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Queen Esther

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Posts posted by Queen Esther

  1. 35 minutes ago, Blanchie DeGrate said:

    Awwwwe, this story is right on time and I really enjoyed it very much. My husband and I are both sick and my daughter takes care of both of us and prints out my study materials. I am going to share this story with her which will describe even further how much we really appreciate and love her. Thank you..................tears :0)

    You're very welcome, dear Blanchie. Yes, its a hearttouching story. When we love each other,  our life can be wonderful and tears are very near, thats ok. I'm happy for you and your husband,  having such a wonderful daughter. I wished, my son were little similar ;o)  Soon more Experiences here - I will translate them from German to English ! Maybe, you need mostly a hanky, sorry...


  2. How to Find Coffee That Won't Bother Your Stomach

    By Monica Reinagel on March 30, 2016

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    Low-acid coffee is said to be easier on the stomach. But the acidity of the coffee is probably not the problem. Learn what to look for in a stomach-friendly brew  -

    I've written before about the health benefits enjoyed by coffee drinkers. But some people find that coffee hurts their stomachs. There are a lot of brands of coffee that are promoted as being lower in acid and good for people with sensitive stomachs.

    For example, Trücup coffee recently sent me some samples of their low acid coffee to try. I definitely noticed the difference in the acidity; the Trücup brand coffee is very smooth and mild tasting. In fact, I sort of missed the acidity, which gives coffee some of the characteristic brightness and edge that I find enjoyable.

    I can’t offer an opinion on  whether or not Trücup is easier on the stomach because regular coffee doesn’t bother my stomach. But that would have been nothing more than anecdotal evidence, anyway.
    It's Not About the Acid

    The whole thing got me wondering about what it is in coffee that bothers some people. I had a sneaking suspicion that it wasn’t the acidity of the coffee. For one thing, coffee isn’t all that acidic. On average, black coffee has a pH of about 5, which is the same as carrots. Trücup reports a pH of close to 6, or about the same as potatoes.  And the most acidic coffees have a pH of around 4.7, or about the same as a banana. We're hardly talking battery acid here.

     

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    Nous sommes les compagnons de travail de Dieu (1 Cor. 3:9).

    Jéhovah est un travailleur qui prend plaisir à ce qu’il fait (Ps. 135:6 ; Jean 5:17). Pour que ses créatures intelligentes éprouvent comme lui la joie et la satisfaction d’accomplir quelque chose, il leur confie un travail agréable et épanouissant. Par exemple, il a fait participer son Fils premier-né à son œuvre créatrice (Col. 1:15, 16). Au cours de son existence préhumaine, Jésus se trouvait au ciel, près de Dieu, « comme un habile ouvrier » (Prov. 8:30). Du début à la fin de la Bible, on trouve des exemples montrant que Jéhovah confie constamment des tâches à ses fils spirituels. Après qu’Adam et Ève ont péché et ont été expulsés de leur demeure paradisiaque, Dieu « posta à l’est du jardin d’Éden les chérubins et la lame flamboyante d’une épée qui tournoyait sans arrêt pour garder le chemin de l’arbre de vie » (Gen. 3:24). Et Révélation 22:6 nous apprend que Jéhovah « a envoyé son ange pour montrer à ses esclaves les choses qui doivent arriver bientôt ». w14 15/10 3:1, 2.

  4. Aged 35,  He Speaks 11 Languages - Luca Lampariello's  -

    11 Tricks To Learn Any Language...

    This article is a wake-up call for all those who dream of becoming multilingual: just do it! Luca Lampariello talks about where he finds the motivation for learning languages, and how he’s learned 11 so far.

    When people meet someone who speaks many languages fluently, the first reaction is often one of slight bewilderment. Multilingualism is generally considered cool yet difficult to achieve, especially if second, third and fourth languages are acquired later in life. As an advocate of language learning, I of course agree that it’s cool, but I challenge the assumption that it’s difficult.

