10
1
10
download/literature/watchtower/1915-17.pdf
../literature/watchtower/1915/17/1915-17-1.html
(259-260)
THE
WATCH
TOWER
BaooKI,YN,
N.
Y.
WHEN
THEIR
HAPPY
LIFE
BEGAN
DISARLY
BELOVED
BROTHER
RUSSELL:-
May
the
love
of
God
be
with
thee!
It
has
long
been
my
desire
to
tell
you
my
appreciation
in
my
feeble
way.
Three
years
ago
I
had
the
pleasure
to
listen
to
a
workman
in
the
APPLICATION
OF
THE
RANSOM
Following
references
are
helpful
studied
in
connection
with
chap
ter
IV.,
Tabernacle
Shadows-"The
Great
Day
of
Atonement:"
World
is
not
yet
Bought
.....•........•
_
..
_.
Year
1912
Palfe
107
Ransom
Points
to
be
Remembered
..
_.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
1909'
349
Deliverance
from
the
Curse
_
..
_.
.
.
.
.
1911
00
187
Ransom-Application
to
all
Mankind
..
_.
_.
.
.
.
"1911
151
Does
our
Lord
Now
own
the
human
race
i.
.
.
.
.
.
,.
1910
II
199
"Sold
all
he
had
and
Bought"..............
1909"
379
Christ
Made
a
Curse
for
Israel
,
_.
.
.
•
I
1912
197
What
the
Church
Sacrifices
.•••.•.
_.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
1911"
390
Incense
and
Satisfaction
of
Justice
.
Who
Typified
by
Levites
1
:
.
Why
represented
in
Court
I-Their
Service
After
Day
of
Atonement
.
Tentative
Levites
.
Type
Changes
at
Glose
of
Age.'
.
Typical
and
Antitypical
Gifts
and
Sacrifices
.
Male
and
Female
Distinctions
to
Cease-when
i
(Luke
20:34-36)
_
..
Moses
a
Mediator
before
Aaron
a
Priest
.....•
Levites
had
no
Inheritance
.....•.••...•....
"Urim
and
Thummim"
....
_
......•..•..•..
Great
Company
and
First
Resurreetion
...
_
....
Were
the
Atonement
Day
Sin-offerings
for
the
year
preceding,
or
for
the
ensuin,g
year
1.
'
_.
Were
the
Atonement
Day
Sin-offermgs
for
the
year
preceding,
or
for
the
ensuing
year
1
..•
,
Manifesta
tion
of
High
Priest
_
.
White
Robe
of
High
Priest
.
"
1911
"
1911
••
1911
"
1911
"
1911
••
1911
1909
1909
"
1912
1912
0'
1912
"
1907
01
1913
"
1910
1910
••
239
••
348
••
349
••
349
••
349
.,
415
"
174
325
••
152
••
186
••
297
230
19
,.
136
136
Standard
Oil
Yard,
Pt.
Richmond,
Cal.
When
I
heard
him
I
was
amazed
and
coming
home
that
night
I
told
my
wife
that
I
had
heard
a
man
talk
as
none
else
before
in
my
life,
although
I
used
to
seck
around
for
the
truth,
but
had
failed
to
find
that
which
I
could
love.
1\ly
wife
asked
me
to
bring
that
man
(Brother
Starr)
home,
so
I
brought
him
home
one
night
and
I
got
some
of
my
friends
over
to
hear
him.
Thanks
be
to
God
for
that
night,
for
there
began
our
happy
life!
Our
home
before
that
time
was
not
very
happy;
but
since
then
it
has
certainly
changed.
We
are
now
consecrated
to
the
Lord,
and
one
of
our
friends,
a
sister,
has
done
the
same.
Happiness
untold
in
both
homes
is
now
to
be
found.
The
Lord
has
been
feeding
us
from
his
storehouse,
and
each
time
when
we
read
THE
WATCH
TOWER,
and
see
the
letters
from
the
friends,
I
simply
must
pray
for
each
one
of
them!
It
has
been
hard
for
me
to
learn
certain
lessons.
I
have
prayed
for
patience
and
would
forget
time
and
time
again.
