Service Meeting for Week Starting July 25, 2005

by TheListener 6 Replies latest watchtower bible

  • TheListener
    TheListener

    Song 138

    15 min: Local announcements. Read accounts report and donation acknowledgments. Using the suggestions on page 4 (if appropriate for your territory), demonstrate how to present the August 1 Watchtower and the August 8 Awake! Other realistic presentations may be used. In one of the presentations, demonstrate offering the magazines informally at a market or in some other appropriate public setting.

    10 min: Inculcate the Truth in Your Child's Heart. (Deut. 6:7) A talk by an elder based on the August 15, 2002, Watchtower, pages 30-1. Highlight Scriptural principles that provide guidance on child training for a Christian parent who has a non-witness mate.

    20 min: "A Debt We Owe to Others" * Include comments on the July 1, 2000, Watchtower, page 11, paragraph 13.

    Song 82 and concluding prayer.

    * Limit introductory comments to less than a minute, and follow with a question-and-answer discussion.

  • upside/down
    upside/down

    If that's "spiritual food"...

    Than the FDS is feeding the sheep crackers and water....

    Jail food...

    u/d (of the doesn't miss it at all class)

  • blondie
    blondie
    child training for a Christian parent who has a non-witness mate.

    Somewhere on JWD in the last few days someone told about an experience from the DC stage where a man was baptized that day, 30 years after his wife. All the children were JWs supposedly because she disobeyed his orders not to study with the children. Is that supporting the headship of the father in the family?

    Family book (1996) chap. 11 pp. 133-134 Maintain Peace in Your Household ***

    13

    Some unbelieving fathers do not object if the mother instructs the children in religious matters. Others do. What if your husband refuses to permit you to take the children to congregation meetings or even forbids you to study the Bible with them at home? Now you have to balance a number of obligations—your obligation to Jehovah God, to your husbandly head, and to your beloved children. How can you reconcile these?

    14

    Certainly you will pray about the matter. (Philippians 4:6, 7; 1 John 5:14) But in the end, you are the one who must decide what course to take. If you proceed with tact, making it clear to your husband that you are not challenging his headship, his opposition may eventually lessen. Even if your husband forbids you to take your children to meetings or to have a formal Bible study with them, you can still teach them. By your daily conversation and your good example, try to inculcate in them a degree of love for Jehovah, faith in his Word, respect for parents—including their father—loving concern for other people, and appreciation for conscientious work habits. In time, the father may notice the good results and may appreciate the value of your efforts.—Proverbs 23:24.
  • Wasanelder Once
    Wasanelder Once

    Song 138 “Don’t Walk With God”

    15 min: Local Denouncements. Read accounts report and donation acknowledgments, don’t forget to make a resolution to send in your contribution to the CO’s health and Automobile leasing fund. Using the suggestions on page 4 (even if inappropriate for your territory), demonstrate how to present the August 1 Watchtower and the August 8 Awake! Other realistic presentations may be confused. In one of the presentations, demonstrate offering the magazines informally at a market where you keep the salesperson from helping a customer from purchasing their wares or in some other inappropriate public setting.

    10 min: Indoctrinate the Truth in Your Child's Heart. (Deut. 6:7) A talk by an elder based on the August 15, 2002, Watchtower, pages 30-1. Highlight Scriptural principles that provide guidance on child training for a Christian parent who has a non-witness mate. Don’t forget to belittle your mates religious stand on any subject and encourage the children to employ Theocratic warfare tactics of dishonesty.

    20 min: "A Doubt We Owe to Others" * Include comments on the July 1, 2000, Watchtower, page 11, paragraph 13. We owe it to our neighbors to give them magazines till they hate us so God will love us and they will be warned He will fry them at the big A.

    Song 82 “The Large Women Are an Army” and concluding prayer.

    * Limit introductory comments to less than an hour, and follow with a question-and-answer diffusion.

    W.Once

  • willyloman
    willyloman

    W. Once.: Nice job of translating these instructions into the "pure language." I'm thinkling how cool it would be if someone posted that version on the info board in the back of the Hall.

  • Elsewhere
    Elsewhere

    *** w02 8/15 pp. 30-31 Questions From Readers ***

    Questions

    From Readers

    What

    guidance do the Scriptures provide about child training when one parent is one of Jehovah’s Witnesses and the other is not?

    Two key Scriptural principles provide guidance about child training for a Witness parent who has a non-Witness mate. One is: "We must obey God as ruler rather than men." (Acts 5:29) The other is: "A husband is head of his wife as the Christ also is head of the congregation." (Ephesians 5:23) The latter applies not only to wives with Witness husbands but also to those with non-Witness mates. (1 Peter 3:1) How can a Witness parent balance these principles when teaching his or her children?

