Author Archives: MeekSpaceNG

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About MeekSpaceNG

MeekSpaceNG - free theocratic materials and downloads We've assembled wonderful selection of fun free theocratic multimedia, crossword puzzles, Bible Reading Schedules, Documents, Templates and various useful research tools for Jehovah's Witnesses, and we offer them all to you for free use and distribution. Jehovah’s Witnesses Theocratic Software. With life becoming ever so full and busy these days, easy access to important resources is both a time-saver and an inspiration, MeekSpaceNG has assembled a wonderful selection of downloads for Jehovah's Witnesses, and we offer them all to you for free use and distribution. Many of these aids are practical, others are a source of motivation, and they're all intended for your enrichment, easy research, pleasure and enjoyment. You'll discover a wide variety of different file types in these collections which among others include multimedia, templates, Word and PDF documents. Theocratic Software offerings range from a complete chronology of "The Promised Seed" (Genesis) to personal Bible reading schedules in a variety of formats. You'll even find a Bible timeline for daily use that puts important scriptural references at your fingertips. Simplify organizational duties with templates for Our Christian Life and Ministry, midweek and weekend meetings, announcements or congregation accounts. Assembly and Regional Convention notebooks are available as well as Life and Ministry workbook and worksheets for adults and the kids are equally given prominent attention. Develop Bible reading schedules, outline study programs, and track field service time. From delightful children's activities to inspiring desktop wallpaper, these JW theocratic downloads are engaging and entertaining resources for the whole family. As God's organization is ever more using jw.org as a means to distribute spiritual food, meekspaceNG was created to find ways to alert the reader of the latest information, releases and updates from the official website. However, we don't allow posting of entire articles or magazines here, only links to such articles will be provided. We know there is such a condition as "fair use". This allows for quoting portions and discussing it. Here is the "official" info on fair-use: https://www.copyright.gov/fair-use/more-info.html. This rule we are bound to respect to the fullest. However, if in anyway we are overstepping our bounds, we are ready for adjustments. We conclude by saying that this is personal project and is in no way officially connected with jw.org. we are jw friendly. We believes in all the teaching of the Giverning Body of JW's Friends and propaging the ideals and doctrines of the organization as the only Channel Jehovah is using today. We therefore encourage all visitors and users of the blog to visit https://www.jw.org which is the official web for Jehovah's organization.

Examining the Scriptures Daily—2019 Friday, October 4

Friday, October 4

Wicked men and impostors will advance from bad to worse.​—2 Tim. 3:13.
Many health-care professionals work among those infected with contagious diseases. They care for their patients because they want to help them. In doing so, however, they need to protect themselves so that they do not become infected with the disease they are seeking to treat. Likewise, many of us live and work with those who are infected with attitudes and characteristics that run counter to godly qualities. This presents a challenge for us. These last days are a time of moral chaos. The apostle Paul’s second letter to Timothy describes the characteristics of people who are alienated from God. (2 Tim. 3:1-5) Though we may be shocked by the prevalence of such qualities, we could be influenced by the behavior and attitudes of those who display them. (Prov. 13:20) Therefore, we must protect ourselves from being infected with negative traits while at the same time helping others spiritually. w18.01 27 ¶1-2

from Blogger http://meekspaceng.blogspot.com/2019/10/examining-scriptures-daily2019-friday.html

Examining the Scriptures Daily—2019 Friday, October 4

Friday, October 4

Wicked men and impostors will advance from bad to worse.​—2 Tim. 3:13.
Many health-care professionals work among those infected with contagious diseases. They care for their patients because they want to help them. In doing so, however, they need to protect themselves so that they do not become infected with the disease they are seeking to treat. Likewise, many of us live and work with those who are infected with attitudes and characteristics that run counter to godly qualities. This presents a challenge for us. These last days are a time of moral chaos. The apostle Paul’s second letter to Timothy describes the characteristics of people who are alienated from God. (2 Tim. 3:1-5) Though we may be shocked by the prevalence of such qualities, we could be influenced by the behavior and attitudes of those who display them. (Prov. 13:20) Therefore, we must protect ourselves from being infected with negative traits while at the same time helping others spiritually. w18.01 27 ¶1-2

