Fascinating! Clever Indians.
P.S. How'd the essay go? Get it in on Tuesday?
these copper plates are from the indus valley civilisation, also known as the harappan civilisation.
as the study indicates:.
the settled life in the indian subcontinent started, as is evident at mehrgarh in baluchistan (jarrige, et al., 1995), around 7000 bc and there has been gradual growth in the cultures culminating into the formation of the harappan culture starting around 4000 bc.. .
Fascinating! Clever Indians.
P.S. How'd the essay go? Get it in on Tuesday?
i finally registered on here after reading on the forum for almost two years on and off (more often the last year).
to give you some background on who i am i can say that i'm a girl in my late teens and live in western europe.
my mom is a jw and my dad is not.
Remember what you said in the beginning. YOU ARE YOUNG.
The terrors are worse when you haven't been down the road before. But this is a HUGE thing you are doing. It is not a little thing--But others have done it, and you will too.
You will need to identify a support system as soon as possible --more than one person if possible. For now, make one that school counselor. Really. She is confidential--you need that and-- she started out with you. You need someone to help keep track of your journey. Hold her to her responsibility to you.
And find friend to have FUN with. Yes talk to them--but they are not likely to understand what's up with you. Not really. But do have some good times.
But you must make up your mind that this is a HARD TIME--especially because you have never done anything like it before. And you have no one to help you through it---except here, of course.
But get some flesh and blood to help--do.
some time ago this couple who had been in the circuit work disappeared--was this the greatest ever fade or what?.
they were remarkable for kindness and good sense.
and humility.
Sorry--I was away for a while.
Doc and Magnum,
Will Gorham was the Circuit overseer round about Northwest Arkansas here in the U.S. It was around 2003-2006 as best I recall when he and Bonnie were here.
He and she both were quiet. She had a gift with the little children--they drew pictures for her all the time. I believe she would rather have talked to them than a bunch of pioneer sisters. they were slight, spare people. Not at all flashy Her father had been an elder for a long time I believe. Will had graduated Notre Dame or some other reputable Catholic University--again I am not certain. I do know he had been raised Catholic. My guess is that he would have been 50-60, herself younger. I think they came from the Midwest and eastern part of the U.S.
I have looked back often--especially right now--and I wonder if they had some inkling of the road they were treading was crooked. When I first had to talk to someone about the problem of reading and thinking about bible questions, it was Will Gorham I talked to first(and another Brother also in the room,of course).
Even more now than then I am moved by the respect he showed to me. I was no one he knew. A woman janitor at the time dressed for work in ill-fitting clothes who had a spotty service record and an unbelieving mate. He did not speak in a condescending or discouraging manner. He used no "JW speak" in the convesation. He was honest and he encouraged me to continue reading and to address the Brooklynn brothers if my search warranted it. I went out with in service with Bonnie. They were well matched, I think. she was not pushy--but I thought she was sad.
I wish I knew more.
Some people are hard to forget. Another overseer came at the time that things had come to a head for me. None of the elders and certainly not the new overseer treated me with the dignity and honest freedom that Will Gorham had. I just wish I knew they were okay. They were kind to me in the way that counts.
Maeve
BOTR--good to hear from you--Yep--Millions of JWs every where. Just curious if these two have been seen or heard from.
some time ago this couple who had been in the circuit work disappeared--was this the greatest ever fade or what?.
they were remarkable for kindness and good sense.
and humility.
Some time ago this couple who had been in the circuit work disappeared--Was this the greatest ever fade or what?
They were remarkable for kindness and good sense. And humility. She was born-in, he was not. He was college educated, an ex-Catholic.
Anyone know if they are quietly doing well? I hope so.
Maeve
this is my first post here.. i was raised in "the truth", and am an ex-bethelite who worked in brooklyn for several years back in the 90's.
a few years after i left bethel, i started to become disillusioned after doing research about the society and reading crisis of conscience (i know..i wasn't supposed to do that lol).
i eventually stopped attending meetings and going out in service.
Good morning, friends.
jhine, Without doubt we have trouble properly tagging our opinions and leaving them for such matters as parting our hair and picking our favorite color. But it is fair to say that there are levels of biblical error that are insubstantial. Yet some that are so corrosive that they overpower our formerly held OPINION. Former theists have had corrosive levels of reasonable doubt penetrate our minds. Doubt that has us fearing on two sides--Is it a dishonor to the concept of a loving and all-powerful God to question Him? Is it a dishonor to a loving and all-merciful God not to ask the questions that are reasonable?
It is fiction to support that the bible is a comprehensive harmonious whole. That is intellectual honesty. That said, it is on another basis, a historical one that some former Christians have turned from Theism. Only last night I read a bit that Dr Ehrman was not thrown off his Christian horse because of the inerrancy issue--Rather he could find no support for the historical validity for the Jesus/Christ/God story being a fact.