    My name is Luca Lampariello. Here I would like to deviate from the well-trodden route to how I learned 11 languages and concentrate on why I learned these languages. Seasoned language learners will all tell you that motivation is fundamental, so where can one find this motivation and how can it be bolstered?

    Language learning is about much more than heaps of books and hours of study. It’s about travelling to marvellous places, meeting inspiring people, enjoying delicious food and embarking on innumerable journeys of self-discovery. I derive my motivation to learn more languages from these experiences; the experiences that these languages make possible.

    "I agree that language learning is cool,  but  I challenge the assumption that it’s difficult."

    Lesson learned: Start working on pronunciation from the very beginning to avoid developing bad habits. Be flexible. If a language has an idiosyncratic feature, work on it more from the start.

    I had been thinking about learning a Scandinavian language for quite some time when my Italian girlfriend at the time bought me a Swedish course for my birthday. Swedish sounds incredibly musical to my ears due to its peculiar intonation, but I found it quite difficult to grasp at the beginning. In 2004 I went to Stockholm for the first time and was immediately enamored by Swedish culture. I kept speaking Swedish, mostly with Norwegians, and watched movies and read books - mainly thrillers, as the Scandinavians are excellent at that. And the best thing of all? If you know Swedish, most Scandinavians will understand you, and you suddenly have access to a fascinating culture and way of thinking.

    Lesson learned: If you are about to give up on a language, actively search for something that reignites your desire to learn. Go to the country, meet someone, watch a movie, make a YouTube video. Anything goes.

    After a few Romance and Germanic languages, I wanted to learn something new. Russian seemed exotic to me: incredibly rich, elegant and intriguingly complex. Thinking in Russian was tantamount to solving a mathematical conundrum for every sentence. My mind boggled as to how native Russians deal with it every day. I had nobody to help me and after 8 months I began to think that it had perhaps been a mistake to learn Russian. I had barely made any progress. I didn’t do much for 3 long years, and then I posted a video on YouTube speaking Russian. The response astonished me. Not in my wildest dreams did I imagine so many people would leave such enthusiastic comments. Russians think that their language is difficult and inaccessible, so when they hear somebody uttering a couple of sentences they explode with joy. I subsequently started speaking Russian on a regular basis and slowly began to navigate my way confidently through Russian’s grammar maze.

    Portuguese

    Lesson learned: You can learn two languages at the same time provided that you organize your time and energy well.

    I started learning European Portuguese at the exact same time as Mandarin. I had never learned two languages at the same time, and so I gave myself very precise guidelines. Portuguese, like Spanish, came very naturally to me. I focused on pronunciation, which can be tricky. Unstressed vowels are barely pronounced and sentences often seem like an uninterrupted sequence of consonants. Portuguese can even sound like Russian to untrained ears as a consequence. I often get asked why I opted for European Portuguese and not Brazilian Portuguese, which is much more widely spoken. The truth is that I often don’t choose a language. I let languages choose me.

        "Language is the blood of the soul into which thoughts run and out of which they grow." ‒ Oliver Wendell Holmes

    Learn Polish Polish

    Lesson learned: Travel is a truly great motivator. Travel as much as you can, whenever you can. It will open doors and push you to learn languages.

    I visited Poland in 2012 for the second time in my life and simply fell in love with the country and its people. Other than using my bilingual translation technique, I also started speaking it from the very beginning by setting up a weekly language exchange with Michal, a Polish guy I had met in the summer of 2012. I highly recommend this approach if you are learning a slavic language and you already speak another one. Although Russian and Polish are quite different in many ways, the overall structure is the same, and knowing one helps enormously with learning the other. After a year I was relatively fluent in Polish and I made a video on YouTube with Michal on a visit to Poland. The video didn’t go unnoticed. A journalist interviewed me for a magazine and I ended up on Polish TV one year later.