Declaration of Facts

Declaration of Facts

Wilmersdorfer Erklärung of 25 June 1933 (page 1)
The Declaration of Facts was a widely distributed public statement issued by Jehovah’s Witnesses during the period of persecution of the group in Nazi Germany. The document asserted the denomination’s political neutrality, appealed for the right to publicly preach, and claimed the Witnesses were the victims of a misinformation campaign by other churches. It was prepared by Watch Tower Society president Joseph F. Rutherford and released at a convention in Berlinon June 25, 1933. More than 2.1 million copies of the statement were distributed throughout Germany, with copies also mailed to senior government officials including German Chancellor Adolf Hitler.[1] Its distribution prompted a new wave of persecution against German Witnesses.[2]

from Blogger http://meekspaceng.blogspot.com/2019/10/declaration-of-facts.html

Nazi Concentration Camp Badge

Nazi Concentration Camp Badge

Nazi camp ID-emblems in a 1936 German illustration
Nazi concentration camp badges, primarily triangles, were part of the system of identification in Nazi camps. They were used in the concentration camps in the Nazi-occupied countries to identify the reason the prisoners had been placed there.[1] The triangles were made of fabric and were sewn on jackets and trousers of the prisoners. These mandatory badges of shame had specific meanings indicated by their colour and shape. Such emblems helped guards assign tasks to the detainees. For example, a guard at a glance could see if someone were a convicted criminal (green patch) and thus likely of a tough temperament suitable for kapo duty.
Someone with an escape suspect mark usually would not be assigned to work squads operating outside the camp fence. Someone wearing an F could be called upon to help translate guards’ spoken instructions to a trainload of new arrivals from France. Some historical monuments quote the badge-imagery, with the use of a triangle being a sort of visual shorthand to symbolize all camp victims.
The modern-day use of a pink triangle emblem to symbolize gay rights is a response to the camp identification patches.

from Blogger http://meekspaceng.blogspot.com/2019/10/nazi-concentration-camp-badge.html

Persecution of Jehovah’s Witnesses in the United States: 1930s and 1940s

Persecution of Jehovah’s Witnesses in the United States:

1930s and 1940sEdit

During the late 1930s and the 1940s, Jehovah’s Witnesses attacked the Roman Catholic Church and other Christian denominations so vigorously that many states and municipalities passed laws against their inflammatory preaching.[8]

World War II

During World War II, Witnesses experienced mob violence in America because they were perceived as being against the war effort.[9]

Pledge of AllegianceEdit

Mandatory flag pledges in public schools were motivated by patriotic fervor in wartime America.[citation needed] The first known mandatory flag pledges were instituted in a number of states during the Spanish–American War. During World War I, many more states instituted mandatory flag pledges with only a few dissents recorded by the American Civil Liberties Union. It was not until World War II was drawing to a close that the practice was officially challenged in the court system.
In 1935, Rutherford proscribed flag salutes, stating them to be a form of idolatry “contrary to the Word of God.”[10] This stance drew mob violence against Witnesses[clarification needed] and many children of Witnesses were expelled from public schools. The Witnesses’ apparent lack of patriotism angered local authorities, the American Legion, and others, resulting in vigilante violence during World War II. Men, women and children were injured and in some cases killed in mob attacks.[citation needed]
In 1940, the case of Minersville School District v. Gobitis received publicity in a lower federal court. The US Supreme Court ruled in an 8–1 decision that a school district’s interest in creating national unity was sufficient to allow them to require that students salute the flag. After the court’s decision in the Gobitis case, a new wave of persecution of Witnesses began across the nation. Lillian Gobitas later characterized the violence as “open season on Jehovah’s Witnesses.” The American Civil Liberties Union recorded 1,488 attacks on Witnesses in over 300 communities between May and October 1940. Angry mobs assaulted Witnesses, destroyed their property, boycotted their businesses and vandalized their places of worship. Less than a week after the court decision, a Kingdom Hall in Kennebunk, Maine was burnt down.[citation needed]
American Legion posts harassed Witnesses nationwide. At Klamath Falls, Oregon, members of the American Legion harassed Witnesses assembled for worship with requests to salute the flag and buy war bonds. They then attacked the Witnesses and besieged the meeting place, breaking windows, throwing in stink bombs, ammonia and burning kerosene rags. The Witnesses’ cars were disabled and many were overturned. The governor was compelled to call the state militia to disperse the mob, which reached 1,000 at its peak.[11] In Texas, Witness missionaries were chased and beaten by vigilantes, and their literature was confiscated or burned.
First Lady Eleanor Roosevelt appealed publicly for calm, and newspaper editorials and the American legal community[who?] condemned the Gobitas decision as a blow to liberty.[citation needed]Several justices signaled their belief that the case had been “wrongly decided.”[citation needed] On June 16, 1940, in an effort to dispel the mob action, the United States Attorney GeneralFrancis Biddle, stated on a nationwide radio broadcast:
Jehovah’s witnesses have been repeatedly set upon and beaten. They had committed no crime; but the mob adjudged they had, and meted out mob punishment. The Attorney General has ordered an immediate investigation of these outrages. The people must be alert and watchful, and above all cool and sane. Since mob violence will make the government’s task infinitely more difficult, it will not be tolerated. We shall not defeat the Nazi evil by emulating its methods.
In 1943, after a drawn-out litigation process by Watch Tower Society lawyers in state courts and lower federal courts, the Supreme Court reversed its previous decision, ruling that public school officials could not force Jehovah’s Witnesses and other students to salute the flag and recite the Pledge of Allegiance.[12]