I
am
a
hard
workman
and
my
associates
are
very
impatient.
So
in
a
re
cent
WATCH
TOWER
you
told
us
to
pray
for
love
to
be
cultivated
in
us,
and
in
the
evening
report
to
our
heavenly
Father.
Since
then
I
have
had
great
blessings
along
the
line
of
patience.
Both
my
wife
and
I
love
the
brethren,
for
among
them
we
spend
all
the
time
we
can,
thanking
the
heavenly
Father
for
his
loving
kindness
to
us.
My
wife
is
doing
colporteur
work
as
much
as
her
strength
permits,
and
we
have
both
had
great
blessings
therefrom.
The
six
volumes
have
brought
us
untold
happiness.
Daily
we
pray
the
Lord
to
give
you
strength.
We
love
you
and
ask
you
to
include
us
in
your
petitions
to
the
Lord
that
we
may
be
among
that
little
flock.
BROTHER
AND
SISTER
CHRISTIAN
LARSEN.-Cal.
VOL.
XXXVI
BROOKLYN,
N.
Y.,
SEPT'EMBER
1,
1915
No.
17
CHRISTIAN
DUTY
AND
THE
WAR
As
the
war
progresses
a
bitter,
partisan
spirit
spreads.
that
this
war
is
not
like
other
wars-that
God
has
let
loose
The
people
of
each
of
the
warring
nations
are
convinced
that
the
winds,
is
no
longer
restraining
them.
The
time
has
come
right
is
on
their
side,
and
that
everything
to
the
contrary
is
for
him
to
allow
the
angry
passions
of
men
to
bring
the
wrong.
The
sense
of
justice
seems
more
and
more
to
go
blind.
whirlwind
of
trouble,
which
shortly
will
lead
on
to
revolution
Any
attempt
to
consider
matters
justly,
equitably,
is
resented
and
then
to
anarchy,
and
will
thus
prepare
the
way
of
the
as
disloyalty,
stupidity,
etc.
The
best
elements
of
the
natural
Lord
and
his
kingdom.
man
seem
to
be
paralyzing
under
the
influence
of
the
war.
What
a
sad
spectacle
the
war
presents-twenty
millions
Germany
and
her
allies
claim
that
they
have
maintained
the
of
soldiers
engaged,
at
a
cost
of
over
forty
mil1ion
dollars
world's
peace
for
thirty
years,
during
all
of
which
time
their
per
day
for
their
maintenance!
Twelve
millions
of
men
in
jealous
neighbors,
noting
their
prosperity,
have
sought
to
the
prime
of
life
have
already
been
wounded,
captured
or
hinder
it
and
have
awaited
only
a
favorable
moment
for
killed.
The
consumption
of
ammunition
is
astounding.
One
attempting
their
destruction.
To
them
their
commercial
of
the
British
ministers
recently
declared
that
in
one
battle
progress
and
attempt
to
build
a
navy
proportionate
to
their
in
Belgium
the
British
forces
used
more
ammunition
than
in
population
have
aroused
the
jealousy
of
their
neighbors
the
entire
Boer
war!
already
entrenched
commercially
on
the
sea.
National
debts
were
already
enormous,
and
British
consols
They
claim
that
Belgium
was
not
neutral,
but
conniving
(bonds)
were
selling
at
twenty-five
per
cent.
less
than
their
with
their
enemies,
and
that,
any
way,
the
passing
of
Ger-
face
value
before
this
war
began.
Can
any
rational
person
man
armies
through
Belgium
was
a
military
necessity.
suppose
that
the
debts
of
the
warrin~
nations
represented
by
Similarly
they
claim
that
the
protection
of
their
national
life
their
bonds
will
ever
be
paid?
And
when
the
people
shall
against
the
European
combination
makes
necessary
their
sub-
realize
the
meaning
of
all
this
and
of
the
crash
of
financial
marine
warfare
and
blockade
and
other
things
which
they
do
institutions
which
this
will
involve,
the
discovery
will
be
not
prefer.
They
claim,
too,
that
necessity
knows
no
law,
that
terrible.