        "One language sets you in a corridor for life. Two languages open every door along the way." ‒ Frank Smith

    Mandarin Chinese

    Lesson learned: Don’t be intimidated by a language’s reputation.

    I had heard that Chinese is notoriously difficult, and that’s why I had never contemplated learning it. Pushed by the unexpected success of my first YouTube videos, I wanted a new challenge. I started learning Mandarin Chinese in my own way, but I faced completely new challenges.

    If somebody tells you that Chinese is impossible to learn by yourself, as I once heard someone say, I can assure you that it is absolutely not true. It has its own complex aspects, but also some refreshingly easy ones as well. If you know how to tackle tones and Chinese characters the right way, Chinese is, in the long run, not harder than any other language, and the reward of speaking it is immense. You come into contact with an incredible culture, and the Chinese are often pleasantly surprised if you speak their language well.

        "The limits of my language are the limits of my world." ‒ Ludwig Wittgenstein

    Japanese

    Lesson Iearned: Some languages have completely new features, so be flexible and adapt your learning method to the language. If your approach is not working, change it! Don’t give up. Don’t give in.

    When I started learning Japanese, I wanted a new challenge, but I didn’t imagine it would be so hard. I couldn’t even build simple sentences because the structure in Japanese was so completely different from any language I had ever learned. I initially thought that this problem was just temporary and could be solved by speaking more regularly, but this simply wasn’t the case. Japanese feels like my biggest challenge yet, but I’m confident that I will get there. I just need to recalibrate my approach and live the language.

        "A different language is a different vision of life." ‒ Federico Fellini

    Conclusion

    Discovering a method to learn foreign languages is, without a doubt, one of the best things that has ever happened to me. Learning languages is an exhilarating experience. I didn’t do it by simply spending time at home staring blankly at verb tables. I did it by getting out there and living.

    Speaking multiple languages is not and shouldn’t be an intellectual performance. It is an act of love towards yourself and others which helps you discover the amazing diversity of human nature as well as discovering the multiple facets of your personality. To those who ask me why I like learning so many languages I always reply: “I don’t live to learn languages, I learn languages to live a better life”.
    Motivated to learn another language?
    Start learning today !

     

    Lesson learned: Languages cannot be taught, they can only be learned. Having someone or something to aid with the process is of great benefit. Find a guide, not an instructor.

    English was already a world language by the time I turned 10 in 1991. Its study was mandatory. I struggled at first. I didn’t like the teacher, grammar explanations confused me, and the material was monotone. I thought I’d never learn it. Then my parents decided to hire a private English tutor. I was 13 and she was wonderful. She didn’t simply instruct me in the language, but helped me discover it - she set me on the right path to learning and, most importantly, learning to love language.

    I started reading a lot of books in English. My aunt bought me The Hardy Boys for my birthday and after that there was no looking back. The combination of reading books, watching movies every day and talking to my tutor once a week for two years worked wonders. By the age of 15 I was fluent in English and in possession of a thick American accent.

    Lesson learned: A language is a door to an entire world which is wholly worth exploring. So let your guard down and fall in love! With the language, with the country, with a person, or even with the food. There’s no greater motivation!

    I started learning French around the same time as I started learning English and encountered many of the same problems. That all changed at the age of fourteen, however, when I discovered that I could watch French TV. I started watching two hours every day after dinner. By the age of 15 I was fluent in French. A few hours of television a day did more than the previous three years in middle school. In 2010 I moved to Paris. Living there for three years enabled me to gain invaluable insights into French culture: history, traditions, jokes, cultural references, and a respect for French pride in their cuisine and language.

    Lesson learned: If you find a method you like and which works for you, you can start learning any language by yourself. There is no one best method to learn a language. Find something that is effective for you. And above all, experiment!

    German was the first language I started learning completely on my own. I don’t remember exactly why I embarked on this journey, but I remember I had no idea how to learn German. I spent a couple of months using a dusty grammar book dislodged from my grandmother’s bookcase. Gothic letters cascaded down the page imploring me to repeat vacuous grammar drills. I quickly became disheartened.

