Thank you, Outlaw. I can rest easy now. (Especially the "65% less fat" thing. That means I'm gonna look better than everyone else up there.)
David_Jay
JoinedPosts by David_Jay
-
27
If a person is transgender and gets saved what will they go to heaven as?
by Nikorasu95 ini know this is a stupid question because the answer is obvious, but if a person was born a male and gets transgender surgery to turn into female will that person go to heaven as a male or female if they died saved?
i think they will go to heaven with the gender they were born with.
-
-
27
If a person is transgender and gets saved what will they go to heaven as?
by Nikorasu95 ini know this is a stupid question because the answer is obvious, but if a person was born a male and gets transgender surgery to turn into female will that person go to heaven as a male or female if they died saved?
i think they will go to heaven with the gender they were born with.
-
David_Jay
Outlaw,
I'm somewhat inclined to believe whatever you post (mainly because you use pictures, and everyone knows that "seeing is believing").
But is this applicable to Jews too? Usually breakfast sausage is not kosher since it is made of pork. Therefore if a Jew ends up as breakfast sausage in the afterlife, doesn't that mean we are in Hell?
Or were you speaking more from a Soylent Green perspective?
-
27
If a person is transgender and gets saved what will they go to heaven as?
by Nikorasu95 ini know this is a stupid question because the answer is obvious, but if a person was born a male and gets transgender surgery to turn into female will that person go to heaven as a male or female if they died saved?
i think they will go to heaven with the gender they were born with.
-
David_Jay
I find it amusing that people give definitive answers one way or another, whether they are religious and believe in a heavenly afterlife or they are not religious and have no such conviction.
My questions are why does one ask such a thing? Do they really believe someone has an answer that can be verified and represents actual facts? Who on the planet has such knowledge?
Second, regardless of what one's personal convictions are, religious or not, how can you be so sure that your answer is 100% correct? How was your position verified? Who were the disinterested parties that did this? Is your answer already shared by theologians or top scientists?
Pardon me if I sound insulting. I don't mean to be. I actually think this is the right way to do this. I fully believe in asking questions and that opinions, no matter who they are from, matter. But at the same time I find the process curious, especially when someone is asking about things no one can verify one way or the other.
In the end, why are some people often not comfortable with forming their own personal views on a matter and then keeping it to themselves? Do we need a "pat on the shoulder" to make us feel comfortable with what we hold stake in? And then why do many people give answers that they have a personal investment in, representing their personal views, and not something more objective--perhaps for "truth's sake"?
I might as well ask people here what my favorite flavor of Jell-O is. At least we know that sooner or later someone should come up with the correct answer. This other question and the answers--it may be fun, but...
-
14
Asking a Jew about the Name "Jehovah"
by David_Jay injehovah's witnesses...that's the trademark of the religion, the use of the name "jehovah.
" if there is anything jws and non-jws can agree on is that this one thing sets them apart from everybody else.. i have only had witnesses come to my door less than five times since i left in the 1990s.
i guess they don't work the territory i live in often, or perhaps after that first time (which was still after the year 2000) they have marked the words "jew who knows a lot" or something in their notes on my address.
-
David_Jay
Dropoffyourkeylee asked:
D J, are therediffering views on this Among Jews, Orthoodox, Reformed, etc?
This is a difficult question to reply to, but not because the answer is difficult or complicated. It is often because the person asking it is only used to the Christian paradigm of religious thought.
Judaism is a religion of practice, not of belief or faith. This is the opposite of Christianity where belief in doctrines and continued faith in them is the cornerstone. Denominations in Christianity are separated by differences in belief.
Differences in Jewish denominations are separated by differences in practice. An Orthodox Jew may often have the same view as a member of Reform Judaism. The differences between an Orthodox Jew and a Reform Jew are how they approach the view they share in common and how they respond to it. Get it?
Also, denominations were caused by different situations that certain Jews living in certain parts of the world were experiencing. Orthodox Judaism appeals mainly to Ashkenazi Jews of European ancestry, while Conservative Judaism was once the mainstay of middle-American Jews. Reform Judaism came from 19th-century Germany, during a time that the modern world was influencing Jews to make bridges between religious practice and humanistic thinking.
Today, with the Internet and the awakening of some 10,000 Sephardic Bnei Anusim (Crypto-Jews or descendants of the Jews who were expelled from Spain at the climax of the Spanish Inquisition), post-denominational/post-rabbinical Judaism is becoming the main movement. The three major branches of Judaism you mentioned are all generally Ashkenazi in custom, but the majority of Jews are now Sephardi (Middle-Eastern Mizrahi Jews or Israeli are also considered Sephardic). These European and American styles of worship do not meet the needs of a new generation of Jews in Israel, America, and especially non-Caucasian groups that have customs that differ greatly from the Ashkenazi of Europe. So the present generation is ignoring the denominational lines and picking and choosing what works best for them. They often refer to themselves as "just Jewish."
