I’ve heard most of these stories in one form or another.....around the western world...seriously.
My husband and I would always keep quiet when the silly story hour started...usually after some brother had had a few wines and was in full swing.....
how often have we heard some sort of sensationalist urban legend as jws?.
here is an example i was told as a kid:.
the experience of a sister who knocked on a door and was greeted by a big fierce looking man- intimidating and mean.
I’ve heard most of these stories in one form or another.....around the western world...seriously.
My husband and I would always keep quiet when the silly story hour started...usually after some brother had had a few wines and was in full swing.....
well, i got to see the final day of this years regional convention.and i saw something that disturbs me.. the final, "summing up review" video.
it disturbs me because it was so well done.
(i wish i could remember the title of the song), to the strains of a solo vocalist singing in a fine "irish tenor", we see the actors from the previous videos of the last few days all assembling together in a clearing.
I want to cry. But no tears left.
I’m just so grateful these ‘film’ producers don’t hold me and my faith in the palm of their fear-mongering hands.
IF, and only IF their Armageddon theology ‘could’ be true...they STILL have no, absolutely no idea how it will look.
Yet....An army of sinister shooters running towards a group of parka-clad people standing out in an opening...is this as real as the ancient prophets being resurrected to live in an American mansion in 1925?
I feel gutted to know people who I love allow their eyes and ears to be filled with such menacing delusion and BASELESS but horribly manipulative imagery.
i am interested in the approach this forum takes to money.
apart from sex, (which i am quite relaxed about) it seems to me that wealth is the surest divider between those who are moral, and those who are not.. it seems jesus thought so, also.
luke 16:19-31 kjv describes well enough his dusty attitude to the rich who do not succour the poor.. and this world has many poor: so many, it might seem that we can do nothing about it, and twist his words; 'the poor ye shall have always with you, but me, ye shall not have always.
At the heart of the OP, it seemed to me there is a sense of dismay regarding the careless attitude of ‘Christians’ with wealth, towards the impoverished.
This situation is notable in the network of Jehovahs witnesses, give their imtensestufy of scripture and regulated worship.
I was as guilty as the next for enjoying over the top financial means.
Somehow, for all my scriptural study, I managed to selfishly enjoy a life of absolute material privilege....whilst not for one minute being ready to lower my financial status to equalise others.
I was ready to to give it all up at ‘Armageddon’ - but looking back, I wasnt ready to ‘give it all’ up a moment before...
I ‘generously’ gave to others, but looking back....it never was at the expense of my own sacrifice, I always had plenty to give.
I was known as a ‘generous’ and not a ‘materialistic’ person....but the truth?
Not proud of it.
But, I didn’t acknowledge that I knew any better, and if I did...I pushed away those uncomfortable feelings.
Thought-provoking OP.
And it’s good to really think about stuff. 👍
made the mistake of opening the front door today...i was expecting someone to service our central heating...oh dear, it was a sister instead :(.
she tells me jehovah misses me.
it seems god only sees me if i go to the meetings.
Hi Phoebe,
It’s frustrating, but worse still...it’s somewhat threatening in its nature, this whole ‘Jehovah misses you’ ‘ She left Jehovah’ ....and so on.
I had a sister greet me in a public shopping mall a couple of years ago...after a quick and cheerful exchange...she then got close up and asked me ‘when are you coming back to Jehovah?’
I kind of gasped inside, that question, if you are a believer is huge in its implications.
And there we are, having just swapped some jolly and friendly greetings...news about our families...and she actually asked me this question as if it were as normal as asking if I’d got over the flu and was I going to feel better soon...
When you’ve had time to stand back, And really listen.....it’s pretty darn sad.
No thought for my feelings, as to whether it was OK to ask such an emotion packed question in such a silly way....in the middle of a shopping mall....
She’s a dear woman.
But, I confess I lost a little respect for her at that time, then I rethought it....she is caught in a cycle of thinking not of her own.
And I just don’t see God the way she does.
I just don’t.
feeling pressure to attend the memorial?.
as a former elder i write this response to hopefully help those genuinely feeling “guilt” before their god.
if you are a jehovah’s witness or an “ex-jw” (for example, disfellowshipped or lapsed), then i hope that this will be of help to you.