    Then I saw a commercial on TV about a language series in 4 languages and decided to give it a go. While using it, I came up with my method: a special technique to absorb the basic patterns of any language in a light, natural and fun way. This method came to me organically, and I quickly realised that it was effective for me. After using it for a year and a half, I met a bunch of Germans while on vacation. I will always remember their faces as they repeatedly asked in bewilderment, “Wie kannst du so gut Deutsch?!” (how can you speak German so well?). This reaction and the resulting, privileged connection were enough to fuel my passion to perfect my German. From that moment on I started reading insatiably. The language had become an integral part of my life.

    Lesson learned: Language learning offers you profound insights into your own, native language. If you learn a language similar to yours, speak it from the beginning. It’s easier than you perhaps imagine.

    Spanish and Italian are like two sisters; different and yet similar at the same time. One common myth in Italy is that Spanish is easy: that you just have to speak Italian and add an “s” to every single word. The overall structure of the two languages is similar, but there are a fair few disparities in terms of pronunciation, intonation and idiomatic usage. In 2007 I did an exchange in Barcelona. Although I was immersed in a predominantly Catalan environment, I was living with a lively Spanish girl from Malaga and often went out with a lot of other Spanish people. The language simply rubbed off. By the time I came back to Rome, Spanish had become a part of me.

    Lesson learned: There is no such thing as a useless language. They will all come in handy sooner or later, so don’t let others determine what you learn. Allow yourself to be guided by your own interests and convictions.

    I met Lotte, a Dutch girl, whilst camping in Northern Sardinia. She didn’t speak much English and we both became frustrated at our inability to communicate. We still had a great time together, but something was missing: a sense of incompleteness kept nagging at me, so I decided to learn Dutch. Lotte and I lost touch, but the language stayed with me. People insisted that Dutch was a completely useless language - they all speak English - but I stuck to it. I read books and magazines that my friends would bring back from the Netherlands. I knew I would use the language sooner or later, and have been proved right. Now I speak Dutch every day with my Dutch housemate. Speaking and expanding Dutch has become easy, effortless and interesting. The old adage that one must move to a country to learn the language is simply not true.

    Lesson learned: Travel is a truly great motivator. Travel as much as you can, whenever you can. It will open doors and push you to learn languages.

    I visited Poland in 2012 for the second time in my life and simply fell in love with the country and its people. Other than using my bilingual translation technique, I also started speaking it from the very beginning by setting up a weekly language exchange with Michal, a Polish guy I had met in the summer of 2012. I highly recommend this approach if you are learning a slavic language and you already speak another one. Although Russian and Polish are quite different in many ways, the overall structure is the same, and knowing one helps enormously with learning the other. After a year I was relatively fluent in Polish and I made a video on YouTube with Michal on a visit to Poland. The video didn’t go unnoticed. A journalist interviewed me for a magazine and I ended up on Polish TV one year later.

    MUCH  FUN  and  success...  ;o)

     

  5. I  was  waiting  sooo  long  time....  not  believe,  it  will  change  to  my  happiness !

    By  some  Members,  seems  it  works   -   I  know,  must  looking  daily  for  a  new  one, hahaha  ;o)

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    Somos colaboradores de Deus. — 1 Cor. 3:9.

    Jeová é um trabalhador que tem prazer no que faz. (Sal. 135:6; João 5:17) Para que suas criaturas inteligentes sintam uma alegria e satisfação similar, Jeová confia a elas trabalho agradável e gratificante. Por exemplo, ele permitiu que seu Filho primogênito participasse em sua obra criativa. (Col. 1:15, 16) Durante sua existência pré-humana, Jesus estava ao lado de Deus no céu “como mestre de obras”. (Pro. 8:30) Do começo ao fim, a Bíblia contém exemplos que deixam claro que Jeová sempre designou trabalho a seus filhos espirituais. Depois que Adão e Eva pecaram e foram expulsos de seu lar paradisíaco, Deus “colocou ao oriente do jardim do Éden os querubins e a lâmina chamejante duma espada que se revolvia continuamente para guardar o caminho para a árvore da vida”. (Gên. 3:24) E Revelação 22:6 diz que Jeová “enviou o seu anjo para mostrar aos seus escravos as coisas que têm de ocorrer em breve”. w14 15/10 3:1, 2

