T
the_phoenix
Guest
Opinions welcome and greatly appreciated on the following situation:
I have a long-distance friend who has only recently admitted to me (via a mysterious non-committal e-mail link with no message) that she is a Jehovah’s Witness. At first we were Star Trek pen pals. When her health deteriorated to the point she could no longer write letters, I would call her on the phone. Later on, we moved to e-mail correspondence.
However, I ended up blocking her from sending me e-mail. Here’s why:
In e-mail, she would send me bizarre messages including an article attacking Mother Teresa (sent one Christmas Eve) a link to a conspiracy theory website (which looking back, is probably JW-sponsored somehow), a link to a page in the Farmer’s Almanac which lists “lucky days for taking baths, getting a haircut, etc.” (She claims she never sent me the link to the Farmer’s Almanac, but rather that the devil must have inspired a hacker to send it.) She would also ask me controversial political questions, tell me that it was “Very Important and Serious that I Answer in a LOT OF DETAIL With Exactly How I Felt” … only to have my carefully thought out e-mails either get a very abrupt acknowledgement, or simply get ignored and be left unanswered. (She claims the devil or some other malignant force must be stopping my e-mails from reaching her, and further claims that she is in fact the one who has been getting no response from me.)
Having spoken to her on the phone now and confronted her that I know she is a Jehovah’s Witness and why did she hide that from me for so many years, she apologized and appears to want our friendship to continue. Now here’s my question:
Since I’ve blocked her from sending me anymore e-mail (which I’ve told her quite plainly), she wants to know if she can write to me again by regular mail instead. What if I agree and she wants to send me Watchtower literature? What if I don’t agree to accept Watchtower publications and still want to send her a calendar at Christmas like I did last year?
Once long ago, she sent me by snail mail a tract condemning the so-called “idol worship” of people who have statues of Mary, other saints, and angels in their house. At the time, I just thought she was an ex-Catholic who had become a Fundamentalist Protestant and that the tract was Protestant along the lines of Jack Chick. I responded by depositing the tract in the garbage after reading it, calling her up, and explaining as charitably as I could why I had just thrown her tract in the garbage.
Any advice is welcome. I am open to remaining friends with this person if God wants me to, and have forgiven the deception about her true religious identity. That said, I want it completely understood that she must continue to thoroughly respect my loyalty to Catholicism.
Many thanks,
~~ the phoenix
I have a long-distance friend who has only recently admitted to me (via a mysterious non-committal e-mail link with no message) that she is a Jehovah’s Witness. At first we were Star Trek pen pals. When her health deteriorated to the point she could no longer write letters, I would call her on the phone. Later on, we moved to e-mail correspondence.
However, I ended up blocking her from sending me e-mail. Here’s why:
In e-mail, she would send me bizarre messages including an article attacking Mother Teresa (sent one Christmas Eve) a link to a conspiracy theory website (which looking back, is probably JW-sponsored somehow), a link to a page in the Farmer’s Almanac which lists “lucky days for taking baths, getting a haircut, etc.” (She claims she never sent me the link to the Farmer’s Almanac, but rather that the devil must have inspired a hacker to send it.) She would also ask me controversial political questions, tell me that it was “Very Important and Serious that I Answer in a LOT OF DETAIL With Exactly How I Felt” … only to have my carefully thought out e-mails either get a very abrupt acknowledgement, or simply get ignored and be left unanswered. (She claims the devil or some other malignant force must be stopping my e-mails from reaching her, and further claims that she is in fact the one who has been getting no response from me.)
Having spoken to her on the phone now and confronted her that I know she is a Jehovah’s Witness and why did she hide that from me for so many years, she apologized and appears to want our friendship to continue. Now here’s my question:
Since I’ve blocked her from sending me anymore e-mail (which I’ve told her quite plainly), she wants to know if she can write to me again by regular mail instead. What if I agree and she wants to send me Watchtower literature? What if I don’t agree to accept Watchtower publications and still want to send her a calendar at Christmas like I did last year?
Once long ago, she sent me by snail mail a tract condemning the so-called “idol worship” of people who have statues of Mary, other saints, and angels in their house. At the time, I just thought she was an ex-Catholic who had become a Fundamentalist Protestant and that the tract was Protestant along the lines of Jack Chick. I responded by depositing the tract in the garbage after reading it, calling her up, and explaining as charitably as I could why I had just thrown her tract in the garbage.
Any advice is welcome. I am open to remaining friends with this person if God wants me to, and have forgiven the deception about her true religious identity. That said, I want it completely understood that she must continue to thoroughly respect my loyalty to Catholicism.
Many thanks,
~~ the phoenix