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Religion / Re: Stories Behind Great Hymns by singlealone: 11:37am On Jul 05, 2016
Thank you. Waiting for more. kiss
Religion / Re: I Was Given Cutlass To Cut A Goat In My Dream. by singlealone: 10:09am On Jun 17, 2016
You will become a Governor in the likeness of Ayo Fayose cool cool
Religion / Re: Anthony Olubunmi-okogie Celebrates 80th Birthday by singlealone: 9:02am On Jun 16, 2016
Happy Birthday your Eminence. You are a fearless and dogged fighter who believed in speaking the truth in love and sincerity to all.

Ad multos annos
Religion / Re: The Chosen Daily Devotional 10th June, 2016 by singlealone: 6:37am On Jun 10, 2016
Good morning
why not put the devotional on a single thread.Locate one of your chosen devotional threads and update on a daily basis.
Peace
Health / Re: India Hospital Transfusions Infect Thousands With HIV by singlealone: 9:01am On Jun 02, 2016
BIBLESPEAKS:
Most certainly, none of Jehovah's witnesses were infected.

Clap your hands then. And peeps that get infected via tooth extraction and other means.
Sports / Re: Chelsea Fans Revealed As Most Racist In English Football by singlealone: 4:59pm On May 15, 2016
juniormusa:

Liecester is available grin

And Leicester wins the league. See your life
Religion / Re: Should I Pay My Tithe Or Pay My Brother's School Fees? by singlealone: 11:44am On May 10, 2016
The parable of the good Samaritan answers this question.
Properties / Re: 3 Buildings In A Compound. At Ajanigbadi Ilogbo Road For Sale by singlealone: 8:00pm On Apr 29, 2016
Where is the location? Before or after Babalola if you are coming from AJANGBADI?
Religion / Re: Why I Left The Jehovah's Witnesses by singlealone: 2:11pm On Apr 26, 2016
cocoduck:
many people can tell lies to promote their church because they gain money or something especially financial from that church, JW does not pay me any money, the HQ where watchtower and awake are printed is in New York, I have never been there, nor do I hope to go there in this Satan's world, so, there is nothing material for me to gain, the only thing is that I am free from useless superstitious beliefs and traditions of men, and I see this world and the things happening in it differently, okay? I want others the think like wise, and you thieves know that it simply means less money in your filthy coffers, ndi oshi nwuru anwu, has any JW solicited for funds from you before? ndi ara.


They have asked me for contribution. They gave me a khaki envelope to put the money. They said the money is to help print more awake
Religion / Re: Why I Left The Jehovah's Witnesses by singlealone: 2:07pm On Apr 26, 2016
cocoduck:
Then you don't know him
it was because of money he left JW, he was a top member in one congregation in Lagos, then they decided to contribute money to either to build or renovate a kingdom hall, as the secretary he was given the money and when the time arrived to bring the money, the guy begin yarn tory , then after all said and done he was sanctioned, he simply left and open his own church and began to castigate JWs, When we are preaching, we usually encounter deeper life people, the way they react when they see us is very different from the way other churches react to our visit, because of the lies they have been told, they don't even want to use eye to see us. I know what I am talking about bro. Maybe he was Catholic before he became JW. But he used to be a JW.


Pure lie and fabrication

1 Like

Family / Re: It's Our Wedding Anniversary! Help Us Thank Jehovah. by singlealone: 4:35pm On Mar 24, 2016
oh birthday of your marriage wink wink wink wink wink wink. Na wa for JWs and their ways. You celebrate birthdays of your marriages

2 Likes

Politics / Re: 'Those Calling For CBN Governor's Sack Are Palmwine Drinkers' - Gov. Oshiomhole by singlealone: 10:55am On Mar 24, 2016
Keggites aka Palm Wine Drinkers' Club over to you. So na una wan mek dem sack CBN governor? shocked shocked shocked shocked
Politics / Re: Why We Handcuffed Metuh − NPS by singlealone: 4:14pm On Jan 20, 2016

1 Like

Politics / Re: Prof. Eskor Toyo Dies At 86 by singlealone: 7:47am On Dec 10, 2015
DrWise:
Prof. N. U. Ndebbio has been buried.

I remember the days of Eskor Toyo, Ndebbio, Bassey, C.K. Graham, Ma Obafemi et al.

I remember Eskor always referring to Ndebbio as a conformist and the whole class would laugh.

Eskor treks most times from the staff quarters to the classroom, and when you pull over to pick him up, he would ask you to pick the student for him while he prefers to walk.

