opusdei1972: May be some of you will be shocked by this question. However, when I was studying the Bible with critical eyes I detected that Paul ( or Saul of Tarsus) misquoted the Hebrew Bible in order to get false support for his arguments. Of course, this tricky kind of use of the "scriptures" was not only used by him, but others, like the author of the Gospel of Matthew got unsupported doctrines misquoting verses. For instance, how could post 70 christians sustain that Mary was virgin after conceiving Jesus?, by quoting Isaiah 7:14 which uses the word virgin in the LXX (not in the Hebrew Bible). Joseph Rutherford seemed to learn this kind of interpretative tricks when he wanted to invent a type anti-type teaching, and so on. Freddy learnt this from him.
fulltimestudent
JoinedPosts by fulltimestudent
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How dishonest was the Apostle Paul?
by opusdei1972 inmay be some of you will be shocked by this question.
however, when i was studying the bible with critical eyes i detected that paul ( or saul of tarsus) misquoted the hebrew bible in order to get false support for his arguments.
of course, this tricky kind of use of the "scriptures" was not only used by him, but others, like the author of the gospel of matthew got unsupported doctrines misquoting verses.
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fulltimestudent
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People who study for years ??
by Clambake inin my cong ( my wives cong.
) there is a lady who attends every meeting , minus the field service just like a regular dub.
it just seems odd she has not taken the dip yet.
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fulltimestudent
sparrowdown: These people aren't slow they're smart, putting off baptism puts off accountability.
haha! It's always been like that.
In later Roman times, after the Emperor Constantine made early Christianity legal, it was quite the fashion for people to wait to be baptised until late in life, or even just before their death. They were likely emulating the Emperor himself, who although taking strong stands on some church issues, like the Arian/Athanasius controversy, as illustrated by this sketch
He also called Church councils and attended, and financed an enormous church construction program. But did all that without ever being baptised.
The Wikipedia entry regarding his baptism, fits within the generally accepted scholastic view of Constantine's late baptism:
"Constantine had known death would soon come. Within the Church of the Holy Apostles, Constantine had secretly prepared a final resting-place for himself.[250] It came sooner than he had expected. Soon after the Feast of Easter 337, Constantine fell seriously ill.[251] He left Constantinople for the hot baths near his mother's city of Helenopolis (Altinova), on the southern shores of the Gulf of İzmit. There, in a church his mother built in honor of Lucian the Apostle, he prayed, and there he realized that he was dying. Seeking purification, he became a catechumen, and attempted a return to Constantinople, making it only as far as a suburb of Nicomedia.[252] He summoned the bishops, and told them of his hope to be baptized in the River Jordan, where Christ was written to have been baptized. He requested the baptism right away, promising to live a more Christian life should he live through his illness. The bishops, Eusebius records, "performed the sacred ceremonies according to custom".[253] He chose the Arianizing bishop Eusebius of Nicomedia, bishop of the city where he lay dying, as his baptizer.[254] In postponing his baptism, he followed one custom at the time which postponed baptism until after infancy.[255] It has been thought that Constantine put off baptism as long as he did so as to be absolved from as much of his sin as possible*.[256] Constantine died soon after at a suburban villa called Achyron, on the last day of the fifty-day festival of Pentecost directly following Pascha (or Easter), on 22 May 337.[257]
Note, that I've left the footnote reference numbers in the text, so that anyone interested can check the sources for themselves.
Link: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Constantine_the_Great
* In reference to his "sins," while supposedly a "Christian Emperor," we can note that he had both his son Crispus and his wife Fausta murdered. I guess that may weigh on one's conscience a little.
Christianity is such a big con. trick.
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People who study for years ??
by Clambake inin my cong ( my wives cong.
) there is a lady who attends every meeting , minus the field service just like a regular dub.
it just seems odd she has not taken the dip yet.
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fulltimestudent
Good topic! And here's a story of one perceptive woman.
I spoke to her after I was kicked out, and she had finally terminated her long-running study when her brother was kicked out. A wife of a high-ranking Bethel brother studied with her for years. I don't believe she ever became a regular meeting attender, but perhaps enough to satisfy the criteria of "making some progress."
Anyway, I knew of her, while I was 'in,' and after we were both disconnected, I met her in a shopping centre one day. We chatted about past Jesus/Yahweh glories and I asked her why she never went, 'all the way?' (grin!!!)
She looked at me and said,
"I have a lot of people in my life, who try to tell me how to run my life, and the last thing I needed was another whole bloody congregation of people telling me what to do!
I'm not a bloody fool."