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    Wir sind Gottes Mitarbeiter (1. Kor. 3:9)

    Jehova ist ein wirkender Gott und hat Freude an seinem Tun (Ps. 135:6; Joh. 5:17). Damit auch seine vernunftbegabten Geschöpfe das befriedigende Gefühl verspüren können, etwas geleistet zu haben, hat er ihnen interessante Arbeiten übertragen. Beispielsweise ließ er seinen erstgeborenen Sohn bei der Schöpfung mitwirken (Kol. 1:15, 16). Jesus war, bevor er Mensch wurde, im Himmel ein „Werkmeister“ an Gottes Seite (Spr. 8:30). Jehova hat seinen Geistsöhnen schon immer Tätigkeiten aufgetragen. Beispiele dafür finden wir überall in der Bibel. Nachdem Adam und Eva gesündigt hatten und aus dem Paradies vertrieben worden waren, „stellte [Gott] im Osten des Gartens Eden die Cherube auf und die flammende Klinge eines sich fortwährend drehenden Schwertes, um den Weg zum Baum des Lebens zu bewachen“ (1. Mo. 3:24). Und wie aus Offenbarung 22:6 hervorgeht, „sandte [Jehova] seinen Engel aus, um seinen Sklaven die Dinge zu zeigen, die in Kurzem geschehen sollen“. w14 15. 10. 3:1, 2

     

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    We are God’s fellow workers.—1 Cor. 3:9.

    Jehovah is a worker who takes pleasure in what he does. (Ps. 135:6; John 5:17) To allow his intelligent creatures to experience a similar joyful and gratifying feeling of accomplishment, Jehovah has assigned them pleasant and satisfying work. For example, he involved his firstborn Son in His creative work. (Col. 1:15, 16) During his prehuman existence, Jesus was beside God in heaven “as a master worker.” (Prov. 8:30) From beginning to end, the Bible contains examples showing that Jehovah has always assigned work to his spirit sons. After Adam and Eve sinned and were ejected from their Paradise home, God “posted at the east of the garden of Eden the cherubs and the flaming blade of a sword that was turning continuously to guard the way to the tree of life.” (Gen. 3:24) And Revelation 22:6 reveals that Jehovah “sent his angel to show his slaves the things that must shortly take place.” w14 10/15 3:1, 2

     

  9. Evening Dinner with my old  Father.....

    A son took his old father to a restaurant for an evening dinner. Father being very old and weak, while eating, dropped food on his shirt and trousers. Other diners watched him in disgust while his son was calm.
    After he finished eating, his son who was not at all embarrassed, quietly took him to the wash room, wiped the food particles, removed the stains, combed his hair and fitted his spectacles firmly. When they came out, the entire restaurant was watching them in dead silence, not able to grasp how someone could embarrass themselves publicly like that. The son settled the bill and started walking out with his father.
    At that time, an old man amongst the diners called out to the son and asked him, “Don’t you think you have left something behind ?”.

    The son replied,  “No sir, I haven’t”.
    The old man retorted, “Yes, you have ! You left a lesson for every son and hope for every father”.
    The restaurant went silent.

    Moral: To care for those who once cared for us is one of the highest honors. We all know, how our parents cared for us for every little things. Love them, respect them, and care for them.
    NWT
    Eph 6:2   “Honor your father and your mother” is the first command with a promise.

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    A little  REMINDER...  of  our  loving  anointed  Brother  *Guy  Pierce*  from  the  GB  ;o)

    Just  now  there  are  7  Brothers  in  our  GB  in  NY....