I agree that there are atheists who simply look at the mad scramble of the bible and, never having been programmed through a sunday school, find inerrancy is a good enough reason to forego Christianity--
Speaking to a discredited Jesus story and the need to leave the myth out of mankind's future:
Galaxie said, "Is it not about time mankind dismissed this ancient guesswork and concentrate on the good works of our contemporaries who deal with the present and work toward a better future without attaching the outcome to complex and controversial ancient myth?"
Intellectually, this is a great idea. But if we took this statement into the neediest or/and most uneducated neighborhoods of the world--excluding no one for reasons of race, religion, age, sex, or place of national origin you would find your program for good foundering very soon. IN MY OPINION!
Yes, in my opinion, all of us are impelled by some mythos or example--some combination of the hand-me-downs of others whose stories have impressed us. a good grandpa, our mother or father. Perhaps a teacher or a neighbor or family friend. Master-Bob asked this:" If you can judge what is good for your own, then why you need Jesus in the first place?"
Have you ever been in a place so destitute of goodness that there are no good examples that shine bright enough, no education to break through a culture that has become corrupt of generousity? And one that is poor. Why has the Jesus story persisted? It has transcended these barriers. And I have to say this, too: the Jesus stories have tremendous power for this huge reason--the forgiveness .
I put this out there because in my area, there are not enough mental health worker to provide even stop-gap measures for deeply damaged individuals, families, communities. Some need to feel clean. The best of the teachings of a good teacher are as wonderful and empowering as a miracle of physical healing. "Clean the inside of the cup that the outside might be clean also"--whether or not it was original to Jesus or not, this teaching has affected my life.
It is a subject worthy of discussion to ask ourselves if we were shaped in any way that was good by the words of Jesus' teaching. Our cultire hasn't outgrown the need for a rallying point, examples/teachers that transcends our experience. Does he/she have to be divine and born of a virgin?
These are just thoughts. The world still needs saving even if there is no Savior. I wonder about that.
this is my first post here.. i was raised in "the truth", and am an ex-bethelite who worked in brooklyn for several years back in the 90's.
a few years after i left bethel, i started to become disillusioned after doing research about the society and reading crisis of conscience (i know..i wasn't supposed to do that lol).
i eventually stopped attending meetings and going out in service.
jhine and Master_Bob
Read the fine parsing between the learned doctors of faith who make distinctions between inerrancy and infallibillity! Do THEY want to stay in tight with the orthodox church.
What the HELL! Getting an education is not the death knell to opinion-based religious views.
IT'S ALL OPINIONS if you are talking about what to do about any facts concerning "inspired" writing.
Chales Kraft is educated--he has some non-mainstream views of christian life.
Bruce Metzger does believe in the incarnation and resurrection of Jesus inspite of his scholarship which showed the errors in Christian texts.
A student of his, (as I understand) Bart Erhman, does NOT believe that Jesus was God-in-the-flesh OR resurrected on a third day.
Erhman's opinion is that there was a historical Jesus, yet states that he and many other scholars feel that "Jesus did not spend his ministry declaring himself to be divine"
Cofty's opinion is that Jesus was an ego-maniac who misled people.
I believe something else.
At some point we all form some opinion or other once we are even EXPOSED to this material.
No one on this board can escape forming an opinion--EVEN IF WE ARE WELL EDUCATED.
(It is just that some of us have to believe that dinosaurs lived with humans to hold certain opinions--and THAT is an opinion that is hard to respect.)
so what do I mean?
jhine, Opinion. Wha if the Book of Job is served up as "inerrant/infallible"--these words do not matter. There is no imprimatur that makes those pronouncements true--whatever "true" means.
It wears me out to chase down the theological mish-mash and fine points---Can you imagine evn a DIVINE Jesus pushing this BS on working people?
I can not.
Let's get together and sing and dance. to hell with the rest. And if Jesus said some good things? DO THEM. and teach them. Does it matter if he was divine?
In my opinion , NO.
the other day we went to our friends business to have our computer worked on.
our friend was raised a jw but never got baptized and left when he was in his late teens.
any way we started talking about the new jw.org and the new tv show they have.
The Mormons have been on this for years as some may have noted already.
Years back I was invited to go to the local meeting place on the U. of Arkansas campus to watch a televised tie-in to their General Conference where, among other talks, their Living Prophet spoke to the LDS faithful.
Check out "October 2014 LDS General Conference" online and see what may be the future for JWs.
i was publicly reproved last year and the elders have taken their sweet time in reinstating my "privileges".
it's been six months and i can't answer at the meetings or participate in the theocratic ministry school.
in all honesty- i don't care about the privileges.
Two of my 3 daughters had the eyes of the elders on them--both left the JWs--one had been baptised.
My youngest liked to dress "well"-- those days (only 5-6 years ago)that could have seemed too provocative--she walked a fine line Also, when the elders leaned on her to get baptised, she told them that she didn't have a relationship with God to justify that step. You might try talking to your mother about that--maybe she will get off you about being open-minded about JWs if you remind her it is about God and you not the Organization(on second thought, she might not be open to that line of thought).