from Blogger http://meekspaceng.blogspot.com/2019/10/persecution-of-jehovahs-witnesses-in_51.html

Persecution of Jehovah’s Witnesses in the United States: Background

Persecution of Jehovah’s Witnesses in the United States:

BackgroundEdit

In the 1910s and 1920s, the Watch Tower Society, then associated with the Bible Student movement, was outspoken in its statements against other religious groups and of the Catholic Church in particular.[4] The Bible Students believed religion to be a “racket and a snare” and refused to be identified as a specific denomination for some time. It was not uncommon for members to carry placards outside churches and in the streets, proclaiming the imminent destruction of church members along with church and government institutions if they did not flee from “false religion”. The Watch Tower Society’s 1917 book, The Finished Mystery, stated, “Also, in the year 1918, when God destroys the churches wholesale and the church members by millions, it shall be that any that escape shall come to the works of Pastor Russell to learn the meaning of the downfall of ‘Christianity’.”[5]
Citing The Finished Mystery, the United States federal government indicted the Watch Tower Society’s board of directors for violating the Espionage Act on May 7, 1918 for condemning the war effort. They were found guilty and sentenced to 20 years imprisonment; however, in March 1919, the judgment against them was reversed, and they were released from prison. The charges were later dropped.[6] Patriotic fervor during World War I fueled persecution of the Bible Students both in America and in Europe.[7]
In 1917, following the death of Charles Taze Russell—the founder of the Bible Student movement—Joseph Franklin Rutherford became president of the Watch Tower Society, and a leadership dispute within the society ensued; those who remained associated with the society became known as Jehovah’s witnesses in 1931.

from Blogger http://meekspaceng.blogspot.com/2019/10/persecution-of-jehovahs-witnesses-in_83.html

Persecution of Jehovah’s Witnesses in the United States: Negative attitudes towards Jehovah’s Witnesses

Persecution of Jehovah’s Witnesses in the United States:

Negative attitudes towards Jehovah’s WitnessesEdit

In his 1964 study of prejudice toward minorities, Seymour Martin Lipset found that the Jehovah’s Witnesses were among the most disliked of all religious minorities he researched; 41% of respondents expressed open dislike of them.[2] In 1984, authors Merlin Brinkerhoff and Marlene Mackie concluded that after the so-called new cults, Jehovah’s Witnesses were among the least accepted religious groups in the United States.[3]

from Blogger http://meekspaceng.blogspot.com/2019/10/persecution-of-jehovahs-witnesses-in_99.html