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    He  passed  away  on  Tuesday,  March 18. 2014  -  He was 79 years of  age...

    NEW YORK- Guy H. Pierce, a member of the Governing Body of Jehovah’s Witnesses at their world headquarters in Brooklyn, New York, died on Tuesday, March 18. He was 79 years of age.

    Mr. Pierce served on various committees that supervise activities related to the Witnesses and their international Bible-education work. His organizational responsibilities required that he travel extensively, and he used these occasions to provide encouragement for Jehovah’s Witnesses throughout the world. Despite his workload, he was well-known for never being too busy to listen to those needing assistance or advice, and he put others at ease with his warm smile and good sense of humor. His closest associates noted that people from different backgrounds or cultures were naturally drawn to him. In a discourse at a graduation program for full-time ministers, Mr. Pierce made remarks that he was known to exemplify: “Be firm for right principles, but be flexible. Do not look down on those in your assignment because their culture is different.”

    Guy Hollis Pierce was born in Auburn, California, on November 6, 1934. He was baptized as one of Jehovah’s Witnesses on August 14, 1955, at the age of 20. He married a fellow Witness, Penelope (Penny) Wong, on May 30, 1977, and the two raised a family together. Mr. and Mrs. Pierce became full-time Bible instructors (referred to by Witnesses as regular pioneers). Later, he became a traveling minister of Jehovah’s Witnesses, visiting congregations of Jehovah’s Witnesses throughout the United States to provide spiritual encouragement to other full-time Bible instructors and local congregation members. In 1997, the Pierces were invited to work full-time at the United States branch office of Jehovah’s Witnesses. On October 2, 1999, Mr. Pierce was announced as a new member of the Governing Body.

    Mr. Pierce was the chairman for the 129th annual meeting of the Watch Tower Bible and Tract Society of Pennsylvania, on the weekend of October 5 and 6, 2013. A total audience of 1,413,676 in 31 countries attended the event either in person or via webcast. According to the Witnesses’ official website, this was the largest gathering of Jehovah’s Witnesses to date.

    In addition to his wife, Penny, Mr. Pierce is survived by his six children, several grandchildren, and great-grandchildren. He will also be fondly remembered by Jehovah’s Witnesses around the world whom he regarded as family.

    In a statement, his fellow members of the Governing Body commented on “his solid faith and firm stand for Jehovah’s laws and principles,” adding: “Our memories of his courageous and faithful earthly life course will continue to strengthen us for years to come.”

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    He ‘Knew the Way’....

    GUY HOLLIS PIERCE, a member of the Governing Body of Jehovah’s Witnesses, finished his earthly course on Tuesday, March 18, 2014. He was 79 years old when his hope to be one of Christ’s resurrected brothers became a reality.—Heb. 2:10-12; 1 Pet. 3:18.

    Guy Pierce was born in Auburn, California, U.S.A., on November 6, 1934, and was baptized in 1955. He married his beloved wife, Penny, in 1977 and raised a family. His experience as a family man contributed to his fatherly manner. By 1982 he and Penny were busy in the pioneer work, and in 1986 he began 11 years of service as a circuit overseer in the United States.

    In 1997, Guy and Penny Pierce began to serve as members of the United States Bethel family. Brother Pierce worked in the Service Department, and in 1998 he was appointed as a helper to the Personnel Committee of the Governing Body. Brother Pierce’s appointment as a member of the Governing Body was announced on October 2, 1999, at the annual meeting of the Watch Tower Bible and Tract Society of Pennsylvania. In recent years, he served with the Personnel, Writing, Publishing, and Coordinators’ committees.

    People of varied backgrounds and cultures were drawn to Brother Pierce because of his warm smile and good sense of humor. However, the qualities that especially endeared him to others were his love, his humility, his respect for righteous laws and principles, and his complete faith in Jehovah. To Guy Pierce, there was a greater possibility that the sun would not rise than that Jehovah’s promises would go unfulfilled, and he wanted to share that truth with the whole world.

