Generation Teaching - Everyone is speechless?

by Red Piller 443 Replies latest jw friends

  • sabastious
    sabastious

    Nice DJ, I'm the one that lacks humility. All you do is condescend everyone on this forum... but Jesus condescended the pharisees so I guess your ok since we are scum apostates.

    You commentary to my last post was a token effort. You didn't address anything I said, you merely replied.

    Having an article entitled "1914 - The Generation That Will Not Pass Away" is a biblical prediction that ended up being false. I don't care if the article contains "coded" speculation, the conclusion FROM the speculations was a false prediction of the end of the world.

    Think of it this way:

    Jane is going to a drag strip to have some fun. John tells Jane that he has heard nothing but bad things about drag strips and has known a lot of people who have been involved in violence and revelry at them. He then decides to tell her that if she goes to this drag strip party she is going to be raped. Jane disregards John's speculative warning and ends up not getting raped and has the most fun of her life, turns out John was just spewing sterotypes.

    Did John make a false prediction? Was he in a position to make that prediction with such certainty? He didn't say she *might* get raped, he said she would.

    Now your point is that John (the Watchtower) didn't have all the facts and was just speculating while using absolute language (the Generation Teaching) about Jane's Fate (the Generation Prophecy).

    Your point would be a valid one if the Watchtower didn't enforce their position. I'll change the analogy a little bit to fit the Watchtower's stance on "current light."

    John says something terrible is going to befall Jane if she goes to the drag strip party. John also says that he is not going to be friends with Jane if she goes because John doesn't associate with people who go to drag strips.

    So John has a prejudice about drag strips and he is allowing it to affect his relationship with Jane. So it's not just a speculative prediction, it's an enforced position.

    Just like the 1914 generation teachings were not merely speculations, if they were held in such regard they would not have been taken so seriously.

    -Sab

  • sabastious
    sabastious

    @garyneal wrote:

    Where's Scholar?

    @undercoverwrote:

    Personally, I think he got a clue and [realized], despite his defense of 607, that he can't defend the WTS for their generation stupidity and he's regained his senses and is working his way through the early stages of fading from the organization. Of course, his ego won't let him come here and take his lumps, so he'll join back up under another name.

    I do not know @Scholar, but I do know the truth, and I can and am able to defend the year 607 BC as being the year when the temple in Jerusalem was destroyed, the same year when Nebuchadnezzar's appointee, Gedaliah, was assassinated, two months after Jerusalem's destruction, after which the 70-year desolation of Judah began to undergo fulfillment. Jehovah, by means of Jesus Christ, has committed to me and to all Jehovah's Witnesses the word of the reconciliation, so [..] my ego is ok with folks 'appraising me as being a subordinate of Christ and steward of the sacred secrets of God.' (2 Corinthians 5:19, 20; 1 Corinthians 4:1)

    @sabastious:

    DJ, you ask for "real" evidence of a prediction of the end of the world?

    I did, yes, real prediction of a real prediction.

    You quoted from a WT article entitled "1914, the generation that will not pass way."

    I did.

    You don't need to even go into the article to get the WT's clear prediction of the end of the world, you just need to know their doctrine.

    If that's how you learn, my judging a book by its cover or by drawing conclusions based on the pictures, ok. But my preference is reading.

    We all know the Witnesses believe the end of the world is coming and that we are in the End Times.

    True. This is what all Jehovah's Witnesses believe. Even if you should no longer be one of Jehovah's Witnesses, do you think that by your not believing that the end of the world is imminent that the word will not end?

    So when the Witnesses compose a persuasive essay called "1914 - the generation that will not pass way" they are giving their conclusion of the essay in the title.

    Oh, is that what we're doing? Ok.

    They are essentially saying that the generation of 1914 will not pass away before the end of the world, hence predicting the timespan of when the end of the world will happen: somewhere between 1914 and when the generation of that 1914 passes away.

    That's not what we're saying at all. What we're saying is that the end is so very close that there are just too many things in the Bible that would make it foolhardy for any one of us to treat them with disdain. The phrase, "the 1914 generation" was coined to represent those that were alive in 1914, and in 1984, it was said that the babies of that 1914 generation were 70 years or older. Do the math; this was a true statement. We prefaced these statements by saying "if Jesus used 'generation' in that sense and we apply it to 1914," then thus and so. We were not making any predictions; we were just speculating as to when the end of this system of things might occur.

    Which is why the WT is knee deep in semantics about the word "generation" because their original prediction fell flat on [its] face.

    If this is what you choose to believe, there is nothing that I can say that can dissuade you from holding such an opinion.

    There would be no need to alter the definition of Jesus "this generation" statement if their original prediction was still true. If it their prediction is not true and needs to be dramatically altered, then it is false. A false prediction of the end of the world it indeed is. It's that simple.

    Ok.

    I'd love for you to stand before God with these logical tomes of semantics and pretzel logic, he would laugh at you I would guess.

    No, Jehovah would laugh in derision over your lack of humility.

    @djeggnog wrote:

    If Jerusalem was destroyed in 587 BC, prove it without contradicting the Bible!

    @Joey Jo-Jo wrote:

    The thing is it doesn't contradict the bible, because it did occur 70 years of servitude not destruction, all the references in Jeremiah and Daniel point to 587BCE and 607BCE is impossible to [reconcile].

    @djeggnog wrote:

    The "good word" that Jehovah gave to Jeremiah was that He would turn his attention to His people after "the fulfilling of seventy years at Babylon," and I believe the land of Judah lay desolate just as Jehovah had foretold by the prophet Jeremiah "until the land had paid off its sabbaths ... to fulfill seventy years," whose prophecy Daniel recounts. (Jeremiah 29:10; 2 Chronicles 36:20, 21; Daniel 9:2) You are free to believe that this 70-year period began in 605 BC as do those who hold to the year 587 BC as the year when Nebuchadnezzar destroyed Jerusalem, knowing that historians all point to 539 BC as being the year when Babylon fell to the Persians, when Cyrus freed the Jewish exiles from captivity and let them return to Judah to rebuild the temple in Jerusalem.