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fulltimestudent
Two forecasters who got it right:
There are others, but two will suffice. From: http://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2015-07-15/nine-people-who-saw-the-greek-crisis-coming-years-before-everyone-else-did
First there was Wynne Godley, a British economist wrote about his own concerns in a 1992 article for the London Review of Books:
What happens if a whole country—a potential ‘region’ in a fully integrated community—suffers a structural setback? So long as it is a sovereign state, it can devalue its currency. It can then trade successfully at full employment provided its people accept the necessary cut in their real incomes. With an economic and monetary union, this recourse is obviously barred, and its prospect is grave indeed unless federal budgeting arrangements are made which fulfil a redistributive role. ... If a country or region has no power to devalue, and if it is not the beneficiary of a system of fiscal equalisation, then there is nothing to stop it suffering a process of cumulative and terminal decline leading, in the end, to emigration as the only alternative to poverty or starvation.
And second, Arnulf Baring, a German political scientist (?) who offered dire predictions in his 1997 book Scheitert Deutschland? Here's an English translation:
They will say that we are subsidizing scroungers, lounging in cafés on the Mediterranean beaches. Monetary union, in the end, will result in a gigantic blackmailing operation. When we Germans demand monetary discipline, other countries will blame their financial woes on that same discipline, and by extension, on us. More, they will perceive us as a kind of economic policeman. We risk once again becoming the most hated in Europe.
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Youth Unemployment in Europe - Will there be Social Consequences?
by fulltimestudent inthink for a moment about this chart and wonder as to effect that unemployment may have on young people.. .
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fulltimestudent
kaik: The issue in the south is that entire generation is growing without gaining employable skills and working habits like waking up for work and having responsibilities.
Yes! And worse, that someone else is going to support them, whether its family or government!
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I think it's saying, "Buy Japanese" ...
by fulltimestudent inor, maybe it's being promoted as the next big thing to replace manga.
sent to me by a university lecturer of my acquaintance.. https://www.youtube.com/watch?t=260&v=m8-vje-bq9c.
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fulltimestudent
Bonsai : That's a *****d up video, but sadly it's the perfect embodiment of young Japanese people's version of what is cute and in vogue these days.
Hi Bonsai - thnks for posting your thoughts on Ladybaby. Are you Japanese? Not that it matters, just interested in how cross-cultural identities develop and see things.
I asked a student friend, (white -grin!- and Aussie) just back from a years study in Japan, for his Impressions? "Crazy, man, crazy," was his response.
"Crazy man, crazy" is not ( I think) a descriptive term that would have been used to describe Japan, pre-WW2. So can we think that (maybe?) that what we are seeing is a result of Caesar MacArthur's attempts to turn Japan into an American clone?
You also commented:
So many young people here dress like princess prostitutes and think it's cute, not pedophilic. Sadly this is resulting in many kids and teenagers getting stalked, kidnapped and raped.
That's sad. But, I dont know how to separate that as a Japanese experience, from the experience of women in India, and here in Australia. Being a woman seems to be the problem.
And, on this thought -
I asked my Japanese friends if anyone has ever heard of "Ladybaby" and none of them had.
Your friends maybe absolutely correct, but 'Ladybaby' seems to have become known in Aussieland, as the following link will demonstrate.
http://www.smh.com.au/entertainment/from-ladybeard-to-ladybaby-the-pro-wrestling-heavy-metal-singer-taking-japan-by-storm-20150711-gia24x.html
What about a group called 'Babymetal?' Have they come within your cultural experience yet?
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=N9r-DbjqDgk
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5cpmLWC7tW0
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Have Anglosphere (USA+UK) sanctions against Russia failed?
by fulltimestudent inits fair to say that western sanctions have hurt the russian economy and made life a little more difficult for ordinary russian families, but as far as causing a political/economic collapse of russia - there is not much evidence that the sanctions are causing grief in russia.. and when you examine 'deals' that russia has made since the sanctions were authorised, it may be that russia is ahead of the game.. it can be suggested that sanctions are a very weak tool.
famously, sanctions have not worked against china (back in mao's time), cuba or north korea.
they weakened iraq, but caused the 2nd world economy then operating, and helped push iraq back into anarchy.
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fulltimestudent
On this topic, there is news today of a huge new joint-Russian-Chinese dairy project in north China. It involves a project milking 100,000 cows.
A joint company financed with 161 billion (US) dollars has been established between China's Zhongding Dairy Farming and Russia's Severny Bur who will work together on the project.
Is a 100,000 cow facility practical? In central China (Anhui Province) there is already a 40,000 animal facility. The largest in the USA is a 30,000 animal unit in Fair Oaks, Indiana.
