Why the GB secretly hates and fears the gospel above ALL else!

by Fernando 24 Replies latest watchtower beliefs

  • Fernando
    Fernando

    Religionists do not want us approaching the Bible as a book that (merely) contains a map, hidden in plain sight, which is called the unabridged gospel/bissar/injeel/injil, and which opens the way for ANYONE to receive direct communication from God.

    It's not hard to see why. If you and I can deal direct, the middleman is redundant.

    If salvation, a right standing, and a clean standing are FREE GIFTS available via UNMERITED FAVOUR to ANYONE, then religion loses all its power, legitimacy and relevance.

  • Black Sheep
    Black Sheep

    Rubbish

    The Governing Body have no hate or fear of the gospels at all. They re-wrote them under guidance from Jehovah, so now they own them.

  • transhuman68
    transhuman68

    Some religions just perform christenings, weddings and funerals- and preach a very simple version of the Gospels- when people are very well educated about the Bible that’s all a religion can do for them.

  • Finkelstein
    Finkelstein

    I wouldn't define it as hate but every religion selectively creates their own doctrines, cherry picking scripture to supposedly support that doctrine.

    At the same time one could pick out scriptures to contravene their own self created interpretations.

    The WTS publishing house have only selected certain scriptures from the gospels for exploitation purposes to enhance their literature proliferation

    and distribution.

  • Fernando
    Fernando

    The gospels and the gospel are far from the same thing.

    This starts becoming evident when we consider that "the gospel" is one and the same as "the good news". There is no "good newses" - and also no "gospels".

    Referring to the books of Matthew, Mark, Luke and John as the gospels is a religious lie designed to confuse, and to hide the fact that others too wrote about the gospel. In the case of Paul far more extensively, detailed and impassioned.

    It is especially the liberal, generous and liberating gospel according to Paul, Moses, Isaiah and Psalms that religionists (in the hierarchy) secretly hate and fear above ALL else.

    "The gospel" is a simple but comprehensive message, map, and medicine, hidden in plain sight throughout scripture.

    "The unabridged gospel message" is the exact opposite of, and answer to, all religion.

    Jesus was and is against any and all religion.

    When Jesus was on earth did he lead people to, or away from, the elders and governing body?

  • LouBelle
    LouBelle

    For me Jesus shows us that we don't need any institution if you know who you are. If you can let go of what is the perceived truth and fine YOUR truth that is the way! I feel the same way about Mohammed and Buddah. They left the institutions of their day / of even their perceived cu;tural truth and found their own way. They shared this with us so that we could learn from them and find our path. However - men found that there is an addictive thing in having power and thus made cultures/religions/institutions in order to supress the free man from thinking for himself, from finding his own path - ultimately leads to the downfall of man. They now know no better. They are, most of them, are caught up in the idententy trap of culture/religion/whatever and will fight to the death to defend it. Look to Jesus, Mohammed, Buddah - they left those very things and were masters!

    That is why not only the GB hates the truth, but every religion, every culture, every institution and just about every man. Leave the identity behind, lose the ego...find YOUR truth!

  • Vanderhoven7
    Vanderhoven7

    <<It's not hard to see why. If you and I can deal direct, the middleman is redundant.>>

    Well said Fernando. There is only one middle Man who mediates for us.

    The WTS writes itself into the gospel formula...so we need to come to an organization to be saved.

    Biblically speaking...that is the rubbish/anathama/apostacy that blinds men to the truth of the gospel and the simplicity in Christ.

    Watchtower religion is heresy.

    It denies access to Jesus Christ who says, "Come unto me and I will give you rest/salvation/forgiveness/righteousness/justification/peace with God..."

    Jesus Christ is the gospel; He is our life, our salvation, our righteousness... The is no one else to go to.

  • WTWizard
    WTWizard

    Simple. For a religion to be true, two things must be true. First, the book they claim to abide by must be at least on the right path toward the truth, if not all the way there. Second, they must actually abide by it as much as it's humanly possible.

    The LIE-ble not being the truth or on its way there is one thing. However, the Filthful and Disgraceful Slavebugger is still afraid of it. Because they claim to abide by it exclusively. Thus, if someone can use it to prove that some of their doctrines are contradicted by it, the religion is proven false regardless of whether the "holy book" itself is any good.

  • OldGenerationDude
    OldGenerationDude

    Don’t forget, WTWizard, that it is the Watchtower religion that claims they are a religion based on the New Testament. It is not a sola scriptura movement either. It’s a totally different concept from traditional Christian or Jewish religion.