The
only
logical
result
to
be
expected
of
the
dis-
this
is
the
hour
of
their
necessity,
and
that
the
object
of
war
couraged
people
will
be
as
the
Bible
predicts-so
great
an
is
success-to
be
obtained
as
honora,bly
as
possible,
but
to
be
earthquake
as
was
not
since
man
was
on
the
earth-social
obtained.
earthquake,
revolution,
gigantic
in
its
character.-Rev.
16:
18.
Britain
and
her
allies
take
the
contrary
view.
They
de-
WAR'S
DEMORALIZING
INFLUENOE
clare
that
for
forty
years
they
have
noted
the
progress
of
the
Professed
ministers
of
Christ
of
various
denominations
Germans
and
considered
it
a
menace
to
their
rights.
Accord-
seem
to
be
vying
with
each
other
in
leaving
the
Great
Captain
ing-Iy,
the
French
maintained
an
army
of
equal
size
with
of
our
Salvation
and
his
standard
of
peace
and
love
in
order
Germany;
Russia,
an
army
of
double
the
size;
while
Great
to
associate
themselves
more
and
more
with
militarism.
Alp
Britain
has
striven
to
have
a
navy
stronger
than
that
of
all
pealed
to
by
the
representatives
of
the
Government,
these
the
r<>maining
nations
of
the
world.
If
Germany
ibe
not
professed
representatives
of
the
Prince
of
Peace
are
making
crushed
now,
her
spirit
of
progress
will
ultimately
put
her
themselves
popular
with
their
governments
by
preaching
war.
at
the
head
of
the
nations,
commercially
and
financially.
Thi"
We
hear
only
a
little
from
Great
Britain
along
these
lines,
would
mean
that
all
the
other
nations
would
be
less
powerful
but
the
suggestion
from
the
Bishop
of
London
is
quite
suffi-
proportionately.
TlH'y
see
in
this
a
terrible
nightmare
of
cient
on
this
point.
His
suggestion
urges
boys
and
girls
to
militarism.
Germany
must
be
crushed
at
any
cost,
not
only
marry
early
and
to
raise
large
families,
presumably
for
mortal
for
the
sake
of
the
present,
but
also
for
the
sake
of
future
combat-not
to
be
soldiers
of
the
Cross
of
Christ
and
fol-
generatioIl3.
lowers
of
the
Lamb,
but
soldiers
of
the
Cross
of
St.
George
The
Bible
declares,
"God
is
not
in
all
their
thoughts."
which
marks
the
British
flag.
(Psalm
10:4)
Although
all
the
nations
of
the
Continent,
Recently
in
Canada
the
Editor
was
astounded
by
the
except
the
Turks,
style
themselves
Christian
nations,
not
one
activity
of
the
preachers
there--especially
those
of
the
Church
of
them
manifests
any
faith
in
God.
They
all
feel
that
the
of
England.
One
was
out
in
Khaki
uniform
marching
through
entire
responsibility,
both
for
the
present
and
for
the
future,
the
streets
with
the
volunteers.
Asked
by
a
college
friend,
rests
altogether
upon
themselves.
"Did
I
see
you
in
the
ranks?"
he
answered,
"Yes,
I
wanted
"FEAR
HATH
SURPRISED
THE
HYPOORITES"
to
encourage
the
boys."
"And
did
you
think
of
going
to
the
Convinced
of
having
a
divine
commission
and
with
sundry
front.
to
the
trenches?"
"Not
a
bit
of
it!"
He
was
merely
forms
of
gorlliness,
hut
without
any
of
its
power
or
faith.