A giant stockfeed venture has also been established. Earlier this month, China's Huae Sinban Co signed an agreement to lease 115,000 hectares (284,000 acres) in Russia's Transbaikal region for feedstock, according to state-run Russia Today. The company is expected to invest about $450 million in the project over the next half century. Huae Sinban plans to lease up to 200,000 hectares in Russia if the first stage of the project from 2015-2018 works out.
The background to this dispute illustrates the futility of sanctions imposed by the USA. Russia imposed a ban on most agricultural products from the United States, Canada, Europe, Australia and Norway until August 2016, in retaliation for recently renewed Western economic sanctions over Russia's military moves in Ukraine and Crimea.
So farmers in those countries lost significant Russian markets. Now those farmers will have to face up to losing a huge percentage of Russian milk/cheese business forever as this new venture (and, likely others) take over the market.
The likely affect of the Chinese-Russian move is spelled out in this statement:
Mansel Raymond, chairman of the Milk Working Party Copa-Cogeca, an organization representing European agricultural groups, said the ban and the Sino-Russian dairy venture are a concern for EU dairy farmers.
"The scale of Chinese investment in dairy production is vast," Raymond told UK-based Farmers Weekly. "I wonder now whether we will ever get the Russian milk market back.
"Building a 100,000-cow dairy farm is simply mind-boggling. If the project goes ahead and the 100,000 head represents milking cows, this unit alone could produce 800 million liters a year (about 200 million gallons).
"In that case, it would equate to 100,000 tons of cheese – and that would mean this unit alone could produce about 30 percent of our previous exports to Russia," Raymond added.
In August 2014, when the Russian agricultural-product sanctions were first imposed, they were estimated to affect about one-tenth of Russia's $43 billion in yearly food imports, straining both foreign suppliers and Russian consumers, the Los Angeles Times reported.
"The food embargo by Russia that began in August of 2014 impacts approximately $1 billion of the $1.4 billion of ag and food products that the US sold to Russia," David Salmonsen, senior director of congressional relations for the American Farm Bureau Federation, said in an e-mail to China Daily. "Those most impacted are Russian consumers and European farmers who had a large share of food exports to Russia."
EU countries were shipping about $2.7 billion in produce a year to Russia, and the embargo's impact will be felt unevenly among the 28 countries in the EU, analysts said.
"For the larger EU economies - Germany included - the costs are bearable. For some of the smaller EU economies, the pain will be more acute," the Times reported, quoting RBS Capital.Link: http://www.chinadaily.com.cn/world/2015-07/09/content_21229773.htm
I predict a lot of unhappy European (mostly) farmers.
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Who are they and where are they?
by fulltimestudent inok, its a teaser heading.
and the "who" is rather easy because of the american flag, but the "where" is more difficult.
and, "who" are the military types in white uniforms?
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fulltimestudent
I found these piks after deciding to be sceptical about a claim that the USA's first clash with 'communist' Russia was at this time.
While I suggest that there is little doubt that (generally) the administration of the time did not like the Bolsheviks, it is suggested by a writer checking the records in the American National Archives, that the Commander of the American contingent, did (under difficult circumstances) attempt to be neutral in the conflict.
You can find Gibson Bell Smith's overview of the operation at:
(Part 1) http://www.archives.gov/publications/prologue/2002/winter/us-army-in-russia-1.html
(Part 2) http://www.archives.gov/publications/prologue/2002/winter/us-army-in-russia-2.html
(Part 3-Notes) http://www.archives.gov/publications/prologue/2002/winter/us-army-in-russia-3.html
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Who are they and where are they?
by fulltimestudent inok, its a teaser heading.
and the "who" is rather easy because of the american flag, but the "where" is more difficult.
and, "who" are the military types in white uniforms?
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fulltimestudent
OK, its a teaser heading. And the "who" is rather easy because of the American flag, but the "where" is more difficult. And, "who" are the military types in white uniforms? And "when" is it?
So let's keep it easy and fill in the blanks.
The "where" is Vladivostok, and the date is August 1918, and the military in white uniforms are a Japanese contingent welcoming the American contingent.
Another view of the march:
The building in the background was the GHQ for the military of all the so-called "Allies" (hence the flags) who took part in the operation. The purpose of the intervention, was ostensibly to protect a Czech force that was attempting to escape defeat by using the Siberian railway to cross Asia to Vladivostok and then by ship back to Europe.
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Youth Unemployment in Europe - Will there be Social Consequences?
by fulltimestudent inthink for a moment about this chart and wonder as to effect that unemployment may have on young people.. .
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fulltimestudent
Think for a moment about this chart and wonder as to effect that unemployment may have on young people.