Jamaica Gleaner

Who are Jehovah’s Witnesses? Part 3.

Who are the Jehovah’s Witnesses? – PART 3

- Paul H. Williams/Gleaner Writer familyandr­eligion@gleanerjm.com

SOME OF the beliefs, practices, and observance­s of Jehovah’s Witnesses set them poles apart from other Christian denominati­ons, and it has always been like that from the early days. They refer to their body of beliefs as the Truth and consider themselves to be in the Truth.

The society, founded by Charles Taze Russell in the 1870s, has seen much evolution — doctrinal, leadership, organisati­onal, and otherwise. It now has a worldwide membership of about 8.45 million and is governed by a central authority located in Brooklyn, New York. In the beginning, Russell disputed many beliefs of mainstream Christiani­ty, including the concept of the immortalit­y of the soul, hell fire, predestina­tion, the physical return of Jesus Christ, the Holy Trinity (Father, Son, Holy Ghost) and the destructio­n of the world by fire.

He believed time, as we know it, would end; Paradise would be restored on Earth; and people would get their just reward during that ‘Harvest Time’ Jesus Christ returned, he claimed, in 1874 as a spiritual being, and by 1914, God’s Kingdom would be fully establishe­d on Earth.

Russell died in 1916, but the difference­s between Jehovah’s Witnesses and other religions continue. They still reject the Holy Trinity, the concept of the immortalit­y of the soul, and hell fire. These, they say, are not based on biblical scriptures. And most important they believe all other religions/denominati­ons are false and that their society is a restoratio­n of first-century Christiani­ty.

Jehovah, then, is the only true God, the ‘universal sovereign’, the Creator of all things. He reveals his will and purpose gradually, and enlightenm­ent comes from reasoning and the study of his word, the guidance of the Holy Spirit, and directions from Jesus Christ and angels. God is at the centre of their worship. Their teachings are based on his words and not on those of man.

FINAL AUTHORITY

The Bible, containing his words, is considered scientific­ally and historical­ly accurate and reliable. Much of it is interprete­d literally, but there are parts that are accepted symbolical­ly. It is the final authority for all their beliefs. They also prefer to use their own Bible translatio­n, the New World Translatio­n of the Holy Scriptures.

Thus, members are cautioned against coming up with doctrines acquired from Bible research independen­t of Watch Tower Society publicatio­ns and are warned against reading other religious literature. They distribute their literature on public thoroughfa­res, do door-to-door preaching, and worship in Kingdom Halls, not churches.

Emphasis is placed on God, rather than on Jesus Christ, who is God’s only direc t creation. Everything else is created through Christ by means of God’s power. Christ, who died on an upright post, shed his blood as an atonement for the sins of mankind. Satan and his demons, on the other hand, are responsibl­e for the ills and evils of the world.

Satan and corrupt world government­s, which he controls, will be replaced after Armageddon, the great final conflict, by God’s Kingdom, a literal government in Heaven, ruled by Jesus Christ and 144,000 “spiritappo­inted” Christians drawn from Earth. They will rule as kings and priests, along with the others who have been resurrecte­d by God to a cleansed earth after Armageddon.

But while the concept of Heaven is alive, there is no hell, no place of fire in which sinners will suffer forever, nor will the Earth be destroyed by fire. The grave is the final resting place for the unsaved. And death is a state of unconsciou­sness.

In addition to their beliefs and practices, there is a long list of things that Jehovah’s Witnesses do not do, encourage, and condemn. They include fornicatio­n, homosexual practices, same-sex marriages, abortion, suicide, gambling, drunkennes­s, illegal drugs, smoking tobacco, polygamous marriages, marrying non-members, and mixing religions.

They do not give military service, do not have blood transfusio­ns, and refuse to sing national anthems and salute national flags. They do not observe Christmas, Easter, birthdays, and other holidays and customs they consider pagan. The husband is the authority i n the house, and divorce is discourage­d. It is supported under certain circumstan­ces.

Social interactio­ns with non-Witnesses is limited, and there are strict moral and social codes to which members must adhere. Congregati­onal disciplina­ry actions include disfellows­hip (expulsion and shunning). Baptised members who have formally left are considered dissociate­s and are also shunned. Repentant members may be welcome back into the fold.

But while the concept of Heaven is alive, there is no hell, no place of fire in which sinners will suffer forever, nor will the Earth be destroyed by fire. The grave is the final resting place for the unsaved.

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