Oeste
Well-Known Member
So, was Nathan (in King David’s day), Jehovah God’s prophet?
Yet the account @ 2 Samuel 7:1-3 informs us that Nathan told David something wrong, even saying that God was backing him.
But David said @ 1 Chronicles 28:3 that that was not the case!
Did Nathan utter a falsehood? Yes, most assuredly...but his heart was in the right place: unselfishly on Jehovah’s side.
Read 1 Chronicles 17:2 again. You’ll notice Nathan’s original message about building a house was never claimed by Nathan to be instruction from God. His subsequent message about not building a house was claimed to be instruction from God.
Had Nathan claimed his original message to be instruction from God he would have been deemed a false prophet…claiming he received words from God that God never spoke.
This is not the case with the Watchtower, which has at times claimed their dates to be God's dates rather than their own.
So When Jesus tested his followers, at John 6:51-69, Peter and the other Apostles knew where the truth came from...
There was nothing untrue or false about what Jesus stated. Sure, Jesus eventually had to explain it to them, but he never spoke a truth that was in need of “correction”.
You can clarify a prior truth, but there’s no need to correct truth. If truth needs correction it was never truth to begin with.
Remember Nineveh? Jonah pronounced it’s impending destruction through the Spirit of God. But Nineveh repented and was spared.
So was Jonah a false prophet? No! Because God has spoken 500 years earlier:
At any time I might announce that a nation or kingdom will be uprooted, torn down, and destroyed. But if that nation I warned turns from its evil, then I will relent of the disaster I had planned to inflict. (Jeremiah 18:7-8)
I see no evidence and certainly no assertion by the Watchtower that the nations had “repented” in 1799, 1874, 1914, 1925, or 1940 and thus avoided or delayed the WT's promise of impending destruction.
Jehovah and Jesus allow tests today, just like Jesus did back then..... but that doesn’t negate the truths we’ve already learned, remembering who taught us.
Correct. We learned the truth about 1799, 1874, 1914, 1925 and other dates and who taught us these "truths".
Their ‘hearts are in the right place’, preaching the Kingdom message worldwide (Matthew 24:14), and all of us “speaking in agreement (1 Corinthians 1:10)” sharing global “brotherly love (1 Peter 1:22)”. It’s evidence of Jehovah’s spirit.
You were all “speaking in agreement” to the wrong truths…truths your Governing Board allegedly received from Jehovah. If your prophet speaks words that Jehovah did not ask him to speak, and your heart is still with the prophet, then your heart cannot possibly be with Jehovah. Jehovah’s heart is not with prophets who speak unrepentant untruths in His Name.
In the “Old Days” claiming Jehovah told you to say something He did not say might have been fatal, subjecting the prophet to stoning. But we are in a New Covenant of grace. The only thing the GB need do is apologize, repent, and ask Jesus forgiveness, something the GB consistently refuses to do.
Jehovah Witnesses are not the only church that has ever faced spiritual dilemma. All churches go through this at some point, and the Watchtower is no exception. The question is whether they are humble and repent, or consider their pride and refuse to do so.
The original Worldwide Church of God (now Grace Communion International) at one time claimed to be God’s exclusive representatives on earth, the “true religion”, much like the Watchtower does today. Despite your Organization's claim of uniqueness, they held many beliefs you would find familiar:
- No Trinity
- Disfellowship wrongdoers
- Great Tribulation about to come in the 1900s including 1975
- Only one true church, all other religions are children of the Devil
- No involvement in war
- Millennium as the major focus
- Cross a pagan symbol
- Christmas, Easter and Birthdays wrong
- Christianity is a way of life
- Cannot vote
- United Nations "10 horns, 10 kings, 10 crowns" of Revelation
(I hear you scoffing now. So does Jehovah.)
I take the time to challenge not “scoff” your beliefs. To the extent possible, I try to do this in a very Berean-like manner (Acts 17:11).
It would be much easier to scoff…I could simply write “ha-ha-ha” and you could respond in kind but neither of us sees that as advancing discussion.
I enjoy our discussion HC, and that goes for Deeje also. So don't you, as the time and effort both of you have put into our discussions makes blatantly obvious. Granted we may not always "like" or agree with what the other writes, but we enjoy the opportunity to converse. Scriptural discussion might appear redundant, boring or predictable to the outside world, but every once in a while someone will toss a curve ball on the forum that keeps things interesting.
We can express ourselves with a freedom and opportunity that many in the world simply do not have and frankly may not always be present. Let the scoffers scoff at that if they wish, but don't forget there are skeptics out there who would consider any "biblically based" argument we put forth as "silly" and “ludicrous”.