acting
as
a
decoy
to
get
others
to
the
front;
just
as
a
bull
many
of
these
nations
are
only
now
awakening
to
the
fact
they
have
at
one
of
the
Chicago
stockyards
which
meets
the
[5754]
(259-260) Incense and Satisfaction of Justice........... ‘© 1911 +‘ 239 Who Typified by Levites?...-5.............. ‘© 1911 ‘* 348 Why represented in Court?—Their Service After Day of Atonement.............. ‘€ 1911 ‘' 349 Tentative Levites ..........., (eee ‘f 31911 ‘' 349 _Type Changes at Close of Age.......... ‘€ 1911 «=‘* 349 Typical and Antitypical Gifts and Sacrifices... ** 1914 "415 Male and Female Distinctions to Cease—-when? (Luke 20:34-36) 2... cece ecw een een ‘* 1909 174 Moses a Mediator before Aaron a Priest...... ‘* 1909 ‘* 325 Levites had no Inheritance........... see "1912 «=** 152 ‘‘Urim_ and Thummim’’ ......0e cece eee ace ‘© 1912 6 '* «186 Great Company and First Resurrection ‘© 1912 3 ‘* 299 Were the Atonement Day Sin-offerings for the year preceding, or for the ensuing year?.... ‘© 1907 ‘* 280 Were the Atonement Day Sin-offerings for the year preceding, or for the ensuing year?.... ‘* 19138 ** | 619 Manifestation of High Priest..........-..+5. ** 1910 ‘* 186 White Robe of High Priest............0.000e ** 1910 «‘* 136 APPLICATION OF THE RANSOM Following references are helpful studied in connection with chapter IV., Tabernacle Shadows——‘‘The Great Day of Atonement:’’ World is not yet Bought.............ee-eaee Year 1912 Page 107 Ransom Points to be Remembered ........... ** 1909 ‘* 3 Deliverance from the Curse..........+...06- *' 1911 ‘'* 187 Ransom—Application to all Mankind......... ** 19110 ff 151 Does our Lord Now own the human race?...... ‘*- 1910 3‘ 199 ‘*Sold all he had and Bought’’.......-...008 ** 1909 ‘* 379 Christ Made a Curse for Israel.............. ‘©1912 ** 197 What the Church Sacrifices...........++00005 ‘© 1911 ‘* 390 WHEN THEIR HAPPY LIFE BEGAN Dear_y BrLoveD BROTHER RUSSELL :— May the love of God be with thee! It has long been my desire to tell you my appreciation in my feeble way. Three years ago I had the pleasure to listen to a workman in the THE WATCH TOWER Brooxiyn, N. Y. Standard Oil Yard, Pt. Richmond, Cal. When I heard him I was amazed and coming home that night I told my wife that I had heard a man talk as none else before in my life, although I used to seck around for the truth, but had failed to find that which I could love. My wife asked me to bring that man (Brother Starr) home, so I brought him home one night and I got some of my friends over to hear him. Thanks be to God for that night, for there began our happy life! Our home before that time was not very happy; but since then it has certainly changed. We are now consecrated to the Lord, and one of our friends, a sister, has done the same. Happiness untold in both homes is now to be found. The Lord has been feeding us from his storehouse, and each time when we read THE WatcH Tower, and see the letters from the friends, I simply must pray for each one of them! It has been hard for me to Jearn certain lessons. I have prayed for patience and would forget time and time again. I am a hard workman and my associates are very impatient. So in a recent Watcu TowER you told us to pray for love to be cultivated in us, and in the evening report to our heavenly Father. Since then I have had great blessings along the line of patience. Both my wife and I love the brethren, for among them we spend all the time we can, thanking the heavenly Father for his loving kindness to us. My wife is doing colporteur work as much as her strength permits, and we have both had great blessings therefrom, The six volumes have brought us untold happiness. Daily we pray the Lord to give you strength. We love you and ask you to include us in your petitions to the Lord that we may be among that little flock. BROTHER AND SISTER CHRISTIAN LARSEN.—Cal. VoL. XXXVI BROOKLYN, N. Y., SEPTEMBER 1, 1915 No. 17 CHRISTIAN DUTY AND THE WAR As the war progresses a bitter, partisan spirit spreads. The people of each of the warring nations are convinced that right is on their side, and that everything to the contrary is wrong. The sense of justice seems more and more to go blind. Any attempt to consider matters justly, equitably, is resented as disloyalty, stupidity, etc. The best elements of the natural man seem to be paralyzing under the influence of the war. Germany and her allies claim that they have maintained the world’s peace for thirty years, during all of which time their jealous neighbors, noting their prosperity, have sought to hinder it and have awaited only a favorable moment for attempting their destruction. To them their commercial progress and attempt to build a navy proportionate to their population have aroused the jealousy of their neighbors already entrenched commercially on the sea. They claim that Belgium was not neutral, but conniving with their enemies, and that, any way, the