djhwoodwerks
Well-Known Member
The Watchtower believes that Birthdays are bad because for instance that Pharaoh had one (Genesis 40:22-22) the JW believe everything in the bible is there for a reason and since they think it portrays Birthdays in an unfavorable light, they must be evil or bad.
However the Watchtowers position is a clear case of guilt by association. Concluding that a particular day is evil because something bad happened on it is not good logic. For instance, Genesis 40:20 proves only that the Pharaoh was evil, not the birthdays. There is no command to celebrate birthdays, though there is no warrant to say that to do so is forbidden from Genesis 40:20 or in any other passage.
Remember, if were going by what Pharaoh did, he actually did something good as well on his birthday, such as declaring amnesty to the chief cup bearer (Genesis 40:21)-He set a man free! So if doing something evil on his birthday means birthdays are bad, then doing something good means there's something good about birthdays with the same logic.
Another "guilt by association" the watchtower uses is found in Matthew 14;6-10, where the NWT renders that when Herod the pagan had a birthday, that's when he had John the Baptist beheaded. Again that only proves Herod was evil, birthdays. You just have to ask yourself, what's the source of evil in these stories-the men who did evil, or the birthdays themselves?
And regarding birthdays in Biblical times, Bible scholar E.M. Blaiklock notes the following:
"The celebration of the anniversary of ones birth is a universal practice, for in most human cities the privileges and responsibilities of life are attached to the attainment of a certain age. The surviving census docents, dating back to A.D. 48, carefully record the age of those described and enrolled according to the requirements of the Roman census law, which implies an observance and counting of birthdays.
The birth of a child, according to Leviticus 12, occasioned certain rites and ceremonies. Under mosaic law age was the chief qualification for authority and office. The blind mans' parents declared that their son was 'of age' (John 9:21). There was significance in Jesus' visit to the Temple at 12 years of age."
From a is tori al and biblical perspective, birthdays spoken above had no evil associated with them. in fact, many scholars belief that birthdays are mentioned in Job 1:4:
"His (Job's) sons used to go and hold a feast on the house of each one ON HIS DAY, and they would send and invite their three sisters to eat and drink with them."
Scholars agree like Adam Clarke that, "it is likely a birthday festival is here intended. When the birthday of one arrived, he invited his brothers and sisters to feast with him; and each observed the same custom."
Nothing in the text indicate Job's children did evil things I this say. Their celebration is not portrayed as a pagan practice. And Job certainly does not condemn the celebration.
If the observance of birthdays was offensive to Jehovah, then Job-a man who "was blameless and upright, one who feared God and turned away from evil".(Job 1:1) would have prevented this practice among his own children but did not for it was acceptable.
So the Watchtower, like the Pharisees in Jesus' day make man made traditions of you cannot do this or that without any biblical support.
Absolutely true!! And to not worship Jesus like they say they do God, the JW's do obeisance to Him. Why not do obeisance or honor your relative on their birthday. The Bible does not teach against it.