I felt I wanted to attend a service today....I went to a local church.....
The whole service was one big thanks giving to Christ and He was the absolute focus, His death, His resurrection.
His love, His love for every last one.
It was very odd. 😉
simple physics.. the timber that was used to execute jesus had to be substantial.
thus, its weight could not have been carried entirely, but rather it had to be dragged.. get a log with no crosspiece, one substantial enough to nail a man to, and try to drag it through town.
try to get a hold of it without it sliding out of your grip.
And yes, I reckon the WT just tried to be deliberately ‘different’ to ‘christendom’.
In retrospect, the whole idea that an entire stake was carried by the condemned across the city and up a hill....? It can’t be.
But the cross beam.....sadly yes.
simple physics.. the timber that was used to execute jesus had to be substantial.
thus, its weight could not have been carried entirely, but rather it had to be dragged.. get a log with no crosspiece, one substantial enough to nail a man to, and try to drag it through town.
try to get a hold of it without it sliding out of your grip.
A human could carry a cross beam....which would be ultimately attached to a grounded pole, which is already in position, in situ.
Carrying a whole post, a stake of wood?
And how long would it take to fix the stake in the ground and for it to hold steady enough to keep upright with the weight of a human on it?
No.
The ‘crucifixion’ stake was already in place surely, the victim carried the cross beam.
An unthinkably horrific death.
this is something that hit me just relatively recently.. the phrase "make the truth your own" is a very famous catch phrase in jw culture.
it was a pet philosophy of daniel sydlik and has been used and is used in talks, literature and song.
every witness knows this trope.
One very important ‘truth’ in scripture is that Christ, and Christ alone secured victory over sin and victory over spiritual death for mankind....biblically, ‘He is our Saviour for all mankind, and especially for believers’ - well of course especially believers because they get to have a living Hope in this life....or a delusion if that is your perception of it all.
A marked variance of this core truth which a Witness may meditate upon given the Memorial ‘season’ is the Watchtower teaching that our own physical death releases us from our sins.
I’m not writing this to preach to the unimpressed 🙂.....just highlighting a blatantly sarcreligious distortion of a basic truth that is bound up in the biblical Christ.
Scripturally, Christ died for us. It’s a basic in the whole Christian faith.
We don’t get to absolve ourselves from our broken ‘missing the mark’ state by our own physical death.
Sorry, but that one Watchtower teaching alone is enough to make a ‘truth-seeker’ dig deeper and question.
this is something that hit me just relatively recently.. the phrase "make the truth your own" is a very famous catch phrase in jw culture.
it was a pet philosophy of daniel sydlik and has been used and is used in talks, literature and song.
every witness knows this trope.
In the scriptures, the only truth is the Christ.
I never really felt comfortable with the expression ‘in the truth’ as used by JWs.
it always felt a little ‘off’ to me .....even as a fully committed JW.
in the most recent assembly there were several heavy hints about not drinking alcohol at all.
saying that it doesn't give a good witness or would stumble others.. is this a new "unwritten directive?.
My experience was that a large number of witnesses were/are extremely heavy drinkers, men and women.
And....I’m talking about fully approved Elders, Ministerial Servants and Pioneers...not just ‘fringe-dwellers’.
I dont mean this in a judgemental way....but as mentioned, the CD needed to be numbed, I’m sure.
When I look back, overall we just didn’t have a wholesome culture.....something was ‘off’.
To live in belief that the lives of billions depended on your ‘witness’, to know you failed time and time again to ‘win’ people over, many who were family, loved and known to be decent folk.....the emotional burden is heavy. One minute you are out under the ‘guidance of angels’ searching for honest-hearted ones in the most significant mission in the history of man, the next minute you were planning that evenings social activities....which always involved alcohol. Our conversations could be all about interior design, the latest plan for this and that...the next second we’d be straight faced ringing a doorbell, offering a magazine on Armageddon.
I look back....it was borderline insanity.
No wonder heavy drinking was prevalent.