This does imply what you may be thinking now: views differ not so much between denominations as they do between individual Jews. And you are right. But what a Jew personally believes has little to do with being Jewish. Judaism is what you do, not what you believe. Your beliefs will influence how you practice Judaism, but that has always been true. Judaism is about the personal wrestling with God and finding ways to interpret Torah in order to bring about Tikkun Olam, or bring genuine, practical healing into the world.
So expect differing views from Jew to Jew. But there is a general basis they work from, therefore it is often a struggle to compose a very brief reply to some questions. Wasanelder Once is not wrong that the result can be longer than expected. I often have to make sure the non-Jewish reader is not projecting their Christian or Western understanding upon the answer, and even with repeated effort it often doesn't work.
In other words, for example, your question is a good one but it wouldn't be asked by a Jew. We naturally go around expecting no one to have our exact views or experience with God among ourselves. What we view or believe (or don't believe) is also sometimes disconnected with what we choose to practice too (which can be very difficult to explain to the Western/Christian mind), so my apologies if the replies are long. It is a struggle even from my end.
-
14
“Winning the Battle for Your Mind”
by SAHS in“winning the battle for your mind.” that is the title of an article in the latest watchtower magazine, of july 2017, pages 27-30. wow, how ironic!
here is the direct link:.
https://wol.jw.org/en/wol/d/r1/lp-e/2017488.
-
David_Jay
The opening words of the article are correct.
The only thing it doesn't actually tell you is that the Governing Body is the one attacking minds with propaganda. If you read the article with this in mind, then it's quite correct.
Just because you call your food "manna from heaven," it doesn't mean you're not eating sh#t. A rose by any other name...
-
29
why does no one ask questions ?
by midnight ini always felt bad for asking questions , did anyone else ?
what question did you ask or want to ask but feel it was wrong ?
mine was regarding the circuit assembly and the amount defecit anounced .. also 1975 i got a stern reply too when i was studying in the 90,s.
-
David_Jay
I ALWAYS asked questions. It's the answers that were in short supply. Every time I would a question that had never been answered in print by the Society, all I would get back in return were the stares of ignorance. The Witnesses are no better than parrots. They can only "talk" when they've heard an "answer" fed to them repeatedly.
What we should be asking is: Why don't Jehovah's Witnesses have real answers?
-
62
Would You EVER Go Back To Being A Jehovah's Witness?
by minimus ini could never understand why some people who know the truth about the "truth" ever go back.
once you understand all the hypocrisy and negatives, i would think it's almost impossible to go back!.
-
David_Jay
I freely and happily left of my own accord. Go back? Why?
-
14
Asking a Jew about the Name "Jehovah"
by David_Jay injehovah's witnesses...that's the trademark of the religion, the use of the name "jehovah.
" if there is anything jws and non-jws can agree on is that this one thing sets them apart from everybody else.. i have only had witnesses come to my door less than five times since i left in the 1990s.
i guess they don't work the territory i live in often, or perhaps after that first time (which was still after the year 2000) they have marked the words "jew who knows a lot" or something in their notes on my address.
-
David_Jay
Jehovah's Witnesses...That's the trademark of the religion, the use of the name "Jehovah." If there is anything JWs and non-JWs can agree on is that this one thing sets them apart from everybody else.
I have only had Witnesses come to my door less than five times since I left in the 1990s. I guess they don't work the territory I live in often, or perhaps after that first time (which was still after the year 2000) they have marked the words "JEW WHO KNOWS A LOT" or something in their notes on my address. I've never told any of them I have been a Witness nor has any one of them guessed. But none of them leave quite the same, mainly because of asking about the name "Jehovah."
Since I've joined this forum, I have received several private messages requesting I answer some questions about the Divine Name. These questions have been similar to the ones I got asked by Witnesses who came to me door. So with the permission of those who have sent me PMs, I have limited the most frequently questions I get asked about God's Name down to four. They might inspire some new ones, so feel free to ask, but keep in mind I am only presenting the general ideas of Judaism here and how they relate to claims made about Jehovah's Witnesses. For more in-depth information about Judaism in general, I recommend My Jewish Learning, a website that will give you a good overview of the various views of Jewish practice.
The four questions are:
- How do Jews regard the Tetragrammaton? Do they see it as a personal name of God?
- Is the Watchtower explanation correct, namely that Jews avoid pronouncing the name due to a superstition? What is this superstition?
- Has Christendom tried to suppress the pronunciation of God’s name as Jehovah’s Witnesses claim?
- Are the Hebrew names for God indicative of theories that the Jews worshipped other deities and then merely applied their names to their current monotheistic concept?
How do Jews regard the Tetragrammaton? Do they see it as a personal name of God?