Purple Triangle

Purple Triangle

Purple triangle
The purple triangle was a concentration camp badge used by the Nazis to identify Bibelforscher (the name for Jehovah’s Witnesses at the time) in Nazi Germany. The purple triangle was introduced in July 1936 with other concentration camps such as those of Dachau and Buchenwald following in 1937 and 1938.[1] In the winter of 1935-36, before the onset of the war, Jehovah’s Witnesses have been reported to make up 20-40% of the prisoners in concentration camps. [2] Although Jehovah’s Witnesses made up the vast majority of those wearing the purple triangle (over 99%), a few members of other small pacifist religious groups were also included.[3][4][5]

from Blogger http://meekspaceng.blogspot.com/2019/10/purple-triangle.html

Persecution of Jehovah’s Witnesses in Nazi Germany Causes…

Persecution of Jehovah’s Witnesses in Nazi Germany:

Causes of persecution and Nazi motivesEdit

Jehovah’s Witnesses were one of a range of religious denominations against whom authorities took action from 1933, declaring that they “contributed to the ideological fragmentation of the German people”, preventing the forming of a united German community.[35] Historians, including Canadian Michael H. Kater, Christine Elizabeth King from England and Austrian Wolfgang Neugebauer, have suggested the extraordinary animosity between National Socialism and Bible Student teachings was rooted in the similarity in structure of both ideologies, which were based on authoritarianism and totalitarianism and which each believed had a monopoly on the “truth”.[36][37] Kater wrote:
Just as the National Socialist ideology, so were also the teachings of Jehovah’s Witnesses dominated not by a democratic but an authoritarian policy. Both systems were totalitarian in that they strictly integrated national comrades as well as fellow believers into the respective authoritarian structure and requested them to give up their own personal identity for the objectives of the system. While the National Socialists accepted the “”Führer State”, the “Earnest Bible Students” submitted to the “Theocracy“, in which not the Führer, but Jehovah, was the dictatorial ruler. Since both groups claimed exclusiveness, this inevitably had to result in conflict. A Bible Student who had devoted himself to Jehovah was in no way able to carry out the duties that the National Socialist State demanded of him as a national comrade.[38]
Garbe accepts that both ideologies claimed to represent the “epitome of truth”, demanded the person as a whole, tolerated no questioning of ideology and also held a common belief in salvation utopias for certain parts of humankind and the vision of a Thousand-Year Reign. He adds that, pitted against a considerably more powerful organization, the group’s efforts were doomed to fail.[39]
German writer Falk Pingel argued that the source of controversy between the Bible Students and the Nazi party was their determination to continue their religious activities despite restrictions[40]and Garbe, noting that the increasing repression by authorities simply provoked the group’s determination to go underground and maintain their activity, concludes that “the extraordinary severity with which Jehovah’s Witnesses were persecuted resulted from a conflict that gradually escalated in an interaction of action and reaction … the authorities responsible for the persecution always responded with increasing severity to the continuous stubbornness of the IBSA members”.[39] He said that the Nazis were baffled by an opponent that, convinced it was being directed by God’s channel, did not back down under intensified persecution, as expected. He wrote:
These factors could have contributed to the fact that … efforts to break their resolve were intensified and even more brutal. From this point of view, the IBSA members contributed to a certain extent to the severity of the NS actions, but this certainly does not mean that they intentionally provoked these measures.[39]
Penton noted that in August 1933, then branch overseer Martin Harbeck directed members that they should cease distributing literature and holding meetings without police permission. (At the beginning of 1934, the branch chief he had temporarily replaced, Paul Balzereit, had issued a similar instruction.) He said the organization’s later decision to abandon caution and direct members to intensify their preaching efforts was a “reckless” behavior that caused Witnesses and their families more suffering than was necessary. Hitler, Penton argued, had become highly popular with the German populace by 1936, yet Witnesses persisted in distributing a Rutherford booklet that described the chancellor as “of unsound mind, cruel, malicious and ruthless”. He said the international campaign to swamp Hitler with telegrams of protest in October 1934 infuriated the chancellor and was a major factor in bringing greater governmental persecution on them. Citing Dietrich Hellmund’s description of their “incredible public militancy”, he wrote: “Jehovah’s Witnesses were the most stridently outspoken conscientious objectors in the country, and the Nazis had no intention of putting up with them … No movement can constantly heap insults on all other religions, the business community and national governments in the way that the Bible Student-Jehovah’s Witnesses did from 1918 onward without provoking a reaction.”[41][42][43]
Scholars are divided over the ultimate intention of the Nazi regime towards Jehovah’s Witnesses. Garbe believes the Gestapo considered members of the denomination to be “incorrigible” elements who had to be ruthlessly eliminated.[44] The 1934 telegram protest had prompted an “hysterical” Hitler to vow that “this brood will be exterminated in Germany”[45], and he repeated the threat in August 1942.[46] Watch Tower Society writer Wolfram Slupina claims the Nazis “attempted to consign the Witnesses to oblivion by systematically exterminating them”. But Penton has argued there is abundant evidence that the Nazis had no intention to eradicate Witnesses. Since they were viewed as ordinary German citizens, the Nazis hoped to break their resistance and compel them to renounce their faith and declare loyalty to the Third Reich.[47]Quoting Jehovah’s Witness Jolene Chu, Penton wrote:
Capitulation, not annihilation seems to have been the Nazi goal for the Witnesses, despite the fact that Hitler had declared about them in 1934, “This brood will be exterminated!” The Gestapo and SS applied the usual torture methods, and in the process hundreds of Witnesses died. But a clue as to the Nazi aim of breaking the Witness resolve is found in a remarkable document offered repeatedly to Witness prisoners — a renunciation of their faith and a pledge of loyalty to the fatherland.[47]
According to Penton, further evidence that the Nazis did not consider Witnesses inherently candidates for destruction in the same way as Jews, Romanis, and homosexuals, is that almost no Jehovah’s Witnesses were gassed, and they were often employed domestically by the SS and in other jobs with significantly better conditions, improving their chances of survival.[48]

