"Really, they have files on murder?"
Sure they do. Just take a read of this letter Watchtower sent to a body of elders . . .
http://watchtowerdocuments.org/wp-content/uploads/2014/08/lopez-11exhibit-8-to-dec-of-copley-iso-opp-to-plnts-mfs.pdf.
did any of you guys sit down and read this??
it's long but i assure you it's a great read.. .
"Really, they have files on murder?"
Sure they do. Just take a read of this letter Watchtower sent to a body of elders . . .
i know this is going to come up in a conversation shortly, how would you respond to this?
i've had it said to me before, specifically about health, one week wine/eggs/milk/axle grease is good for you, next week it's not..
I did an OP some time ago contrasting the wisdom of the scientific community with the folly of the religious community:
"Jesus prayed that all his followers be united as one. But we see christianity divided into thousands of denominations. This division is partly due to the fact that the book that christianity claims is the truth, the inspired word of a supremely wise God, was not written in a sufficiently unambiguous manner as to make its one true meaning indisputably clear throughout.
By contrast take a field of science - say physics. How many different brands/versions/sects/denominations of physics are there? One! Barring respectful differences of opinion among physicists on matters not yet clearly understood, the field of physics is united. Physicists don't go off forming their own 'church' of followers resulting in different denominations of physics being taught in schools. Physicists the world over are united on all the major teachings of the field that have been established though experimentation. What the universe reveals through testing and experimentation is unambiguous, provable, repeatable, demonstrably true. Are we to believe the same God who created this universe and its consistent, unambiguous laws was unable to also inspire a book whose meaning is similarly clear and unabiguous throughout?
Christianity condemns doubt and scrutiny of its teachings as a show of lack of faith and as trying to destroy the faith of others. Often, a christian who openly exposes a teaching of his church as being in error is branded as divisive and expelled - sometimes even shunned, as ex-JWs can attest to. Christianity claims to be about seeking truth but its behavior reveals that its leaders are really about maintaining their power and their traditions. Christianity's inflexible and unreasonable demand of unquestioning conformity to tradition - even those not explicitly taught in scripture - often results in friction and conflict that leads to honest-hearted truth seekers being expelled and going off to form their own denomination, thus compounding the division in christianity.
By contrast, science welcomes doubt and scrutiny of its theories. Working to disprove a theory is seen as a good thing. It is precisely because of such scrutiny that scientific knowledge has increased and been refined. The scrutiny inherent in the scientific process serves to filter truth from error. Science does not condemn scrutiny of its theories - it feeds on it and grows as a result - because science is genuinely about seeking truth - not preserving the power of a particular leader or organization. Scientists respectfully have different hypotheses on matters not yet clearly understood or proven one way or the other. They don't let let their differening views on such matters divide them into different denominations that condemn each other.
Christianity seeks to unite followers through obedience to an ecclesiastical authority of one kind or another. Many christian denominations claim that without such centralized authority or organization there would be division and God's will (such as having the good news preached in all the inhabited earth) could not be successfully accomplished. The top down approach is employed where teachings flow from the central authority down to the followers. The irony is that such authorities are the ones that often foment divisions.
By contrast, science has no one central hierarchy demanding adherence to its theories. What unites scientists is truth itself. When a hypothesis is demonstrated through experimentation to be true, scientists the world over can't help but be united in agreement based on the hard facts proven through math and experimentation. This isn't to say that there aren't authorities in the field of science. There are multiple universites and other bodies that set standards and rules for research etc. But there is no one central body that seeks to impose its theories on others by pulling rank. There is no 'faithful and discreet experimenter' appointed to give hypotheses in due season which must be accepted by all without question. There is no magisterium. Knowledge flows from the bottom up - from individual scientists and researchers who prove their hypothesis to the universities and other bodies that publish them.
I find these stark contrasts between science and christianity to be very revealing. Didn't Jesus say that wisdom is proved righteous by its works? So compare the fruitage of science re unity and getting at the truth with the fruitage of christianity. How is it that christianity - a system professing belief in an allwise God of order - can be so divided, whereas another system that professes no belief in God can be so united? For me this comparison reveals exactly who is in error and stupidity and who is in truth and prudence. Science puts christianity to shame!"
i know this is going to come up in a conversation shortly, how would you respond to this?
i've had it said to me before, specifically about health, one week wine/eggs/milk/axle grease is good for you, next week it's not..
