A major point I have trouble with is the Society's attitude about material it publishes and the way it expects Jehovah's Witnesses to view that material. That brings us to the topic of "adjustments in understanding," if you will. On one hand, the Society often writes articles from the point of view that it expects Witnesses to accept the material as if it came directly from God. For example, the United in Worship book asks several questions:
Do we truly appreciate how Jehovah is directing his visible organization?
When we appreciatively accept the spiritual provisions that come through the 'slave' class and its Governing body, for whom are we showing respect? But what if we were to speak disparagingly of these?
Then the reader is referred to Luke 10:16, which says:
He that listens to you listens to me [too]. Moreover, he that disregards me disregards [also] him that sent me forth.
Although it is not directly stated, the implication is that an appreciative Witness will accept whatever spiritual provisions the Society makes as if those provisions came directly from God.
Another example showing the Society's expectations in this regard is found in some Watchtower main study articles "Loyally Submitting to Theocratic Order" and "Each One in His Place." One paragraph says of the "faithful slave": Their duties include receiving and passing on to all of Jehovah's earthly servants spiritual food at the proper time.Another paragraph says:How vital it is for everyone in God's family to submit loyally to the teachings and arrangements of the Great Theocrat, Jehovah, and his King-Son, Christ Jesus, as transmitted through the 'faithful slave' on earth!
A third paragraph says: Jehovah has provided a goodly quantity of aids to Bible understanding in the form of publications....
Another Watchtower article said: "One body" is the Christian congregation, of which Jesus is the "head.".... The individual anointed members of this united congregation would all receive the same spiritual food. To that end, their "master" appointed a collective "faithful steward" class, the body of anointed Christians on the earth since Pentecost 33 C.E. Since the "master" found the remaining ones of this body faithfully and discreetly giving out "food supplies" when he arrived for inspection in 1919, he appointed them "over all his belongings.".... The facts show that since 1919 this "steward" has faithfully cared for these "belongings."
To reinforce statements like these, articles often include warning examples of those who failed to submit to "theocratic order," such as the rebellion against Moses by Korah or by Miriam and Aaron.
The Society clearly wants its members to believe that it is actually inspired by God, claims to the contrary notwithstanding. According to Webster's New Collegiate Dictionary, "inspire" means to "influence, move, or guide by divine or supernatural inspiration; to exert an animating, enlivening, or exalting influence on; to spur on, impel, motivate." The above quotations from Watchtower publications make it abundantly clear that the Society feels that its activities fit this definition, although it reserves the word "inspired" for the Bible alone. The Insight book, Vol. 1, says on page 1204:
The men used to write the Scriptures therefore cooperated with the operation of Jehovah's holy spirit. They were willing and submissive to God's guidance..., eager to know God's will and leading....
In many cases they had certain goals in mind or were responding to an evident need..., and God directed them so that what they wrote coincided with and fulfilled his purpose.... As spiritual men, their hearts and minds were attuned to God's will, they 'had the mind of Christ' and so were not setting down mere human wisdom nor a "vision of their own heart," as false prophets did [italics added].
Note how closely this description fits the way the translators of the New World Translation of the Holy Scriptures described their work, in the foreword to the 1961 edition:
The translators who have a fear and love of the divine Author of the Holy Scriptures feel especially a responsibility toward Him to transmit his thoughts and declarations as accurately as possible.... It was with such a sense of solemn responsibility that the committee of dedicated men have produced the New World Translation.... In releasing it for publication we do so with a deep sense of gratitude to the Divine Author of the Holy Scriptures, who has thus privileged us and in whose spirit we have trusted to co-operate with us in this worthy work.
On the other hand, the Society sometimes expresses a point of view in its publications in which it freely admits that it is not infallible, that the writers are not inspired, and that its views on certain matters change from time to time.Through a process of searching the scriptures, a clearer understanding is reached on certain matters, and adjustments are made. This searching process is illustrated in the article "The Path of the Righteous Does Keep Getting Brighter," which compares the searching to the tacking of a sailboat and to the progress of scientific truth.
