Jump to content
The World News Media

ARchiv@L

Moderator
  • Posts

    2,593
  • Joined

  • Last visited

  • Days Won

    1

Posts posted by ARchiv@L

  1.  

    $_72.JPG

     

    Wie jedes Jahr suchen wir ab etwa März/April 2017 eine weibliche Kraft für mehrere Monate für Arbeit in unserem Hotel und Restaurant.
    Irena ist Ende November wieder nach Polen zurück, nachdem sie, wie schon etliche Jahre, auch 2016 wieder einige Monate bei uns gearbeitet hat. Leider wird sie wohl 2017 nicht kommen können.
    Neben dem Verdienst - so bemessen, daß er unter der Steuergrenze bleibt - werden unsere Kräfte angemeldet und bekommen Kost und Logis frei.
    Einfach mal Kontakt mit uns aufnehmen, damit wir uns kennen lernen. Wir sind in Erwartung!

    https://www.ebay-kleinanzeigen.de/s-anzeige/bevorzugt-zeugen-jehovas-z-b-aus-polen-oder-rumaenien-oder-/574221730-110-4919

  2. hello everyone.
    perhaps you had noticed that screen on the january broadcasting program.

    2017-01-10 jw-archives 10jan2017.jpg

     

    I searched the internet to find that papyrus, so I like to share the information with all of you.

     

    2017-01-10 jw-archives3 10jan2017.jpg

    can anyone tell us, where is that from the bible ?
    thank you.

    jw archives only.jpg

    (and for those who like the greek letters),
    can you see those 3 words ?
    ΘΕΟΣ
    ΔΑΜΑΣΚΟΥ
    ΙΣΡΑΗΛ

    2017-01-10 jw-archives4 10jan2017.jpg

     

     

    [my greetings to all]

  3. hello everyone,

    I want to make a "collection" of all those photos that appear radomly on the official page,
    although our internet friend david has made a wonderful collection on his web.8080.page.
    [thank you david]

    502015935_univ_pnr_lg.jpg

    Chachapoyas, Peru—
    Talking about God’s Kingdom with Spanish-speaking farmers

     

     

    502015949_univ_pnr_lg.jpg

    Matobo District, Zimbabwe—
    Witnessing from house to house

     

     

    502017706_univ_pnr_lg.jpg

    Vienna, Austria—
    Offering Bible-based publications in Maria-Theresien-Platz

     

     

    502017713_univ_pnr_lg.jpg

    Seoul, South Korea—
    Engaging in metropolitan witnessing

     

     

     

    Lavaux region, Switzerland—Lavaux region, Switzerland—.jpg

  4. On 19/10/2016 at 5:53 AM, Mr_VHC@WNF said:

    Hi there, is anyone interested in having a list of the parts for each Monthly program? I thought it might be helpful if all the parts were listed somewhere for easy reference. Here is the first program in October 2014. If you are interested and would like to help add other months programs please post here. Thank you.

     

    October 2014

    Bro Stephen Lett GB

    Opening Comments

    Behind the Scenes

    Theme Talk: “Young Ones You are Loved by Jehovah and His Organsiation.”

    “How to Deal With Bullies.”

    From Our Archives - Theodore Jaracz

    Legal Cases – Stratton Ohio

    Morning Worship: William Malenfont Helper “Run the Race With Endurance” 1 Cor 9: 24

    Interview – Bro Burt Mann Age 93

    Original Song “The Best Life Ever.”

    Closing Comments

    Closing Footage - International Convention Delegates Visit HQ

    jwb_univ_201410_wsr_001_lg.jpg

  5. On 19/10/2016 at 5:53 AM, Mr_VHC@WNF said:

    Hi there, is anyone interested in having a list of the parts for each Monthly program? I thought it might be helpful if all the parts were listed somewhere for easy reference. Here is the first program in October 2014. If you are interested and would like to help add other months programs please post here. Thank you.

     

    October 2014

    Bro Stephen Lett GB

    Opening Comments

    Behind the Scenes

    Theme Talk: “Young Ones You are Loved by Jehovah and His Organsiation.”

    “How to Deal With Bullies.”

    From Our Archives - Theodore Jaracz

    Legal Cases – Stratton Ohio

    Morning Worship: William Malenfont Helper “Run the Race With Endurance” 1 Cor 9: 24

    Interview – Bro Burt Mann Age 93

    Original Song “The Best Life Ever.”

