HA! Hey Cal....
Isn't it amazing how this subject comes up and instantly so many people just have a single person come to mind.
Amazing how taking on that new personality can make one so infamous.
CYP
HA! Hey Cal....
Isn't it amazing how this subject comes up and instantly so many people just have a single person come to mind.
Amazing how taking on that new personality can make one so infamous.
CYP
Yeah I know one like that to Luna!
Wow Ms... that sounds just like some of the people I have met
one of the most signficant influences that helped me get free from the organization is the novels of ayn rand.
i had a very long fade and at some point during my "fade" i discoverved any rand.
i have read "the fountainhead" and "atlas shrugged" numerous times.
I was always partial to the one She said that "in a rational world there can be no contradictions, so if you arrive at one, you must go back and Check_Your_Premises."
I also like one where she said that anytime we experience pain it is because there is something about the world we didn't understand. I don't know if I share her opinion that we have that much control over our lives, but it is a damn good quote nevertheless.
I love Ayn Rand. She really laid bare the moral failing of the Marxist paradigm with an intellectual rigorousness that I don't think has ever been matched. She was a bit off, and she did carry the myth of certainty such that she became a bit cultish. Those who disagreed with her were not wrong or of another opinion, they were simply evil.
A really cool bitch though. I wish I could have met her.
CYP
most jw beliefs and practices i have been able to trace down to some basic motivation of belief.
one that still eludes me is how the jw address the issue of reconciling the idea of a benevolent creator with the fact of human misery that nobody can expect to be immune from.
i am not talking about the kind of stuff we bring on ourselves by living self destructive lives.
Ah my old friends. I haven't seen you in some of our other haunts. I haven't been seen anywhere lately.
Actually I was aware of this book by C.S. Lewis and that is probably where I got the title for the thread. That book is on my very long reading list.
CYP
most jw beliefs and practices i have been able to trace down to some basic motivation of belief.
one that still eludes me is how the jw address the issue of reconciling the idea of a benevolent creator with the fact of human misery that nobody can expect to be immune from.
i am not talking about the kind of stuff we bring on ourselves by living self destructive lives.
Most JW beliefs and practices I have been able to trace down to some basic motivation of belief.
One that still eludes me is how the JW address the issue of reconciling the idea of a benevolent Creator with the fact of human misery that nobody can expect to be immune from. I am not talking about the kind of stuff we bring on ourselves by living self destructive lives. I am talking about the kid who is born into some third world slum and forced to live as a sex slave. That kid never got a chance to ruin their life. It was already destroyed before he/she got a chance.
Now an orthodox Christian would rationalize it by saying that God is in control of all things. Even if evil exists, it is all apart of His plan that will eventually bring about pure justice. All things, even the evil ones, are serving to fulfill that purpose. Now this does make it harder to believe in a benevolent Creator. On the other hand it does take the performance pressure off of us. No matter what we do, there is no human misery that we should expect to be free from. And it also bring us some comfort when tragedy defies all reason.
The JW's are real touchy about attributing any evil to Jehovah. In their new publication they depict the world's sad state as a result of man's seperation from God. This evil is depicted as being "allowed" to prove the point that man cannot live without Jehovah's sovereignty. That is pretty consistent with orthodox views, but they are adamant to state that God doesn't allow evil, even if it is to fulfill a larger purpose of good. For instance my wife gets real touchy when someone starts to say, "this is all happening for a reason." If you suggested that a persons horrific death was an act of God, she would be equally offended.
So why this distinction?
i love data.
especially in charts.
i can visually "see" things that i just can't by relying on memory and current perceptions.. i thought an interesting peice of data to track over time is the "type" of articles published by the wt.
MJ,
Good point.
Mega themes? Does this pretty much cover it?
Fear
Guilt
Obey
Hope
Appeal and claim to divine authority
Criticism of all other authorities
here's something i got emailed to me from ptm ministries at: http://www.ptm.org/uni/resources/ptmupdate/ptmupdate.htm.
nice writeup by people who have nothing to do with the jws.
addicted to judgmentalism.
PTM ping. I love reformed cults.
i love data.
especially in charts.
i can visually "see" things that i just can't by relying on memory and current perceptions.. i thought an interesting peice of data to track over time is the "type" of articles published by the wt.
Yeah the more I think about it, every article will utilize several themes. Carrot-Stick-Stick-Carrot-Stick
So maybe I should go back and read all the old WT. Ok, maybe not. I actually started reading them just to point out particularly egregious arguments.
CYP
i love data.
especially in charts.
i can visually "see" things that i just can't by relying on memory and current perceptions.. i thought an interesting peice of data to track over time is the "type" of articles published by the wt.
Blondie (not you though, CYP)
Well what do you know.... the Watchtower from two weeks ago said I didn't have Jah's blessing, but I do have Blondies!
CYP