The best place to learn about the beliefs of Jehovah's Witnesses is in person from one of the millions of lay-ministers around the globe. A personal visit may be requested using this website:
https://watch002.securesites.net/contact/submit.htm
You can write a letter requesting literature or a personal visit, and mail it to the branch office that serves your land:
http://www.watchtower.org/how_to_contact_us.htm
There are hundreds of educational articles on the official websites of Jehovah's Witnesses. The websites are:
http://watchtower.org/archives/index.htm
http://jw-media.org/
2006-09-27 07:14:39
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answer #1
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answered by achtung_heiss 7
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Did you know the Watchtower organization is a false prophet and has changed its teachings many, many times?
Charles T Russell, founder of the Watchtower Bible and Tract Society in 1914 predicted that Armeggedon would be fought in 1918. Of course it was not.. They taught that 1874 was the year Jesus came the second time to Earth. And that millions of people alive in 1920 would never die because 1925 was the year that God's 1000 year reign on Earth would begin..
These are just some of the reason you cannot trust the Watchtower.
more can be found here: http://www.equip.org/free/CP0410.pdf
2006-09-25 12:01:39
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answer #2
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answered by Anthony M 6
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No, but it's nice of you to put the info on a website so people aren't trapped into reading some long question. I hate when people just copy a website as their question or answer and it's soooo long...too hard to read! Very good etiquette!
2006-09-25 11:44:58
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answer #3
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answered by SlowClap 6
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Not especially. Anyone wanting a different opinion, please see www.freeminds.org or www.1260days.org
For reading, have a read at "Crisis of Conscience" by Ray Franz (one of the governing body) or "The Gentile Times Reconsidered" Both are wonderful thought provoking reads!
2006-09-28 16:06:20
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answer #4
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answered by Buzz s 6
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When I have 5 hours to spare and all the paint in the house has dried.
2006-09-25 11:43:51
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answer #5
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answered by Anonymous
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Great web site, it confirms what I have said about JW's, it's a cult. Your believing in a lie, created by liars which makes you a liar and the truth is not in you. Repent and read the true word of God!
2006-09-25 11:51:44
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answer #6
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answered by Anonymous
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lame
explain at least 10 other non christian faiths before using this site to push own religion you may not understand
how can you differentiate if you don't know?
2006-09-25 11:44:52
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answer #7
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answered by Anonymous
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Already knew what Jehovah's Witness believe and it is considered a "Christian" cult since they deny the divinity of Christ, deny the authority of the bible and deny salvation by grace.
2006-09-25 11:55:57
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answer #8
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answered by parepidemos_00 3
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That could be interpreted as spam. But i wont report you cause at least you seem sincere in your beliefs..
2006-09-25 11:43:38
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answer #9
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answered by Anonymous
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According to Jehovah's Witness' theology, God is a single person, not a Trinity, who does not know all things and is not everywhere. He first created Michael the Archangel through whom He created all "other things," including the universe, the earth, Adam and Eve, etc. This creative work took God 42,000 years.
At one point, The Watchtower Bible and Tract Society taught that God ruled the universe from somewhere in the Pleiades star system. They have since modified this to say that the "Pleiades can no longer be considered the center of the universe and it would be unwise for us to try to fix God's throne as being at a particular spot in the universe."1 Such changes and even contradictions in teaching are frequent in the Watchtower organization and when a doctrine changes, they tell their followers that the light of truth is getting brighter.
After Adam sinned, the paradise which God had created for them, was ruined. So, God instituted a system of redemption which was revealed in the Bible and would ultimately lead to the crucifixion of Jesus the messiah. But, in the meantime, God needed to have a visible, theocratic organization on earth to accurately represent Him. Throughout history, this true organization had a remnant of faithful Jehovah's Witnesses (Noah, Abraham, Moses, David, etc.) but it wasn't until the late 1800's that Charles Taze Russell formerly began what is now known as the Watchtower Bible and Tract Society which is run out of Brooklyn, New York. This organization claims to be the only true channel of God's truth on earth today and that it alone can properly interpret God's word since it is the angel directed, prophet of God on earth.
When it came time for the savior to be born, Michael the Archangel became a human, in the form of Jesus. Jesus grew and kept all the laws of God and never sinned. Finally, when Jesus died, it was not on a cross, but on a torture stake, where he bore the sins of mankind -- but this did not include Adam's sins. Jesus rose from the dead as a spirit, not physically (his body was dissolved and taken by God) and during his visitations to people on earth, he manifested a temporary physical body for them to see and touch. Thus began the true Christian church of Jehovah's followers.
Throughout history there have been faithful Jehovah's witnesses who have managed to keep The Truth in spite of the "demonic" doctrine of Trinitarianism that has permeated the Christian church in "Christendom." Christendom is filled with pastors who are antichrists, in churches run by Satan, and who support the earthly governments which are all of the devil. In other words, all of Christianity is false and only the Jehovah's Witness "theocratic" organization lead by several men in Brooklyn, New York, is true.
In the late 1800's, a young man of 18 years, by the name of Charles Taze Russell, organized a Bible class in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. In 1879 he sought to popularize his ideas on doctrine so he co-published The Herald of the Morning magazine with its founder, N. H. Barbour and by 1884 Russell controlled the publication and renamed it The Watchtower Announcing Jehovah's Kingdom, and founded Zion's Watch Tower Tract Society (now known as the Watch Tower Bible and Tract Society). Russell served as the teacher and guide for the organization which taught that Jesus returned invisibly in 1914 and is now reigning in heaven. When Jesus finally returns physical to earth, which will happen at the time of the Battle of Armageddon, He will set up his earthly 1000 year kingdom.
During this 1000 year period, people will be resurrected and have a second chance to receive eternal salvation by following the principles of Jehovah's Organization on earth known as the Watchtower Bible and Tract Society. After the millennium, those who reject God and His organization will be annihilated; that is, they will cease to exist. The rest of the Jehovah's Witness who have faithfully followed God's organization on earth will be saved from eternal annihilation and reside forever on Paradise earth. Heaven, however, is a place for a special group of 144,000 Jehovah's Witnesses -- the only ones who are "born again" and who alone are allowed to take communion in their annual communion service. These are the ones who have "immortal life," all other Witnesses have "everlasting life." Those with immortal life do not have resurrected bodies. They have "spirit bodies." Those on Paradise Earth have everlasting life and consists of a resurrected body that must be maintained through eating, rest, etc.
When you study with the Jehovah's Witness, you agree to attend five meetings a week where you are taught from Watchtower literature. You cannot be baptized until you have studied their material for at least six months and have answered numerous questions before a panel of elders. Men are not supposed have long hair or wear beards and women are to dress in modest apparel. They refuse to vote, salute the flag, sing the "Star Spangled Banner, celebrate birthdays or Christmas, won't take blood transfusions, and they can't join the armed forces. A schedule of door-to-door canvassing is required where you distribute the Watchtower literature, acquire donations, and forward all monies to the headquarters in Brooklyn, New York.
If you ever leave the Jehovah's Witness organization, you are considered an apostate and are to be shunned.
2006-09-25 11:52:38
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answer #10
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answered by pops 6
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