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Rocky

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Everything posted by Rocky

  1. The SECOND point I intended to make about Victor Wierwille and Loy C Martindale was with regard to AUTHENTICITY. To illustrate authenticity or lack thereof, I (perhaps not as successfully as I had hoped) the concept of self-deprecation and related humor. I did so because establishing legitimate connection with people a leader wishes to lead requires a willingness to become vulnerable with and to those people. Did Victor Wierwille or Loy C Martindale, in YOUR experience, establish a compassionate connection with you or did they influence you by other tactics/strategy?
  2. Herein, I will try to narrow down what I presented in the first few posts/comments I used to begin this thread. Among the subterfuge Victor Wierwille used to trap each of us in his subculture organization, was that HE knew that he knew that he knew? But DID HE REALLY? We don't and can't know to what degree he knew what he claimed. But he made outrageous claims nevertheless. Was HE more fallible IN the private interpretation of the Bible than he both claimed and otherwise alluded to? THIS is point ONE of this thread. And WERE/ARE each of us fallible/infallible in the degree to which we fell for his schtick... hook, line, and sinker?
  3. I'm not discounting the insight you presented in the comment from which the above quoted excerpt originated... however, it is totally For this thread's discussion topic.
  4. Hmmm... wow, thank you for illuminating how UNCLEAR I was in conveying my intended message in the OP and for the discussion on this thread. Forgiveness was STL's topic. Mine IS about whether and to what extent WE knew that we knew that we knew. Perhaps STL or you, chockfull, might be interested in starting a discussion thread about forgiveness.
  5. So you're saying somehow Twi is a major cult? How so? Please clarify.
  6. Completely without data or any other kind of potential rational information. In doing so, they build their own parochial mental construct. Overall your comment is salient and well spoken (written). However, I suggest this tweak...
  7. This too... a subject adjacent to the question of free will. It also strikes me as somewhat bizarre that Wierwille and the Advanced class taught this phenomenon as exclusive to Christians. All the arts depend upon telepathy to some degree, but I believe that writing offers the purest distillation. I didn’t tell you. You didn’t ask me. I never opened my mouth and you never opened yours. We’re not even in the same year together, let alone the same room … except we are together. We’re close. —Stephen King Roorbach, Bill. Writing Life Stories (p. 7). Penguin Publishing Group. Kindle Edition.
  8. I have to figure you know/knew what message you were trying to get across with that post/comment. But I sure as heck can't discern what that message/idea was or may have been. By all means, please expound further.
  9. Please explain further. How do or would you define freedom, in the context of what you're trying to communicate here. There's freedom OF something and freedom FROM other thing(s). Thanks.
  10. The primary (and underlying) point I intended in the first posts on this thread was how Victor Wierwille and Loy C Martindale presented themselves to followers in extremely INAUTHENTIC ways. My point was not to color them unforgivable, for they were/are human. What they were NOT is honest brokers of God to followers who purchased their classes and books and who took part in their outreach and leadership training programs. Self-deprecating humor is, or can be, a much more authentic way to CONNECT emotionally.
  11. This seems scarier than Idalia was. https://www.washingtonpost.com/weather/2023/08/28/record-heat-gulf-coast-water-temperatures/?pwapi_token=eyJ0eXAiOiJKV1QiLCJhbGciOiJIUzI1NiJ9.eyJyZWFzb24iOiJnaWZ0IiwibmJmIjoxNjkzMzY4MDAwLCJpc3MiOiJzdWJzY3JpcHRpb25zIiwiZXhwIjoxNjk0NzUwMzk5LCJpYXQiOjE2OTMzNjgwMDAsImp0aSI6IjgwMGFkY2ZkLTBlNzItNDhlNi05OGQ2LWU1MGZjODA1Y2VmMyIsInVybCI6Imh0dHBzOi8vd3d3Lndhc2hpbmd0b25wb3N0LmNvbS93ZWF0aGVyLzIwMjMvMDgvMjgvcmVjb3JkLWhlYXQtZ3VsZi1jb2FzdC13YXRlci10ZW1wZXJhdHVyZXMvIn0.MxEg0KirYv_yN9cNpV_5WPyCfr1L1aOpb6ylK_0EgGM
  12. Forgiveness and critical analysis of the Victor Wierwille private interpretation ministry are complicated matters. Doing so requires assessment of the emotional fallout on the people who had been subject to abuse, whether it was emotional abuse or sexual abuse or anything else. Nevertheless, I appreciate your feedback, STL.
  13. Well... thank you, you made an excellent point. 1) I didn't say they were undeserving of forgiveness. I didn't think I was implying it either. 2) Looking back on the post and comments I made above, I'm wondering how you may have come to conclude, or even infer I was equating either of them to murderers. If you'd be so kind, I would appreciate you expounding about that on this thread. 3) Considering the two decades of people writing about their experiences on GSC, let me clarify my intent as being to criticize the actions each of the two of them took as cult leaders, and criticize the cult structure and conduct related thereto. There's plenty to show and tell about the power dynamics in and of themselves. 4) Again, thank you for reading and watching the videos.
