Gasp! It's been several years since I PM'd anyone. How do I PM you? How much does a copy cost? I am certainly interested.
moggy lover
JoinedPosts by moggy lover
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7
Available: "The Kingdom That Never Came" - English translation of book by Norwegian Ex-JW
by PrincessPeachz inrepost here for lurkers and newbies... if you would like a pdf copy please pm me, i have permission to distribute the english translation electronically from the author's, joseph wilting, family (my family)..
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When did the Watchtower first raise the idea of 1919?
by moggy lover inwith all the changes arising from the shifts in watchtower "understanding" of its own prophetic ministry, i think we can discern a slow but detirmined interest in elavating the date 1919 to almost iconic standards - soon to displace the other date of significance, 1914.. my question to those with access to watchtower material is: when in fact did the watchtower leadership first mention this date as having any significance?
popular watchtower mythology proceeds along the lines of jehovah coming to his temple in that year, and on inspecting the then watchtower leadership, chosing them to be his exclusive spokespersons on earth.. although this supposedly took place in 1919, it was certainly not in that year that there was any awareness that such was occurring.
it was many years after when this first began to be pressed.
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moggy lover
So the light begins to dawn.
1. From Leolaia we know that some nascent awareness of the significance of 1919 was present in that very year itself, through Uncle Joe's biblical importunings.
2. But this was tentative at best and featured other aspects of the Watchtower's self proclaimed prophetic ministry which were unrelated to this inspection and selection process that is so explicitly pressed today. [IE, the "Elijah-Elisha work" which has gone the way of all fiction, into the scrapheap of Forgettable Literature]
3. From Terry we can see that the period 1918-1925 was a period of JFR's bid for personal consolidation of power. What did the Communists of a previous age call it? Cult of Personality? By sucessfully destroying the cult of personality build around the revered figure of CT Russell, JFR succeeded in erecting the edifice of his own cult of personality. It appears that the irony was lost on him.
4. From Phizzy we can detirmine that the first mention of an "inspection" of some bizarre entity called "the antitypical temple" by "The Lord Jesus Christ" in 1918 was made in the August 1, 1926 Wt magazine, a year after the 1925 fiasco.
Significantly I think, one can see two propositions within this incredulous develpment.
1. A relatively high Christalogical manifestation as in calling Christ the "Lord Jesus Christ" something that is fairly infrequent in later Watchtower theology.
2. A corresponding minimalization of a certain deity, Jehovah, whose significance in Watchtower theology had not yet evolved.
5. From Ann O'Maly we learn that a year later, in 1927, the final act in the devaluation of CTR when he was demoted from his position of the "faithful and wise servant" [KJV] and the corresponding elevation of JFR and his coterie of sycophants to that position was enacted.
Oddly enough I must admit that I assumed that this theological development of the Watchtower leadership being chosen out of an exacting scrutiny made by Christ Himself would have taken longer to evolve. 1927 seems fairly early to me. I imagined that a clearer understanding of this deity, Jehovah and his significance in Watchtower theological develpment would have come first.
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When did the Watchtower first raise the idea of 1919?
by moggy lover inwith all the changes arising from the shifts in watchtower "understanding" of its own prophetic ministry, i think we can discern a slow but detirmined interest in elavating the date 1919 to almost iconic standards - soon to displace the other date of significance, 1914.. my question to those with access to watchtower material is: when in fact did the watchtower leadership first mention this date as having any significance?
popular watchtower mythology proceeds along the lines of jehovah coming to his temple in that year, and on inspecting the then watchtower leadership, chosing them to be his exclusive spokespersons on earth.. although this supposedly took place in 1919, it was certainly not in that year that there was any awareness that such was occurring.
it was many years after when this first began to be pressed.
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moggy lover
Thanks Leolaia for that. The impression I am getting is that the 1919 doctrine was an evolving teaching with several nuanced edges that do not relate to each other.
For instance, the above, although first acknowledged as early as 1919, did not recognize any particular relationship between the Watchtower Leadership and this Jehovah. Indeed, it was always assumed that CT Russell, and later Joe Rutherford, spoke in some unspecified way, for God.