from Blogger http://meekspaceng.blogspot.com/2019/10/persecution-of-jehovahs-witnesses-in_44.html

Persecution of Jehovah’s Witnesses in Nazi Germany: Concentration camps

Persecution of Jehovah’s Witnesses in Nazi Germany:

Concentration campsEdit

From 1935, the authorities began sending hundreds of Jehovah’s Witnesses to concentration camps, where they were imprisoned with Communists, Socialists, other political prisoners and union members. In May 1938, they accounted for 12 percent of all prisoners at Buchenwald concentration camp near Weimar; by May 1939, they represented 40 percent of all prisoners at Schloss Lichentenburg, the central concentration camp for women, though as the total number of prisoners increased rapidly, the proportion of Witnesses generally fell to about 3 percent. About 2000 Witnesses were eventually sent to Nazi concentration camps, where they were identified by purple triangles; as many as 1200 died in custody, including 250 who were executed.[30][31] Garbe claims members of the group were special objects of hatred by the SS, receiving beatings, whippings and public humiliation and given the dirtiest and most laborious work details for refusing to salute, stand at attention or sing Nazi songs. They were subjected to high-pressure jets of ice-cold water from fire hydrants and subjected to arbitrary acts of torture, including pushing a fully laden wheelbarrow with their necks while crawling on hands and knees. Others were forced to stand still for an entire day in the heat or cold, or were confined in groups in small closets in an attempt to suffocate them.[30] From March to December 1938, Jehovah’s Witnesses in Buchenwald were not allowed to send or receive letters or to purchase food. Many approached starvation and were forced to eat leaves from trees and bushes. Many were forced to engage in a “drill” that included rolling, creeping, hopping, and running for 75 minutes while camp guards kicked and beat them, while others, forced to work in stone quarries, were refused medical attention when sick.[32] Despite persecution, Jehovah’s Witnesses continued to hold secret religious gatherings inside the camps.
Conditions for Witnesses improved in 1942, when they were increasingly given work details that required little supervision, such as farming, gardening, transportation and unloading goods, while others worked in civilian clothing in a health resort, as housekeepers for Nazi officials, or were given construction and craft tasks at military buildings.[33]
In July 1944, Himmler ordered Ernst Kaltenbrunner, the head of the RSHA, to begin sending Jehovah’s Witnesses to the occupied east. Himmler viewed the Jehovah’s Witnesses as frugal, hard-working, honest and fanatic in their pacifism, and that these traits were extremely desirable for the suppressed nations in the east.[34]

from Blogger http://meekspaceng.blogspot.com/2019/10/persecution-of-jehovahs-witnesses-in_89.html