  14. Here's another thing to consider. Intuitively, we know politics is as polarized as ever in today's society. Why is that? Could it be related to something Victor W and other religious leaders pushed about us all being in the world but not of the world? Is that why so many people are immune to exploring and considering common ground?
  15. Wierwille's private interpretation ministry established outreach programs. WOW Ambassadors made commitments of a year at a time to go in teams of about 4 at a time to a city or town to sell the foundational class and try to graft new believers onto The Way Tree. Then there was the Way Corps leadership training program. Colloquially referred to at times by former followers as the Way Corpse. That program was sold (or appealed to) as for committed Bible believers who wanted to be and do their best for God. The training consisted of a year at a time in a ministry location (i.e. HQ in New Knoxville, OH; The Way College of Emporia, in Kansas a ranch in Gunnison, CO and a campus in Rome City, IN) Much of the abusive conduct wannabe leaders endured and learned to repeat took place in the WOW Ambassador and Way Corps programs.
  16. Victor seized on things he read in the Bible to highlight and accentuate what he wanted to do and to be. WE were "called out." WE were in the world, but NOT "of the world." He traveled around to "bless the believers" and teach the "greatness of the Word of God." But he was an alcoholic, consumed filtered Kool menthol cigarettes like a factory smokestack, and acted like he was the King to whom every young, attractive female believer BELONGED. As such, he promulgated unwritten norms according to which men and women followers would procure (often willing) sex partners. Wierwille established substantial revenue streams by way of selling classes, books and pamphlets, and teaching that God won't even spit in your direction unless you "abundantly share" more than 10 percent of your meager earnings... believers were often expected to donate at least 15 percent.
  17. My latest realization regarding Victor Wierwille and his ministry of private interpretation: We are ALL inherently fallible. Victor Wierwille and Loy C Martindale were and are at least as fallible as I am and I them. So what was it about each of them that made them cult leaders? Not their private interpretations on the Bible, though I now also believe the Bible is not the only way to human enlightenment. No, what I see about them that is and was so distasteful and probably the essence of the ungodliness or anti-godliness of each can be fairly summed up in their hubris. This may or may not be a fallacy, but have you ever noticed that the best comedians and satirists in our modern culture exercise a distinct level of anti-arrogance, iow, they are unassuming and unpretentious. Most significantly self-deprecating. Can one have adequate and appropriate levels of confidence and still express self-deprecation? Authenticity, which I believe Victor Wierwille had serious deficits in, requires willingness to be openly vulnerable to and with the people you hope to engage, teach, and fellowship with. (See books by Brené Brown, such as https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/13588356-daring-greatly and https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/23500254-the-power-of-vulnerability and https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/58330567-atlas-of-the-heart and several more) Here's the nugget. Victor taught us a way of believing and living which was and is counter-social. That's cultic. The foundation was not God. Not Jesus Christ. They were side issues. The essence of the private interpretation ministry of Victor Wierwille was Victor Wierwille as THE mogfodat. HIS place in the hierarchy was at the top. His social subculture had (and maybe still has, IDK) practices and unwritten rules/beliefs that revolved around Victor's wants and needs. There was so much extraneous emotional noise (subterfuge) too few followers figured it out at a time when they could come together to effect a change in the "corporate culture." Yes, people figured it out. But when they did, they either left on their own or were shunned, excommunicated, (and if employed by the organization) fired, and in the jargon of the cult itself, "Marked and Avoided." The last expression having come from somewhere inside the Bible itself, in that way strengthening the illusion the cult was somehow based on godliness as contained in the Bible.
  18. We should ALL (including Mike) consider how this one applies to us.
  19. I hope you'll be prepared in the unfortunate even Idalia takes a sharp right turn. Much love to friends in the Orlando and Tampa/St Pete metro areas too.
  20. I love it. However, with the one caveat that I haven't put enough study into the perspective you've shared to say I can agree with it without reservation. Yet, on the surface, it makes sense to me. Thanks again.
  21. Wonderfully eloquent way to envision the story nature of scriptures. I came to a personal realization/recognition not too very long ago that the Bible is an anthology of stories. I see the main truth as being since we are humans, in a radically different culture than then, all we can do is imagine. And I go back to my current favorite passage Proverbs 2:1-5. Thanks for sharing your perspective.
  22. At least massive trust in terms of how we (I) understand what it would take. Not only after enduring temptations for 30 years, but cultivating enough trust (and, I suppose also love) in the Hebrew scriptures or whatever other basis Jesus could have had to develop such a trust to be willing to go through the torture and death.
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