Louisville Newspaper-Please help

by silentlambs 24 Replies latest jw friends

  • silentlambs
    silentlambs

    If you would like to help me, please write to this newspaper and confirm your support of how wrong Watchtower is to silence abuse survivors and supporters by disfellowshipping them.

    Regards,

    bill

    http://www.courier-journal.com/localnews/2002/07/27/ke072702s248845.htm

    Man vows to appeal Witnesses' expulsion


    By Peter Smith
    [email protected]
    The Courier-Journal

    A man is fighting a move by elders in the Jehovah's Witnesses to excommunicate him, saying he is being punished for his claims that church policies protect child molesters.

    Bill Bowen of Benton, KY, says he will file an appeal Monday of a decision by three church elders to ''disfellowship'' him on charges of ''causing divisions.'' Bowen said he was notified Thursday of the action after the elders met without him the previous evening.

    If the excommunication is upheld by a separate three-elder appeals panel, Bowen would become the fourth person expelled this year from the church after criticizing policies on child molesters. The church denies such criticisms.

    Jeff Steen, one of the elders who Bowen says decided to disfellowship him, would not confirm or deny the elders' action, saying church discipline is conducted confidentially in ''a spirt of mildness, not confrontation.''

    Phone messages from The Courier-Journal were not returned by the other elders or by the press office of the Jehovah's Witnesses' headquarters in New York.

    Bowen said the action against him is ''absolutely not'' justified.

    ''I have committed no sin against God; I have broken no law in the Bible,'' said Bowen, who resigned as an elder in December 2000 to protest church policies but had remained a member in good standing. ''This is nothing but a kangaroo court to silence me.''

    Bowen contends Jehovah's Witnesses keep incidents of child molestation secret and refuse to let victims warn other members of predators in their congregations.

    The Courier-Journal reported in February 2001 of court cases in several states in which Jehovah's Witnesses officials were accused of keeping secret the allegations of abuse by their elders or members, sometimes in violation of state law. Since then, new lawsuits making such claims have been filed in New Hampshire, Minnesota, and Washington state.

    Officials with Jehovah's Witnesses have said that they abhor child molestation, report cases to authorities in states that require such reports and allow members to report fellow members to police.

    Under church rules, Jehovah's Witnesses are to shun an expelled person socially as well as in religious contexts, and even family members are restricted in their relationships with disfellowshipped relatives.

    Others expelled this year include Carl and Barbara Pandelo of Belmar, N.J., who have been outspoken in saying Jehovah's Witnesses treated their daughter's abuser with more compassion than her, and Barbara Anderson of Normandy, Tenn., a former employee at church headquarters in New York who has criticized church policy.

    Anderson, who said she learned Sunday that her appeal was denied, said the church is acting ''so that Jehovah's Witnesses will feel that they are justified to say to others that we are liars.''

    She said Bowen should not be punished for publicizing the issue. ''It takes a very brave Jehovah's Witness to go forth and do what he did,'' Anderson said.

    David Clohessy, national director of the Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests, says Bowen is being treated similarly to whistleblowers in the molestation crisis in the Roman Catholic Church.

    ''The hierarchy should consider him a hero, not a pest,'' said Clohessy, who has corresponded with Bowen for 1 1/2 years.

    Edited by - silentlambs on 28 July 2002 18:32:2

    Edited by - silentlambs on 28 July 2002 18:36:47

  • DakotaRed
    DakotaRed

    Done, BIll. They just received a copy of the letter I wrote the Watchtower

    Lew W

    Watchtower Decruit

  • Crystal
    Crystal

    Just sent mine.Letting people at my site know.

  • ISP
    ISP

    Bill, have you mentioned this to the Panorama contacts you have? I would like to see this in the English Press.

    ISP

  • blondie
    blondie

    Even if the WTS is wrong, you must support them or be viewed as disloyal. Is Jehovah blessing an organization that refuses to admit they made mistakes and are not correcting them?

    LOYALTY TO THE BIBLE OR THE ORGANIZATION.

    *** jv 191 14 "They Are No Part of the World" ***


    Many of the churches went much further than they were asked. They became recruiting stations for the enlistment of troops." What did the Bible Students do?

    Although they endeavored to do what they felt was pleasing to God, their position was not always one of strict neutrality. What they did was influenced by the belief, shared in common with other professed Christians, that "the higher powers" were "ordained of God," according to the wording of the KingJamesVersion. (Rom. 13:1) Thus, in accord with a proclamation of the president of the United States, TheWatchTower urged the Bible Students to join in observing May 30, 1918, as a day of prayer and supplication in connection with the outcome of the world war.

    (TheWatchTower, June 1, 1918, p. 174)

    *** Proclaimers Book 191-2 14 "They Are No Part of the World" ***


    At least at that point, the overall record of the Bible Students was not quite like that of the early Christians described in TheRiseofChristianity, by E. W. Barnes, who reported: "A careful review of all the information available goes to show that, until the time of Marcus Aurelius [Roman emperor from 161 to 180 C.E.], no Christian became a soldier; and no soldier, after becoming a Christian, remained in military service."