    Now I realize, @Joey Jo-Jo, that you were repeating something you either heard or read somewhere without realizing what it was you were saying -- kinda like those folks that were caught up in the ruckus at Jesus' trial and shouted "Impale him!" without giving any thought whatsoever as to whether the man upon whom they were urging Pilate to condemn was deserving of death [(John 19:6)] -- because it isn't possible to find 70 years between 587 BC and 539 BC since you would be 22 years shy of fulfilling 70 years, but let me continue since, to be fair, you did mention the servitude of the Jewish exiles in Babylon.

    @Joey Jo-Jo wrote:

    DJ: I didn't elaborate because I didnt have much time, but putting words in my mouth is just childish, most of my reasoning comes from the book Insight Of The Scriptures and Gentile Times Reconsidered. Scripture proves that 587BCE was the date, without any secular dating (with the exception of 537BCE which is in harmony with also the WT teaching of 537BCE).

    It occurs to me that neither you nor @wasblind here in hindsight ought to have been given a copy of the Insight book nor the Reasoning book, because neither of you knew how these books were designed to be used. The Reasoning book, for example, is an aid, but not a Bible study aid. It was designed to be used to refresh our own recollection of Bible doctrines when such discussions should come up in our field ministry. Even if you weren't cognizant in discussing these doctrines, the book could be used to explain things that might be hard to explain by those publishers unfamiliar with the topic.

    On the other hand, the Insight book is like an encyclopedia that contains facts that can serve to help us to understand some of the things that the Bible mentions that are not necessarily doctrinal in content, but of historical interest or that we don't quite understand from our own study of the Bible. The Insight book specifically states that "[t]he objective of this publication is to help you to acquire insight on the Scriptures."

    I wont elaborate now but I will say that the Gentile rule began about 20 years before Jerusalem was destroyed because the bible spoke of 70 years of servitude (to the king) and not 70 years of exile. I will comment on what you posted in a later time.

    Feel free to elaborate later, but keep in mind that while the Bible does speak of 70 years of servitude to King Nebuchadnezzar, Jewish servitude didn't begin until Nebuchadnezzar's seventh regnal year in 618 BC. (Jeremiah 25:11) More importantly though, it was during Nebuchadnezzar's 18th regnal year in 607 BC when when Jerusalem was destroyed and Zedekiah, who had fled Jerusalem, was overtaken at Jericho, blinded and then led captive to Babylon.

    While Jeremiah 25:11 does speak of "these nations" being forced to serve King Nebuchadnezzar for "seventy years," but it was not until 607 BC that Judah began to lie desolate just as Jehovah had foretold would occur by His prophet Jeremiah, some 11 years after the servitude of "these nations" in the Syria-Palestine region had already begun in 618 BC. It was only then -- in 607 BC -- that "the fulfilling of seventy years at Babylon" by the Jews began, during which "the land [would pay] off its sabbaths ... to fulfill seventy years." (Jeremiah 29:10; 2 Chronicles 36:21)

    Scripture does not prove that 587BCE was the date when Jeremiah's prophecy regarding the 70 years of the Jewish exile in Babylon (2 Chronicles 36:21), nor is 587 BCE the date when the 70 years of servitude by the nations (Jeremiah 25:11) began either. Put another way, the reason you will be unable to reconcile 587 BC with 607 BC is because (1) these two dates cannot be reconciled with one another and (2) you are confusing Jeremiah's prophecy at Jeremiah 25:11 with Jeremiah's prophecy at 2 Chronicles 36:21. There are just three(3) other points I want to make here, and the first is this: @Alleymom is just like you, clueless. That's point #1.

    Whether you add an additional 20 years, which would take us back to 607 BC, you would still be completely overlooking the fact that 607 BC was not Nebuchadnezzar's accession year, but was his 18th regnal year, or don't you get that yet? If 607 was Nebuchadnezzar's 18th year, this means that he had already been king of Babylon since his victory over Pharoah Necho at Carchemish in 625 BC, or for an additional 18 years, or don't you get this? This being the case, you would essentially be saying that Babylon only ruled for 70 years, when the fact is that Babylon had been a world empire for 86 years until 539 BC, when Babylon fell to the Persians. That's point #2.

    Last point: You stated that "Scripture proves that 587BCE was the date, without any secular dating." My impulse is to ask you where in Scripture -- book, chapter and verse -- would one find this date, 587 BCE? But I'm not asking you this question. I know you can figure that out all by yourself, but I'm telling you so that there is no misunderstand: This was an unintelligent thing for you to say. Learn from me: I know what I'm talking about here.

    What I will say though is that there is this rock that was discovered in Baghdad, Iraq, back in 1879. This stone is called the "Nabonidus Chronicle." Maybe you've heard of it. In the event you have never heard of it, this particular stone document is of historic significance in that it memorializes the date when Babylon was captured by King Cyrus of Persia. Nebuchadnezzar was Nabonidus' father-in-law’s, and Nabonidus was Belshazzar's father, Nebuchadnezzar’s grandson, and Belshazzar is the one to whom Daniel refers at Daniel 5:22.

    According to "Assyrian and Babylonian Chronicles," pp. 109, 110, the Nabonidus Chronicle that is written in Babylonian cuneiform script states concerning the night of Babylon's fall that "[i]n the month of Tashritu, ... [t]he 16th day, Gobryas (Ugbaru), the governor of Gutium and the army of Cyrus entered Babylon without battle." Consequently, we know the exact date when Belshazzar was killed by the Medo-Persian forces (Daniel 5:30) that came against Babylon that night: October 5, 539 BC.

    It is by means of this date and other secular dates, along with Scripture, that we are able to easily and accurately calculate and verify the dates when various events recorded in the Bible occurred, dates such as the date when the flood occurred (2370 BC), the dates when Abraham was born (2018 BC) and died (1843 BC), the dates when Solomon's temple was built (1027 BC) and destroyed (607 BC), the date when Zerubbabel's temple was built (516 BC) and the date when Herod's temple renovation work was commenced (around 18 BC), and then destroyed (70 AD).

