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Post by irvinegrey on Oct 26, 2011 12:36:46 GMT -5
In Ireland there seems to be quite a few new workers, all quite young. They seem to come from families who have a long association with the movement. In recent years are there any who come from outside the movement and after professing become a worker?
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Post by irvinegrey on Oct 31, 2011 8:23:17 GMT -5
Thanks. This helpful but there must be many others out there who can contribute an answer that would aid my research. My question is genuine and I am trying to get a balanced picture
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Post by emerald on Nov 1, 2011 6:59:02 GMT -5
In Ireland there seems to be quite a few new workers, all quite young. They seem to come from families who have a long association with the movement. In recent years are there any who come from outside the movement and after professing become a worker? There is one sister worker who's family (brother and sister-in-law, perhaps not her parents?) professed some years ago but left the meetings a few years later. I don't think the worker in question professed as she was quite young at the time but she returned to the meetings and within a short time offered for the work. She's been in the work for 4 or 5 yrs now I think? Years slip by rather quickly. I can't think of any others off-hand.
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Post by redeemed on Nov 3, 2011 14:34:37 GMT -5
I think that it is fair to say that any of the new workers in Ireland are from families who have been professing for a long time some could even be third or fourth generation
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