    *** w87 6/15 15 Testing and Sifting in Modern Times ***

    3 TheWatchTower had encouraged its readers to set aside May 30, 1918, as a day of prayer for victory for the democratic powers, as requested by the U.S. congress and by President Wilson. This amounted to a violation of Christian neutrality.John 17:14, 16.

    *** yb75 119 United States of America (Part Two) ***


    Another occurred when TheWatchTower of June 1, 1918, stated: "In accordance with the resolution of Congress of April 2nd, and with the proclamation of the President of the United States of May 11, it is suggested that the Lords people everywhere make May 30th a day of prayer and supplication." Subsequent comments lauded the United States and did not harmonize with the Christian position of neutrality.John 15:19; Jas. 4:4.

    *** w96 3/15 16-17 Meeting the Challenge of Loyalty ***


    We now come to the matter of being loyal to Jehovahs visible organization. Certainly, we owe loyalty to it, including "the faithful and discreet slave," through which the Christian congregation is fed spiritually. (Matthew 24:45-47) Suppose that something appears in Watch Tower publications that we do not understand or agree with at the moment. What will we do? Take offense and leave the organization? That is what some did when TheWatchTower, many years ago, applied the new covenant to the Millennium. Others took offense at what TheWatchtower once said on the issue of neutrality. If those who stumbled over these matters had been loyal to the organization and to their brothers, they would have waited on Jehovah to clarify these matters, which he did in his due time. Thus, loyalty includes waiting patiently until further understanding is published by the faithful and discreet slave.

    10

    Loyalty to Jehovahs visible organization also means having nothing to do with apostates. Loyal Christians will not be curious about what such people have to say. True, those being used by Jehovah God to direct his work on earth are not perfect. But what does Gods Word tell us to do? Leave Gods organization? No. Brotherly affection should keep us loyal to it, and we should continue to "love one another intensely from the heart."1 Peter 1:22.

    *** w84 10/1 22 'Jehovah Has Dealt Rewardingly With Me' ***


    Shortly after my baptism in 1918, my loyalty to fellow Bible Students was put to the test. World War I was raging, and even though the most prominent brothers had been unjustly imprisoned over the war issue, the need for Christian neutrality was not fully appreciated by those then taking the lead. A few who saw the issue clearly took offense and separated themselves from the Bible Students, calling themselves Standfasters. They warned me that if I stayed with the Bible Students I would lose out on being of the "little flock" of Jesus anointed followers. (Luke 12:32) Mother, though not yet dedicated, helped me to make the right decision. I could not see myself leaving those from whom I had learned so much, and I therefore decided to take my chances with my Bible Student brothers. It really was a test of loyalty. Since then, I have observed many similar tests of loyalty. When mistakes are made, those not wholly loyal at heart seem to pounce upon them as an excuse for quitting.Compare Psalm 119:165.

    Edited by - Blondie on 28 July 2002 19:30:59

  • silentlambs
    silentlambs

    ISP

    I have contacted panorama, all the primary people on this story are on vacation. We wait for them to return.

    silentlambs

  • Valis
    Valis

    Bill, I just sent this to the editor of the Waco Tribune, since there is a convention there. Will also write a letter to the Louisville paper too. Thanks for all your hard work.

    Dear Editor...I recently saw your article on Jehovahs Witness. You made note of ways in which they effect your community. I would like you to please take note of some ways in which they may effect your community, albeit ones they would not like you to know about. Both the producers of NBC's Dateline and the British equivalent Panorama, have found it important to expose the fact that Jehovahs Witness ,and their Watchtower bible & tract Society of New York, cover up pedophelia in many congregations. They acknowledge they have a pedophile database, but refuse to hand over any evidence to the authorities. What does this mean for you? Simply put, your town, for however long, will be a nexus point for a whole organization of people who 1. Will not admit they have a problem dealing with pedophiles. 2. Will not tell their own congregation when a pedophile is in their midst. 3. Will allow pedophiles to go door to door, soliciting their extreme brand of Christianity. The third point has the most significance to your community. Do you want possible pedophiles knocking on your door some Saturday, when you're still asleep and the kids get up early for cartoons and cereal? There is a knock on the door and your child answers....Well, you figure out the rest. I would urge the people of Waco to consider this when they are a major presence in your community and ask them for proof against my remarks. For further information please see www.silentlambs.org. By the way, the gentleman who runs that site has been kicked out of their religion for trying to protect the children from pedophiles in the Jehovahs Witness church. Are those the kind of folks you want invading your town?

    Sincerely,

    Travis Bush
    Dallas, Texas

    Sincerely,

    District Overbeer

  • alliwannadoislive
    alliwannadoislive

    ok - mine has gone too

    i admire you're stamina bill !

  • ronin1
    ronin1

    Hi Bill:

    I just sent a letter in your support to the Louisville paper.

    Ronin1

  • LyinEyes
    LyinEyes

    Will do, Bill............. you have our support .

    Denny and Dede Brown

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