Thanks for your thoughts, aristeas.
I wonder if others can see a shift away from the WTS saying that the Parousia has occurred, or that the WTS was anointed in 1919? Do they no longer say this? If that is so, where is their anchor, their source of authority?
For decades I have felt that the value of looking at the subject of the neo-Babylonian chronology lies in its use as the foundation for determining 1914 and 1919 (the WTS earlier used Lev 26 instead of Dan 4).
Its value also lies in showing how the WTS organisation continually misquotes and misrepresents the authorities it supposedly quotes. Since it is easy to show that the WTS does this, that fact should help break the WTS's mental stranglehold and permit enlightened discussions.
Until and unless that happens, a JW believes the WTS because of whom and what it claims to be (Jehovah's sole channel of communication), rather than because of what it is saying.
When the JW sees that they are being deceived and lied to, that the organisation is waging theological warfare on its own followers, then it is possible to have an open discussion. Certainly no two people will agree on everything, but that should never matter. The WTS does not allow for personal views; I encourage them
I certainly do conduct very deep, serious and personally challenging study into the Biblical writings and I am more than keen to discuss my views.
I am not an eschatologist, nor am I interested in so-called prophetic fulfilment. Rather, my strong interest lies in discovering the immediate context of any writing (religious politics, secular politics, contemporary idiom, and so on), and knowing whether a writing is genuine.
Each Biblical writer was only addressing their immediate community, with the objective of influencing behaviour and attitude within that immediate community. With many of the NT writings, the writer was arguing against opposing views within the Christian community. Much of the NT writings are not what they purport to be; much is wrongly attributed. Most of the so-called NT fulfillments of the OT stretch the bounds of credulity.
Another area of great interest to me is the religious and secular politics that determined which NT writings were canonised. It took centuries before a decision was finally arrived at, and the Roman emperors had a say.
The religious expectation of an imminent divine appearance of Jesus (Yeshua/Joshua) has been taking place in every century since the first, and probably earlier. Even Jesus and Paul expected it to happen in their own time (this generation, then we who are alive, etc.). The expectations in every century of an imminent divine manifestation have had the same outcome -- zero.
I see the Bible as a human book.
But until we are able to break the nexus between the WTS and the JW's brain, such valuable discussions cannot commence. If you know of a better tool than neo-Babylonian chronology, I am more than keen to hear of it.
Doug