Disposable, that statement is so something that an elder I know would say. LOL.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nnoslbdatzc.
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https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nnoslbdatzc.
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[DUPLICATE POST]
for one thing, i cant get past genesis, but no matter.. when god told adam and eve if you eat from the tree youll die.
so why did he not simple let them die and not allow the offspring to?.
you see, if i was a god, and i told two people that, id let them die , .
"This snake could talk, but possibly all snakes could, at least before they were cursed"
And they evidently had legs too, which they only lost after they were cursed.
It is clear that the Genesis account was designed to provide answers to questions that ancient people thought about. Questions like:
~ Why do women have painful childbirth?
~ Why do men subjugate women?
~ Why do people grow old and die?
~ Why do men have one less rib than women?
~ Why do snakes crawl on their belly instead of having legs?
~ Why are people ashamed of their nakedness and wear clothes?
~ Why do rainbows appear in rainclouds?
~ Why do people speak different languages?
This kind of literature that seeks to provide mythical answers to the origins of certain phenomena is not unique to Genesis. This kind of writing is found throughout the ancient world.
hey guys, here's something to think about.
in my country there's a small town of a few thousands people were most people are jws.
can you image what's like living there?
The movie Pleasantville comes to mind.
hey guys, here's something to think about.
in my country there's a small town of a few thousands people were most people are jws.
can you image what's like living there?
The movie Pleasantville comes to mind.
or for that matter at all, from my perspective ,.
the only place in the bible that there is a mentioning of reading something [in an undertone day and night] [that i can find].
is in the hebrew scritures.
I wouldn't say christians aren't to read the bible at all.
2 Timothy 3:15,16 makes the point that the bible makes one wise for salvation and fully equips one. So a bible-believing christians would not want to omit to read the bible.
2 Peter 3:2 admonishes christians to remember what was previously spoken by the prophets as well as Jesus' commands given through the apostles. A christian would certainly want to refresh his memory on these matters by reading them in the bible periodically.
James 1:22-25 stresses the need to diligently apply what God's word says. That would certainly mean having to "peer into it" or study it. So there is no getting around the fact that christians ought to read - no, study - the bible.
But you would notice that James 1 talks about "hearing" the word of God and not "reading" it. I think the reason for this, and the reason for the absence of statements explicitly telling christians to "read" the bible, has to do with the fact that there were relatively few complete copies of the bible back then. Or, to put it another way, the average christian did not have a personal copy of the bible. That was a time before the invention of mass-printing and all copies of the bible had to be reproduced by hand - a time-consuming and expensive task. Thus only the religous leaders and some wealthy individuals had personal copies of the scriptures in their entirety. So the people depended on the religous leaders to read the scriptures to them at their weekly visit to the temple or synagogue. The situation was likely similar for early christians of the first century. They probably had a communal bible that was read from at congregation meetings. Few christians would have had personal copies. This is why Timothy was exhorted to apply himself to public reading at 1 Timothy 4:13; and this is why James 1:22 talks about hearing the word God. I'm saying all of this to say that the absence of explicit statement telling christians to read the bible is owing to the logistical reality of the times when personal copies of the bible were the exception. It's not owing to the reading of the bible being unnecessary (for they did have to "read" it with their ears when they attended meetings).
Having said all of that, I think that JWs take an almost superstitious view of the importance of reading the bible daily. Unless you're an ancient king or judge who has to be ever on guard as to what the law says, you probably don't need to read the bible daily. JWs see reading the bible as a spiritual end in and of itself and read the bible for the sake of reading it, as if the mere act of reading the bible makes them holy or righteous in God's eyes. There is the goal of reading the whole bible in a year by reading so many chapters a day. Is that really a worthy goal? Is it wise to read all the bible in a year just so you can claim to have read all the bible? So you see it becomes all about accomplishing a feat and reading the bible becomes an end in and of itself instead of the means to an end. Reading the bible becomes a legalistic religious work to make one feel righteous - all while they are distracted from what should be the ultimate reason and benefit from reading the bible. So JWs have a similar attitude to completing chapters in the bible as they have to counting hours in the ministry.
http://watchtowerdocuments.org/wp-content/uploads/2014/08/lopez-11exhibit-8-to-dec-of-copley-iso-opp-to-plnts-mfs.pdf.
did any of you guys sit down and read this??
it's long but i assure you it's a great read.. .
Marked