    Brother Pierce was tireless in serving Jehovah, rising early in the morning and often working late into the night. His travels to encourage his Christian brothers and sisters took him all over the world, and he was never too busy to spend time with individual Bethel family members and others who sought his fellowship, advice, and assistance. Even after years have passed, fellow believers recall his hospitality, friendship, and Scriptural encouragement.

    Our brother and dear friend is survived by his wife and six children, as well as grandchildren and great-grandchildren. He also had countless spiritual children. A memorial talk for Brother Pierce was given at Brooklyn Bethel on Saturday, March 22, 2014, by Mark Sanderson, a fellow member of the Governing Body. Among other matters, he spoke of Brother Pierce’s heavenly hope and read Jesus’ words: “In the house of my Father are many dwelling places. . . . If I go my way and prepare a place for you, I will come again and will receive you home to myself, so that where I am you also may be. And where I am going, you know the way.”—John 14:2-4.

    True, we will miss Brother Pierce very much. Yet, we rejoice that he ‘knew the way’ to his permanent ‘dwelling place.’

     

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    Thats  a  very  rare  pic....  A  Brother  on  stage  belongs  to  the  anointed !

    I  never  seen  before...  Our  young  anointed  Brother  had  never  a  duty  by  the  Memorial ❤

    Always  sitting  near  us ;o)   ( but  we've  13  Elders  and  more  for  these  doings... )

    But  I  know,  all  Cong.'s  are  a  little  different  in  some  things !

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    Como último inimigo, a morte há de ser reduzida a nada. — 1 Cor. 15:26.

    Que dizer de Satanás, aquele que deu início a todo o sofrimento que tem afligido a humanidade? Revelação 20:7-15 dá a resposta. Numa prova final pela qual todos os humanos perfeitos passarão, Satanás terá permissão para tentar desencaminhá-los. O Diabo e os que o seguirem serão eliminados permanentemente na “segunda morte”. (Rev. 21:8) Esse tipo de morte nunca será reduzido a nada, visto que os que estiverem nessa condição nunca mais voltarão a viver. Mas “a segunda morte” não é um inimigo para os humanos que amam e servem ao seu Criador. A humanidade aperfeiçoada estará numa condição aprovada por Jeová para a vida eterna, livre de qualquer inimigo. A comissão dada a Adão terá sido executada sem a presença dele. A Terra estará repleta de seus descendentes, que terão o prazer de cuidar dela e se alegrar com suas muitas formas de vida. Que nunca deixemos de ser gratos a Jeová por tudo que ele amorosamente fez e ainda fará para reduzir a nada o último inimigo, a morte! w14 15/9 4:17, 18

     

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    Comme dernier ennemi, la mort sera réduite à rien (1 Cor. 15:26).

    Et Satan, celui qui est à l’origine de tous les malheurs du monde, quel sera son sort ? La réponse se trouve en Révélation 20:7-15. Tous les humains parfaits subiront une épreuve finale durant laquelle Satan aura la permission d’essayer de les égarer. Le Diable et ceux qui iront à sa suite seront éternellement éliminés dans « la deuxième mort » (Rév. 21:8). Étant donné que ceux qu’elle retient seront définitivement privés d’existence, cette mort ne sera jamais réduite à rien. Toutefois, « la deuxième mort » n’est pas l’ennemie des humains qui aiment et servent leur Créateur. Rendue parfaite, l’humanité sera alors pleinement approuvée par Jéhovah et jugée digne de la vie éternelle, tout ennemi ayant disparu. La mission confiée à Adam se sera accomplie sans lui. La terre sera remplie de ses descendants, qui auront plaisir à la surveiller et se délecteront de ses différentes formes de vie. Ne perdons jamais notre admiration pour la façon dont Jéhovah, dans son amour, réduit à rien le dernier ennemi, la mort ! w14 15/9 4:17, 18.

