ANSWERS: 2
  • It was neither crazy or divinely inspired. Just a lapse in judgement.  Since Jehovah's Witnessess believe in a ressurection of people on earth he probably thought they needed a house but it doesn't make sense that David, Gideon and Barak would be ressurected in North America. People make mistakes. Tell me you haven't.
  • Once again this disturbed individual has phrased a question in a misleading way. He puts a false answer into the very question he asks! The "House of Princes" was a vacation retreat for an aging couple. Brother Rutherford had a severe case of pneumonia earlier in his life. Thereafter, he had only one good lung. In the 1920’s, under a doctor’s treatment, he went to San Diego, California, and the doctor urged him to spend as much time as possible there. From 1929 on, Brother Rutherford spent the winters working at a San Diego residence he had named Beth-Sarim with his wife Mary. Because Sister Rutherford had poor health and found the winters in New York (where the Watch Tower Society’s headquarters were located) difficult to endure, Beth-Sarim was built with funds that were a direct contribution for that purpose. The deed, which was published in full in “The Golden Age” of March 19, 1930, conveyed this property to J. F. Rutherford and thereafter to the Watch Tower Society. The Hebrew words ‘Beth Sarim’ mean ‘House of the Princes. ViceGrip, get a grip on your senses man. If you call yourself a Christian, than act like one. Stop stalking me too!

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