But that this deity actually intervened in some way, and manifested some sort of preference for these guys in 1919 specifically, was a quantum leap in the theological blueprint of the Watchtower.
So, while slowly making its tentative appearance in 1919 itself, a fully rounded articulation of what that date signified would need to await some later, more audacious revelation.
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When did the Watchtower first raise the idea of 1919?
by moggy lover inwith all the changes arising from the shifts in watchtower "understanding" of its own prophetic ministry, i think we can discern a slow but detirmined interest in elavating the date 1919 to almost iconic standards - soon to displace the other date of significance, 1914.. my question to those with access to watchtower material is: when in fact did the watchtower leadership first mention this date as having any significance?
popular watchtower mythology proceeds along the lines of jehovah coming to his temple in that year, and on inspecting the then watchtower leadership, chosing them to be his exclusive spokespersons on earth.. although this supposedly took place in 1919, it was certainly not in that year that there was any awareness that such was occurring.
it was many years after when this first began to be pressed.
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moggy lover
With all the changes arising from the shifts in Watchtower "understanding" of its own prophetic ministry, I think we can discern a slow but detirmined interest in elavating the date 1919 to almost iconic standards - soon to displace the other date of significance, 1914.
My question to those with access to Watchtower material is: When in fact did the Watchtower Leadership first mention this date as having any significance? Popular Watchtower mythology proceeds along the lines of Jehovah coming to his temple in that year, and on inspecting the then Watchtower leadership, chosing them to be his exclusive spokespersons on earth.
Although this supposedly took place in 1919, it was certainly not in that year that there was any awareness that such was occurring. It was many years after when this first began to be pressed. My understanding is that this was not till the 1930s. Is that correct?
Cheers.
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Do you know why God cannot KNOW?
by Terry inlogic prohibits self-reference.
it is a convention like not multiplying by zero.
live with it!.
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moggy lover
Sorry, I must have misunderstood you. You were insisting that God CANNOT know because of the verity behind self realization and logic. But the logical consequence of an ignorant God is His non existence. The reason I say this is because the existence of an ignorant God is....dare I say it?.....a paradox.
To paraphrase a Latism, He knows therefeore He is. If He cannot know, He does not exist. That is the premise I was working from. If I am wrong, then I must admit I have no idea what you are getting at.
You accept the existence of God but, in applying ignorance as an attribute to such a God, you basically believe in an ignorant reality.
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Do you know why God cannot KNOW?
by Terry inlogic prohibits self-reference.
it is a convention like not multiplying by zero.
live with it!.
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moggy lover
Again, I think the use of paradox is being misapplied. Remember we are attempting to encompass the meaning of Ultimate Reality. In other words, Reality beyond which nothing else exits. Now Reality is not a paradox. That is why it is real. It is only when we try and explain this Reality in terms of logical inference that we fall into paradoxical anomalies.
If we are trying to disprove the existence of God using "logic" and reason, then we fall into the trap of depending on paradoxical evaluations of this logic. That is what I am trying to say.
For instance: Is Ultimate Reality a paradox? No, because then no reality would in fact exist.
But: Does our intellectual belief in this Reality prove that God exits or does not exist? This is where we slide into metaphysical explorations that involve logical inferences, and which in turn can be sustained only through paradox. Thus to argue for or against the existence of God on certain perceptions such as self realization and logic can be a trap, because the use of this perception can be circular and inferentially paradoxical.
When we wrestle with the concept of the WHY of reality, we are involving ourselves in the interplay of cause and effect. We are not detirmining the HOW of things. When we say that reality exists because of the implied existence of the question of reality itself, we are interpreting reality in the nature of HOW, not WHY. In order to answer the WHY, we must delve into the interrelationship of cause and effect which detirmines the existence of reality.
For instance, when we ask: WHY does the universe exist? The answer must confront the importance of its cause, not its assumed existence. The universe must have a cause behind its existence. Otherwise it is Infinitely Real and has always existed. But as we have seen this is as meaninglessly meaningful as inferring that God has always existed. If the material universe has infinitely existed, and this is held to be unimpeachably true, why can't the same be said of an infinite God? How does self realization and logic infer the existence of one and not the other?