I do not see how the two points of view can be reconciled. One viewpoint says essentially that as the "faithful slave" searches the scriptures, its understanding increases, and this increased understanding is communicated to readers of Watchtower publications. The other viewpoint says that the increased understanding comes from Jehovah through the channel of the "slave" and is in effect blaming Jehovah for the consequence of that change. On the one hand readers are asked to make allowances for mistakes or misunderstandings in print, but on the other hand they are asked to view what they are reading as coming directly from Jehovah, unaltered by the channel. On the one hand, readers are exhorted to believe that there is a "body of truth" to which "adjustments have been made,"16 that the adjustment process shows how Jehovah's Witnesses are "lining up with 'Jehovah's mind' as now revealed."17 On the other hand, this body of truth is said to be adjusted by Jehovah himself, that this body of truth even constitutes "Present Truth."
I think the first viewpoint must be correct. The Society does its best to interpret the scriptures correctly but sometimes is in error. But if that is the case, then the Society cannot make statements such as quoted in footnotes 2, 3 and 4 above, and still expect to remain credible.
One argument that attempts to justify such statements says essentially, "to the extent that the Society's publications conform to God's Word, it can be said that the 'faithful slave' is transmitting Jehovah's thoughts to his people." But this argument requires someone to decide the degree of conformance. Who is to decide? The only reasonable choices are either the reader or Jehovah. If the reader is to decide, the argument is meaningless because it can be restated thus: "to the extent the reader decides the Society's publications conform to God's Word,...." But if Jehovah is to decide, then the issue is still undecided from any reader's point of view, since Jehovah does not tell readers of his decisions. Saying that Jehovah will make his decision known at some future time does nothing for the present question.
Another argument the Society uses to show it is "God's channel of communication" goes something like this: "The way Jehovah God has prospered the activities carried on under [the faithful and discreet slave's] direction can leave no doubt in the minds of dedicated Christians as to Jehovah God's approval being upon it." Well, even if those who direct the activities of Jehovah's Witnesses are indeed "the faithful slave" and they have Jehovah's approval, that approval still does not warrant the conclusion that Jehovah makes adjustments to the body of knowledge the Society has called "Present Truth." God's approval on an arrangement is no evidence that he directs it, in light of Romans 13:1, 2 which says regarding the present arrangement for ruling mankind:
"the existing authorities stand placed in their relative positions by God. Therefore he who opposes the authority has taken a stand against the arrangement of God...."
Let me point out some examples of what I've been saying. Back in the spring of 1971 I was quite surprised when I read the Watchtower articles about the heart, which contained statements such as:
Where and what is your heart? You may say, What heart are you talking about? You know you have a heart in your chest, one that is pumping blood.... But do you have another "heart" in your head, a "figurative heart"? Is it part of your brain....? No! The brain, in which the mind resides, is one thing and the heart in our thorax, with its power of motivation, is another thing.... The Bible does not speak of a symbolic or spiritual heart in contradistinction to the fleshly or literal heart, just as it does not speak of a symbolic mind, and thus we do not want to make the mistake of viewing the literal heart as merely a fleshly pump as does orthodox physiology today. Most psychiatrists and psychologists.... [look] upon the word "heart" merely as a figure of speech....
I was even more surprised when these ideas were presented in a drama at the "Divine Name" district assembly the following summer, and illustrated by giant, glowing, talking models of a heart and brain. Did Jehovah direct these articles to be written and did he direct the assembly dramas to be staged? Did Jehovah then change his mind and make a complete turnabout on this question in 1984 and direct that the following statements be written?
What are we to understand, then, by the word "heart"?.... What an amazing number of different functions and capabilities are ascribed to the heart! Do all of these reside in the literal heart? That could hardly be so.... in nearly a thousand other references to "heart" in the Bible, "heart" is obviously used in a figurative sense.... obviously, a distinction must be drawn between the heart organ and the figurative heart.
This information is not new. Not one thing was stated in the 1984 article that was not known in 1971. Obviously some strong minded individual, who appears to have written numerous other articles (I recognize the writing style), managed to convince enough other people of his ideas on the heart that he got his ideas into print.