    If one has an accurate knowledge of the Bible, an aptitude for math and some knowledge of when certain secular events occurred in history, one can deduce many of the dates to which the Bible refers, such as the date when "the [seven] appointed times of the nations" that Daniel mentions at Daniel 4:25 and to which Jesus refers at Luke 21:24 would undergo fulfillment, which date is 1914, some 2,520 years after Solomon's temple was destroyed in 607 BC. This is easy when one stops resisting what the holy spirit says.

    @djeggnog wrote:

    But what you have failed to do,@lisaBObesa, is [to provide] evidence that we have ever made a prediction as to when the world would come to an end. All of this bluster on your part doesn't make your case. Where's your evidence that we've done more than just speculate on when the end of this system of things might occur? Where is it, @lisaBObesa?

    @wasblind wrote:

    Under the Heading of Dates, on page 97 in the Reasoning Book it States....

    Please take a moment to read what it was I wrote to @Joey Jo-Jo in my latest response to his message, since what I said in that response applies equally to you. You really do not know enough to be having this discussion with me. You may be smart as far as the world is concerned, but when it comes to spiritual things, you're an illiterate. To be honest, I do believe you have a reading comprehension problem, too, which may well be because you never finished high school. I'm not sure that you really understand what things I have been saying to you in this thread.

    @Ding:

    "The Time Is At Hand," 1911 edition, ... Pastor Russell's Sermons, 1917, The Finished Mystery, 1917 edition, ... Millions Now Living Will Never Die, 1920....

    You're off topic. BTW, you've posted at least two messages since you wrote the following:

    Others can do what they want, but from now on I intend to ignore his posts and spend my JWN time conversing with posters who want to have meaningful conversations.

    Why don't you stop posturing and do what it is you said you were going to do?

    @wasblind:

    I would like to remind DJeggnogg that they specifically built Beth Sarim for the prophets of old to live in. If that ain't a testament of a false prophecy I don't know what is.

    What Rutherford may have had in mind for Beth Sarim was zany, but was not a prophecy. Get a dictionary and find someone to help you understand what the words used to define the word mean, ok? You clearly do not know what a prophecy is. One way of viewing a prophecy is that it is a forecast about some future event. A meteorologist (a weather person) forecasts or predicts the weather, whether it will be cold or not, wet or sunny, or just cloudy.

    Scheduled events, on the other hand, do not constitute prophecies, for, in the US, presidential elections occur every four years on the first Tuesday in the month of November. Unscheduled events aren't prophecies either, for I might plan to use my income tax refund check to weatherize all of the windows in my home or to buy Los Angeles Dodgers baseball season tickets for two on whatever day after the check arrives.

    Now someone might be zany enough to furnish a room in their home with a crib, a bassinet, a baby tub and a dresser, and even clothes for a newborn baby, even though he or she is not yet married nor has made any effort to seek a spouse or adopt a newborn. However, no one that should be zany enough to do any of these things is guilty of making a prophecy. This is not what the word means. You have here been using a word thinking you understood its meaning when you have no real idea what it means. Hopefully, you will understand this message and stop using the word "prophecy" until you have finally come to learn what the word actually means.

    @djeggnog wrote:

    Let me put it this way: Anyone that listens to you will die. There is no one that refuses to listen to us that will be saved. Period. By our paying constant attention to ourselves and to what we teach, and living our lives in accord with these things, Jehovah's Witnesses have faith that we will save not just ourselves but those who listen to us. (1 Timothy 4:16)

    @3dogs1husband wrote:

    So needless to say when I read your reply ... I say to you: YOU ONLY HOPE TO SAVE YOURSELF!

    @djeggnog wrote:

    You are free to believe whatever it is you wish about my intentions, but if you refuse to listen to us, you are probably going to perish.

    @3dogs1husband:

    I've said it before and I'll say it again...I'm done with EggNogg.

    He just told me I'll probably [perish] anyways.....that would be tragic if Jesus hadnt already died for my sins.

    That's not what I said at all to you! I said that if you refuse to listen to us -- that is, to Jehovah's Witnesses -- you are probably going to perish. Am I supposed to understand your response to mean that you have no intention of listening to us?

    It is true that Jesus died for your sins, your sins, my sins, the sins of the whole world. (1 John 2:2; Hebrews 2:17) However, unless one exercises faith in Jesus' ransom sacrifice, you cannot receive the benefits of his sacrifice. I might assume that you knew this already, but I'd rather tell you this in the event you don't know this. Here's the scriptural text:

    "For the undeserved kindness of God which brings salvation to all sorts of men has been manifested, instructing us to repudiate ungodliness and worldly desires and to live with soundness of mind and righteousness and godly devotion amid this present system of things, while we wait for the happy hope and glorious manifestation of the great God and of the Savior of us, Christ Jesus, who gave himself for us that he might deliver us from every sort of lawlessness and cleanse for himself a people peculiarly his own, zealous for fine works." (Titus 2:11-14)

    It is by means of God's grace, by means of His undeserved kindness, that the salvation of Jesus Christ has been made known to us, but if you don't repudiate ungodliness and worldly desires, if you are not living with soundness of mind with righteousness in view and with godly devotion, if you are not spiritually clean and zealous for fine works, you will not be saved. God has no plans to save the entire world of mankind. He sent His son to minister as well as "to give his soul a ransom in exchange for many." (Matthew 20:28) These are the ones for whom Christ died, for not everyone will accept the things he taught in his ministry.

    So, then, if you are not about finishing the work that God has, through Jesus, given those for whom he died to do, then you cannot be exercising faith in Jesus, and to you his ransom would not apply, and you will not be saved. (Matthew 28:19, 20; John 6:29; 17:4) For a certainty, "faith without [godly] works is dead," and for anyone to even think that they could say what things you have said to me here to any of Jehovah's Witnesses without getting called on those things smacks of ignorance. (James 2:26)

    It would be delusional on your part to believe that you are going to be saved while teaching others to this effect, when absolutely no one can be saved by pursuing their own selfish works of righteousness. That you do not know that one disowns God by such works is incredible. (Titus 1:16; 2 Thessalonians 1:7-9) Personally, @3dogs1husband, I think it to be rather tragic for someone to be delusional.