Ma Obafemi is the HOD now. cheesy cheesy. She is like a big sis to me. Wonder why some students fear her.
Eskor, such a vast intelligent man. His writings and speeches full of knowledge. He hated everything on World Bank and IMF.
Religion / Re: Crisis Of Conscience By Raymond Franz (a Former Jehovah’s Witnesses Top Leader) by singlealone: 9:43am On Nov 11, 2015
CREDENTIALS AND CAUSE
I am speaking the truth as a Christian, and my own conscience, enlightened by the Holy Spirit, assures me it is no lie. . . . For I could even pray to be outcast from Christ myself for the sake of my brothers, my natural kinsfolk.—Romans 9:1, 3, New English Bible. WHAT has thus far been said gives, I believe, good reason for the writing of this book. The question may remain as to why I am the one writing it. One reason is my background and the perspective it gives. From babyhood up into my sixtieth year, my life was spent in association with Jehovah’s Witnesses. While others, many others, could say the same, it is unlikely that very many of them had the range of experience that happened to be my lot during those years. A reason of greater weight is that circumstances brought to my knowledge information to which the vast majority of Jehovah’s Witnesses have absolutely no access. The circumstances were seldom of my own making. The information was often totally unexpected, even disturbing. A final reason, resulting from the previous two, is that of conscience. What do you do when you see mounting evidence that people are being hurt, deeply hurt, with no real justification? What obligation does any of us have—before God and toward fellow humans—when he sees that information is withheld from people to whom it could be of the most serious consequence? These were questions with which I struggled. What follows expands on these reasons. In many ways I would much prefer passing over the first of these since it necessarily deals with my own “record.”
The present situation seems to require its presentation, however, somewhat in the way circumstances obliged the apostle Paul to set out his record of personal experiences for Christians in Corinth and afterward to say to them: I am being very foolish, but it was you who drove me to it; my credentials should have come from you. In no respect did I fall short of these superlative apostles, even if I am a nobody [even though I am nothing, New International Version].1 I make no pretense of being a Paul, but I believe that my reason and motive at least run parallel with his. My father and mother (and three of my four grandparents) were Witnesses, my father having been baptized in 1913 when the Witnesses were known simply as Bible Students. I did not become an active Witness until I was sixteen in 1938. Though still in school, I was before long spending from twenty to thirty hours a month in “witnessing” from door to door, standing on street corners with magazines, putting out handbills while wearing placards saying “Religion is a snare, the Bible tells why. Serve God and Christ the King.” That year, 1938, I had attended a Witness assembly in Cincinnati (across the Ohio River from our home) and listened to Judge Joseph F. Rutherford, the president of the Watch Tower Society, speak from London, England, by radiotelephone communication.
That appealed to me as a worthwhile principle to follow in life. I felt receptive to the facts he would present. World War II had not yet begun as of that year, but Nazism and Fascism were growing in power and posing an increasing threat to democratic lands. Among major points emphasized in the Watch Tower president's talk were these:

God has made it clearly to be seen by those who diligently seek the truth that religion is a form of worship but which denies the power of God and turns men away from God. . . . Religion and Christianity are therefore exactly opposite to each other. . . .3 According to the prophecy of Jesus, what are the things to be expected when the world comes to an end? The answer is world war, famine, pestilence, distress of nations, and amongst other things mentioned the appearance of a monstrosity on the earth. . . . These are the indisputable physical facts which have come to pass proving that Satan’s world has come to an end, and which facts cannot be ignored. . . .4 Now Germany is in an alliance with the Papacy, and Great Britain is rapidly moving in that direction. The United States of America, once the bulwark of democracy, is all set to become part of the totalitarian rule. . . . Thus the indisputable facts are, that there is now in the earth Satan’s dictatorial monstrosity, which defies and opposes Jehovah’s kingdom. . . . The totalitarian combine is going to get control of England and America. You cannot prevent it. Do not try. Your safety is on the Lord’s side. . . .5 I have italicized statements that particularly engraved themselves on my mind at that time. They created in me an intensity of feeling, of near agitation, that I had not experienced before. Yet none of them today form part of Witness belief. Rutherford’s other major talk, “Fill the Earth,” developed the view that as of 1935 God’s message, till then directed to persons who would reign with Christ in heaven, a “little flock,” was now being directed to an earthly class, the “other sheep,” and that after the approaching war of Armageddon these would procreate and fill the earth with a righteous offspring. Of these he said: They must find protection in God’s organization, which shows that they must be immersed, baptized or hidden in that organization. The ark, which Noah built at God’s command, pictured God’s organization. . . . 6 Pointing out that Noah’s three sons evidently did not begin to produce offspring until two years after the Flood, the Watch Tower
3 Ibid., pp. 7, 8. (Jehovah’s Witnesses now view “religion” as an acceptable term for true worship.) 4 Ibid., p. 9. (The teaching then was that, since Satan’s lease of power ended in 1914, the “world ended” in that sense. The Society’s publications no longer teach this.) 5 Ibid., pp. 16, 17, 27. (As is well known, the Second World War ended in the defeat of the Nazi-Fascist “dictatorial monstrosity,” the exact opposite of what is here predicted.) 6 Ibid., pp. 40, 41. (This view of the ark’s symbolic significance has changed, though the role of the organization as essential to salvation as presented is basically the same.)

Joseph Rutherford spoke forcefully and with a distinctive cadence of great finality. These were facts, even “indisputable facts,” solid truths on which to build life’s most serious plans. I was deeply impressed with the importance of the organization as essential to salvation, also that the work of witnessing must take precedence over, or at least militate against, such personal interests as marriage and childbearing.8 In 1939 I was baptized and in June, 1940, on graduating from high school I immediately entered full-time service in witnessing activity. That year was a turbulent one for the world and for Jehovah’s Witnesses. World War II was under way, the work of Jehovah’s Witnesses came under governmental ban in several countries and hundreds of Witnesses were imprisoned; in the United States large numbers of children of Jehovah’s Witnesses were being expelled from school for refusal to salute the flag (viewed as a form of image worship); the Witnesses’ stand of neutrality toward war often inspired violent antagonism on the part of those priding themselves on their loyalty and patriotism; vicious mob attacks were starting to spread. That summer of 1940 our family went to Detroit, Michigan, to attend a major Witness convention. A spirit of tense anticipation prevailed, a sense of being under siege. At the close of the assembly Judge Rutherford indicated that ‘this might be the last assembly we would have before the great tribulation struck.’ When the autumn of 1940 came and I put my summer clothes away, I remember thinking that I would likely never take them out again—that either Armageddon would have come or we would by then all be in concentration camps, like many Witnesses in Nazi Germany.