Really, a lot of the young women in the congregations I was around had difficulties. Hauled in for one thing and another, pregnancies, sneaking out, spotty meeting attendence, drinking, keeping the wrong company.
Teen years are tough any way. You will get away eventually.
I am sorry that you can't confide in your mother. Just let her know that you love her--and that Jesus let each person choose what to do. You need to have people back off and not be crowding you. See if you can at least gain that ground--and try to be happy with it until you are out of the house.
It is hard. But you will make it--steady as you go.
Maeve
throughout several past threads various posters have emphatically made the point that countries like great britian, united states, france etc.
basically countries where white people exist, are to blame for the poverty in many other third world nations.
some have even went so far as to suggest that the first world is to blame for all third world conditions.. i often see excuses such as these for why a country refuses to provide clean water, some food and basic sanitation for its people:.
If one is born in despair it is hard to have a vision of hope, redvip2000.
As a previous poster mentioned, the squalor of Native American reservations does not reflect the culture that they had before their decimation and removal.
They have a culture now--but it too often has become one of violence and substance abuse.
Have you ever lived in a broken community? I have lived in a community that has been breaking down for the past 40 years. The grandparents of the young men and women having babies here were hard working, pretty solid folks. There has been a breach in the culture--I have watched it--been involved in it-I raised 7 children around it. The young are struggling and failing to a great extent. The people on the margins of a technological society need strong families to make it--when the vision breaks down it is hard to repair.
When you get to know the back story of some, it is not so easy to write them off.
also--about housing projects-Sometimes it is hard to assess what you see(And of course, I don't know what YOU, redvip are seeing at all) But the poor always have had more street presence than the middle class.
My daughter had a photo essay that was the cover story published two months ago in the Washington Post about the housing project she lives in. It's also on line. It doesn't take a "position" on who is responsible. But it gives more texture to the discussion were have here.
Type in "Darcy Courteau Washington Post" " the Faces of Carver Langston"
Edit: To gather my posts on this topic--yes, there is a lot of responsiblity among the "haves" for the situation of the "have nots" that result from their invasive and extractive use of the land and the people (sometimes in their own countries). But I am trying to say that it isn't as simple as some would have it.
throughout several past threads various posters have emphatically made the point that countries like great britian, united states, france etc.
basically countries where white people exist, are to blame for the poverty in many other third world nations.
some have even went so far as to suggest that the first world is to blame for all third world conditions.. i often see excuses such as these for why a country refuses to provide clean water, some food and basic sanitation for its people:.
Simon,
For he past five days I thought of this thread-and your comments here:
You wrote ".....Besides that I think the other great achievement is in organization and management of people and resources for a purpose (my emphasis).
Those are the things that the 3rd world seems to struggle with. Why do they need the west to dig a well or build a school?"
Your statements and the question reframes the topic into a more accessible one. Like: what makes one life better than another and what or who should make that better life attainable?
You said: for a purpose.
A man who grew up on the border of Alsace-Lorraine, Jean Frederich Oberlin (1740-1826) provided an example to any of us who toy with the idea of philanthropy or else bear with the frustration that we are the perpetrators of our own failure to thrive.
One of several children of a school teacher, became a clergyman and moved to the desperately poor Vosges region in the mountains and through his own gentle prodding and example (HE shouldered a pick to build a road--the skeptical peasants followed and then pitched in) transformed the lives of the parishes around him over the next 60 years of his life. Interdenominational--he welcomed absolutely all to his services. He showed them how to work as a community, to value education and kindness. How to improve the quality of the seedstock and orchards and how to improve the soil with compost!
The effect he had on the dignity of the poor, the ELEVATION FROM SQUALOR, the fact that the peasants there were relatively safe from extreme want during hard times due to the principals of public welfare becoming each person's personal responsibility created a growing fame. In circles both secular and religious his result astounded. /the entire population learned how to take care of one another.
A GOOD PURPOSE REALIZED
No one had had anything but contempt for these dirty, backward people who spoke their own backwoods dialect --until he came and stayed. When he arrived there was a hut designated as "the School". It was occupied by children too young to work and overseen by a former pig-herder--a man unable to work OR teach, "Sir, I cannot teach as I know nothing myself." He developed a schooling system that is a model for today--with hardly a penny spent!
In the U.S. in 1833 a college was established and named for him-Oberlin College opened to Blacks, white and women! Astonishing given the times.
I have read a 150 year old biography taken from his journal. It is a small book, available on line. It should be read by all.
notable that his funeral was attended by Catholics, Lutherans, Jews and all who realized that his legacy was really one that was a treasure.
I encourage anyone who finds the problems of poverty distressing, unapproachable and unmanagable.
Just had to bring this in.
Maeve