    @Listener:

    I was so young at the time and do not recall all this hype of 1975 and certainly not the articles or meetings in 1968 that put a great significance to the year 1975 and the indications that Armageddon would occur anytime up until 1975.

    Then why do you feel competent to comment on something about which you admit you know very little?

    Ex-JWs and [observers] will swear that by 1975 Armageddon was supposed to have happened. JWs still in the faith after that date will swear that the org never said such a thing.

    This is a lie. You are repeating something you've heard that isn't true at all.

    Without a doubt there was much confusion and that would have started occurring from 1968 right up until 1975 and yet there was not proper clarification during this time to clearly point out what the situation was and so the problem and expectations slowly started to fester....

    What are you are talking about. No one was in any doubt pre-1975 as to the fact that Jesus had stated at Matthew 24:36 that "concerning that day and hour nobody knows, neither the angels of the heavens nor the Son, but only the Father." Jehovah's Witnesses had not dedicated their lives to serve Jehovah until 1975 or any particular year. There was no problem back then, but greed on the part of those that thought they could get something for nothing, wanting to believe that if the Armageddon was coming in 1975 that they would not have to pay off the debts that they were incurring pre-1975, and many at the time were lost due to greed.

    This would have delighted the org at the time as it promoted an idea of great urgency and that suited them very well. They didn't consider the future, past 1975, when they had to reign in their stray [sheep] who they personally had let wander off with wrong understandings.

    Jehovah's organization didn't promote any great urgency beyond what we are promoting today, and the majority of Jehovah's Witnesses were not driven by greed, and when we came to learn about those who had proved themselves to be greedy persons, many were rebuked and some even disfellowshipped from our ranks. (1 Corinthians 5:11-13)

    In 1975 the org decided to then take some action - purely as damage control. They could have done this much sooner but in their Discretion chose not to, they were happy with the idea that it would help weed out those who had lost their confidence in the org.

    There was no such action taken as "damage control" at all. For someone that claimed at the very beginning of your post to have been "so young at the time" so that you "do not recall all this hype of 1975," you seem to want to make it appear that you know more than can possibly know.

    Instead they held a short emergency convention globally on this very issue and again they chose not to publish a proper clarification, acknowledging that the misunderstanding stemmed from there very publications. They did not want to point to themselves as being the cause of the confusion.

    This is a lie. There has never been "a short emergency convention" held globally on any issue in our organization. What does this even mean?

    As it was the year 1975 they could not have been calling them apostates for pushing forward the idea that Armageddon was going to occur by 1975 so I can only assume that it was due to murmurings and the false illusion that many JWs had been given.

    You're mistaken. Apostates have been around since the first century AD, and after a first and second admonition, it they persist in their apostasy, they are removed.

    They now didn't want JWs in the religion who would recall events and statements that were obviously now proven false as this would result in a mass exodus and would continue to do so into the future. As there was a serious problem [occurring] high up in the organisation they turned the tables on those ones and decided they must go, they were causing a fuss.

    You cannot possibly be referring to those apostates that would gather outside of our conventions holding signs of protest, could you? Of course not.

    @djeggnog

    I've taken the time to highlight DJ's choice of words and phrases.

    He is a troll. He just wants to argue for the Watchtower. 95% of all of his reponses in the above quote are directly argumentative. He states the exact opposite of which the person he quotes states.

    He is not interested in truth, he is intereted in defending the Watchtower. I know we all know this, but it's good to remind ourselves that this guy is nothing but a complex internet troll.

    -Sab

  • djeggnog
    djeggnog

    @lisaBObesa wrote:

    Exactly. That is what the Watchtower has repeatedly promised Jehovah's Witnesses. They said that they KNEW THIS WOULD HAPPEN before the generation alive in 1914 passed away. But they didn't KNOW. They were just guessing. THEY LIED to you.

    @djeggnog wrote:

    I see I have to be careful about my word choices when I talk to you here, because when I used the word "promised" here, you took my use of the word as an unconditional promise; I didn't mean as in I had "promised" to give you a ride to work this morning if you managed to get to my house before I left without conditions, for I had also told you that you had to be at my house no later than 7:35 am. My promise was a conditional one, so if you got left, it would have been because you weren't there by 7:35 am.

    @lisaBObesa wrote:

    ***I hope everyone please reads the above exchange.***

    Djeggnog, they said they were certain that those living in 1914 would not all pass away before the end came. They said that JESUS promised that the generation of 1914 would not pass away.

    You quoted something from the article, "Where Are We According to God's Timetable?" in the Watchtower, dated May 1, 1967, and made your entire argument based on the something contained in the following quote:

    "Interestingly, the autumn of the year 1975 marks the end of 6,000 years of human experience. This is ascertainable from reliable chronology preserved in the Bible itself. What will that year mean for humankind? Will it be the time when God executes the wicked and starts off the thousand-year reign of his Son Jesus Christ? It very well could, but we will have to wait to see. Yet of this we can be certain: the generation that Jesus said would witness those events is nearing its close. The time is close at hand. On God’s 'timetable' we are in the closing days of a wicked system of things that will soon be gone forever. A glorious new order is immediately before us."

    As I was reading this, I had in mind what a basketball coach in high school might say to the kids on the team as an encouragement to make them go out and do their vest best to win the championship game for which they have worked so very hard to become a contender in this final game of the season.

    Of this I am certain: You guys are the best this year, the best in the game; we've beaten everyone that dared to compete against us and we beat each one of those teams convincingly. This game is our final test of our determination to play like a well-oiled unit, the battle of all battles, true, but the one that will make people talk about this championship team for decades. We are going to make history for this school and in the future every time any one of you thinks back on what happened here today, you will smile. Oh, yes. You will smile and remember how you all contributed to decimating every team that stood before you, including the one that stands before you today, how you guys left it all out there on the court for all to see and showed your mettle, and demonstrated to all that what you are all made of, a force with which no one could contend, the best of the best, a team using its individual talents to play as a team with an unselfishness like no team has every played before.

