|
.:SECTION ONE: QUESTION FOUR:
HOW CLOSE IS THE END?
(WDGR LESSION 8: “Family Life that Pleases God”)
View Book Table of Contents
Is the end so close that one should not live
a “normal” life? Do Jehovah’s Witnesses claim
to be inspired prophets? What does the record show? Are Watchtower
“speculations” false prophecies?
CINDY: Hello Karen, how is the
baby doing today? Did she get over the cold she had last week?
KAREN: Yes, Cindy. She is doing a lot better
and seems to be getting over her coughing spells. Do you have
any kids?
CINDY: No, Karen. Steve and I talked about it
when we got married and decided instead to put our Kingdom ministry
first. Just like we are studying today in the Watchtower brochure,
What Does God Require of Us? Jehovah expects parents to “spend
time with their children and study the Bible with them, caring
for their spiritual and emotional needs.”1. Since Steve and I pioneer full-time, we don’t feel that
we can devote the time and energy to rearing children in Jehovah’s
ways and be able to serve in the ministry as much as we are serving
Him now.
KAREN: Cindy, why is your time in the Kingdom
ministry so important to you, that you and Steve would give up
the joy of rearing children in order to spend more time serving
in the Watchtower organization?
CINDY: Well, Karen, I think the Society said
it best when they said in the February 15, 2000 issue of The Watchtower:
“The people of Noah’s day ‘took no note,’
leading a life centered around their regular routine. In a time
of emergency, one cannot live a ‘normal’ life.”2. You see, Karen, we’re living in the “last days”
of this wicked system of things. In an article entitled “Keep
on the Watch,” The Watchtower of January 15, 2000 said:
“The destruction of this system of things will come with
striking suddenness.…Indeed, it has never been more urgent
for us to keep on the watch.”3. Just as the Society noted in the August 1, 2000 issue
of The Watchtower: “While this does not imply that it is
wrong to have children today, many Christian couples decline to
have children so as to become more fully involved in the urgent
work that Jehovah has given his people to do. Some couples.…have
decided to remain childless and consider the possibility of bearing
children in Jehovah’s righteous new world.”4.
KAREN: Cindy, are you saying that the reason
you and Steve decided not to have children is because you believe
the end is so close that you feel it would be better to give your
time to the preaching work in hope that after the battle of Armageddon,
you may have children in the new world?
CINDY: That’s right, Karen. One of the
reasons we know the end is so close is because the Society said
in The Watchtower of January 15, 2000 “It seems that by
the year 1935, the general ingathering of the anointed was complete.…the
number of genuine anointed disciples of Christ is dwindling, though
some will evidently still be on earth when the great tribulation
begins.”5. So you see, Karen, because the Society says that some of these
anointed brothers will still be on earth when the tribulation
begins, we know that the end must occur sometime before all of
these brothers die. Since we know that the majority of the youngest
members of this anointed class of people will be a hundred years
old by the year 2035, Armageddon must be only a few years away.
KAREN: So let me get this straight. Cindy, is
the Watchtower Society teaching that the generation of people
living since 1935 must not pass away before the end comes?
CINDY: Well, I guess that is what they’re saying, Karen.
I hadn’t thought of it in those terms before.
KAREN: Wasn’t it just a few years ago
that the Watchtower stopped teaching that Armageddon would come
before the generation of the people living in 1914 would pass
away?
CINDY: Yes, Karen, the Society taught that for
nearly thirty years, but in 1995, they received “new light.”
In the November 1, 1995 issue of The Watchtower, the Society announced
that the end could come at any time and should not be counted
as a generation of people who started living in 1914.6.
KAREN: So, Cindy, what happened to the “new
light”? Are they now speculating that the generation should
be counted from 1935 instead of their original date of 1914?
CINDY: Well, I guess that’s what they’re
saying.
KAREN: Cindy, how is this any different from
the speculations the Watchtower made regarding the end occurring
in 1914, 1915, 1918, 1925, the 1940’s, and 1975?7. Is this the case in which they hope that if they guess enough
times, they’ll eventually get it right?
CINDY: I don’t know, Karen. All I know
is that the end is very close. Don’t you think we’re
living in the last days?