Mob violence reached a crescendo during the early 1940’s. In Connersville, Indiana, I attended a court trial of two women Witnesses charged with seditious activity (“riotous conspiracy”), simply because they studied Watch Tower publications as part of a home study group. The trial ran five days and on the last day, after night had fallen, the jury brought in its verdict of guilty. On leaving the courthouse, the defense attorney (a Witness named Victor Schmidt) and his wife were violently assaulted by a mob and were forced to walk, in a driving rain, the entire distance to the city limits. On the way the horror of the situation caused Schmidt’s wife suddenly to begin to menstruate. I had in my car group a Witness representative (Jack Rainbow) who had earlier been threatened with death by some of these men if he returned to “their city.” On arriving at the city limits and there seeing Schmidt and his wife, followed by a remnant of the mob, I felt obliged to take the risk of picking them up and was able to do so. Another Witness had attempted this but only got a broken car window for his efforts. Schmidt’s wife broke out into hysterical screaming when we got her into the car; her husband’s face was bruised and covered with blood from deep cuts where he had evidently been hit with brass knuckles.9 To experience firsthand such raw and callous intolerance left a vivid impression on my young mind. I felt all the more convinced of the rightness of my course with those who were quite evidently the true servants of God. Later, as a tactic recommended by the Watch Tower Society’s legal counsel, Hayden Covington, a large group of seventy-five Witnesses from the Cincinnati, Ohio area, including my parents, my two sisters and myself, traveled to Connersville in a “blitzkrieg” witnessing effort. With one exception, we all, men, women and children, were arrested and wound up in various jails, being locked up for one week until bail could be worked out. Still in my teens, it was my first time at experiencing the feeling that comes with seeing a massive metal door swing shut, hearing the bolt shoved in place and realizing that your freedom of movement is now taken from you. Some months later I was in Indianapolis, Indiana, for a superior court hearing involving the Connersville events. My uncle, Fred Franz, a member of the Watch Tower headquarters staff since 1920 and a close associate of Judge Rutherford, was also there from Brooklyn as sort of an expert witness on the Society’s behalf. The local congregation asked him to speak to them one evening. During the course of his talk he began discussing the attitude of so many that the work of witnessing was nearing its end, just about finished. To put it mildly, I was stunned to hear my uncle speak to the contrary, saying that at Brooklyn they were not expecting to close down, that ‘anyone who wanted to send in a subscription for the Watchtower magazine needn’t send it in for just six months—he could send it in for a full year or for two years if he wanted!’ The thrust of his remarks was so contrary to the comments of the Society’s president at the Detroit assembly that it seemed clear to me that my uncle was speaking on his own, not presenting some duly authorized message from the Society. I actually felt like going to him and urging caution lest his remarks get back to Brooklyn and be viewed as disloyal, as having a dissipating, undermining effect on the sense of extreme urgency that had developed. Although then in his late forties, my uncle was a relatively young man compared to Judge Rutherford and I found myself uncertain as to whether to accept his remarks as proper or discount them as the product of an independent, somewhat brash attitude. Leaving home that year to become the partner of a young fellow Witness in the coal mining region of West Virginia and eastern Kentucky, I found myself in an area where the threat of violence was faced almost on a daily basis. Some mining camps consisted of long wooden “row houses” strung along the highway. At times, upon reaching the last of such a section of houses, we could look back to the point where we had begun our calls and see men and boys excitedly running about gathering a mob. At the “Octavia J” mining camp in Kentucky, our old “Model A” Ford car was surrounded by a group of angry miners and we were told to ‘get out of there and out of the State of Kentucky and not come back if we valued our lives.’ Attempts to reason only provoked greater anger. We did return a couple of months later and before we got out were shot at and pursued, escaping only by a ruse that led us over back roads and across a mountain until we could finally make our way home. More so than patriotic fervor, religious bigotry seemed to have been the force motivating the miners. Our disbelief of the teaching of a literal hell fire torment (causing young boys to yell out “no-hellers” as we drove by) weighed almost as heavily as our stand toward war. I found that close-minded bigotry appalling then. I was happy to be part of an organization free from such intolerance.
The summer of 1941 came and, contrary to my expectation, I found myself attending another assembly, held in St. Louis, Missouri. I still remember seeing crowds gather around as Judge Rutherford was driven up to the assembly site in a large car with Hayden Covington and Vice President Nathan Knorr, both men of large build, standing on the running boards as bodyguards. On the final day of the assembly, Rutherford had all the children from five to eighteen years of age seated before the platform. After his prepared speech, he talked to them extemporaneously. A tall man of usually stern appearance and stern tone, Rutherford now spoke with almost fatherly persuasion and recommended to these children that they put marriage out of their minds until the return of Abraham, Isaac, Jacob and other faithful men and women of old who would soon be resurrected and would guide them in their selection of mates. A free copy of a new book entitled Children was given each child. As a vehicle for developing the material, it presented a fictional young Witness couple, John and Eunice, who were engaged but who had decided to postpone their marriage until the arrival of the New Order so near at hand.
Religion / Re: Crisis Of Conscience By Raymond Franz (a Former Jehovah’s Witnesses Top Leader) by singlealone: 9:18am On Nov 11, 2015
Chapter One.
PRICE OF CONSCIENCE
WHETHER we like it or not, moral challenge affects each of us. It is one of life’s bittersweet ingredients from which there is no successful escape. It has the power to enrich us or impoverish us, to determine the true quality of our relationships with those who know us. It all depends on our response to that challenge. The choice is ours—it is seldom an easy one. We have the option, of course, of surrounding our conscience with a sort of cocoon of complacency, passively “going along,” shielding our inner feelings from whatever might disturb them. When issues arise, rather than take a stand we can in effect say, “I’ll just sit this one out; others may be affected—even hurt—but I am not.” Some spend their whole life in a morally ‘sitting’ posture. But, when all is said and done, and when life finally draws near its close, it would seem that the one who can say, “At least I stood for something,” must feel greater satisfaction than the one who rarely stood for anything. Sometimes we may wonder if people of deep conviction have become a vanishing race, something we read about in the past but see little of in the present. Most of us find it fairly easy to act in good conscience so long as the things at stake are minor. The more that is involved, the higher the cost, the harder it becomes to resolve questions of conscience, to make a moral judgment and accept its consequences. When the cost is very great we find ourselves at a moral crossroads situation, facing a genuine crisis in our lives. This book is about that kind of crisis, the way people are facing up to it and the effect on their lives. Admittedly, the story of the persons involved may have little of the high drama found in the heresy trial of a John Wycliffe, the intrigue of the international hunt for an elusive William Tyndale, or the horror of the burning at the stake of a Michael Servetus. But their struggle and suffering are, in their own way, no less intense. Few of
1
2 CRISIS OF CONSCIENCE
them could say it as eloquently as Luther, yet they take very much the same stand he took when he said to the seventy men judging him: Unless I am convinced by the testimonies of the Scriptures or by evident reason (for I believe neither pope nor councils alone, since it is manifest they have often erred and contradicted themselves), I am bound by the Scriptures I have quoted, and my conscience is held captive by the word of God; and as it is neither safe nor right to act against conscience, I cannot and will not retract anything. Here I stand; I cannot otherwise; God help me. Amen.1 Long before any of these men, the apostles Peter and John of nineteen centuries ago confronted essentially the same issue when they stood before a judicial council of the most respected members of their lifelong religion and frankly told them: Whether it is right in the sight of God to listen to you rather than to God, you must judge; for we cannot but speak of what we have seen and heard.2 The people I write of are from among those I know most intimately, persons who have been members of the religious group known as Jehovah’s Witnesses. I am sure, and there is evidence to show, that their experience is by no means unique, that there is a similar stirring of conscience among people of various faiths. They face the same issue that Peter and John and men and women of later centuries confronted: the struggle to hold true to personal conscience in the face of pressure from religious authority. For many it is an emotional tug-of-war. On the one hand, they feel impelled to reject the interposing of human authority between themselves and their Creator; to reject religious dogmatism, legalism and authoritarianism, to hold true to the teaching that Christ Jesus, not any human religious body, is “the head of every man.”3 On the other hand, they face the risk of losing lifelong friends, seeing family relationships traumatically affected, sacrificing a religious heritage that may reach back for generations. At that kind of crossroads, decisions do not come easy. What is here described, then, is not merely a “tempest in a teapot,” a major quarrel in a minor religion. I believe there is much of vital
1 These were Luther’s concluding words in making his defense at the Diet of Worms, Germany, in April of 1521. 2 Acts 4:19, 20, RSV. 3 1 Corinthians 11:3.
Price of Conscience 3
benefit that any person can gain from considering this account. For if the numbers presently involved are comparatively small, the issues are not. They are far-reaching questions that have brought men and women into similar crises of conscience again and again throughout history. At stake is the freedom to pursue spiritual truth untrammeled by arbitrary restrictions and the right to enjoy a personal relationship with God and his Son free from the subtle interposition of a priestly nature on the part of some human agency. While much of what is written may on the surface appear to be distinctive of the organization of Jehovah’s Witnesses, in reality the underlying, fundamental issues affect the life of persons of any faith that takes the name Christian. The price of firmly believing that it is “neither safe nor right to act against conscience” has not been small for the men and women I know. Some find themselves suddenly severed from family relationships as a result of official religious action—cut off from parents, sons and daughters, brothers and sisters, even from grandparents or grandchildren. They can no longer enjoy free association with longtime friends for whom they feel deep affection; such association would place those friends in jeopardy of the same official action. They witness the blackening of their own good name—one that it has taken them a lifetime to earn—and all that such name has stood for in the minds and hearts of those who knew them. They are thereby deprived of whatever good and rightful influence they might exercise on behalf of the very people they have known best in their community, in their country, in all the world. Material losses, even physical mistreatment and abuse, can be easier to face than this. What could move a person to risk such a loss? How many persons today would? There are, of course (as there have always been), people who would risk any or all of these things because of stubborn pride, or to satisfy the desire for material gain, for power, prestige, prominence, or simply for fleshly pleasure. But when the evidence reveals nothing indicating such aims, when in fact it shows that the men and women involved recognized that just the opposite of those goals was what they could expect—what then? What has happened among Jehovah’s Witnesses provides an unusual and thought-provoking study in human nature. Besides those who were willing to face excommunication for the sake of conscience, what of the larger number, those who felt obliged to share in or support such excommunications, to allow the family circle to be broken, to terminate long-standing friendships?
There is no question about the sincerity of many of these persons, or that they felt and still feel distress from carrying out what they deemed a necessary religious duty. What convictions and reasonings motivated them? Notably, as regards the cases here dealt with, many if not most of those involved are persons who have been associated with Jehovah’s Witnesses for twenty, thirty, forty or more years. Rather than a “fringe element” they have more frequently been among the more active, productive members of the organization. They include persons who were prominent members of the Witnesses’ international headquarters staff at Brooklyn, New York; men who were traveling superintendents and elders; women who spent long years in missionary and evangelistic work. When they first became Witnesses, they had often cut off all previous friendships with persons of other faiths, since such “outside” associations are discouraged among Jehovah’s Witnesses. For the rest of their life their only friends have been among those of their religious community. Some had built their whole life plans around the goals set before them by the organization, letting these control the amount of education they sought, the type of work they did, their decisions as to marriage, and whether they had children or remained childless. Their “investment” was a large one, involving some of life’s most precious assets. And now they have seen all this disappear, wiped out in a matter of a few hours. This is, I believe, one of the strange features of our time, that some of the most stringent measures to restrain expressions of personal conscience have come from religious groups once noted for the defense of freedom of conscience. The examples of three men—each a religious instructor of note in his particular religion, with each situation coming to a culmination in the same year—illustrate this: One, for more than a decade, wrote books and regularly gave lectures presenting views that struck at the very heart of the authority structure of his religion. Another gave a talk before an audience of more than a thousand persons in which he took issue with his religious organization’s teachings about a key date and its significance in fulfillment of Bible prophecy. The third made no such public pronouncements. His only expressions of difference of viewpoint were confined to personal conversations with close friends.