As another example of the Society's changing its collective mind, when the elder arrangement was first discussed in 1971, the Society stated that the chairmanship of the early Christians' body of elders "likely rotated". The entire arrangement was implied to be "God's doing." But as the years passed, the Society found that, on the whole, things worked better when elders maintained their positions for more than one year. So the rotation arrangement was officially cancelled as of 1983. Again I ask, did Jehovah learn from experience and then make this "adjustment to the body of truth" -- or was it the Society?
In the November 15, 1967 Watchtower the Society declared its opposition to organ transplants. The section "Questions from Readers" posed the question of how Jehovah's Witnesses were to view transplants, and the Society gave its official answer:
Is there any Scriptural objection to donating one's body for use in medical research or to accepting organs for transplant from such a source?....
Humans were allowed by God to eat animal flesh and to sustain their human lives by taking the lives of animals, though they were not permitted to eat blood. Did this include eating human flesh, sustaining one's life by means of the body or part of the body of another human, alive or dead? No! That would be cannibalism, a practice abhorrent to all civilized people.... To show disrespect for the sanctity of human life would make one liable to have his own life taken....
.... Those who submit to such [transplant] operations are thus living off the flesh of another human. That is cannibalistic.... It is not our place to decide whether such operations are advisable or warranted from a scientific or medical standpoint. It would be well, though, for Christians faced with a decision in this regard to consider the indication as to God's viewpoint presented in the Scriptures....
It should be evident from this discussion that Christians who have been enlightened by God's Word do not need to make these decisions simply on the basis of personal whim or emotion. They can consider the divine principles recorded in the Scriptures and use these in making personal decisions as they look to God for direction, trusting him and putting their confidence in the future that he has in store for those who love him.
The Society proceeded "to decide whether such operations are advisable or warranted from a scientific or medical standpoint" in a rather shrill series of articles in the June 8, 1968 Awake!, using almost the entire magazine to consider such topics as health, misuse of humans for medical experiments, doctors and their view of organ transplants, experimenting with transplants, and the problems of heart transplants. The bottom line for Jehovah's Witnesses was presented on page 21, under the sub-heading, "The Scriptural Aspect," which presented no scriptures. This was:
Not to be overlooked are the religious, the Scriptural issues involved. There are those, such as the Christian witnesses of Jehovah, who consider all transplants between humans as cannibalism; and is not the utilizing of the flesh of another human for one's own life cannibalistic?
There the official view remained until the March 15, 1980 Watchtower considered the question of congregational action towards someone who accepted an organ transplant. Here are some excerpts:
.... It may be argued.... that organ transplants are different from cannibalism since the "donor" is not killed to supply food.... Clearly, personal views and conscientious feelings vary on this issue of transplantation.... While the Bible specifically forbids consuming blood, there is no Biblical command pointedly forbidding the taking in of other human tissue. For this reason, each individual faced with making a decision on this matter should carefully and prayerfully weigh matters and then decide conscientiously what he or she could or could not do before God. It is a matter for personal decision.... The congregation judicial committee would not take disciplinary action if someone accepted an organ transplant.
The June 22, 1982 Awake! reiterated this position, stating:
The Witnesses do not feel that the Bible comments directly on organ transplants; hence, decisions regarding cornea, kidney, or other tissue transplants must be made by the individual Witness.
This is quite a flip-flop, going from the view that organ transplants are cannibalism and akin to murder, to it being a personal decision. Where is the guiding hand of God in all this?
I think that from these examples, and from many other instances where "adjustments to understanding" have been made, the only conclusion is that Jehovah does not directly cause any particular statements to be written in Watchtower publications nor does he cause any particular actions, such as the presentation of Bible dramas at assemblies, to be taken. He does not directly adjust "Present Truth." and it is sacriledge to suggest that he does.
The publications do occasionally admit of this conclusion, but they also exhort the reader to ignore it. The Society strongly discourages readers from questioning or critically viewing the "spiritual food provided by the faithful slave."
We should have confidence in the channel God is using.
