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aball001

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Posts posted by aball001

  1. Hi, M. L. Kent! Don't feel too bad about not having the correct translation to bring to class. In 1985 Mom got me a dramatized Kjv for Christmas, something I'd wanted since they'd begun advertising it on Tv, but the only ways to have access to the Scriptures for me at the time were through Braille and cassette tape. When I came to class, I didn't bring a Bible like my sighted peers. They transcribed the books for me in Braille, were a little late getting them but I was still thrilled to be able to follow along.

    I am more than a little chagrined to see this thread...

    In 1978 my dad asked me what I wanted for christmas...

    I asked for the Oxford Revised Standard Version of the Bible...(annotated, with the apocrypha)and...

    A bottle fo Drambuie to drink with my girlfriend (who introduced me to Drambuie the prior year)

    In 1979...I took a class called PFAL...and for the life of me I could not understand why the gift from MY DAD was not the right text for the class...

    I sat through all of the sessions with the "wrong" bible... (I was give a Gideons KJV for the 9th or 10th Session to help me "follow the text")

    Nearly thirty years later, I still have the same Bible, (and 5 others) but the Drambuie is gone...

    I used to enjoy Drambuie once and a while. After reading posts here in Greasespot, I can not drink Drambuie. (It gives me the heebe jeebies)

    but I am content to read and study the bible... But sparingly, and, perhaps with more "fear and reverance" than ever before...

    M L Kent

    Hey, don't feel bad about having the wrong translation! Before I took PFAL, that year at Christmas Mom got me a dramatized KJV on tape, something I really wanted to have ever since the ads for it appeared on Tv. I am totally blind, and the only two ways to have access to the Scriptures then were in Braille, which was much too cumbersome and on tape. When I attended class, I was unusual in that I didn't have a Bible with me at all or the means with which to take notes. They transcribed the books in Braille for the course. I was thrilled becausef God in Romney, WV, had been the only two who cared if the same literature my sighted peers were using was accessible. my Sunday school teachers in WV, one who taught first and second grade at the Baptist church and another one at the Church oFear and reverence are not bad things -- though I like what one poster here said about not being afraid to read f God in Romney, WV, most hadn't seemed to care if I had access to the same material my sighted peers were using.

  2. I think the question should be do you still love God as much before and after twi.

    As for studying the bible I think I've done enough to last a lifetime.

    My interest now is to live it rather than study it.

    I definitely think you're spot on about the importance of living your faith, especially in the good and compassionate things you do when no one is looking. One need only look at 1 Cor. 13 to understand that knowledge alone is not enough -- and indeed in some cases in The Way and in other spiritually abusive churches as well, there tends to be a general feeling of superiority, e.g. that one has a corner on truth, or the rigor with which certain Scriptures are applied, as if there were classes of have's and have-nots. One of the fellowship groups that broke away from TWI recently put up a teaching on compassion, which the speaker correctly describes as a proactive thing. When one has to be told over and over again how compassionate somebody is, I have to wonder./quote]

  3. welcome

    i can personally tell you that veepee told me he could heal me from sexual abuse by having sex with me

    Wow .. it's horrible and I believe you. In 1989 I read John Juedes's article about the splintering of the Way Tree and listened to John Lynn's two-tape set "Overview of Events" and got the impression then that they were scratching the surface, actually trying to avoid being too explicit in their descriptions. It's sad how when leadership is perverted and the head is sick all are devastated.

  4. Thankfully, I was spared much of that but I did see a great d eal One of the women in the first Twig I attended actually mentioned how a sexual encounter with a man of God could be a healing experience, and there was a teaching going around that a fetus in the womb was no different from a plant because it hadn't taken its first breath and become a living soul. and perverted of It takes a tremendous amount of courage to share one's experiences of rape and sexual abuse, and my hat goes off too to all of you who have found the strength to come forward.idealization of Wierwille and LCM and, funny how that works, built up a similarly idealized imagemental picture of WOW was built up as an awesome experience -- though i saw the people in one Twig fellowship I attended who had only popcorn to subsist onin their house. Hearing your pain and rage is a sobering reminder of how horrible it could get.

    Sad to see those who just can't stay away from hurting someone else's positive experiences?

    You mean, like hurting people who were so excited to finally meet the man of God? And he pokes his prick in your face?

    Like, believing the WOW field will be the experience of a lifetime,

    and it was,

    but not like you thought it was going to be?

    I am so sick of you fXcking pigs, who, even when the truth of a first hand witness is right in front of your eyes, you still push it aside and IGNORE IT.

