Just one more group that emerged out of the wreckage of William Miller's failed propheies of 1844.
Bill
in my plan to exit the jw i thought it would be good if i adhere to another faith group, not cultish as the jw but non trinitarian.. this is decided for the sake of my children (two sons)'s spritual safety.
i researched the internet and in the non trinitarian groups i found these christadelphian.
any idea about this group?.
Just one more group that emerged out of the wreckage of William Miller's failed propheies of 1844.
Bill
to be honest i figured until i received some pleasure, enjoyment.
in waking people up on their day off, there was no way i was going.
to pressure anyone else to do the same.
Lisa Rose,
Too true!
The JWs I see in action around here sure look like they are engaged in a "life saving work" - NOT!
(i) Not by the body language they exhibit as they "pioneer shuffle" up somebody's driveway, making it plain they desperately hope nobody is going to be home. That way, they can put in the appearance of being "out in service, without actually having to speak to anybody!
(ii) Not by the way they will walk right past - and without speaking to - a person in the street, only to go in and knock on the door of an (often) empty house.
It is a good thing for Joe Publisher that this "End of the World" the GB insist is going to happen "soon" hasn't eventuated:
-otherwise they would all get the boot (from the top down) for sounding a very ineffective warning!
Bill.
to be honest i figured until i received some pleasure, enjoyment.
in waking people up on their day off, there was no way i was going.
to pressure anyone else to do the same.
SfPW,
If it is a lifesaving work, then they ought to start using more effective warning methods than door knocking. A few pointers could be taken from the emergency services around here, from the way in which the recent bushfires were handled:
i.e.
- Bushfire warnings firstly issued by radio and television broadcasts.
- Then the final evacuation orders issued from the loud hailers on the emergency service vehicles.
One can only be thankful that the emergency services didn't attempt to rely on door knocking to get bushfire victims out of the way of the flames!
Of course, if it is not after all a "lifesaving" work, then why bother at all?
Bill.
to be honest i figured until i received some pleasure, enjoyment.
in waking people up on their day off, there was no way i was going.
to pressure anyone else to do the same.
The only time I felt good about field service was when it was over.
Agreed - and the bloody same for assemblies, too!
Bill
page 12 of the january 1,1989 wt original magazine paragraph 8 ends with the statement that the apostle paul's missionary activity laid a foundation for a work that would be completed in our 20th century.".
(a subtle prophecy that 'the end' will come by the year 2000 a.d.).
this sentence is changed in the bound volume reprint to read "a work that would be completed in our day.
I well remember the interest aroused by that remark in the January 1 1989 WT:
- bloody fools that we all were!
Bill.
he's been to my door a couple of times as they've done the territory and said hello and all that, a nice, clean-shaven version of santa clause.
he was with a sister, a mild, pleasant intelligent sister with whom i always got on well, and we had a bit of a simple pleasantries-exchanging chat while my husband ran off and hid in the house like he normally does when jws come.. we got onto the sister's university studies and i said, "but at the dc they lumped university education in with fornication and every terrible thing!".
shaved santa pipes up suddenly, "oh, you're not meant to take that seriously.
It seems to me that those longtime JWs - i.e the ones who have stuck with the religion - are the ones like the "shaved Santa" fellow you just described.
They may do lip service to the more extreme demands of the GB, but in practice use their judgement and common sense about such matters. Just the same, I don't know how those - again like "shaved Santa" - who are elders fare when they are "counselling" others about such things university education. Do they warn others not to, but then send their own children to uni?
There is a word to describe such actions - and it is not avery pleasant one!
Bill.
when i was an elder, i had a few couples approach me to confess that they either played around or went all the way.. i suspect there were many more that did not admit to it, though..
Hortensia,
"MYOB"
- I would make that MYOBB!
Bill
growing up in the south everyone i knew believed in god, even the.
town drunk.
i remember watching some special tv program around xmas .
My experiences are more like those of GoodGuyGreg, in that atheisim was more the norm where I grew up. When the subject of religion came up, the typical response from most men would have been "What ...... believe that rubbish?" Less so the women, though. The typical scenario would have been the women going to church at the church on Sunday morning - while all the guys had already been to "church" on Saturday night, but at the pub!
Bill.
that's the message in my inbox today, from (an aussie publication) transport and logistics news.
( http://www.tandlnews.com.au/2013/10/10/article/skill-up-or-lose-your-job/ ).
note: i should edit this down a bit - but feeling mentally lazy.. but the message is simple - if you want to keep your job, find a way to develop your skills and make yourself more useful to your boss.. my xjw friend's son-in-law spent 6 long years doing an engineering degree part time, and was rewarded not long ago when two large mining companies competed for his services.. and, interestingly, i was talking last week to a singaporean businessman, who sells equipment that he buys from both italy and china.
Absolutely so true!
In my field, I am more and more seeing skills that now have to be licensed , which 30 years ago were hardly even classed as a skill:
- the two that immediately come to mind are driving a forklift and operating a truck-mounted crane (Hiab or similar).
( not to mention no setting foot on a construction site without a generic construction industry induction - the Queensland "Blue Card" or similar. Like so many things, this course can only be completed on line, making computer literacy essential even for a builder's labourer).
Those skills used to be learned (typically) while working on a farm, after which you obtained a generic drivers licence that allowed you to drive anything on wheels that wasn't in the category of a motor bike, car, truck or bus. This licence only permitted you to drive such a machine along a public road - it said nothing about your ability to operate it. In fact, back in 1978, when I obtained my Heavy Special type licence, the traffic policeman who conducted the driving test specifically said that they were not concerned or not you could operate the machine.
Certainly, the days when you could operate a specific piece of mobile plant without first being fully trained and licensed to do so are long gone - and never to return!
Bill.
did jehovah's witnesses plagiarize hwa's false prophecy of 1975?.
http://livingarmstrongism.blogspot.com/2013/10/did-jehovahs-witnesses-plagiarize-hwas.html.
bangalore.
David17,
You have talk about the "stress" that the WTS put on Jesus' words in Matt 24:36.
The Watchtower of August 15 1968 had this cautionary statement to make about that particular bible verse:
"This is not the time to be toying with the words of Jesus that "concerning that day and hour nobody knows" (Matt 24:36)
So, yes, you are correct in that the WTS did cite those remarks of Jesus:
- however, these weren't always cited in the same manner as you and other JW apologists would have us believe!
Bill.
(PS: Being an avid reader of everything printed by the WTS during those years, I can remember all that like it was yesterday)