Unlike what Jehovah’s Witnesses teach, Jews see all the words that they use in their language (such as "God," "Lord," etc.) as “names” for the God of Abraham. As for the Tetragrammaton, what Jews call the Shem Ha-M’forash, it is seen as a self-designation. It’s also a name, but in some respects an “anti-name.”
In the ancient Mesopotamian world, bestowing a name upon something implied you had power over it. The Hebrew word shem actually means “handle” or even “reigns” or “leash,” items used to control or maneuver other things. While the other names for God seem to have been borrowed language from the world the ancient Hebrews lived in, the Shem Ha-M’forash is understood as a revelation. Instead of it being a name the Jews gave God, it explains the way Jews experienced God. God is “Self-designating,” not the other way around.
The “I am what I am” definition so familiar to most Christians is really another way of saying, “I am defined by myself, by what I am. I am not defined by you. Instead, you are defined by me.”
As such it isn't so much of a “handle” as it is the opposite of such. It is God’s “name,” for lack of a better word in English, but it’s not really a name since such implies control over the one so “named.”
Is the Watchtower explanation correct, namely that Jews avoid pronouncing the name due to a superstition? What is this superstition?
No, Jehovah’s Witnesses are not correct when they say Jews have a superstition that keeps them from pronouncing the Shem Ha-M’forash. We don’t pronounce it for two very good reasons.
Jews treat holy things different from mundane things. Just as the Ark of the Covenant was not to be touched and its contents not to be viewed, the Shem Ha-M’forash is not to be pronounced. Mundane names can be used often, just like mundane objects can be used and approached by all. But holy things in the Jewish world are treated in a fashion that separates them from the regular, everyday mundane world. The Self-designation of God is far holier than other names, thus Jews don’t speak it. We often use other names of God, such as Adonai as substitutes.
No one knows for sure how it was pronounced or if it was ever pronounced to begin with. While there are possible ways of attempting to reconstruct the way the Shem Ha-M’forash sounded, there is also evidence to suggest it was meant to remain ineffable. The words “Yahweh” and “Jehovah” were constructed by Christians, not Jews, and therefore these terms have no meaning for us.
Has Christendom tried to suppress the pronunciation of God’s name as Jehovah’s Witnesses claim?
The opposite is true. “Jehovah” comes from Catholicism’s attempt to reconstruct the name. “Yahweh” is a more ecumenical Christian attempt at reconstruction, but it was again the Roman Catholic Church that has made it popular after Vatican II. It was once, in either or both forms, the mainstay of many Baptist and Catholic prayers and hymns.
However, due to the official, ongoing Jewish-Christian dialogue (wherein the Catholic Church is the major player on the Christian side), the use of the name had been dropped from Catholic and most Protestant liturgies by the dawn of the 21st century. The reason is that the idea that “a Jewish superstition” kept the Jews from pronouncing it was discovered to have no basis (with some evidence suggesting this claim came from anti-Semitic propaganda). Theologians of Christianity today side with the Jewish understanding of the Ineffable Name of God as proper, so much so that many churches, including those of the Catholic Church have removed the words “Jehovah” and “Yahweh” from all hymnals and prayer books. The upcoming third revision of the Jerusalem Bible, a Catholic Bible well-known for using “Yahweh” throughout, will have “Lord” or “God” in capital letters as a substitute for the Shem Ha-M’forash in its upcoming version.Are the Hebrew names for God indicative of theories that the Jews worshipped other deities and then merely applied their names to their current monotheistic concept?
There are hypothetical paradigms created by some which data suggests might support such a view, but they are not at the stage of theory yet.
While it is true that the Jews also worshipped the gods of the nations around them (even the Bible admits this repeatedly), and it is understood even by Jews that we borrowed words from other deities to describe ours (such as the word El), critical analysis reveals a competition of God-concepts and not a single line of evolution from one god to another.
This doesn't mean that the various hypothetical paradigms have no weight, but they do seem to be reconstructions of what current critical theories teach. Currently it appears that the Jewish claim that monotheism was unique and won-out in co-existence with these other Mesopotamian deities matches what disinterested academia can decipher.
Still the other hypothetical models wouldn't change much of anything for Judaism. The monotheistic concept of the Jews itself has greatly evolved over millennia, so much so that it no longer completely matches with the written Biblical views. Christianity cherishes the static view of God found in Scripture, but Jews use it as a sounding and diving board by which they move forward. And unlike Jehovah’s Witnesses who believe the Bible is the basis for Judeo-Christian religion, Jews see their religion and culture as the basis for the Bible. Therefore what it offers can only be a static view of God from the ancient past, frozen in the time it was composed and limited by the views the ancient theologians had so many thousands of years ago.
-
17
Is a born-in brought up in a JW home like being a child inmate being raised in prison?
by Still Totally ADD ini bring up this subject because of all the restrictions children have to endure in the jw cult.
they are made prisoners of mind and body.
being forced to do things that are not natural for children to do.