Yet the strictness of the official action taken toward each of these men by their respective religious organizations was in inverse proportion to the seriousness of their actions. And the source of the greatest severity was the opposite of what one might expect. The first person described is Roman Catholic priest Hans Küng, professor at Tübingen University in West Germany. After ten years, his outspoken criticism, including his rejection of the doctrinal infallibility of the Pope and councils of bishops, was finally dealt with by the Vatican itself and, as of 1980, the Vatican removed his official status as a Catholic theologian. Yet he remains a priest and a leading figure in the university’s ecumenical research institute. Even students for the priesthood attending his lectures are not subject to church discipline.4 The second is Australian-born Seventh Day Adventist professor Desmond Ford. His speech to a layman’s group of a thousand persons at a California college, in which he took issue with the Adventist teaching about the date 1844, led to a church hearing. Ford was granted six months leave of absence to prepare his defense and, in 1980, was then met with by a hundred church representatives who spent some fifty hours hearing his testimony. Church officials then decided to remove him from his teaching post and strip him of his ministerial status. But he was not disfellowshiped (excommunicated) though he has published his views and continues to speak about them in Adventist circles.5 The third man is Edward Dunlap, who was for many years the Registrar of the sole missionary school of Jehovah’s Witnesses, the Watchtower Bible School of Gilead, also a major contributor to the organization’s Bible dictionary (Aid to Bible Understanding [now titled Insight on the Scriptures]) and the writer of its only Bible commentary (Commentary on the Letter of James). He expressed his difference of viewpoint on certain teachings only in private conversation with friends of long standing. In the spring of 1980, a committee of five men, none of them members of the organization’s Governing Body, met with him in secret session for a few hours, interrogating him on his views. After over forty years of association, Dunlap was dismissed from his work and his home at the international headquarters and disfellowshiped from the organization.
4 They simply receive no academic credit for such attendance. 5 In conversation with Desmond Ford at Chattanooga, Tennessee, in 1982, he mentioned that by then more than 120 ministers of the Seventh Day Adventist church had either resigned or been “defrocked” by the church because they could not support certain teachings or recent actions of the organization.