If we insist that it does valididate the existence of one and not the other, then this use of logic ultimately becomes inferencially paradoxical. To avoid the inference of paradox one will have to acknowledge the application of such logic equally to both possibilities.
Thus, we must all struggle with the existence of an Infinite Reality, and of our place in it.
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Do you know why God cannot KNOW?
by Terry inlogic prohibits self-reference.
it is a convention like not multiplying by zero.
live with it!.
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moggy lover
My understanding of "self realization and logic" is that it only attempts to explain paradoxes that appear as a result of applying conditions that are themselves inferentially paradoxical in the first place. But we are at this time attempting to understand another dimension altogether - a dimension that encompasses metaphysical exploration to explain physical realitiies.
For instance: Why is there something instead of nothing.
We inhabit a realm of physical reality, and what we are discussing is the nature of this reality. The universe for instance is the ultimate reality. But what, ultimately, is the nature of this reality? For instance is it "finite" or "infinite"? It can't be both and there is no third alternative that I know of. The terms that we use to explore this concept, "finite" and "infinite" are themselves subject to paradoxical infractions of logic.
For instance: If the universe is the ultimate reality then is it finite? If it is, then where does it "begin" and where does it "end"? If it ends at point Z then whatever exits beyond that point must reveal some other potential reality. Which means that the universe is NOT the ultimate reality. Something else exists beyond its edges.
Otherwise the universe then must be infinite. But if it is infinite, what is the nature of this infinity? Is it infinite in all directions, encompassing space, time, and all the consequences that accrue from applying "logic"?
If it is, then we are using meanigless meanings that are simply interpolations of logic to explain what is in reality a preconceived notion.
And this is the fallacy that faces all rational discussions such as this. Preconceived notions, founded on, and sustained by, personal experience. It also opens the door to that hoary old debate of faith verses reason. All intellectual belief is a form of faith. If you believe that the physical universe is infinite and that this meaningless meaningful concept proves the non existence of an infinite God, it is based on the faith you have in this logical approach.
Thus the proposition that God CANNOT know all things, because self realization and logic deny this, is based on the intellectual belief that God cannot know all things in the first place. Hence one is importuning self realization as a reason for this belief by indulging in something that again paradoxically, can only be defined in terms that involve the understanding of the word "faith".
If, on the basis of one's own reflection on the nature of things, one is led to believe that this universe, or ultimate reality, is both self-sufficient and uncaused, then one has already formed an impression of this reality and it provides for no room for any other causual reality. But this intellectual belief can be sustained only on the basis of having faith in the notion that physical reality is the only reality that exits. To be intellectually sustaining, it must be proved beyond any reasonable doubt to be true. But logic is a trap here. The only way to prove that there is no reality beyond the material universe is to assume that there is no other kind of reality in the first place.
On the basis of my own reflection on the nature of things, I am led to believe that there IS a reality beyond the material. Logic can be pressed into service just as meaningfully to predicate one's intellectual belief in this transendent, causual reality. A reality that exhibits personal traits beyond the credibility of human reason, and exits in a realm that defies exploration. Brighter than a thousand suns and infinite in all directions, transcendent beyond all discursive knowledge, this Ultimate Reality nevertheless relates to propositional thought and verbal communication.
Beyond the apparent meanlessness of human existence, this Ultimate Reality personally gives significance to the most insignificant life.
Thus this Reality, logically, CAN know and know in fulness.
But then that is my intellectual belief, and ultimately, the source of my faith.
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Taking alcohol into the veins (WBT$ illo) - can someone deconstruct this for me?
by punkofnice inok. so i've heard that the wbt$ say that having alcohol into the body intraveniously (how do you spell it?
), when the doctor says you shouldn't have alcohol is baaaadddd!
so you wouldn't have a blood transfusion because invisible sky friend jar hoover says it's baaaaaddddddd.. no doubt the illustration is beyond crazy but how is the best way to deconstruct it?.
