Ass is the correct term for the animal commonly known as the donkey or burro. The Latin term for the animal is Asinus and the scientific term for these animals is Equus asinus. The term Ass fell into disrepute through confusion with the indelicate term “Arse” meaning the human backside.
Athanasius
JoinedPosts by Athanasius
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jesus (apparently) in Old NWT rode into Jerusalem on an anal sphincter
by hamsterbait inthe (american) witless justified replacing the correct translation of ass with donkey, claiming we would never describe a happy brother as "gay".
an ass is a different animal from a donkey, making the nwt an inaccurate translation here.. are jdubs sooo filthy minded they think below the waist even in the context of christ riding into jerusalem?.
how do they translate numbers 31: 34: " 61 thousand asses" remember it is not 61 000 anuses.. .
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Money making business
by Skinnedsheep inguesses.
est.
number of bibles printed 2,000,000. suggested donation for each- $50-60.
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Athanasius
While it's true that leather bound Bibles have a retail cost of $50-$75, the manufacturing costs are a lot less. I used to work for a retail bookstore chain and the discount for Bibles was around 50%. This means that the retailer paid the distributor $25 for a Bible that would be sold for $50 retail. The distributor received a similar discount from the publisher, and the publisher got a discount from the printer.
Keep in mind that the Watchtower employs slave labor, whereas a for profit printer employs union labor. Since the Watchtower doesn't provide retirement or medical benefits for their workers, the Watchtower has minimal labor expense. The cost of materials would be their biggest expense in producing a Bible. Plus the Watchtower doesn’t have to pay out royalty fees, as the NWT is their own invention.
So my guess is that the new deluxe NWT costs the Watchtower only $2 or $3 to print.
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Fun dinner tonight with ex-JWs
by Hortensia ini got to meet some real live jwn posters tonight, they stopped here and we met for dinner.
i was nervous about it, but they are a lovely couple, very intelligent and fun.
i am sure i talked too much, it was all so interesting -- swapping stories about our jw histories and how we got out and what we're all doing now.
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Athanasius
Hi Hortensia. My wife and I had breakfast at the Black Bear dinner just two weeks ago. We were on Holiday and we stayed at the Mount Shasta Resort. My wife liked Shasta so much we plan to come back next year. Didn't know any ex-JWs lived in Shasta. Maybe next time we can get together.
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who has actually read the entire Bible?
by losingit inno matter how many times i've tried, i just couldn't get through the whole thing.
you know, there were always those reminders to read the bible, have a personal study, go out in service, and.... the other two of the five things we were supposed to do i already forgot.
so, i constantly felt guilty that i just had no interest.
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Athanasius
Though I was raised in the JW religion and had the complete NWT in one volume since 1961, I didn't read the Bible from cover to cover until 1970 when I purchased a copy of the recently published New English Bible. The NWT was such a poor translation that I found it painful to read. But the NEB was easy to read and it took me less than a year to read from Genesis to Revelation. The NEB also included the Deuterocanonical Books, so I read these too.
Others in our congregation also found the NEB a joy to read. One brother liked the NEB so much that when he had the Bible reading in the TMS, he used it in place of the NWT. That didn't go over well with the hardline elders, but since I was the TMS overseer at the time, I let him get away with it. Later there was a Watchtower article that warned against using Bible versions other than the NWT. But I ignored the Watchtower and continued to use other Bible versions for my personal study. But this was a wake up call as I couldn't see why we were required to use an inferior Bible version when there were so many superior Bible Translations available.
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Total Donations
by turtleturtle inwas just calculating how much $ i had given to the local cong & wt over the period of about 10 years.
28,000 us baby!
ouchie!
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Athanasius
I was raised in the JW religion, but from age 18 to 38 I probably dropped less than $200 in the contribution box. I figured that the money I spent on gas for FS, hotels for conventions, and 12 years of voluteer work as an elder was enough.
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What was YOUR wake-up call before you left the JW´s organization?
by Mr Fool inwhat was your wake-up call(s) before you left the jw s organization?
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Athanasius
It was a number of things that caused me to wake up. I served as an elder from 1972-1984. During that time we saw the liberal reforms of Watchtower Vatican II replaced with the repression of the 1980s and Witch Hunts for “apostates.” Of course being an elder you have a front seat to observe all the politics that goes on in the congregation, and it was obvious that the Holy Spirit had nothing to do with the appointment of elders or MSs.