Thus, the religious organization that, for many, has long been a symbol of extreme authoritarianism showed the greatest degree of tolerance toward its dissident instructor; the organization that has taken particular pride in its fight for freedom of conscience showed the least. Herein lies a paradox. Despite their intense activity in door-todoor witnessing, most people actually know little about Jehovah’s Witnesses aside from their position on certain issues of conscience. They have heard of their uncompromising stand in refusing to accept blood transfusions, their refusal to salute any flag or similar emblem, their firm objection to performance of military service, their opposition to participation in any political activity or function. Those familiar with legal cases know that they have taken some fifty cases to the Supreme Court of the United States in defense of their freedom of conscience, including their right to carry their message to people of other beliefs even in the face of considerable opposition and objections. In lands where constitutional liberties protect them, they are free to exercise such rights without hindrance. In other countries they have experienced severe persecution, arrests, jailing, mobbings, beatings, and official bans prohibiting their literature and preaching. How, then, is it the case that today any person among their members who voices a personal difference of viewpoint as to the teachings of the organization is almost certain to face judicial proceedings and, unless willing to retract, is liable for disfellowshipment? How do those carrying out those proceedings rationalize the apparent contradiction in position? Paralleling this is the question of whether endurance of severe persecution and physical mistreatment at the hand of opposers is, of itself, necessarily evidence of belief in the vital importance of staying true to conscience, or whether it can simply be the result of concern to adhere to an organization’s teachings and standards, violation of which is known to bring severe disciplinary action. Some may say that the issue is really not as simple as it is here presented, that there are other crucial matters involved. What of the need for religious unity and order? What of the need for protection against those who spread false, divisive and pernicious teachings? What of the need for proper respect for authority? To ignore those factors would admittedly show an extreme, blindly unbalanced, attitude. Who can challenge the fact that freedom, misused, can lead to irresponsibility, disorder, and can end in confusion, even anarchy? Patience and tolerance likewise can become nothing more than an excuse for indecision, nonaction, a lowering of all standards. Even love can become mere sentimentality, misguided emotion that neglects to do what is really needed, with cruel consequences. All this is true and is what those focus on who would impose restraints on personal conscience through religious authority. What, however, is the effect when spiritual “guidance” becomes mental domination, even spiritual tyranny? What happens when the desirable qualities of unity and order are substituted for by demands for institutionalized conformity and by legalistic regimentation? What results when proper respect for authority is converted into servility, unquestioning submission, an abandonment of personal responsibility before God to make decisions based on individual conscience? Those questions must be considered if the issue is not to be distorted and misrepresented. What follows in this book illustrates in a very graphic way the effect these things have on human relationships, the unusual positions and actions persons will take who see only one side of the issue, the extremes to which they will go to uphold that side. The organizational character and spirit manifest in the 1980s, continued essentially unchanged in the1990s, and remains the same in this year 2004. Perhaps the greatest value in seeing this is, I feel, that it can help us discern more clearly what the fundamental issues were in the days of Jesus Christ and his apostles, and understand why and how a tragic deviation from their teachings and example came, so subtly, with such relative ease, in so brief a span of time. Those who are of other religious affiliations and who may be quick to judge Jehovah’s Witnesses would do well to ask first about themselves and about their own religious affiliation in the light of the issues involved, the basic attitudes that underlie the positions described and the actions taken. To search out the answers to the questions raised requires going beyond the individuals affected into the inner structure of a distinctive religious organization, into its system of teaching and control, discovering how the men who direct it arrive at their decisions and policies, and to some extent investigating its past history and origins. Hopefully the lessons learned can aid in uncovering the root causes of religious turmoil and point to what is needed if persons trying to be genuine followers of God’s Son are to enjoy peace and brotherly unity/.
Religion / Crisis Of Conscience By Raymond Franz (a Former Jehovah’s Witnesses Top Leader) by singlealone: 9:18am On Nov 11, 2015
CRISIS of CONSCIENCE
Fourth Edition
RAYMOND FRANZ (Former member of the Governing Body of Jehovah’s Witnesses)