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moggy lover
I think the problem lies with the word "abstain" which the Watchtower writers constantly keep using in the wrong contexts. The Watchtower "reasoning" goes something like this: Your doctor tells yah to "abstain from alchohol" right? Well, if God tells us "to abstain from blood" it must be equally valid, right? Would a person "reason" that I could not drink blood, but I can take it in intravenously? No! they coo.
The point is that they can! Because "abstain" here is being used ccontextually in a different sense. When we eat or drink something, we are utilizing the digestive system in our bodies. So when God tells us to "abstain" from blood, if such an injunction were still valid [most evangelicals believe that this was only operative in the first century when the peculiar Jew/Gentile controversy was in effect] it would mean that of either eating or drinking it, using our digestive processes.
But when we take blood into our veins, we do not use our digestive systems but rather our circulatory system which is an independent operation in our bodies. It is never classified as "eating" or "drinking" or even "feeding". It is merely circulating.
Now if God had said: "Abstain from circulating blood" in your system, then the ban on blood transfusions would be valid.
But then it would mean that we could drink it!
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What happened in the Christian Congregation immediately following the destruction of Jerusalem?
by itsibitsybrainbutbigenoughtosmellarat inwhat exactly happened in the christian congregation immediately following the destruction of jerusalem?
what were the central issues being dealt with at the time?
was there a crises akin to what happened to jws when they weren't all raptured in 1914?.
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moggy lover
I am sorry for the format, which seems have to shifted off the page to the right. Hope it can be read.
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What happened in the Christian Congregation immediately following the destruction of Jerusalem?
by itsibitsybrainbutbigenoughtosmellarat inwhat exactly happened in the christian congregation immediately following the destruction of jerusalem?
what were the central issues being dealt with at the time?
was there a crises akin to what happened to jws when they weren't all raptured in 1914?.
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moggy lover
The issue is relevant only if one presupposes that the Christian Church was patterned along the lines of the currently structured Watchtower community of believers, in that there was a secretive, anonymous body of men controlling doctrinal probity. This would then beg the question: What happened to those guys, and how was the Christian Chruch goverened then?
Actually, from the very start, despite all the Watchtower posturings that the Early Church served as a template from which their own organizational bias was crafted, the exact opposit is true. The early congregations were free communities of free people who were united along interdependent lines with the basis of that unity being a common love for the Person of Jesus Christ, not doctrinal propriety. What did those first century believers understand of doctrine?
We know that those first century believers believed in God, but the definition that would stabilize that sense of belief had not yet occurred. The opening chapters of Acts speak of "God" in terms that defy accurate explanation, and this was intersected in some paradoxical crosshairs that involved Christ in this estimation. In the very first days of Jesus' absence, in Acts 1, we see Christians unabashedly praying to Him, and whereas Jewish believers in OT times ascribed all miraculous events to the Yahweh of the OT, the Christians had no hesitation in ascribing miracles in the first century to either "Jesus" Himself personally, or as the inspired text says to the "Lord". It is only when a detirmined effort is made to emend the text to more comfortable contours that propound a "Jehovah" into the NT text that a Watchtower template can be illegally forged.
So the early Christian community were independent churches that had their own internal and self perpetuating structures. Some had elders appointed by a local body, some were appointed personally by travelling evangelists such as Paul, and some evidently like Titus, had single leaders.
When the Church began in 30 AD it was exclusively Jewish, but within 10 years, with the opening to the Gentiles the centre of gravity was beginning to shift. By that time two cities were prominent, Jerusalem which was Jewish in ethnicity, and Antioch, which was urban, prosperous, and Gentile. By 70 AD the shift away from Judaisim was almost complete with, as is evidenced by the many incidents reported in Acts, more persecution coming from the Jews than converts.
In the post 70 AD era, this breach was final and Chritianity broke away from its primal Jewish roots and began to flex its theological sinews along those Hellenized, Gentile lines. This interdependent congregational system continued with local leaders shepherding the flock. Three major centres of Christian theological and cultural influence developed. Antioch, Alexandria, and Rome. Dogma, hesitant, illdefined, and largely undeveloped would evolve along strictly scriptural lines from those three cities and issues would need resolution only with the cooperative effort of all three places.