KAREN: Yes, Cindy, but didn’t Jesus warn
that in the last days “…false prophets will arise,
and will mislead many.”?8. Doesn’t Deuteronomy 18:20-22 warn that it only takes one
false prophecy to make a false prophet? How many times does the
Watchtower have to be wrong before people will recognize it is
a false prophet?
CINDY: Karen, in the Watchtower book Reasoning
from the Scriptures, the Society says: “Jehovah’s
Witnesses do not claim to be inspired prophets. They have made
mistakes. Like the apostles of Jesus Christ, they have at times
had some wrong expectations.” 9.
KAREN: Cindy, what is the difference between
a “wrong expectation” and a false prophecy? What causes
a prediction to be a “wrong expectation” but not a
false prophecy?
CINDY: Karen, that is a good question. I guess
I’d have to say that the difference is when a prophet claims
that his prediction is from Jehovah God and it fails, I guess
that would make him a false prophet. But Jehovah’s Witnesses
are not false prophets because in the March 22, 1993 issue of
the Awake!, the Watchtower Society said: “Jehovah’s
Witnesses, in their eagerness for Jesus’ second coming,
have suggested dates that turned out to be incorrect. Because
of this, some have called them false prophets. Never in these
instances, however, did they presume to originate predictions
‘in the name of Jehovah.’”10.
KAREN: Cindy, is the Society saying that they
have never claimed that their predictions were “in the name
of Jehovah”?
CINDY: That’s right Karen. This is why
our speculations were only “wrong expectations,” not
false prophecies!
KAREN: Cindy, have you read The Watchtower article
of March 15, 1972? In that article, under the heading “What
is Required of God’s Messenger,” the Society said:
“Therefore, when it came time for the name of Jehovah and
his purposes to be declared to the people, along with God’s
warning that Christendom is in her ‘time of the end,’
who qualified to be commissioned?…was there any group on
whom Jehovah would be willing to bestow the commission to speak
as a ‘prophet’ in His name, as was done toward Ezekiel
back there in 613 B.C.E.? What were the qualifications?”11. Then, in subsequent articles, the Society went on to explain that
they fulfilled the qualifications to speak as a prophet in Jehovah’s
name. Why is the Society being dishonest in their Awake! article
by claiming that they never spoke in Jehovah’s name when
the facts prove that they did? Do you really want to give your
life to an organization that is a false prophet and lies about
its history in order to conceal the evidence?
COMMENTS:
Friends, history reveals that not only has the Watchtower
Society falsely prophesied the end on a number of occasions, but
at various times throughout its history, the Society has encouraged
its member to put off marriage, having children, and even obtaining
additional education, simply because they said the end was so
close.12. Is it any wonder many Jehovah’s Witnesses are leaving the
Watchtower to find a real relationship with the living Lord Jesus
Christ? Are you tired of serving a counterfeit organization? Jesus
says: “Come to Me, all who are weary and heavy-laden, and
I will give you rest.” 13.
NEXT DIALOGUE
==================
1. What Does God Require of Us?,
1996, p. 17
2. The Watchtower, February 15, 2000, p. 6
3. The Watchtower, January 15, 2000 p. 14
4. The Watchtower, August 1, 2000 p. 21
5. The Watchtower, January 15, 2000 pp.
16, 13
6. The Watchtower, November 1, 1995 pp.
17, 19
7. The Time Is At Hand,
1889, p. 101; The Time Is At Hand, 1915ed, p. 101; The Finished Mystery,1915, p. 485; Millions Now Living Will Never Die,1920, pp. 89-90, 97; The Watchtower,
September 15, 1941, p. 288; Jehovah’s Witnesses—Proclaimers of God’s Kingdom, 1993, p. 633
8. Matthew 24:11, New American Standard Bible
9. Reasoning from the Scriptures, 1985, 1989ed,
p. 136
10.AWAKE! March 22, 1993, p. 4
11. The Watchtower, March 15, 1972, p. 189
12. Face The Facts, 1938, pp. 46-47, 50; Salvation,
1939, p. 325; Kingdom Ministry, May 1974, p.
3; The Watchtower, March 15, 1969, p. 171
13. Matthew 11:28, New American Standard Bible
|