    Whomever is hot, we feed that player and we keep feeding that player and we keep feeding that player, and we keep moving the ball so that no one realizes that our strategy is to keep feeding the next hot player when double coverage of the previous hot player frees up whoever becomes the next hot player. When they double team anyone, they decide for us who the next hot player will be. They steal the ball. We're back on defense. They intercept the ball. We're back on defense. But on every possession, whether in the paint or behind the arc, we keep feeding whoever it hot, and we keep feeding that player and we keep moving the ball and feeding that player. No team has faced a team more determined than you are to win games. This is what we do. No one can beat us.

    Of this I am certain: You will soon be telling your children and your grandchildren about what you did here today, how you were able to accomplish what no other team of your caliber every did, and due to your unselfish play, you will have earned the respect of everyone that has every played this game. We did not come this far just to lose the Big Game. When they see our style on the court, they will marvel over how we were able to dominate everyone to get to the Big Game, but they will see how we were able to remain unbeaten for the entire season because our only ethic this year, this season, this game, has been to play winning basketball, to put points on the scoreboard and to win games. This is what we do. No one can beat us. A glorious future awaits each one of us.

    Could the end come in 2012? Yes. Could it come this year in 2010? It very well could, but we will have to wait to see. "Yet of this we can be certain: the generation that Jesus said would witness those events is nearing its close. The time is close at hand. On God’s 'timetable' we are in the closing days of a wicked system of things that will soon be gone forever. A glorious new order is immediately before us."

    Did Jehovah's Witnesses ever say, in this Watchtower article, dated May 1, 1967 -- in the article you quoted here that is entitled, "Where Are We According to God's Timetable?" -- that we were certain that those living in 1914 would not all pass away before the end came? No, we did not say that. Only if our calculations were correct, would this be the case, but we never made a prediction that those living in 1914 would not all pass away before the end came. At Mark 13:32, Jesus said that 'nobody knows that day or hour' and we believe him. Do you believe Jehovah's Witnesses know something about that day or hour even though Jesus said "nobody knows"? This sounds to me like a problem you have in believing Jesus. You want to believe we know something that Jesus said "nobody knows," and you are willing to beat up on Jehovah's Witnesses because they don't know something that Jesus said "nobody knows." If someone should say to you, they know when the end is coming, you, being a Bible reader, someone that has read Jesus' words many times, should not be thinking that Jesus lied when he said that "nobody knows," you should not be wondering if maybe somebody does know "that day or hour," because you know what Jesus said in the Bible on this point. I don't care if it is one of Jehovah's Witnesses that should say this, you hate us anyway, why should you believe what Jehovah's Witnesses say. Your life changed dramatically because you thought you read in the Watchtower that we were certain that those living in 1914 would not all pass away before the end came, although the Watchtower didn't say this at all, so beat up on us, but beat up on yourself, too, because it is you that thought you read something in the Watchtower that contradicted what Jesus said on this point and you preferred to believe what you thought the Watchtower had said instead of what the Bible said on this point.

    If the basketball team to whom the coach gave such a stirring speech as an encouragement to them before they went out there to play that final championship game should have lost that game -- they didn't lose it, but let's just say they did lose that game -- the win wasn't certain, there was no prediction; only encouragement to stick to the game plan was given to the team. But they won the game. Jehovah's Witnesses are out there every day giving others encouragement to win the race for life, and many have endured to the end and have become winners. We know that a glorious future awaits those who have endured to the end for they will receive a resurrection in God's new order.

    Now what about us, @lisaBObesa? The race is not over for us yet; the end has not yet come and we still live. Whether we live to be one of the unnumbered great crowd that the apostle John saw in his vision coming out of the great tribulation after Armageddon or we race ends in this life before Armageddon, only the one that has endured to the end will be saved. This we know. Let us do our utmost to win the race for life, to endure to the end, whether it be through Armageddon or after our resurrection. (Revelation 7:9, 14; Matthew 24:13; 1 Corinthians 9:24)

    @djeggnog wrote:

    In conclusion, the recent information in the Watchtower about "this generation" didn't change our understanding of what occurred in 1914. We were guessing, but we didn't lie to anyone. Although you and others missed it, we spelled out our viewpoint on the matter and we made no promises whatsoever as to any specific year. You choose to believe this, but this is not true at all.

    @lisaBObesa wrote:

    ^^^You [yourself] say they were only guessing about this.^^^ But they didn't say 'maybe the end would come before the generation of 1914 passed away.' They said JESUS said that the end would come before the generation of 1914 passed away. They said JESUS SAID. There was no 'conditions.' There was no 'speculating' about this. They said it was a FACT.

    That is a lie. A LIE. They didn't know it for sure, and yet they said they knew it for sure. They called it "The Truth." It was not "the truth.' It was only a guess. They are liars. Leave this false religion.

    You had the Bible and you knew what Jesus stated in it. You had to know that we were speculating as to when the end could come because you also knew that Jesus had said that 'nobody knew' when the end could come. We were making an educating guess as to when the end might come, but we could not predict when the end could come because we didn't know then and we don't know now when the end is coming; "nobody knows," says the Lord Jesus Christ. It seems you want Jehovah's Witnesses to know when the end is coming, but why us? Why don't you want someone else to know when the end is coming? Why do you want Jehovah's Witnesses in particular to know something that Jesus said "nobody knows," @lisaBObesa? Let's find out what this anger in you is all about, because, quite frankly, you don't sound to me like a reasonable person if you should really think that Jehovah's Witnesses ought to have known something that you have yourself read in the Bible that is unknowable by us, that we cannot know, because Jesus said that "nobody knows."

    No, we are not liars. You are the one that keeps saying that we said we were "certain," but you have produced no proof to that effect. I have asked you more than once for it, but you have failed to produce any proof. You read more into words than are really there and then expect me to explain to you why they say to you what they don't say to others that can both read the English language and comprehend it. We've gone round and round on this point and all you've been doing here is repeating yourself; you've presented nothing new. You're wrong and your quotations from the various articles prove you're wrong. There's absolutely nothing in any of these quotes that provide support for your contentions.

