BLOOD BAN BOMBSHELL summer 2006

by DannyHaszard 20 Replies latest watchtower medical

  • Christian Peper
    Christian Peper
    (2) Since the Jehovah's Witnesses ultimate sacrilege has been modified,and parts or fractions of a forbidden substance are now permitted... Would it now be permissible to have sexual activity fractions as long as whole copulation intercourse is abstained?

    Maybe by educating the public about how this cult causes sexual dysfunction there could be some results. I think in the “combating cult mind control” book this was touched on but it seems it is not really focused on by counter cult educators.

  • parakeet
    parakeet

    ***Already poised and a good student, the young woman plans to enroll in the Cuyahoga Community College registered-nurse program***
    Wouldn't you love to get her as a nurse? There you are, bleeding on a table in the ER. The doctor orders a transfusion. Already poised, the young nurse says to the doctor, "I'm sorry, doctor, but as a Jehovah's Witness, I can't in good conscience follow your order. Let me explain ........"

  • mkr32208
    mkr32208

    Would it now be permissible to have sexual activity fractions as long as whole copulation intercourse is abstained?
    Now THAT is a good idea danny! I'm trying that line on the next two sexually frustrated 19 year old pioneers who knock on my door!

  • DannyHaszard
    DannyHaszard
    August 5 2006
    Jehovah's Witnesses find dedication to the faith defines their lives

    CLEVELAND -- D.C. Jones vividly remembers being dunked underwater 53 years ago. And Darcell Williams says her immersion in a portable pool last month was an experience she, too, will not forget. They're Jehovah's Witnesses recalling the key symbolic ...

    • Alexandria Daily Town Talk
    • 4 hours ago
    Jehovah's Witnesses find dedication to the faith defines their lives
    By Frank Bentayou
    Religion News Service
    CLEVELAND -- D.C. Jones vividly remembers being dunked underwater 53 years ago. And Darcell Williams says her immersion in a portable pool last month was an experience she, too, will not forget. They're Jehovah's Witnesses recalling the key symbolic experience in their spiritual lives -- their baptism.

    A single message emerges: Theirs is a faith that demands what most Americans would consider great personal sacrifice. Jones, 88, says that since his baptism in 1953, when he was 35, he has sought to "read the Bible at least one hour every day" and to "witness to others" whenever he has the opportunity. And 17-year-old Darcell, a recent high school graduate, said she can imagine nothing more important in her life than the mission of a Witness. That duty, she says, is to communicate -- to as many people as possible -- her belief that the Bible provides answers to many of life's questions. Sometimes the answers Witnesses find put them dramatically at odds with mainstream society. A widely known example is how, historically, most members rejected blood transfusions, even when doing so meant risking life. The church has clarified its stance -- members now may receive certain blood products (instead of whole blood). Despite the recent interpretation regarding blood, Jones maintains that he and most Jehovah's Witnesses believe the Bible -- and its informed study -- can yield "all that we need to know in life." Indeed, Jehovah's Witnesses -- 6.6 million worldwide, including a little more than 1 million in the United States -- dedicate what others consider free time to studying the Bible and taking its messages of salvation and hope to nonmembers in their communities. That includes strangers members may approach on the street or in their homes. "We don't just belong to a church. We go out from our homes and Kingdom Halls (the religion's worship and meeting centers) and 'make disciples of all the nations,'" Witness Jim Roach said, quoting Matthew 28:19 in the New Testament. At a recent gathering of members -- and across a gulf of 71 years of age difference -- Jones and Darcell shared their feelings and experiences regarding their commitment to their religion. Jones, dapper, focused and hardworking, dedicates 70 hours a month to the person-to-person ministry for which his denomination is known. Often working with fellow Witnesses, he knocks on doors in his neighborhood and others in Cleveland and its suburbs. Before retiring, Jones worked as a letter carrier, and he remains fit enough to keep active in what his church considers a 2,100-year-old tradition of face-to-face Christian evangelism. "We think of it as practicing the same approach Jesus and his apostles used," he says. For the past month, some 7,500 Witnesses from Ohio and neighboring states have been meeting each weekend in an arena at Cleveland State University to sing, read the Bible and baptize new members. "We consider baptism a very public display of our faith and commitment," says Roach, spokesman for the district committee. The denomination's meetings, he emphasizes, "are freely open to anyone. We don't turn anybody away." Kingdom Halls, too, invite nonmembers to Bible discussions and lectures. Jones, a Georgia native, settled in Cleveland in 1945 after serving in the South Pacific during World War II. He had grown up a Baptist. When he began working here, he started looking for "some enlightenment from the Scriptures," he says. He remembers hearing other Christians tell him that they had been hopeless sinners before turning to God for salvation, and without that they would be doomed to an eternity in hell. Jones says he wondered why "a loving God would take his highest creation -- which man is supposed to be" -- and condemn all to damnation "if they didn't get the word." He began attending a Kingdom Hall "because the Jehovah's Witnesses had this message of a loving God. That's one of the things I liked." Joining the denomination required him to study the Bible with others and consider the depth of his commitment. More than seven years passed before he felt ready to be baptized. Roach explains that such a protracted period between introduction and baptism is the norm. "People who come to us," he says, "take up a personal study of the Bible" and consider how they will conduct their own evangelism once they are members. To carry the religious message, Jehovah's Witnesses must learn to overcome any reticence. Congregations hold weekly meetings where experienced Witnesses help newer members structure their messages, engage outsiders and practice courtesy and clear, convincing delivery. Many Witnesses attend special training sessions that help them overcome any unease they have about knocking on doors, with the denomination's Watchtower and Awake publications in hand, to address people about their own acceptance of the church's doctrines and, especially, to urge them to study the Bible. "These sessions help them learn how to approach people and communicate their messages, how to witness to strangers," Roach says. Darcell plans to continue the training she already has begun because, she says, "I want to help spread the word of Jehovah." Already poised and a good student, the young woman plans to enroll in a community college nursing program this fall. "It (college) may take me a little longer," she says, "because I want to become a pioneer." A pioneer, one of the three levels of ministry within the denomination, requires further Bible study and learning more about how to witness effectively to others. Darcell will attend her pioneer sessions to learn evangelism techniques, often through role-playing exercises with more experienced church members and elders, who then critique the efforts and suggest changes in substance, delivery or style. Most of the teaching and sharing of traditions falls to elders. Jehovah's Witnesses don't organize their congregations around an official clergy. "We're all clergy, in a way," Darcell says. -------------

