I'm new, Hello everybody !!!

by Rodin 26 Replies latest jw experiences

  • Sassy
    Sassy

    Hi Rodin, Welcome officially to the board. Sounds like you have been reading longer than I have been here...We're happy you could join us!

  • Kenneson
    Kenneson

    Hi!

    Isn't Rodin a sculptor? I'm curious about the history connection. I do a lot of local history research for the State of Florida Library and really am a buff also.

    Welcome to the forum.

  • shamus
    shamus

    Welcome!

    Nice to see lots of new lurkers finally posting for the first time... even if it is to just say hello. Yes, Blondie, Farkel, and Maximus are pretty cool in my books, as are countless others too. Very knowlegable people here... (sp?)

  • seeitallclearlynow
    seeitallclearlynow

    Hi Rodin, and welcome to the forum - I'm glad you're coming out and joining in on the fun.

  • lovinlife
    lovinlife

    Welcome Rodin!

  • myauntfanny
    myauntfanny

    Hi Rodin

    You lurked for years? I lurked for one weekend, and that was only cuz I kept trying to put my alias where my username should go and couldn't log on (jeesh). I don't know how you could resist so long.

    Welcome now, anyway.

  • blondie
    blondie

    Come back, Rodin. Thanks for putting me in wonderful company. I was just a lurker myself about 2 years ago.

    Blondie

  • Bryan
    Bryan

    Hello Rodin!

    Please fasten your seatbelt... we'll be taking off shortly. Hope you enjoy the flight!

    Bryan

  • Sirona
    Sirona

    Welcome Rodin!

    Sirona

  • Rodin
    Rodin

    Thanks for the warm reception. In my initial post I should have stated: "That I would be coming back soooon." Well, at least I kept my promise. Since I have a busy schedule, I will be dropping in from time to time.

    I hope I can add some input (historically speaking) to threads dealing with the early history of the "society." Although much has been written on the subject, the "reform impulse" of the late nineteenth century/ early twentieth century or lack thereof within the nascant Bible Student's association and particularily in the Rutherford era affects continued policy on isolation from the "world." Interestingly Joseph Rutherford was quite active in the political arena supporting the "Populist" party (later called the Peoples Party) an agrarian crusade in the 1890s and latter supported William Jennings Bryan (Democrat) in his bid for the Presidency in the election of 1896 losing to Republican William McKinley. The problems that faced the Populists assumed a delusive simplicity: the victory over injustice, the solution for all social ills, and crusade against the money power (Big Business). Several historians argue, such as Richard Hofstadter of Columbia University, that it was an attempt to go back to a "Golden Age" a "status revolution."

    I have wondered about the connection between the People's Party and the formation of the People's Pulpit, corporation formed in 1909 when property was purchased in Brooklyn. What influence or input did Rutherford have on the name choice since he was legal counsel at the time? Russel had also supported labor and opposed big money. Historian Eugene Weber's Apocalypes: Prophesies, Cults, and Millennial Beliefs through the Ages (2000) states the following: "After 1919, the prohibition amendment to the Constitution divided and criminalized the nation. After Scopes (1925 Tenn court case over the teaching of evolution in public schools), a new separatism encouraged withdrawal from reform, public life, public schools, local and national affairs, and even abstention from voting.

    None proved as extreme as Rutherford. In 1929, he declared the secular state demonic. His Bible Students were not to salute national flags or stand up for a national anthem; Mother's Day was denounced as a feminist plot, Christmas and birthdays parties were banned as pagan. The main Witness periodical The Golden Age, founded in 1919, denounced the American Medical Association, the germ theory of disease, and smallpox vaccines. The modern world, its snares and its delusions, were to be shunned. (191)"

    This is an interesting quotation and I thought many of you might enjoy the contents.

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