    No, @lisaBObesa, Jehovah's Witnesses are practicing true religion, we believe what things the Bible teaches, we believe in the truth, and the truth is that "nobody knows" when the end is coming. Ok?

    In a previous post, I spoke about conditional and unconditional promises, but even a six-year-old child knows that an unconditional promise can become a conditional one. When they look outside and see that it is raining cats and dogs, they realize that the promise that they were given by their parents about their spending all day Saturday at the amusement park was a conditional one. So they go to their parents, not to cry to them about how they didn't keep their promise, but to try to elicit another promise from them for next Saturday, assuming in their little hearts that it doesn't rain next Saturday and Mom and Dad have nothing else planned for that day.

    For all I know, you might even be a child. I cannot really tell based on what you have written, so I'd better just leave it at that and ask you, like the kids say, to stop trippin'.

    @Listener:

    I am not mistaken eggnog, there was a convention that was held in the USA, Australia and other places. It was called and organised at such short notice that many JWs were not able to make arrangements to attend. It may have been held in 1976 but I'm pretty sure it was in 1975. There were several congregations invited to attend the one talk at the same time and held at public venues. It ran for just over an hour. The topic was specifically to clarify the misunderstandings of the 6,000 years since the creation of Adam being identified as [occurring] in 1975.

    I am righteously indignant over what you have said here, @Listener, and you are very mistaken. Of course, you can't possibly know what I've been doing over the years in connection with cataloguing the various conventions held here in the US, which conventions are also held in the UK, in Australia, in many other countries, but I know that you cannot possibly know what you're talking about. Now if anyone here should believe what you are saying here, that would be @Listener: 1; @djgeggnog: 0, and I'm ok with that.

    There have been no such conventions either scheduled or held among Jehovah's Witnesses in either 1975 or post-1975, conventions designed to do "damage control" over the apostate viewpoint as to the significance of 1975, which "false doctrine" had spread across the US, in the UK and in certain other countries around the globe. (I cannot tell you what was going on specifically in Australia, but I know what was going on here in the US and in some other places.) It was sad that what occurred did occur, but it served to identify those that were not of our sort and I'm going to leave it there.

    @aligot ripounsous:

    Only the Father knows "that day and hour."

    DJ, I heard a few times this silly reasoning from JWs whereby Jehovah may have hidden the day and hour from humans but must have given his servants a few clues as to the month and year of the occurrence of Armageddon. Can you please reassure me and tell me that this isn't what you meant in your post.

    I meant what I've been saying through this thread: Jesus said that no one knows "that day and hour." Period. Are their hints that let us know where we are in the stream of time? Yes. Are there enough of them that could lead us to determine "that day and hour"? Jehovah's Witnesses may have thought so, but when we came to realize that we really had no real idea what it was Jesus meant when he used the word "generation" at Matthew 24:34, we came to realize that he meant what he said at Matthew 24:36: "Concerning that day and hour nobody knows, neither the angels of the heavens nor the Son, but only the Father." What we do know, @aligot ripounsous, is that the end, and, of course, our salvation, is nearer now than it was yesterday.

    @sabastious:

    Jane is going to a drag strip to have some fun. John tells Jane that he has heard nothing but bad things about drag strips and has known a lot of people who have been involved in violence and revelry at them. He then decides to tell her that if she goes to this drag strip party she is going to be raped. Jane disregards John's speculative warning and ends up not getting raped and has the most fun of her life, turns out John was just spewing [stereotypes]. Did John make a false prediction? Was he in a position to make that prediction with such certainty? He didn't say she *might* get raped, he said she would.

    It would be just your opinion that John was "spewing [stereotypes]." He feared for Jane's safety and so said what he did hoping that she could be persuaded to change her mind. Yes, John tells Jane that "she is going to be raped," but Jane knows that John is not making a prediction, but is merely expressing his concern for her safety. John is no more making a prediction than someone that says to someone, "If I were you, I would not drive to that neighborhood alone. You should get someone to ride with you if you must go." Like I said, this would not be a prediction either, but an expression of someone's concern for another's safety. Here's another one: "If you go down there by yourself, you are going to get yourself killed." A prediction? No. Is the one who says this tantamount to being a false prophet should the individual to whom these words were said show up later after having "gone down there" alive and well? No. He is still an individual that was concerned for another's safety, and that's it.

    John says something terrible is going to befall Jane if she goes to the drag strip party. John also says that he is not going to be friends with Jane if she goes because John doesn't associate with people who go to drag strips. So John has a prejudice about drag strips and he is allowing it to affect his relationship with Jane. So it's not just a speculative prediction, it's an enforced position.

    This is irrelevant. No comment.

    @djeggnog

  • OUTLAW
    OUTLAW
    There was nothing magical about the year 1975, except to those among Jehovah's Witnesses like you
    that had decided or were persuaded to believe 1975 to have [had] more significance than it had,
    and many of those who ran ahead of God's organization and had begun to spread this man-made doctrine like wildfire,
    from one end of the globe to the other......DjEggNogg

    Where is the Evidence..Of the large group of Pre-1975 JW Renegades..The WBT$ "lost control of" for decades?..

    Where is it?..

    Show us the WBT$ literature Warning JW`s,against Preaching "Armageddon by 1975"..

    According to you..

    It was a Globel WBT$ Problem and it Spread like Wild Fire..

    The WBT$ would never let something like that go unchecked..The WBT$ would be all over that,in a HeartBeat..

    No JW runs ahead of the WBT$,without Severe Penalty..

    You have made Claims..Where is the Evidence?..

    D-JackAss-EggNogg..

    http://i3.squidoocdn.com/resize/squidoo_images/-1/lens7034502_1253135352jackass-jack_20ass.jpg

    ..................... ...OUTLAW

  • thetrueone
    thetrueone

    So true Sab. Every JW goes through a indoctrination process that instills the notion that everything the WTS publishing company

    proclaims and published in their literature is Divine Truth from god himself. There is a known protectionist clause surrounding these claims

    thwarted to maintain the cohesive power structure of the organization. The paradigm of "We are the true religion and distinct

    from all the other established religions out there, gets carefully pushed into the new interested ones.