    You fail to see that YOU are the very reason so many rape victims suffer in silence.

    Do you have any inkling about how many raped women may be reading this in tears, saying to themselves, "hell no, I'm not going through that, I'll keep my damn mouth shut and crawl into a hole somewhere."

    You have no idea the raw guts it takes for a woman like Marsha or Ex to tell her story. Just to tell it. To ANYbody. My sister cannot even today tell me everything.

    And you have no idea what you do to them when they tell you the truth and you brush them aside like you just did here with excathedra.

    Damn you idiots, damn you. You have no fxcking idea what you are doing. You have no idea what it will take for her to get over just telling what she told you. And you just tossed her aside like so much trash. Like VP tossed her aside. Don't you GET IT?

    Thank you ex, for sharing your experience. And thank you exwaycorps, for your corroborating information. My hats are off to all of you men here on this thread who have the cojones to stand up for these women who have been raped.

    I have no earthly words to express my disdain for you absolute swine who just did what you did. And you don't even realize it.

    Or, just maybe you DO.

    And that's exactly how evil you ARE.

    Made in the exact image of your idol.

    You people fXcking make me want to vomit.

  5. To the group member from New York City, hi, and thanks for the welcome! I have used both the NIV and the NASb, found that I liked both! There is a free Bible software at http://www.e-sword.net which has seemingly every translation imaginable -- though as a totally blind person who uses a screen reader the interlinear layout can be a bit confusing. As to the law of believing, I would tend to fall in the third category, with the added observation that it is similar to the positive confession the Word of Faith teachers promote on TBN, with much the same results for people who don't get healed. One book I read after leaving TWI which may not be in print anymore is Dan R. McConnel's A Different Gospel. While it had nothing to do with Twi per se, it discussed the Faith teachers' reliance on Kennyon and the devastating results when people take doctrines like Positive Confession to their logical extreme. By the way, I love the Elie Wiesel quote at the end of your post; it really struck a chord with me!

  6. After I left Twi, I really didn't want to think about what I might have learned from PFAL. These discussions have given me the freedom to sort through what attracted me to it in the first place, as well as the negative and damaging aspects of Twi. I grew up in a Free Will Baptist church background with strong emphasis on hellfire and brimstone. I found the environment to be very authoritarian and legalistic and the moment I turned eighteen ran away screaming. T year before I had flirted with atheism, so it was refreshing to hear a message of grace and forgiveness, not condemnation. It was a message I later found after I left Twi in the Presbyterian Church, and at least if Pfal did nothing else it showed me there were other ways to approach spirituality than the narrow upbringing of my parents. Some of the other aspects -- sonship rights, the belief that all could manifest the nine gifts of holy spirit, wereaspects I found refreshing at the time, having experienced elitism and second-class treatment at the hands of my Pentecostal peers at school as a teenager. That said, the negative flipside of the coin of the Law of Believing was one of the more damaging aspects of PFal which I experienced firsthand in the form of isolation the week I fell and broke my arm. I'm not sure if I would have reached different conclusions about God on my own than the ones taught in my upbringing without Twi and the Pfal course, but think in the end I came away more true to myself and more outspoken in standing up against spiritual abuse and legalism in religion that keep people in fear.

  7. I am new to the forum and wanted to comment that I appreciate the honesty with which this issue is being addressed, both by those who believe in God and those who in the sorting-out process have reached the conclusion that God does not exist. I was only in the Way a short time, through the fall of 1985 and spring of 1986, and during that time saw what some of you described -- how Greek and Hebrew were used to dupe, and sometimes intimidate us into believing we couldn't question the experts. That said, since leaving Twi I still have a deep and long-standing interest in studying Scripture and to a lesser extent the Greek and Hebrew. I think this was mainly because of some Presbyterian friends in the peace movement who took me under their wing after I left Twi and let me vent as I began the sorting-out process and even wrestled with what translation to read (for quite some time I couldn't bring myself to open a KJV especially the book of Acts and the writings of Paul .. because immediately the Way interpretations would come immmediately to mind.)

    On a separate note, today I got through listening to the John Juedes interview about the Law of Believing and could have cried when he brought up the illustration V. P,. Wierwille used of the little boy who got run over by a car in which the mother's fear was blamed for the little boy's death. Has there been any discussion of the Law of Believing on the forums? Though John Lynn and CES did much to debunk this dangerous teaching, it never really occurred to me till Dr. Juedes pointed it out how dependent a lot of Twi's other teachings in the PFAL course were on the Law of Believing.

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