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Peace and Security, Great Tribulation, Armageddon


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3 hours ago, navco said:

im always looking at the waters of religion and how its drying up and the rate its drying up especially since  covid so i know we are close  but one thing has caught my attention that stands out the aggressive verbal on the intrument that Jehovah wil use to destroy the un i havent witnessed in my 47 years of living is catching my attention i say under 5 years but i will wait forever if its needed.i told my wife in 2019 before 2030  im running out of time

 

what does that mean?

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6 minutes ago, LeolaRootStew said:

 

what does that mean?

Sorry about that im on my phone. i meant the attitude that the united states and others who have a negative view of the un at the moment.

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12 hours ago, LeolaRootStew said:

 

I completely agree. In the past, when I felt like the end was coming "soon" I realize I didn't have anything concrete to point to that justified my feelings - I was just ready for the end. But now, I see so many legitimate reasons why it has to happen soon.

 

I would actually be more shocked of the GT didn't start this year! I really, really hope this is it!

In a way I think it would be unfair for them to taste death from old age…

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5 hours ago, yzarctonmi said:

Looking at the way the world has disintegrated in the past 30 years, especially in the last 6 years or so tells me the end has to come soon.

I’ve noticed that we often feel a strong urge for the end to come, and it is driven by deeply personal convictions. In many (if not all) cases, this longing is sincere. We are tired, we are hurting, and we want relief. I really do.

 

But could it be that we sometimes miss a vital part of the picture? The vindication of Jehovah’s name.

 

When our focus shifts too heavily toward wanting the end to arrive simply so our problems will disappear, we risk losing sight of one of the foremost reasons the end matters at all. The issue is not only our relief, but Jehovah’s sovereignty and name.

 

While the end has not yet come, we are still living in a truly remarkable spiritual environment: one that offers access to understanding, guidance, and unity that no generation before us has experienced in this way. 
 

Jehovah, on the other hand, continues to have his name misrepresented by the greater populace. If the end had come twenty-seven years ago, I would not have been born. I would not have had this opportunity to know him, to reason, to choose, or to grow.
 

That realization leaves me with no room for telling Jehovah what to do; only gratitude. Many times, it brings me right to the core of my emotions, because I recognize that Jehovah patiently waited for me.

 

It doesn’t change my belief that the end is close (even way closer), and I know many feel the same. However, I find it valuable to engage in what I call scenario analysis, deliberately considering the less comfortable and ugly possibility: what if it does not come as soon as we expect? What if it takes another seven years… or fifteen… or even twenty?

 

What would life (our lives) look like then? Is there something — even something small — that I could adjust now? Could I set a meaningful spiritual purpose for that span of time? Could I learn a skill that could be useful in the new world, especially in the early years? 
 

Planning for the new world is one way we get ourselves busy. I am working on cloud technology currently. I intend to apply it in the early years of the new world. I am so widely optimistic about it, lol.

 

But someone needs to keep JW.org active in those early years before it is discontinued if it ever is. And if I can start now, maybe I can be useful for that purpose then and even now in the branch. 


I am just offering another perspective that could help us endure this system if it persists. Instead of anchoring ourselves to a single outcome, we prepare for scenarios and faithfulness over time. It helps us remain steady, productive, and spiritually focused even if our expectations are delayed.


Edited by GodlyDevotion
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7 hours ago, yzarctonmi said:

 

I don’t think it'll be another 30+ years, for a few reasons.

 

First is our current understanding of Matthew 24:34. The contemporaries of the 1st group that some of will live to see the great tribulation are really up in years, and they will not live another 30 years.

https://wol.jw.org/en/wol/d/r1/lp-e/202018090

https://wol.jw.org/en/wol/pc/r1/lp-e/1200272352/12/4image.thumb.jpeg.de8c02cf96617484ff866ba82d4d92c7.jpeg

 

My second reason for not believing that the end will come in 30+ years is based on Matthew 24:37-39. Looking at the way the world has disintegrated in the past 30 years, especially in the last 6 years or so tells me the end has to come soon. If conditions get any more extreme, everyone would forced to recognize that the only logical reason is because of prophecy being fulfilled.

https://wol.jw.org/en/wol/d/r1/lp-e/2015604?q=Conditions&p=par#:~:text=5.%20Why,this%20wicked%20system.

 

The current state of the world is so fragile and is in eminent danger of collapsing in nearly every aspect, yet we know this will not happen until the Great Tribulation.

https://wol.jw.org/en/wol/d/r1/lp-e/2019603#:~:text=Read%C2%A0Luke,without%20certain%20necessities.

 

These and other reasons convince me that this system cannot continue for another 30+ years. However, as we do not know Jehovah’s exact time, I try to live as it will be tomorrow yet plan as it will be another 30 years. 

 

Awesome comment, sister Cyndi! That's the right way and outlook to live. I was also looking for that "Keep in Expectation" article, so thanks for sharing the source!

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4 hours ago, GodlyDevotion said:

 

If the end had come twenty-seven years ago, I would not have been born. I would not have had this opportunity to know him, to reason, to choose, or to grow.
 

 

What you said is true.  And everyone can say the same thing simply by changing the number to 50, 60 , 70 ,  years ago.

 

Here's another perspective ~  If Adam and Eve had not sinned, you and the rest of us would not have been born. We are alive as a result of every little thing that happened since they had their first children.  If they had not sinned, the human race would have gone in an entirely different direction. It seems weird, but we live because they sinned and Jehovah deemed their yet-to-be-conceived children as deserving of life.

 

In Br Winder's talk "Manifest Godly Patience", he makes the point that God's patience is purpose oriented, he wants to give people a chance to change.

But, his patience is not due to babies being born every day, and wanting to give them a chance to grow up and have the opportunity to know him, to make a choice.  If that was the case, the end would never come.

 

Jehovah's attributes are perfectly balanced, and the time will come when patience can no longer be warranted.  At that time, justice and righteousness demand action.

 

We understand that the 'good news' will be preached right down to the end. So, Jehovah exercises patience, holding out the opportunity to know him, until it can't be warranted, and he knows when that time is. It's on the divine calendar.

 


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