    We all known the psychology of a fully indoctrinated Jws since we were once a part of this invasive mental indoctrination .

    People that have posted on this particular thread have been gasped at djeggnog's intellectual dishonesty and weak personal integrity in discussing

    WTS doctrines. I personally myself am not surprised at his position he takes in evaluating the WTS/JWS.

    I get the feeling recently that a little window of truth has opened in djeggnog's mind and he's now trying to intensionally keep that window closed.

    One of the reason's for myself leaving the JWS was a earnest passion for the truth and its' due to this passion that will make me to continue on

    in never returning .

  • jay88
    jay88

    thetrueone- have you seen eggnogg respond at all like you just did, in his/her own words without this barrier of communication going on?

  • just n from bethel
    just n from bethel

    For every paragraph DJ writes - 5 doubting lurkers end their doubts and leave the org for good. -They become completely convinced the only way to believe JWs is if you take crazy pills like Egghead.

    So Egghead - even though few posters here will waste their time even reading your crazy rants, please keep posting. Nobody else will be as effective as you in convincing all the doubting lurkers that JWs are just another crazy belief system. Everytime you post Bethel facepalms. You are the reason they write articles about not debating and posting on the internet. If it wasn't for you, many lurkers would still be stringing along, wondering if JWs could possibly be right. Thanks to you though, their dillema is solved within seconds of reading your incoherent ramblings. Every sentence you post is more stupid than the last. By the time a lurker finishes reading one page of your 'as-long-as War and Peace' posts, they realize that they are more stupid than before they started reading.

  • sabastious
    sabastious

    John says something terrible is going to befall Jane if she goes to the drag strip party. John also says that he is not going to be friends with Jane if she goes because John doesn't associate with people who go to drag strips. So John has a prejudice about drag strips and he is allowing it to affect his relationship with Jane. So it's not just a speculative prediction, it's an enforced position.

    This is irrelevant. No comment.

    Irrelevent to whether or not it was a prediction, maybe.

    But it's a hard point of which your light dismissal of is asinine.

    Saying things like "Don't go there or you are going to get yourself killed" is indeed a prediction. The probability of the outcome is very high when using statements such as that. One would essentially be stating a 9/10 (maybe more) chance of something bad happening. It's hyperbole but definitely based in a less exaggerated notion that something indeed IS going to happen.

    Which is a prediction. Not an official prediction that should be recorded for posterity, no, but a casual prediction... YES!

    Now to the part of which you feel is "irrelevant."

    The Watchtower made a more informal "casual" prediction that the people living at the time of 1914 would not die before the great tribulation started. You are using this "casual" prediction as an excuse for the Organization. Which is OK with me. It's perfectly fine to make bold predictions in a less formal... casual way. They should't be used to damn you in the future.

    THE PROBLEM is that the fact that the JW leaders enforce these on the minds of it's members is where it stops being a casual prediction (which could be described as guidence, a good and benevolent action).

    How do they enforce them? Well that's an entirely different discussion, but they do through many different means.

    Basically it's a relevent piece of information because it changes the whole playing field for the Watchtower's "guidance." It warps the guidance into a form of Law, of which is much more serious then a casual hyperbole prediction made because of concern and love for others.

    -Sab

  • thetrueone
    thetrueone

    thetrueone- have you seen eggnogg respond at all like you just did, in his/her own words without this barrier of

    communication going on? Absolutely, a mind that is structured on nothing but false and inaccurate knowledge

    isn't really too hard to identify where that knowledge originated from.

    As an example - djeggnog reiterated one of the most bogus dating proclamations in the history of the WTS.

    when they came out and stated that man's total existence since creation totaled 6000 years ending up in September of 1975.

    When the actual and honest fact of the matter there never was an accurate chronological dating system in the bible,

    such as someone did this in 4067 BCE or someone was born in the first month of 4023 BCE.

    Why is that ? simply because accurate chronological dating systems weren't used or practiced in ancient times and certainly the bible does not contain

    any either, nothing that can be honestly perceived to be calculably accurate. Therefore 1975 was just an intensional lie to pretentiously heighten

    and create an outward impressionable image that yes the WTS is a viable source of Truth and mankind is truly living in the last days of its existence.

    " Hold on folks the door to Paradise is about to slam shut " is one phrase I remember hearing a few times.

    In other-words throw in a mixture of false information and add a good portion of fear, coercion and exploitation into the ingredients and

    you've pretty much have made yourself an organization identical to the Watchtower Organization.

  • lisaBObeesa
    lisaBObeesa

    "Interestingly, the autumn of the year 1975 marks the end of 6,000 years of human experience. This is ascertainable from reliable chronology preserved in the Bible itself. What will that year mean for humankind? Will it be the time when God executes the wicked and starts off the thousand-year reign of his Son Jesus Christ? It very well could, but we will have to wait to see. Yet of this we can be certain: the generation that Jesus said would witness those events is nearing its close. The time is close at hand. On God’s 'timetable' we are in the closing days of a wicked system of things that will soon be gone forever. A glorious new order is immediately before us."
    DJEGGNOG SAID: As I was reading this, I had in mind what a basketball coach in high school might say to the kids on the team as an encouragement to make them go out and do their vest best to win the championship game for which they have worked so very hard to become a contender in this final game of the season.

    It made you think about a basketball coach encouraging the kids on the team.

    It made me think of a false prophet.

    Maybe your analogy would work if the coach had said, "Jesus said we will win this game!" But what coach would say that? That would be a lie! Jesus never said that!

    Oh snap. Maybe this analogy does kind of work.

    Did Jehovah's Witnesses ever say, in this Watchtower article, dated May 1, 1967 -- in the article you quoted here that is entitled, "Where Are We According to God's Timetable?" -- that we were certain that those living in 1914 would not all pass away before the end came? No, we did not say that.

