and without any basis whatsoever.

    I said last week that the article was so bad, it should be on the Gong Show. Well I take that back. This article was even worse than last weeks and was so boring, it should be approved by the FDA as a cure for insomnia........... Thanks for doing them Billy.

  • WuzLovesDubs
    WuzLovesDubs

    Has anyone else come to HATE the word INGEGRITY because of the JWs???

    geeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeez

    Also "ones" and "such ones"

  • WTWizard
    WTWizard

    Adding to the issue of integrity, "sin" is any volitional act that is detrimental to self or society (which is immoral). The root of sin is laziness, dishonesty, and envy. Those are the roots of all other immoral acts.

    Now, I could fill a whole server with all the accounts of where Jehovah Himself has displayed laziness, dishonesty, and/or envy. He displayed laziness and dishonesty by recording stock examples of prayer answerings in the Bible instead of answering them now, and then expecting us to believe Him without a shred of evidence. He has displayed pure envy on numerous occasions--like the Tower of Babel. (Envy is the desire to destroy something good because we ourselves do not have it.) And, most of us can think of numerous examples of Jehovah displaying laziness, dishonesty, and envy. The very doctrine of "Original Sin" displays dishonesty, plus enviously destroys man's chances of independently making it.

    On top of our cruel, vile, evil villain of a Creator's immorality, the Washtowel Slaveholdery commits more of its own laziness, dishonesty, and envy. We see the laziness and dishonesty each and every time we go to the boasting sessions or read poorly written articles such as the one above. They enviously destroy children by forcing them to give up their lives for field circus, and preventing them from making a reasonable living. They seem to thrive in Jehovah's tyranny and lack of compassion for anyone other than Himself--and they add to it.

  • Quandry
    Quandry

    A Christian woman is conversing with a small group when the talk turns negative, becoming hurtful gossip about a sister in the congregation.

    Always the women.....why always the women......elders are the biggest gossips......My husband was one for twenty years and the elders were always known for telling their wives or just others in the congregation what was going on......

  • quietlyleaving
    quietlyleaving
    "Integrity" appears 21 times in the NWT... only in the OT... mostly Psalms and Proverbs. If "integrity" is particularly important, why didn't Jesus mention the word? I'm guessing that "integrity" is more about appearances, not so much about motive

    well spotted billytheexbethelite. I would think that the context in which the WT is discussing integrity - in human conduct and living (and the expectation of purity) demands mention of the ransom sacrifice of Jesus. But if they did mention Jesus they would be detracting from their own importance and authority. Meanwhile what is the poor unfortunate JW to do but to cower in defeat and dependence on the WTS.

  • booby

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