passing of German armies through Belgium was a military necessity. Similarly they claim that the protection of their national life against the European combination makes necessary their submarine warfare and blockade and other things which they do not prefer. They claim, too, that necessity knows no law, that this is the hour of their necessity, and that the object of war is success—to be obtained as honorably as possible, but to be obtained. Britain and her allies take the contrary view. They declare that for forty years they have noted the progress of the Germans and considered it a menace to their rights. Accordingly, the French maintained an army of equal size with Germany; Russia, an army of double the size; while Great Britain has striven to have a navy Stronger than that of all the remaining nations of the world. If Germany be not crushed now, her spirit of progress will ultimately put her at the head of the nations, commercially and financially. This would mean that all the other nations would be less powerful proportionately. They see in this a terrible nightmare of militarism, Germany must be crushed at any cost, not only for the sake of the present, but also for the sake of future generations, The Bible declares, “God is not in all their thoughts.” (Psalm 10:4) Although all the nations of the Continent, except the Turks, style themselves Christian nations, not one of them manifests any faith in God. They all feel that the entire responsibility, both for the present and for the future, rests altogether upon themselves. ‘‘FEAR HATH SURPRISED THE HYPOCRITES" Convinced of having a divine commission and with sundry forms of godliness, but without any of its power or faith, many of these nations are only now awakening to the fact - terrible. that this war is not like other wars—that God hag let loose the winds, is no longer restraining them. The time has come for him to allow the angry passions of men to bring the whirlwind of trouble, which shortly will lead on to revolution and then to anarchy, and will thus prepare the way of the Lord and his kingdom. What a sad spectacle the war presents—twenty millions of soldiers engaged, at a cost of over forty million dollars per day for their maintenance! Twelve millions of men in the prime of life have already been wounded, captured or killed. The consumption of ammunition is astounding. One of the British ministers recently declared that in one battle in Belgium the British forces used more ammunition than in the entire Boer war! National debts were already enormous, and British consols (bonds) were selling at twenty-five per cent. less than their face value before this war began. Can any rational] person suppose that the debts of the warring nations represented by their bonds will ever be paid? And when the people shall realize the meaning of all this and of the crash of financial institutions which this will involve, the discovery will be The only logical result to be expected of the discouraged people will be as the Bible predicts—so great an earthquake as was not since man was on the earth—social earthquake, revolution, gigantic in its character.—Rev. 16:18. WAR’S DEMORALIZING INFLUENCE Professed ministers of Christ, of various denominations seem to be vying with each other in leaving the Great Captain of our Salvation and his standard of peace and love in order to associate themselves more and more with militarism. Appealed to by the representatives of the Government, these professed representatives of the Prince of Peace are making themselves popular with their governments by preaching war. We hear only a little from Great Britain along these lines, but the suggestion from the Bishop of London is quite sufficient on this point. His suggestion urges boys and girls to marry early and to raise large families, presumably for mortal combat—not to be soldiers of the Cross of Christ and followers of the Lamb, but soldiers of the Cross of St. George which marks the British flag. Recently in Canada the Editor was astounded by the activity of the preachers there—especially those of the Church of England. One was out in Khaki uniform marching through the streets with the volunteers, Asked by a college friend, “Did I see you in the ranks?” he answered, “Yes, I wanted to encourage the boys.” “And did you think of going to the front, to the trenches?” “Not a bit of it!” He was merely acting as a decoy to get others to the front; just as a bull they have at one of the Chicago stockyards which meets the [5754]
Folosim fișiere de tip cookie pentru a vă oferi o experienţă mai bună online și pentru a îmbunătăți acest site. Continuând să utilizați acest site, vă dați consimțământul asupra utilizării cookie-urilor. Dacă doriți mai multe informații sau nu acceptați folosirea acestor fișiere când utilizați site-ul nostru, vă rugăm să accesați paginile
Politica de Confidențialitate
Condiții de utilizare
.