     

  14. !!!!!!!!!!!!!.jpg

    MITTEN  IM  PARADIES.jpg

    Als letzter Feind wird der Tod zunichtegemacht (1. Kor. 15:26)

    Wie steht es mit Satan, der alles Elend über die Menschheit gebracht hat? In Offenbarung 20:7-15 finden wir die Antwort. In einer Schlussprüfung für alle vollkommenen Menschen darf Satan versuchen, sie in die Irre zu führen. Der Teufel und seine Anhänger werden für immer aus dem Weg geräumt und enden im „zweiten Tod“ (Offb. 21:8). Dieser Tod wird nie zunichtegemacht, denn alle, die sich in seinen Klauen befinden, sind für immer aus dem Dasein ausgelöscht. Der „zweite Tod“ ist aber für Menschen, die ihren Schöpfer lieben und ihm dienen, kein Feind. Die zur Vollkommenheit gebrachte Menschheit steht dann vor Jehova und hat sein uneingeschränktes Wohlgefallen, was ihr ewiges Leben einträgt. Nirgendwo lauert ein Feind. Der Adam übertragene Auftrag wird ohne ihn ausgeführt werden. Unzählige Nachkommen Adams werden sich dann gern um die Erde kümmern und sich an den vielen Tieren und Pflanzen erfreuen. Verlieren wir nie die Wertschätzung dafür, wie liebevoll Jehova vorgeht, um den Tod, den letzten Feind, zunichtezumachen. w14 15. 9. 4:17, 18

     

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    §§§§  PARADISE  -  ERDE.jpg

    The last enemy, death, is to be brought to nothing.—1 Cor. 15:26.

    What about Satan, the one who initially caused all the misery that mankind has experienced? Revelation 20:7-15 provides the answer. In a final test of all perfect humans, Satan will be permitted to try to mislead them. The Devil and those who follow his lead will be eliminated everlastingly in “the second death.” (Rev. 21:8) Because those within its grasp will be forever out of existence, this death will never be brought to nothing. “The second death” is, however, no enemy of humans who love and serve their Creator. Perfected mankind will then stand before Jehovah as fully approved for everlasting life, with no enemies anywhere. The commission given to Adam will have been accomplished without him. The earth will abound with his offspring, who will delight to oversee it and enjoy its many life forms. May we never lose appreciation for the way in which Jehovah lovingly brings the last enemy, death, to nothing! w14 9/15 4:17, 18

  16. 10  Crazy Facts About Human Eyes....  ( you  will  wonder )

    These are the top 10 Facts you probably didn't know about  Your eyes.

    1. Eyes heal quickly!  With proper care, it only takes about 48 hours for the eye to repair a corneal scratch. 80% of vision problems worldwide are avoidable or even curable.

    2. Newborns don’t produce tears and they’re color blind at birth. They make crying sounds, but do not produce any tears, tears don’t start flowing until they are about 5-12 weeks old.

    3. Doctors have yet to find a way to transplant an eyeball. The optic nerve that connects the eye to the brain is too sensitive to reconstruct successfully.

    4. Some people are born with two differently colored eyes. This condition called heterochromia.

    5. If your eyes are blue, you share a common ancestor with every other blue-eyed individual in the world. The very first person to ever have blue eyes lived around 6,000 to 10,000 years ago.

    6. Your eyes are about 1 inch across and weights about 28 grams.

    7. The human eye can distinguish about 10 million different colors. If the human eye was a digital camera it would have 576 megapixels.

    8. Your eyelashes keep dirt out of your eyes and your eyebrows prevent sweat dripping into your eyes.

    9. Although the function of tears is to keep eyes clean, scientists don’t understand why we cry when we are upset.

    10. While a fingerprint has 40 unique characteristics, an iris has 256. This is why retina scans are increasingly being used for security purposes.

     

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