    Quote above article-"..A single message emerges: Theirs is a faith that demands what most Americans would consider great personal sacrifice ...
    Reference Eight Marks of a deadly Mind Control Cult applied to Jehovah's Witnesses

    # 5 The "Sacred Science"

    The cult's ideology becomes the ultimate moral vision for the ordering of human existence. The ideology is too "sacred" to call into question, and a reverence is demanded for the leadership. The cult's ideology makes an exaggerated claim for possessing airtight logic, making it appear as absolute truth with no contradictions. Such an attractive system offers security.

    # 7 Doctrine Over Person

    Human experience is subordinated to doctrine, no matter how profound or contradictory such experiences seem. The history of the cult is altered to fit their doctrinal logic. The person is only valuable insomuch as they conform to the role models of the cult. Commonsense perceptions are disregarded if they are hostile to the cult's ideology.

  • Madame Quixote
    Madame Quixote
    (2) Since the Jehovah's Witnesses ultimate sacrilege has been modified,and parts or fractions of a forbidden substance are now permitted... Would it now be permissible to have sexual activity fractions as long as whole copulation intercourse is abstained?

    Danny - If the chair I was sitting in did not have arms, I would have fallen out of it laughing; alas, I was so busy practicing sexual fractions (masturbating) that I would have cracked my skull. Instead I've cracked my ribs and I'm still laughing.

  • Blueblades
    Blueblades

    Danny, have you read David Reed's book "Blood On The Altar". Lots of sad stories here. The deaths of the innocents is detailed in his book.

    Blueblades

  • hawkaw
    hawkaw

    Witnesses are also allowed to take multilple plasma fractions (instead of individually) at the same time as well.

    Stupid.

  • BlackSwan of Memphis
    BlackSwan of Memphis

    wasn't there a recent W article regarding the blood issue?
    Maybe within the last month or two?
    If so, is there a link for that?
    thx ahead of time
    BSoM

  • Swamboozled
    Swamboozled

    I love it that they are flip-flopping like this again. I was talking to my mother in-law (JDub) about all of the flip-flopping on issues like vaccinations and organ transplants. She says it's new light, I say it's bullsh** especially to the mother that lost her child to some preventable desease or because of an organ failing that could have been saved with a transplant. I told her to think about if she were the person who lost a loved one days or even weeks before this "new light". Hopefully that got her thinking, and then she'll see this new info.

  • hawkaw
    hawkaw

    I also believe "new light" is suppose to "tact" or in other words still go forward.

    When it came to organ tranplants, vaccines and other blood products there were 180 degree reversals.

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