IN THE HISTORY of a religious organization there can be defining moments, particular times and circumstances that allow for seeing beyond external appearance and recognizing the true character and essential spirit of the organization. The organization’s own self-image, its dominant cast of mind and outlook, its motivating force and its pattern of response to disagreement or challenge, can then be seen more clearly. The factors that come to light may have actually been there all along, at the inner core of the organization, but were beneath the surface, even at odds with external appearances and professed principles. The defining moment may produce a portrait that is disturbingly different from the image the organization holds in the minds of its membership, and that defining period may even escape their notice if those at the organization’s center can effectively suppress awareness of it. Most readers of the book that follows will have at least some familiarity with the religion of Jehovah’s Witnesses. Consider, then, the following statements and ask yourself as to the possible source of these expressions, and also as to their validity: The natural man can see that a visibly organized body, with a definite purpose, is a thing of more or less power; therefore they esteem the various organizations, from which we have come out, in obedience to the Master’s call. But the natural man cannot understand how a company of people, with no organization which they can see, is ever going to accomplish anything. As they look upon us, they regard us simply as a few scattered skirmishers—a “peculiar people”—with very peculiar ideas and hopes, but not worthy of special notice.
Under our Captain, all the truly sanctified, however few or far separated in person, are closely united by the Spirit of Christ, in faith, hope and love; and, in following the Master’s command, are moving in solid battalions for the accomplishment of his purposes. But, bear in mind, God is not dependent upon numbers (See Judges 7, as an illustration). . . . We always refuse to be called by any other name than that of our Head—Christians—continually claiming that there can be no division among those continually led by his Spirit and example as made known through his Word.
Beware of “organization.” It is wholly unnecessary. The Bible rules will be the only rules you will need. Do not seek to bind others’ consciences, and do not permit others to bind yours. Believe and obey so far as you can understand God’s Word today, and so continue growing in grace and knowledge and love day by day.
. . . by whatsoever names men may call us, it matters not to us; we acknowledge none other name than “the only name given under heaven and among men”—Jesus Christ. We call ourselves simply CHRISTIANS and we raise no fence to separate from us any who believe in the foundation stone of our building mentioned by Paul: “That Christ died for our sins according to the Scriptures”; and those for whom this is not broad enough have no right to the name Christian.
If asked to assess these statements and characterize the principles they advance, among Jehovah’s Witnesses today most would certainly classify them as of an “apostate” source. The actual source is, however, the Watch Tower magazine—of an earlier time.† The rejection and discarding of the principles espoused in those published statements were factors in a major transformation within a body of people initially joined together in free affiliation, having no visible organizational structure, and their transposition into a highly centralized organization with a distinctive name and the claim to the exclusive right to be viewed as genuinely Christian. That transformation took place many decades ago. Yet the pattern it established remains in effect to this day and exercises a controlling force. Similarly with the events and circumstances set forth in Crisis of Conscience; they point to a defining moment in more recent times, one that for many may be as unfamiliar as the previous quotations from the Watch Tower magazine. The evidence presented in this fourth edition demonstrates the continuing impact of that period’s developments through the succeeding years and into this 21st century. Rather than diminish their relevance, the years that have passed have instead served to enhance the significance of that period and its events, to validate the picture that unfolds, and provide living examples of the accompanying effect on people’s lives. It is against the background of that defining period that one can discern a reality that is as meaningful and crucial today as it was at the time of the original writing of the book.
Education / Re: Pained Nigerians On Twitter Demand That Schools Owned By Churches Must Be Free by singlealone: 1:20pm On Oct 24, 2015
jascon1:
I strongly agree with them. Many Churches are financial establishments and scam stations. Catholic schools were free back in the days. Working in the church is a volunteer job and a humanitarian one. The church makes too much from tithe, offering and donation etc... Is time to put the money back into the church for the poor n needy n stop enriching self-acclaimed men of god