It is as if the Society expects all Witnesses to simply accept the most recently published ideas on any matter as Present Truth, and unquestioningly, unthinkingly, discard anything not in line with it.
The very expressions "Present Truth" and "present body of truth" ought to be abhorrent to a lover of truth. They are oxymorons -- contradictions in terms. Truth does not change and does not depend on time -- only understanding changes. But the Society so strongly wants its readers to believe what it says that it seems to have no qualms about using such abhorrent terms to try to convince them that it is "God's channel of communication." I can only imagine the reply I would have received from the Society had I immediately written in response to the 1971 Watchtower article about the heart, saying exactly the same thing as the 1984 article did. I can especially imagine what would have happened if I had told anyone in the congregation what I thought. And from the 1984 article I can only conclude that the Society is not particularly interested in having its readers know it has changed its mind. There is not a word mentioned that this was a change of understanding with respect to the ideas presented in the 1971 article. Nor does the 1980 Watchtower article on transplants mention a word about the earlier views. In fact the 1930-1985 Watchtower Publications Index does not even list the 1967 Watchtower article. This is, in effect, changing history to suit current priorities. How many were injured or disfellowshipped because of following the "leading of men?"
I certainly accept that, to be one of Jehovah's Witnesses, one must conform to certain standards, but the Society is demanding too much when it requires someone to view its ideas in the same manner as Israelites were required to view Moses' directions. After all, who in the Governing Body or the "faithful slave" speaks to Jehovah "face to face"? The Governing Body claims that it as a body was commissioned by God, and that its members are "appointed by holy spirit." But when it comes right down to it, the members of the Governing Body of Jehovah's Witnesses can only trace their appointment back to Charles Russell in the late 1800s, and no amount of logical squirming can get away from this. The article "A Governing Body as Different from a Legal Corporation," under the sub-title "How the Governing Body Came to Exist," manages to avoid being specific about its theme and the point I just raised, no less than ten times, by using terms such as "evidently," "patently," "according to the facts available," "facts speak louder than words," "the facts speak for themselves," "holy spirit must have been operative," "there came on the scene," and "a governing body made its appearance." Nowhere in all this dissembling does the article show why things are evident, refer the reader to what facts it is talking about, or say anything that it could possibly be pinned down on. It is a masterful work of subterfuge, and the best example I have ever seen illustrating how to use the passive voice to avoid hard explanations. The article certainly does not answer the question as to how the very first appointments to responsibility were made in the late 1800s. It simply states that certain things are so, and implies that all loyal Witnesses of Jehovah must accept these things because they come from On High.
All these words about remaining loyal, not questioning, appreciatively accepting spiritual provisions, and the like have a negative effect: it is nearly impossible to discuss a point of difficulty with most Jehovah's Witnesses, because the moment a Witness suspects that someone is not toeing the party line he becomes defensive, angry and closed-minded. This includes elders and circuit overseers, but is especially true of run-of-the-mill Witnesses. I have personally experienced this many times. The net effect is that it is nearly impossible to have a reasoned discussion with a Witness on any subject which he suspects might not conform completely to the "body of present truth." Very, very sad.
Saturday, August 30, 2008
The Society's View Of Material It Publishes
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23 comments:
"Now, for the first time ever, the average Jehovah's Witness is privy to the actual Confidential Letters sent by the Governing Body of Jehovah's Witnesses to the Congregation Elders."
So where is the confidential stuff then? This is almost all cut-and-paste from the Watchtower Library.
The few "revelations" you've made have turned out not to be true -- circuit overseers are still here and the pioneers' hours haven't been reduced.
Most of your stuff has been on other websites for ages!
You are a bit of a fraud, aren't you?
If you don't like the blog, please do not come here. There are plenty of other blogs all over the web that I am sure will satisfy your curiosity.
Just for the record, the letters regarding the reduction of pioneer hours will be sent out at the end of this month.
The position of circuit overseer will be eliminated, but will probably continue for another year or so.
These decisions have already been voted on by the Governing Body and the two-thirds majority won. They will release the information when they want to. I have no control over that. Perhaps they are waiting on word from Jehovah.
