He played their game set up by their rules and he forfeited.
Huh? What exactly did he forfeit, anyway? Tell me. Be specific.
Yes, he probably got some satisfaction out of venting but that was it. He is near powerless now.
It seems to me that he's actually empowered now, speaking up, probably for the first time, to an overwhelming authority on a personal subject most people would cower from. And now he's free from their influence in his life.
No doubt they view baptism nullification as the worst form of apostasy. But they would be deprived of the satisfaction of announcing it to the friends.
Right. If they decided that baptism nullification was something they'd recognize, and if they decided that it wasn't effectively the same thing as disassociation, they would have a "public needs" talk about him and his family, and "mark" him, and spread all kinds of misinformation about him and his lifestyle -- malicious gossip and slander, something you admit yourself. How is that better than the consequence of the decision he made instead?
Your way, this kid has to worried about what satisfaction the elders do or don't have, and persist in some semantic struggle about the status of his baptism in relation to his status with the Organization. His way, he can be sure of his own satisfaction as an individual exercising control over his own life, without giving a damn about whatever "games" he might or might not be playing, and how the elders may or may not feel.
And in time he would be forgotten and would feel no obligation to tell anyone of his past.
Huh? What are you talking about? I don't think this makes much sense. The Witnesses would forget about him, and therefore he would keep his past (as a Witness?) to himself? So what? So he could be reactivated as some kind of sleeper anti-Witness terrorist?
He could do real damage then if he wanted.
Who said he wanted to do "real damage"? And what constitutes "real damage," anyway? How do you quantify it? And is it the immediate obligation of every Witness who wants out to become some sort of militant fighter for the cause? What about just getting on with your life and leaving others to do the same? Why isn't that a viable option?
But what is done is done and hopefully he will be able to deprogram himself of the exit phobias and other trash that the GB install in the membership and develope a relationship with the True God and His Son.
Maybe he doesn't give a shit about your sky god and theirs. Maybe he wants some time to live with the ambiguity of not knowing, and not being told, the answers to all of the difficult questions religion pretends to answer so easily. And your insinuation that there's only one right way to leave the Organization kind of reminds me of, well, the Organization.
After all, there is a difference between religion and worship.
What the hell does this have to do with anything?
Dedalus
Edited by - dedalus on 12 February 2003 22:20:7