    Neither Christianity nor is Judaism based on the Bible. These religions composed the Scriptures. They did not get their doctrines from these books. Instead these books got their doctrines from these religions. It's not a question of abiding by the books, as if the books were the basis and sole path toward the truth. While that argument is sound against the Witnesses, it only works with folks like them who expect carts to pull horses.

    To explain: the Catechism of the Catholic Church states: “The Christian faith is not a ‘religion of the book.’ Christianity is the religion of the ‘Word’ of God, a word which is ‘not a written and mute word, but the Word [Jesus Christ] is incarnate and living.”—CCC 108; quoting St. Bernard, S. missus est hom. 4,11:PL 183,86.

    As for the religion of my people, the Jews, it is not based on Tanakh (the Hebrew Scriptures). To Jews, God reveals his truth through prophets and other religious leaders, like the rabbis. The rabbis tell us that a Jew does not need to be a follower of Jewish laws and customs to be considered Jewish. In fact, a Jew can have no belief in God at all and still be Jewish. There is nothing in that religion about the Scriptures being the path to abide and follow.

    The Jehovah’s Witnesses, by teaching that “true religion” must be based on the Bible, have created for themselves a paradox. The Scriptures were not written to be the basis of any creed or religion. They were meant to be read in the living and evolving tradition (religious practice and theology) of the religions that composed them. They aren’t meant to be used in any other fashion. If you do, you end up reading Genesis like it is literal history or believing that the Gospel accounts are meant to be chronological and historical biographies of Jesus of Nazareth. They aren’t. All the books of Scripture are a theological or religious take on events, but not a historical transcript of what has come before us.

    The religion of the Jehovah’s Witnesses came about during a time when some people in the United States of America developed an interest in gnostic-like teachings, claiming that the written work of religions had a spiritual or even magical quality to them, hidden to all save a select few. The Christian groups of the revival period after the Civil War in America had their own take on this, claiming that the Bible was the ultimate of such "secretly coded" books. It was in this atmosphere that Joseph Smith made claim to finding the Book of Mormon, on which the religion of the Latter-Day Saints is hinged. And it wasn’t long after that happened that the Miller/Russell view of the Bible as a book to “base” religion on (using it like the Book of Mormon) and containing some mysterious code foretelling the future (available to a select few) fired up the Bible Students movement.

    Using the Bible this way, as the basis for religious belief (especially if one doesn’t want to convert to Judaism or be a Catholic, either Roman or Greek Orthodox) is totally ridiculous. It’s just as sensible as if someone ran into a group of members of the Church of Scientology and took a copy of Dianetics and announced: “This book is the basis of all true religion…But we must ignore the reason this book was written by the Scientologists and all the practices and belief of the Scientologist religion in applying it.

    You can’t base Christianity or Judaism on the Bible. That would mean these books would have had to be written before Abraham and Moses were born, before Matthew and Luke existed, before Jesus of Nazareth started to preach. It’s claiming that this book just popped up out of nowhere and someone stumbled into it and said: “Hey, this sounds great! Let’s base religion on these stories.”

    That didn’t happen. Regardless of what you or anyone else thinks about religion or God, these religions existed before these books. History knows and can testify that people from these religious movements wrote the books--this is so regardless if the testimony in them is true or not. These books were not meant to be the starting point of religion. If the religions and their doctrinal stories didn’t exist before the Bible, then where did the Bible get them? The Bible didn’t exist before Moses received the Ten Commandments. There wasn’t a New Testament when Jesus walked the earth or when the apostles received the Holy Spirit at Pentecost. Neither Moses nor Jesus and his apostles based their religion on the Bible. These individuals created religions. These religions then wrote the Bible, but did not do so in the belief that these books were exhaustive creeds of theology.

    You can’t put the cart in front of the horse. It doesn’t work that way. Carts will only move if you have a horse to pull them. Religious books don't write themselves. You can't have a Judeo-Christian religious book first--unless you're Joseph Smith--and claim that the true religion can o nlycome from the book. The religions who wrote the book had to be true if the religious writings reflecting their teachings are true. If the religions aren't true, then neither are their books. If the books are true, then the religions are true. And if the religions are true, why are people making up new religions instead of joining the ones that composed and canonized the Scriptures?

    Like Dianetics, if you want to follow the religious book of another group, you must follow that religion. If you don’t, leave that "copy of Dianetics" alone.

  • Fernando
    Fernando

    @LouBelle: enjoyed your comment. Isn't it great that we can find our way in life so much better without the "help" of the WBTS Pharisees and Sanhedrin?

    @Vanderhoven7: Thank you and amen to that.

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