how much do you give?
Jokes Etc / Re: Hilarious Pic: When You Gave Birth To A Stubborn Kid And Refuses To Stay Home by singlealone: 10:11pm On Jul 17, 2015
Arm arrest
Sports / Re: See What A Chelsea Fan Did To A Cow After Chelsea Were Declared Champions Lol by singlealone: 1:22pm On May 06, 2015
nairawallcom:
This guy was so happy he ended up painting a full cow in chelsea's logo.. guess he won a bet..
[size=15pt]
ONE WORD FOR HIM AND THE COW[/size]
lols

CLICK HERE TO POST ADS,ARTICLES,BUSINESS FOR FREE


Old story. That was when shepe abi alomo, ogogoro football club won the UEFA
Family / Re: I Just Started A Family! My Wedding Pics by singlealone: 7:46pm On Mar 15, 2015
[quote author=mezabo post=31648493]mooore[/quote
Fine pics. Fine wedding. That is the spirit. Put a ring on it. But your haircut nearly spoil the images. grin. The barber for smoothen the junction of the gorimapa and where he left some hair. Your wife fine oh. Enjoy

1 Like

Properties / Re: Newly Built 3 Bedroom Bungalow(95%) Wit 2-shops FOR SALE AT Igando. Wit Pics by singlealone: 2:56pm On Feb 25, 2015
Why you wan sell the house?Are you the owner or agent?
Religion / Re: Rhapsody Of Realities: A Daily Devotional by singlealone: 9:45am On Feb 25, 2015
Your Inheritance In Him .
Wednesday, February 25th .
Pastor Chris
And now, brethren, I commend you to God, and to the word of his grace, which is able to build you up, and to give you an inheritance among all them which are sanctified (Acts 20:32).
The Word of God is able to deliver an inheritance to you. This is why study and meditation on the Word is of utmost importance to the believer. Colossians 1:12-13 says, "Giving thanks unto the Father, which hath made us meet to be partakers of the inheritance of the saints in light: Who hath delivered us from the power of darkness, and hath translated us into the kingdom of his dear Son".
God has qualified you to be a partaker of the inheritance of the saints in light, so you see, there's an inheritance for you in Christ Jesus. You couldn't qualify for it by yourself, but He qualified you by Christ Jesus, for a glorious heritage. Something else to note is that He delivered you from the power of darkness, and translated you into the Kingdom of His dear Son.
Darkness represents evil powers, demons, devils and their works. But He delivered you from them all; He didn't say it'll happen if you prayed hard enough; He's already done it. All He expects of you is to respond to His Word, and walk in the blessings of all He's done for you in Christ.
The Bible says through knowledge - revelation knowledge - shall the just be delivered into their inheritance (Proverbs 11:9). As you study and meditate on the Word, not only will you discover your inheritance in Christ, you'll also be able to relate with, and enjoy, all that God has made available to you in Him. Live in your inheritance in Christ. Celebrate it.
Celebrating your inheritance and all that Christ has done for you is one way of silencing the devil. As you give thanks to God for the things He's done for you in Christ Jesus: your salvation, divine health, prosperity, peace, and His life in you, you're celebrating your inheritance in Him.
CONFESSION
I'm a child of God, and a joint heir with Christ. The lines are fallen unto me in pleasant places, and I have a goodly heritage. I'm conscious of my glorious heritage in Christ, and through meditation on the Word, and fellowship with the Spirit, I get to know more and enjoy my inheritance in Christ. Halleluiah!
Further Study: Psalm 16:5-6 NIV LORD, you alone are my portion and my cup; you make my lot secure. 6 The boundary lines have fallen for me in pleasant places; surely I have a delightful inheritance. ;
Romans 8:16-17 The Spirit itself beareth witness with our spirit, that we are the children of God: 17 And if children, then heirs; heirs of God, and joint-heirs with Christ; if so be that we suffer with him, that we may be also glorified together.
Daily Scripture Reading
1-Year Bible Reading Plan: Mark 7:1-23,
Leviticus 26-27
2-Year Bible Reading Plan: Matthew 17:22-27,
Exodus 6
Sports / Re: Chelsea Fans Revealed As Most Racist In English Football by singlealone: 4:17pm On Feb 19, 2015
juniormusa:

Chelsea will give those guys lifetime stadium ban
It seems ur a man utd fan

I am single and alone, clubless tongue tongue
Sports / Re: Chelsea Fans Revealed As Most Racist In English Football by singlealone: 1:53pm On Feb 19, 2015
juniormusa:

We don't care we are still leading grin grin

As a black man, Chelsea Fans will stop you from entering a train or bus to watch matches. They may soon stop you from watching matches shocked shocked shocked shocked.
make i take style run before Chelsea fans meet me here

