Hello Bill, are we the only people left reading this forum?
Your comments against my prophecy and all of my concerns, along with all of my replies to your comments, have been posted on every other forum, so I don't need to answer them in any detail here unless there is evidence that someone besides you and I read the site.
If I had the time and energy I would bring a lawsuit against several institutions--not because I would win, but to get attention for my concerns.
You could argue until June 6, and your arguments would mostly just further my cause, since you do spell "Farmington" right.
> Whether or not their decisions are sound, each
> publication has the right to publish what it chooses.
> For publications like religious publications, normally
> there are limitations even on paid ads.
Then why don't the editors state what those limitations are? Nobody at either Friends Journal or Quaker Life has explained what is so offensive about my saying that God will do something wonderful next year in Farmington.
> By the way, the Quaker Life article was not published
> with a paid ad banner, which could have confused some
> readers, although at the bottom it clearly identified
> who was responsible for its content, and it was in a
> very different typeface from editorial content.
Yes--and I am surprised that the editor didn't just put in a "Paid Advertisement" banner, so it's not as if I was trying to pass it off as her editorial or news article. She could have just apologized for not doing that.
> Apparently some readers objected to its publication,
I object to most of what appears in most Quaker media these days--but nobody ever apologizes to me for printing the junk. I have no idea who objected to my prophetic ad, and the disclaimer which appeared in October's QL doesn't even say that anyone did. It just said there had been "inquiries." How evasive can one get? Bill, don't you think it is suspicious when so many people are obviously turned off by a message that is totally positive?
> and the editor subsequently published an apology for
> printing the ad - a very brief one which did not really
> make clear to me the reason for her regrets.
Maybe she didn't know herself.
> (Personally I would think it appropriate to publish it
> as a clearly labeled paid ad.)
Personally I think it should have been the lead article. There is nothing else half so important in that magazine.
> It is hard to think of any other specific event or
> prophesied event, past or future, which has been the
> subject of more posts in Quaker online forums than
> Licia's Farmington prophecy.
Well, it's not as if I were only predicting that it will rain next June on some plain in Spain. This is the most important event any of us have yet seen.
> I think she has been successful in communicating it to
> many Quakers, and I know from limited experience that
> this sometimes results in people on these forums
> talking it about with other Quakers at gatherings, so
> it does spread wider. For example, one Friend (not me)
> raised it at a Bible study I attend, which resulted in
> several Friends hearing of it for the first time.
Great! Bill, how do I contact the members of that Bible study? Someone was interested enough to raise the subject, and in my experience there is usually some misunderstanding of the prophecy when I am not there actively engaging in discussion. I would love to be able to answer their questions, objections, concerns, etc.
> I do find a blanket policy of not publishing prophecies
> strange, and I believe I recall Quaker Life noting a
> prophecy uttered at a Triennial some time back. I do
> think there are many Friends who are not very open to
> prophecies at all, and I think that is sad.
Tell me about the prophecies you and other Friends are open to. I don't hear prophecies coming from Friends.
> But I also think that many Friends who don't view this
> particular prophecy as given by Christ do not reject
> prophecy per se.
Nonsense--the only reason anyone ever gives for rejecting this prophecy is that they don't believe anyone knows the voice of Christ. Which means that they do reject prophecy "per se" unless they believe in prophecies given by some other deity.
> I'll admit I've never understood why Licia is so
> concerned with getting out her prophecy so widely
> before 6/6/06. From what I've heard of it, there really
> would be no need to be in Farmington on that date.
> Coming some time after would gain someone all the
> benefits of what Licia believes Christ will do in
> Farmington, from everything I've read from Licia on it.
> She has noted that word of what is happening there will
> receive much attention from the mass media if the
> prophecy comes to fruition. Then Friends and others can
> respond.
So if God tells me to prophesy I should just tell him to buzz off--Friends can find out what God has done, after he has done it, by reading the New York Times? The
only reason I am "so concerned" with getting out the information is that Christ keeps prodding me to publish it in many different places, and I can't help noticing that Friends seem to be deaf to prophecy.
> If the prophecy turns out to be mistaken, people can
> avoid an unnecessary trip and disruption to their lives
> by deferring any decision to go to Farmington until
> after the 6/6/06 date.
And I suppose that is what most of them will do--though they will probably be sorry they deferred it. And those who have hardened their hearts (I'm not saying Bill is one of these) will find out that God is not mocked--although in the case of some of them they will be so relieved to find out that there is no pit of burning sulfur for them to be thrown into that they won't mind being sent home as soon as they get to Farmington and told to retract all their hard words against me, prophecy, and Farmington.
Meanwhile I am probably one of the very few Friends who will not have to pay rent from now until the Parousia, since I had the foreknowledge and guidance to buy a house in Farmington. Bill, do you have your motel reservations for June 7? If you don't, you had better get them by February. (I was going to say March, but then I realized that some people really do read prophecies.) June is tourist season--quite apart from any prophecies or miracles--and motels fill up. By the time you decide your life will be less disrupted by coming to Farmington than otherwise, you will need to bring a tent.
Licia Kuenning (Farmington Friend)
http://www.megalink.net/~klee
licia@qhpress.org
WATCH FARMINGTON!