You mean at the end of August?, it is already the end. When do you think it will be announced, the week of Sept 1? Will it take effect on September 1?
The new hours are supposed to take effect on September 1st, but the notice says that the letter will be sent to the Body of Elders at the end of August. I know that doesn't make much sense, but that what it says.
That's all I know. I guess we'll all see soon.
Sir, where and how do you get your inside information?
So what exactly have you published that was not on the WT CD or on another website?
Hi GBL
Are you Alan Ferubacher by any chance?
It has the potential for all sorts of problems when the 'present truth' that you understand and follow can become 'old truth' (falsehood) because as our friend who runs this blog has shown, if that 'old truth' involved life or death decisions, which have been shown to be not necessary by 'new truth', then that raises the culpability or bloodguiltiness of the ones who handed down the 'old truth' in the first place.
The rulings on blood, organ transplants and neutrality are all issues that have involved people needlessly dying because they understood from the 'present truth' (at that time) that they had to follow a hard and fast rule otherwise even if they survived, they had seriously jeopardized their chances of making it through Armageddon.
And the fact that 'truth' in the world of the JWs is so fluid, makes one wonder just how much of 'present truth' is not, in fact, truth, but will become 'old truth', (or falsehood) at sometime in the future. Which, taken to its logical conclusion, is that the Jehovah's Witnesses do NOT have the truth, because it can ALL be subject to change in the future.
Which also lets all other religions off the hook, because they too may change their belief structure,just like the JWs are constantly doing, at some time in the future.
The argument that because the JWs are doing SOME things right that other faiths are not doing makes them the true religion, can be an argument that all other 'Christian faiths can use too, for they are undoubtedly doing SOME things right too. And thats without even getting into the argument about interpretation of the scriptures, which can be read 1000's of different ways as the number of sects of Christianity prove.
That is why I always say, don't go by what the Society says, go by the Basic Bible principles.
But then they are the same. Isn't that interesting?
What do you think this Anti Watchtower stuff means anyway?
As a great fighter once said:
"It ain't about how hard you hit, it is about how hard you can get hit and keep moving forward, how much can you take and keep moving forward. That's how winning is done! "
Well, we have been getting hit for over 100 years and we have been moving forward. We are winning.
Are you talking about the fighter: Rocky Balboa?
Just want to remind you... he is was not a "real" fighter - he's an imaginary figure Ronde.
"That is why I always say, don't go by what the Society says, go by the Basic Bible principles.
But then they are the same. Isn't that interesting?" - Ronda says.
Another circular comment from Ronde... makes no sense unless you stand on your head and pat your stomach.
If Rocky wasn't real, then why is there a statue of him at the Philadelphia Museum of Art?
You know, the more I think about it the more I believe Ronda (sorry, a slip Ronde) is a Disfellowshipped Jehovah's Witness.
If you been following his replies, I think it will make sense.
Ronde replies: "If Rocky wasn't real, then why is there a statue of him at the Philadelphia Museum of Art?"
So people like you can live in an imaginary world and "quote" imaginary people.
btw: Doesn't school start sooon?
While Rocky may be a movie character, but the lessons taught are real.
One is:
People say that JWs are not to go to oppostion sites like this one,but that is not wise. In Rocky VI, it was said that Mason Dixon, the champ, was spoon fed week opponents and he was not getting respect for that. They said that he did not have the heart or passion of a champ because he did not go against anyone strong.
Well, there are Witnesses who just read the publications, no opposition, and just see the good things. They are like that. They don't have the heart of champions. They don't have the passion because they have not fought the best and beat the best.
I have the heart and passion of a champ because I go through the tough situations and keep going, and not giving up.
Anyone remotely familiar with Watchtower materials will have no doubt as to what they want readers to believe because it so frequently repeats:
"The Organization is Jehovah's "ONLY CHANNEL OF COMMUNICATION".
In other words, WE hear from God, no one else does. If you want to know what God says you must have what we offer*.