    Yes, the Watchtower did say that in the May 1, 1967. "Jesus said that "This generation" that saw the beginning of this time period in 1914 would also see its end." Here it is in context...

    May 1, 1967 Watchtower: According to Bible chronology, we are already over fifty-two years into the wicked system of things' "time of the end." That time began in the autumn of 1914 C.E., at the termination of the "Appointed times of the nations," and it is alrady far advanced. Jesus said that "this generation" that saw the beginning of this time period in 1914 would also see its end. The generation that was old enough to view those events with understanding in 1914 is no longer young. It no longer has many years to run. Already many of its members have died. But Jesus showed that there would still b emembers of ":This generation" alive at the time of the passing away of this wicked systme of things in both heaven and earth.

    Nowhere does it say 'maybe the end will come before the generation of 1914 passes away' or 'if our calculations are correct...' or anything else. They said "Jesus said." Period.

    Djeggnog said: Only if our calculations were correct, would this be the case, but we never made a prediction that those living in 1914 would not all pass away before the end came.

    No, you are wrong. They never said, 'if our calculations were correct.'

    Yes, the Watchtower did predict the world ending before the generation of 1914 passes away. For proof, please see above. And for additional proof see all of the many other quotes I posted on page 21 of this thread.

    djeggnog said: At Mark 13:32, Jesus said that 'nobody knows that day or hour' and we believe him.

    Then why did they say, "Jesus said that "this generation" that saw the beginning of this time period in 1914 would also see its end. "

    Do you believe Jehovah's Witnesses know something about that day or hour even though Jesus said "nobody knows"?

    No, I don't.

    This sounds to me like a problem you have in believing Jesus. You want to believe we know something that Jesus said "nobody knows," and you are willing to beat up on Jehovah's Witnesses because they don't know something that Jesus said "nobody knows."

    I'm willing to argue with a Jehovah's Witness who insists on telling lies about the fact that they used to teach that "Jesus said that "this generation" that saw the beginning of this time period in 1914 would also see its end. "

    If someone should say to you, they know when the end is coming, you, being a Bible reader, someone that has read Jesus' words many times, should not be thinking that Jesus lied when he said that "nobody knows," you should not be wondering if maybe somebody does know "that day or hour," because you know what Jesus said in the Bible on this point.

    Finally, we agree on something.

    I don't care if it is one of Jehovah's Witnesses that should say this, you hate us anyway, why should you believe what Jehovah's Witnesses say.

    I don't hate Jehovah's Witnesses. I hate the organization, and I hate lies.

    Your life changed dramatically because you thought you read in the Watchtower that we were certain that those living in 1914 would not all pass away before the end came,

    My life changed dramatically when my parents were converted in the late 60's.

    although the Watchtower didn't say this at all,

    Yest, the Watchtower did say "Jesus said that "this generation" that saw the beginning of this time period in 1914 would also see its end. "

    so beat up on us, but beat up on yourself, too, because it is you that thought you read something in the Watchtower that contradicted what Jesus said on this point and you preferred to believe what you thought the Watchtower had said instead of what the Bible said on this point.

    Dude, everytime you bring up that the Bible says no one would know the day or the hour you are just making my point. Because clearly, the Watchtower did go against the Bible when they said, "Jesus said that "this generation" that saw the beginning of this time period in 1914 would also see its end. "

    @djeggnog wrote:

    No, we are not liars. You are the one that keeps saying that we said we were "certain," but you have produced no proof to that effect.

    Yes, you are liars. The Watchtower said, "Jesus said that "this generation" that saw the beginning of this time period in 1914 would also see its end." May 1, 1967 Watchtower

    Jesus never said any such thing. It's a lie.

    I also provided many, many more quotes where the Watchtower stated this teaching as FACT on page 21 of this thread.

    I have asked you more than once for it, but you have failed to produce any proof.

    See above.

    You read more into words than are really there and then expect me to explain to you why they say to you what they don't say to others that can both read the English language and comprehend it. We've gone round and round on this point and all you've been doing here is repeating yourself; you've presented nothing new. You're wrong and your quotations from the various articles prove you're wrong. There's absolutely nothing in any of these quotes that provide support for your contentions.

    Well I suppose we shall have to agree to disagree. The readers of this thread will look at your proof and they will look at my proof here and on page 21 and they will decide if you are right, or if you are in more denial than Lindsay Lohan.

    No, @lisaBObesa, Jehovah's Witnesses are practicing true religion, we believe what things the Bible teaches, we believe in the truth, and the truth is that "nobody knows" when the end is coming. Ok?

    It's not the TRUTH. It's a GUESS. The Watchtower and the Governing Body are just guessing. Even now, they are still guessing,

    In a previous post, I spoke about conditional and unconditional promises, but even a six-year-old child knows that an unconditional promise can become a conditional one. When they look outside and see that it is raining cats and dogs, they realize that the promise that they were given by their parents about their spending all day Saturday at the amusement park was a conditional one. So they go to their parents, not to cry to them about how they didn't keep their promise, but to try to elicit another promise from them for next Saturday, assuming in their little hearts that it doesn't rain next Saturday and Mom and Dad have nothing else planned for that day.

    So something came up, rain, so the parents couldn't take the kids to the amusement park.

    The Watchtower said, "Jesus said that "this generation" that saw the beginning of this time period in 1914 would also see its end. "

    Are you telling me something came up and Jesus couldn't fulfill His promise?

    The Awake said, ""This magazine builds confidence in the Creator’s promise of a peaceful and secure new world before the generation that saw the events of 1914 passes away."

    Are you saying something came up and the Creator couldn't fulfill His promise?

    For all I know, you might even be a child. I cannot really tell based on what you have written, so I'd better just leave it at that and ask you, like the kids say, to stop trippin'.

    I'm young compared to some people.

    In conclusion, the recent information in the Watchtower about "this generation" didn't change our understanding of what occurred in 1914. We were guessing, but we didn't lie to anyone.
    In conclusion, the recent information in the Watchtower about "this generation" didn't change our understanding of what occurred in 1914. We were guessing, but we didn't lie to anyone.

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