    If the husband is one of Jehovah’s Witnesses, he is responsible for making both spiritual and physical provisions for his family. (1 Timothy 5:8) Although the unbelieving mother may spend more time with their children, the Witness father should teach his children by giving spiritual training at home and by taking them to Christian meetings, where they will benefit from moral instruction and wholesome association.

    What if his unbelieving wife insists on taking their children to her place of worship or teaching them her beliefs? The law of the land may give her the right to do so. Whether the children are enticed into acts of worship at such places may depend much on the quality of the father’s spiritual teaching. As the children grow older, the Scriptural education by their father should help them to follow the truth of God’s Word. How happy the believing husband would be if his children were to take their stand for the truth!

    If the mother is one of Jehovah’s Witnesses, she has to respect the headship principle while being concerned about her children’s eternal welfare. (1 Corinthians 11:3) In many cases, her unbelieving mate will not mind if his Witness wife gives moral and spiritual education to their children, and help toward that end is available at meetings of Jehovah’s people. The mother can help her unbelieving husband to see the benefits of the upbuilding education that their children receive through Jehovah’s organization. She can tactfully emphasize the merit of inculcating the Bible’s moral principles in their children, faced as they are with living in a morally deteriorating world.

    However, the unbelieving husband might insist that his children practice his religion, taking them to his place of worship and giving them religious education according to his faith. Or a husband may be opposed to all religion and insist that his children receive no religious education. As the head of the family, he is the one primarily responsible for making the decision.

    While respecting her husband’s headship, as a dedicated Christian, the believing wife would bear in mind the attitude of the apostles Peter and John, who said: "As for us, we cannot stop speaking about the things we have seen and heard." (Acts 4:19, 20) Out of concern for the spiritual welfare of the children, a Witness mother will find opportunities to provide moral direction for them. She has a responsibility before Jehovah to teach others about what she knows to be true, and her children should be no exception. (Proverbs 1:8; Matthew 28:19, 20) How can the Witness mother deal with the dilemma?

    Take for example the matter of belief in God. The Witness wife may not be able to have a formal Bible study with her children because of her husband’s restrictions. Should she for this reason shy away from telling her children anything about Jehovah? No. Her words and deeds would naturally reflect her belief in the Creator. Her children would no doubt have questions on the subject. She should feel free to exercise her freedom of religion by expressing her belief in the Creator, including to her children. Even if she may not be able to conduct a Bible study with the children or take them to meetings regularly, she can impart to them knowledge about Jehovah God.—Deuteronomy 6:7.

    Concerning the relationship between a Witness and his or her unbelieving mate, the apostle Paul wrote: "The unbelieving husband is sanctified in relation to his wife, and the unbelieving wife is sanctified in relation to the brother; otherwise, your children would really be unclean, but now they are holy." (1 Corinthians 7:14) Jehovah views the marital relationship as holy because of the believing mate, and the children are considered holy in Jehovah’s eyes. The Witness wife should do her best to help her children to understand the truth, leaving the final outcome in Jehovah’s hands.

    As the children grow older, they have to decide what stand they will take based on the information they have received from their parents. They may decide to act in accord with Jesus’ words: "He that has greater affection for father or mother than for me is not worthy of me." (Matthew 10:37) They are also commanded: "Children, be obedient to your parents in union with the Lord." (Ephesians 6:1) Many youths have decided to ‘obey God as ruler’ rather than a non-Witness parent, despite suffering hardship from that parent. How rewarding it would be to the Witness parent to see the children decide to serve Jehovah in spite of opposition!

    [Footnote]

    The wife’s legal right to free practice of religion includes her right to attend Christian meetings. In some cases, a husband has been unwilling to care for minor children at those times, so the loving mother was obliged to take them with her to the meetings.

  • Hellrider
    Hellrider
    10 min: Indoctrinate the Truth in Your Child's Heart. (Deut. 6:7)

    EXACTLY! My mother used to say that the reason for adult baptism was that the child should "choose for himself, whether or not he/she wants to serve Jehovah". Well mom, that`s not exactly correct, the fact is that you become indoctrinated from the day you`re born! The choice you make as an adult is between life in that hypocritical, psychologically damaging cult, and a short life as an apostate, daily fearing Jehovahs apocalyptic bloodbath in which you are going to die, violently! (cause that`s what your heart believes for years, decades after the logical parts of the mind has dismissed it). And that`s the godawful truth!

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