1 Like

Religion / Re: Check Our Church Doctrine And Join Us by singlealone: 12:50pm On Feb 19, 2015
obal2:
Brethren,
We want to start a Christian assembly and our our body of doctrine shall include the following among others:
1. Tithes will[b] NOT[/b] be collected because it is un-biblical under the new covenant
2. There shall be no Isaac Offering because Isaac had been born and dead thousands of years ago.
3. Complete holiness shall be preached and not only sexual immorality
4. Hard work, integrity and professionalism will be emphasized
5. Sunday service will be devoted more to reading and studying of the bible (The whole church must read through the bible twice a year).
6. Solemn worship rather than noisy celebration will be given pride of place
7. Second coming of Christ and holiness rather than prosperity will receive higher attention.
6. There shall be no recognition of world ordained festivals such as Easter, Xmas etc
7. Only offering shall be taken and channeled to biblically ordained purposes such as hospital evangelism, prison evangelism, welfarism among church members etc
8. Bony and deep word of truth rather than milky messages such as "ten steps to be free from bondage" will be our watch word
9. The wealth of church members shall remain among members.
10. Lovers and practitioners of heresies and wickedness will be excommunicated pronto
10. Truth among members will be emphasized
Please click LIKE if you will like to join us and SHARE if you think this body of doctrine is outdated


Please when are we starting?
Sports / Re: Chelsea Fans Revealed As Most Racist In English Football by singlealone: 11:23am On Feb 19, 2015
No wonder agbero, touts and other shady characters are their main supporters. grin grin grin grin
Sports / Chelsea Fans Revealed As Most Racist In English Football by singlealone: 11:22am On Feb 19, 2015
Chelsea Football Club had the most supporters arrested for racial and indecent chanting during the 2011/12 season, according to Home Office statistics
By Nick Howson

Chelsea Football Club had the most supporters arrested for racist or indecent chanting during the 2011/12 season, according to Home Office statistics.

The annual football related arrests and banning orders report for the 2011/12 campaign showed that Chelsea fans were five of the 23 football supporters in England and Wales arrested for racial or indecent chanting.

However, despite criticism of the Kick it Out campaign and The Football Association's stance against incidents of prejudice in football, the total number of racially motivated arrests decreased by 46% from the 2010/11 campaign, during which 43 fans were retained.


Chelsea had the most fans arrested for racial and indecent chanting during the 2011/12 campaign.
The Premier League saw 15 arrests and The Championship endured four in 2011/12, while the additional offences occurred in Conference, FA Cup and European matches.

Top flight supporters from Arsenal, Aston Villa, Liverpool, Manchester United, Sunderland, West Bromwich Albion and Wigan Athletic were all arrested for racist or indecent chanting.

The statistics come at a time when referee Mark Clattenburg faces allegations of having racially abused midfielder John Obi Mikel during Chelsea's defeat to Manchester United on 23 October, an accusation which the club made public two weeks ago.

The FA are still to rule on the allegations, and Clattenburg will miss a third successive weekend of Premier League matches having assisted with the investigations.

Metropolitan Police confirmed on Tuesday that no action would be taken against Clattenburg, following a complaint from the Society of Black Lawyers, after they were presented with no evidence from Chelsea. The matter will however remain as a recorded incident and could be revisited.

The Blues were heavily condemned for their handling of the John Terry affair, after the 31 year old was banned for four matches for racially abusing Queens Park Rangers' Anton Ferdinand during a league match in October 2011.

Chelsea decided to take internal action against Terry, but the former England international has since returned to the first team and has retained the club captaincy.

Terry became the second Premier League player to be found guilty of racial abuse after Liverpool's Luis Suarez was banned for eight matches after an incident with United full-back Patrice Evra last year.

Anton, brother Rio Ferdinand and Reading striker Jason Roberts were among a group of players who boycotted wearing Kick it Out t-shirts during the campaign's awareness week in protest of the group's inactive stance.
Religion / Re: Photo: Court Sentences Two Pastors To 7 Years Imprisonment For Stealing N32M by singlealone: 8:03am On Dec 11, 2014
PastorKun:


They won't see any tithes to collect in prison ministry na cheesy


They pay tithes in prison in ministry. Just visit any prison fellowship and verify.

1 Like

Religion / Re: Is Speaking In Tongues For Christians Today? by singlealone: 9:15am On Dec 02, 2014
CANTICLES:
Firstly, What Is Speakin In Tongues? The Record In Act 2:4 Says D Apostles Speak In " Different Tongues " ! What Ar Dis Tongues, Ar Dey Languages Of D World ? Verse 7 And 8 Said D People Hearin Dem Said " How is it then, that each one of us is hearing his own NATIVE LANGUAGE ( or d language in wich we were born)" ! Dats clears , and bible went ahead to mention many of d dialects spoken such as " egyptian, cretans , arebia and so many" ! How diferent dis is diferent from Todays Outburst Of Unintelligible Sounds Utter By D Clergies Of Christendom ! Anyway dont be suprised at their unscriptural black sounds ,speakin In Tongues ( In Diferent Languages) Has Ceased Since It Has Accomplish It Purpose In D 1st Century, Scriptures Said " whether there are tongues, dey will cease" 1 cor 13:8 ! Speakin in tongues of our days is unscriptural and demonic ! CHRISTENDOM IS A SNARE AND A RACKET


lets continue reading to verse 13
13 Others mocking said, These men are full of new wine.

14 But Peter, standing up with the eleven, lifted up his voice, and said unto them, Ye men of Judaea, and all ye that dwell at Jerusalem, be this known unto you, and hearken to my words:

15 For these are not drunken, as ye suppose, seeing it is but the third hour of the day.

Those that believed, the bible called them devout/pious men heard their own languages spoken but mockers who didnt believe accused them of being filled with new wine.

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