Then in 1982 while preparing a Public Talk on the Trinity the outline referred to a Watchtower, which I consulted to get a better grasp of the subject. This Watchtower quoted from J.N.D. Kelly’s Early Christian Doctrines, and I happened to have a copy in my library. But I found that the Watchtower quoted Kelly out of context. Be suspicious whenever the Watchtower uses the ellipsis in quoting a non-JW source. In fact I found more quotations taken out of context to support the Watchtower’s anti-Trinitarian doctrine. It was this discovery of the Watchtower’s scholastic dishonesty that set off more alarm bells. By 1983 I had serious doubts about the JW religion.
But in the spring of 1984 I read COC, and this confirmed that the Watchtower was not God’s organization and my resignation as an elder and my exit from the Watchtower cult soon followed.
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I'm not sure why... (Comparing presidents of the US to Watchtower presidents)
by slimboyfat inbut lyndon johnson often reminds me of rutherford.
is there anything to that comparison?
i gather that johnson had a very fiery temper and was disliked by many around him; drinked heavily too, was a womaniser, no stranger to dirty tricks, and was fond of power more than idealistism.
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Athanasius
The Watchtower presidents seemed to be more like the dictators of the former USSR. Russell was the Lenin of the Watchtower movement. Rutherford was the JW Stalin, who purged the party of the Old Bolsheviks Russellites and created a more militant movement. Knorr was the Borg's Khrushchev, who modified the extremism of the Rutherford era and modernized the movement. Freddy was the Watchtower Brezhnev, whose regime repealed the reforms of the 1970s and ushered in the new repression. Maybe there will be a Watchtower Gorbachev who will preside over the Watchtower's collapse.
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So 144,000 will go to Heaven? Is this to be taken literally even though......
by I_love_Jeff inwe have something within their own literature stating otherwise?.
"apocalypse, or revelation, is the name of the last book in the bible, written toward the end of the first century c.e.
in view of the prophetic nature and highly symbolic language of this book, the adjective apocalyptic came to be applied to a form of literature that began long before the bible book of revelation was written.
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Athanasius
If you weren't able to find an amendment to the 1999 Watchtower teaching, Jeff, that means that it hasn't been repealed and is still current "truth."
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So 144,000 will go to Heaven? Is this to be taken literally even though......
by I_love_Jeff inwe have something within their own literature stating otherwise?.
"apocalypse, or revelation, is the name of the last book in the bible, written toward the end of the first century c.e.
in view of the prophetic nature and highly symbolic language of this book, the adjective apocalyptic came to be applied to a form of literature that began long before the bible book of revelation was written.
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Athanasius
It only becomes old light if a later Watchtower publishes a retraction adjustment indicating that the brothers had the wrong understanding of the Scripture (even though that's what the GB taught them) so the new Watchtower is correcting their mistaken beliefs.
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2 she-bears kill 42 children
by confusedandalone inwe all remember this passage vividly: from there elisha went up to bethel.
while he was on his way, some small boys came out of the city and jeered at him.
"go up baldhead," they shouted, "go up baldhead!
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Athanasius
The Watchtower as usual picks a couple of verses from the Tanach and applies it to the JWs. 2 Kings2:23-24 must have been in the Watchtower outline, Separation of Powers, as I recall our CO making the same point, also some 40 years ago.
But we must remember that the Tanach, or Old Testament, is a Jewish book. The Rabbis study the whole book and don't cherry pick verses out of context like the Watchtower. Moreover, if one reads 2 Kings 2:19-22 it puts the bear incident in a different perspective. Elisha had healed the waters of the town which had an economic effect on youth employment. The Soncino Books Of The Bible, Kings, page 175 says this about the angry youth who mocked Elisha: "They were angry at having lost their means of earning their livelihood, which until now had been to supply the town with sweet drinking water." So Elisha was as popular with these kids as a CEO who closed the local factory, laid off all the employees, and transferred the jobs overseas.
Unfortunately I don't have it handy right now, but another Jewish commentary said that the Hebrew word translated "little boys" in the NWT can also mean teenagers. So situation was more threatening than dealing with a group of Kindergarten kids as the Watchtower would have us believe. Since there was no unemployment insurance or job training programs back then, one can understand why these young men were angry. How were they going to make their chariot payments without a paying job? Being unemployed wouldn't impress the Israelite girls either.
But the moral of the story is that should you lose your job, if you don't want to be eaten by bears, don't insult a baldheaded man.