    Closing Comments

    Closing Footage - International Convention Delegates Visit HQ

     

     

     

     

    jwb_univ_201410_wsr_001_lg.jpg

    https://assetsnffrgf-a.akamaihd.net/assets/m/jwb/univ/201410/art/jwb_univ_201410_wsr_001_lg.jpg

     

  6. Support for conscientious objection increases

    (KOREA)

    By Kim Se-jeong

    The number of people in Korea who support conscientious objection has risen significantly over the last decade, a recent survey showed, Monday.
    According to the survey conducted by the National Human Rights Commission on 2,556 people aged 15 or older from May to December, 46.1 percent of respondents said the country should allow conscientious objection.
    The commission has conducted the survey regularly and the support ratio has increased from 10.2 percent in 2005 to 33.3 percent in 2011.
    "Tolerance has improved, but it is clear that conscientious objection is still a contentious issue in Korean society," the commission said in a report. "The number shows it is time for open discussion about it."
    The survey didn't mention what contributed to the change in public opinion.
    All able-bodied men aged 18 or older in Korea are obliged to serve in the military. Objectors are subject to prison terms. According to statistics, almost 600 men are punished every year for refusing to serve.
    Most objectors in Korea cite religion or personal belief in peace as reasons for refusal. Many of them are Jehovah's Witnesses, a Christian denomination.
    They demand the government give them an opportunity to serve the country in other ways by introducing alternative services. But the government has refused to accommodate their request, saying no exception is allowed for compulsory military service.
    The survey results came out hours before a local court ruling in favor of conscientious objection.
    Siding with a 23-year-old conscientious objector surnamed Park, the Jeonju District Court in North Jeolla Province said, "We recognized that the defendant refused to serve on the basis of his religion and values, which is an individual freedom given to all."
    Park, a Jehovah's Witness, was taken to court by the government in June last year after refusing to comply with the mandatory service.
    A dozen other local courts and an appeals court in Gwangju have also ruled in favor of conscientious objectors.
    The Constitutional Court has been reviewing petitions from such people and is expected to make a ruling sometime early this year on whether compulsory military service infringes on individuals' freedoms and whether the country needs to allow alternative services.
    The ruling was originally due by the end of last year, but was put off as the court has been focusing on the review of President Park Geun-hye's impeachment.
    In 2004 and 2011, it ruled against objectors.

    THE KOREAN TIMES
    http://www.koreatimes.co.kr/www/news/nation/2017/01/117_221797.html
    Posted : 2017-01-10
    By Kim Se-jeong

     

     

  7. tyndale1.JPG

     

    Success—Despite Opposition

    Translating and printing was one thing. Getting the Bibles to Britain was another. Church agents and secular authorities were determined to prevent shipments across the English Channel, but friendly merchants had the answer. Hidden in bales of cloth and other merchandise, the volumes were smuggled to the shores of England and up into Scotland. Tyndale was encouraged, but his fight had only begun.
    On February 11, 1526, Cardinal Wolsey, accompanied by 36 bishops and other church dignitaries, assembled near St. Paul’s Cathedral in London “to see great basketfuls of books cast into a fire.” Included among them were some copies of Tyndale’s precious translation. Of this first edition, there are now just two copies extant. The only complete one (lacking just the title page) is in the British Library. Ironically, the other, with 71 pages missing, was discovered in St. Paul’s Cathedral Library. How it got there, nobody knows.
    Undaunted, Tyndale continued to produce fresh editions of his translation, which were systematically confiscated and burned by English clerics. Then Tunstall changed tactics. He struck a bargain with a merchant named Augustine Packington to buy any books written by Tyndale, including the New Testament, in order to burn them. This was arranged with Tyndale, with whom Packington had made an agreement. Halle’s Chronicle says: “The bishop had the books, Packington had the thanks, and Tyndale had the money. Afterward when more New Testaments were imprinted, they came thick and threefold into England.”
    Why were the clergy so bitterly opposed to Tyndale’s translation? Whereas the Latin Vulgate tended to veil the sacred text, Tyndale’s rendering from the original Greek for the first time conveyed the Bible’s message in clear language to the English people. For example, Tyndale chose to translate the Greek word a·gaʹpe as “love” instead of “charity” in 1 Corinthians chapter 13. He insisted on “congregation” rather than “church” to emphasize worshipers, not church buildings. The last straw for the clergy, however, came when Tyndale replaced “priest” with “elder” and used “repent” rather than “do penance,” thereby stripping the clergy of their assumed priestly powers. David Daniell says in this regard: “Purgatory is not there; there is no aural confession and penance. Two supports of the Church’s wealth and power collapsed.” (William Tyndale—A Biography) That was the challenge Tyndale’s translation presented, and modern scholarship fully endorses the accuracy of his choice of words.

    READ MORE:

    *** w95 11/15 p. 26 William Tyndale—A Man of Vision ***

     

     

    6

     

     

    *** na pp. 17-18 God’s Name and Bible Translators ***
    The name first appeared in an English Bible in 1530, when William Tyndale published a translation of the first five books of the Bible.

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

×
×
  • Create New...

Important Information

Terms of Service Confirmation Terms of Use Privacy Policy Guidelines We have placed cookies on your device to help make this website better. You can adjust your cookie settings, otherwise we'll assume you're okay to continue.