-
David_Jay
This may have to do more with what your parents were like, and not necessarily if you were raised by Jehovah's Witnesses.
I was originally raised by non-religious parents of Jewish ancestry. Besides for a few cultural earmarks, there was little religion. We were a wealthy family, with all the material things you can imagine. My parents celebrated Christmas and Halloween and birthdays (things you don't always find in a every Jewish home). My grandparents gave me what little teaching in Jewish ways as they could, and their influence was great, but the home my parents raised me in was very different.
My parents were also abusive. I had to be rescued and separated from my parents who put my life in physical danger repeatedly since infancy. I have both emotional and physical scars from the little over 10 years I was with them.
My aunt (of no blood relation) raised me after that. She was a Jehovah's Witness. She was kind, loving, caring, thoughtful, honest and dependable. She went to every meeting, assembly and convention, and was even a regular pioneer for some time. I went along to every meeting as well and out in service regularly. I didn't have what I had grown up with materially and had no Christmas or birthday celebrations anymore, but I also had peace, love, and no more abuse at home.
So it depends. The way my aunt practiced her religion was very orderly and exemplary, and this included how she treated me and her children, my cousins. It was a loving home, and from what I saw even then a lot better than even others had it who were also JWs. Some of them had what some here are describing.
And that is because abusive parents come in all denominations (and even without being religious, like mine). So some born into the religion experienced the Watchtower through an abusive environment. Others did not. But just as not all non-religious parents are abusers like my non-religious parents, not all JW families were the same either.
Being raised in a religious home can be abusive IF the parents use the religion as one of their tools of abuse. I've seen this in Catholic and Jewish and Mormon and JW homes. But my parents once beat me with a toy, and that doesn't mean that all children who are given toys will experience being bruised and bloodied by them as I was.
We can all be so greatly limited by our personal experience with the Witnesses that we often cannot see that our own view of Witness life may be unique. If you were abused growing up, you might want to blame the religion before you blame your parents. Being an adult survivor of child abuse, I see this all the time.
If you had an abusive childhood it is because you had abusive parents. A religion can play a part, true, but it can't raise you irresponsibly. Parents can however, and do. A religion can make demands and tell a parent to treat their child one way, and the parent can always say, "No." My aunt did this several times. In the 1970s she made sure all her kids were immunized and took medications when they needed it. She was a nurse, but the Witnesses sometimes frowned on medicine back then (just see the old "Youth" book from my era). My aunt had no problem putting elders and other mothers in their place when they challenged her on this.
If your JW parents did everything by the book, then you may have received some religious abuse that way. But your parents had the option of being brave like my aunt and saying "no." So it all can't be blamed on the religion. My aunt is a second-generation JW too, and she knew the difference between good parenting and going along with the Watchtower blindly.
I was abused by non-religious parents. You may have been abused by religious parents. The constant here? Abusive parents.
Besides, Jewish kids grow up without Christmas, some without birthday celebrations, and some with strict religious-adhering parents...and I know many like this, none of whom claim it was abuse.
Child abuse knows no religion. It comes from people who abuse children, period. So again if you were abused growing up, the Watchtower might have had some fault in it, but you need to take a hard and honest look at your parents too.
-
40
Is there truth in religion
by bola ini am asking this questions due to the teachings, beliefs and practices of different religions..
-
David_Jay
Judaism does not teach that "eternal rest" is guaranteed only to those who practice Judaism.
For instance, when asked if Jews think their religion is the right one, the answer is usually: "For whom?"
Unlike what many of us may be familiar with due to our exposure to Jehovah's Witnesses, Judaism does not agree that religion has an exclusive on truth. At the same time, it neither promotes others to join Judaism nor any religion for that matter. It also promotes no search for ultimate truth or gives "truth" of any type a salvific quality.
Jews see their cultural response to their concept of God as "their religion," but at the same time do not teach that it is the way for others who are not of Jewish origin.
Spiritual and secular paths other than Judaism are fully valid and can be beneficial as long as they conform to the seven basic laws of all humanity, often referred to as the seven Noahide Laws: do not serve idols, do not curse the God of Abraham, do not murder, do not pervert sexuality or blatantly live outside the sexual mores of society, do not steal, live justly, and treat all animals mercifully.
One need not worship the Jewish God or even acknowledge God, so religion is not necessary for those outside of a covenant relationship with the Creator. If there are ultimate truths or axioms, discovering and holding these guarantees no salvation of any type.
If there is a World to Come in which an eternity of bliss awaits, it is open to all who are just, not just Jews. The idea of "truth," however is therefore separate and, again, not a requisite. If there is truth anywhere, it might be found in some religions as well as outside of religion in general. But knowing the truth about anything is very different from being honest, honorable, and just.