* WTB&TS publications are offered "on a contribution basis". They are not free. This raises questions about its claim of having received its communications from God as they would have to be 'given freely'. (See Matt 10:7-8)
From the horse's mouth:
"Crisis of Conscience"
(ISBN: 0-914675-23-0
Commentary Press, 1983, now in its 4th Edition,14th printing,available in 12 languages) by Raymond Franz who spent a decade on the Governing Body Jehovah's Witnesses, and was responsible for many Watchtower publications still in use today answers this question in detail.
Ronde Quote:
"If Rocky wasn't real, then why is there a statue of him at the Philadelphia Museum of Art?"
Philly Visitor's Info:
"One of Philadelphia’s most famous pieces of public art is the fictional Rocky Balboa of Sylvester Stallone’s Rocky movies immortalized in bronze in 1980.
Originally created for Rocky III, the sculpture is now a real-life monument to a celluloid hero. After filming for the movie completed, Stallone donated the statue to the City of Philadelphia."
As you mentioned, it now stands at the steps of the Philadelphia Museum of Art--made famous in the movie.
"From the horse's mouth:
"Crisis of Conscience""
So you say that Ray Franz was one of the evil GB members? And still is?
So Cee Cee can actually do research?
Yes, Ronde, research is what I do--just like the Berean's.
I was 'raised in the truth' and like the two generations of my family before me, never questioned anything The Society said. Later I learned to question everything testing it for truth.
I met several members of the GB personally because my family moved to Brooklyn Heights the summer of the International Convention in 1958. We belonged to the Columbia Heights Congregation (it met in the Bethel Home) and occasionally various members of the GB would attend (usually along with Brother Knorr).
I never did meet Ray Franz, who later wrote "Crisis of Conscience" and "In Search for Christian Freedom" as he belonged to a Spanish congregation.
Do I think they were "evil men"? No. Not any more than the leaders of any other religious organization.
You've probably heard the expression that 'power corrupts, and absolute power corrupts absolutely'. I believe that. I also believe that it is nowhere as corrupting as when people think they alone speak for the Almighty. When an organization says "we alone have the truth" (JW's aren't alone in that), the central issue becomes one of defending that claim--rather than allowing the Lord to speak.
Furthermore, if they did actually hear from, and speak for, Jehovah God as the appointed "channel of communication" why do they get so many things wrong (Like 1974), that they must make 'adjustments' to God's 'truth'? The only plausible answer for those who believe in the bible is that what the Society claimed came from Jehovah was in fact its own opinion and NOT His.
Think about it.
Cee Cee
CEe cee:
"I was 'raised in the truth' and like the two generations of my family before me, never questioned anything The Society said. Later I learned to question everything testing it for truth."
Why? I was raised in the truth and question everything and in doing so I makes me a better Witness. I find that we do not have to look at things word for word to be servants of Jehovah.
"Do I think they were "evil men"? No. Not any more than the leaders of any other religious organization."
They are people doing a good job the best that they can do. No evil is involved.
"You've probably heard the expression that 'power corrupts, and absolute power corrupts absolutely'. I believe that. I also believe that it is nowhere as corrupting as when people think they alone speak for the Almighty."
I don't believe that they have any power.
" When an organization says "we alone have the truth" (JW's aren't alone in that), the central issue becomes one of defending that claim--rather than allowing the Lord to speak."
No, I don't have a problem with it. To me it is pride. JWS should take pride in their worship and who we are. Unlike GBLetters who does not have the heart and pride in what he is. That is so sad.
"Furthermore, if they did actually hear from, and speak for, Jehovah God as the appointed "channel of communication" why do they get so many things wrong (Like 1974), "
You know something. I really don't give a rat's ass about this whole speak for God business. It does not matter unless you make it matter. I just don't make it matter.
Why do they get things wrong like 1975. 1975 was not wrong. Nothing was wrong there.
"that they must make 'adjustments' to God's 'truth'? The only plausible answer for those who believe in the bible is that what the Society claimed came from Jehovah was in fact its own opinion and NOT His.
Think about it."
I have, that is why I am one of Jehovah's Witnesses. That is why I do not worship the Society like you all do. As I said I don't give an "RA" about any of that as it does not matter.
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