So did anyone notice the statement on page 11, paragraph 11? Is this new? "If a brother has been baptized at least one year and to a reasonable degree meets the Scriptural qualifications fo rministerial servants outlined at 1 Timothy 3:8-13, he can be recommended for appointment." I thought Paul specifically warned against appointing a "newly converted man"? What's up with that?
Okay, Paul was referring to the appointment of elders when he warned about that, but usually I've seen them reference verse 10 in regards to ministerial servants, to 'let them be tested as to fitness first, then let them serve.' So how can someone be tested as to fitness in one year's time?
The thing that just irked me about this--and probably this statement about ministerial servants isn't something new, but I'm just now thinking of it as a free man for the first time--is...well, probably goes back to the start of my big problems with this religion. I got pulled aside for DATING a sister who'd been baptized for a year. So how is it that if this same person was male, they'd be able to qualify to give public talks? How does that work, exactly?
My first thought is, the need for qualified men must be severe if you have to recruit people in their sophomore year as a JW. And it seems to me a lot of these men would just end up being deleted anyway. For one, you usually end up facing some big trial to your faith at some point, be it a woman or some other temptation that hounds you. For two, you can burn out if you do too much of anything. Some actual record of endurance, I would think, would be better, wouldn't it?
Thoughts?
--sd-7