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Preaching Door-to-Door Why live any longer with the uncertainty of whether you will be acceptable to God when you die? Discover how to have the assurance of Eternal Life! (www.4witness.org) |
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.:SECTION ONE: QUESTION THREE A: IS THE WATCHTOWER ORGANIZATION A CULT—PART 1? Are personal opinions and independent thinking condemned by God? How can Christian unity exist in a religion that allows its members to disagree on spiritual issues? Do true Christians need the guidance of an organization to understand the Bible? What are the mental manipulation techniques of a cult?
KAREN: Oh, it was all right. It’s just that my mom is giving me a hard time because I’m studying with Jehovah’s Witnesses. I guess she’s afraid that I’m going to end up in a cult. CINDY: Karen, we hear that a lot from people who don’t understand our religion. Just like usual we’ll be studying today in the Watchtower brochure, What Does God Require of Us?. “Satan may use persecution or opposition to get you to leave Jehovah.” As you are seeing, Karen, “Some of your loved ones may become very angry because you are studying the Bible.…Satan wants to frighten you so that you will stop learning about Jehovah.”1. You won’t let Satan win by listening to your mom, will you Karen? KAREN: Cindy, my mom is not upset that I’m studying the Bible. It’s just that she’s worried that I’m studying with Jehovah’s Witnesses. She thinks that the Jehovah’s Witness religion is a cult and she doesn’t want me to end up in it. CINDY: Karen, do you know what a “cult” is? A few years ago, in the February 15, 1994 issue of The Watchtower, the Society described what a “cult” is. Let me read some of the things they said in that article: “Cult leaders are known to use manipulative methods to control the minds of their followers. Is there any evidence that Jehovah’s Witnesses do this?.…Outstanding is a recent ruling by the European Court of Human Rights. It declared that the Witnesses should enjoy freedom of thought, conscience, and religion and that they have the right to speak about their faith and teach it to others. This would hardly be the case if Jehovah’s Witnesses…used manipulative methods to control the minds of their followers.”2. Karen, you see what we are like. Do you think we use “manipulative methods” to control your mind? KAREN: I’m not sure, Cindy. My mom said that Jehovah’s Witnesses are not allowed to question any of the doctrines and policies of the Watchtower organization and that if they don’t believe absolutely everything the Society teaches, they will be disfellowshiped from the organization. She said that fear of being rejected by the organization, manipulates many Witnesses into not accepting blood transfusions,3. refusing any kind of political activities,4. and not participating in anything that is disapproved of by the Watchtower organization. Is this true that the Watchtower manipulates its members in this way? CINDY: I wouldn’t call it “manipulation,” Karen. The Watchtower Society doesn’t tell us what to believe. Based on our conscience, we make our own personal decision in regard to blood transfusions and politics. KAREN: Really, Cindy? You are allowed to make your own personal decision? So what happens if the conscience of a Witness permits him to vote; are you saying he wouldn’t be disfellowshiped for such an action? CINDY: Well, no, Karen. He would be disfellowshiped if he persists in this action because a Jehovah’s Witness must believe and act in harmony with the Watchtower organization. KAREN: Then are you saying, Cindy, that a Witness’ personal conscience is determined by the Watchtower organization’s doctrine and policies? CINDY: Well, I guess so. . . KAREN: Listen to this Watchtower article and tell me how this is not mental “manipulation” in controlling what people think and believe. The Society said: “…Satan called into question God’s way of doing things. He promoted independent thinking.…How is such independent thinking manifested? A common way is by questioning the counsel that is provided by God’s visible organization.…Why is it so dangerous? Such thinking is an evidence of pride.…Really, can we get along without the direction of God’s organization? No, we cannot!”5. Cindy, when personal judgment of determining Scriptural truth is viewed as pride against God, how can this not be a means of controlling what people believe? If a person is not allowed to question the doctrines of an organization, how can he follow the Biblical command to “make sure of all things”?6. CINDY: That’s a good question, Karen, but once we prove that this is Jehovah’s organization, we must not question its doctrines any longer. Jesus told us that we must be “one” even as he and the Father are one,7. and the apostle Paul exhorted the Corinthian believers to: “all speak in agreement, and that there should not be divisions” so that they would be “united in the same…line of thought.”8. So in order to have unity of thought, we must not question the counsel provided by the organization. KAREN: Cindy, is unity the same thing as uniformity or is there a difference? CINDY: What do you mean by is there a difference between unity and uniformity? Aren’t they the same thing, Karen? KAREN: Not exactly, Cindy. Let me explain. Notice that in the passage you referenced, 1 Corinthians 1:10, Paul does not tell the believes to have uniformity of belief, but rather, as he put it, to be: “united in the same…line of thought.” Do you think it is possible for a group of people to be “united in the same…line of thought” without having absolute uniformity in beliefs? For example, Cindy. Suppose you and your husband were to have a disagreement on whether you should eat apples for breakfast. Now the Bible says that husbands and wives, by being united in marriage, are as “one,” but does this mean that you are required to like apples as much as your husband does? CINDY: Of course, not, Karen. I’m in unity with my husband, but that doesn’t mean that we do not have our differences of opinion on certain issues. He may like certain kinds of food or clothing that I’m not particularly fond of, but that doesn’t affect our relationship. We exercise unity in our marriage by working together in spite of our differences. When an issue comes up that we don’t see eye to eye on, I defer to his leadership and support him in his decision, even if I disagree with his viewpoint. Is this what you mean by the difference between unity and uniformity? KAREN: Yes, Cindy, that’s exactly what I’m talking about. What you just described about your relationship with your husband, is a beautiful picture of what being “one” in unity is all about. While uniformity requires absolute conformity in every aspect of life and thought; unity, on the other hand, is more concerned about working together in the midst of diversity. Given the context of the passage in which the Corinthian believers were so divided that they could not work together, can you see why Paul exhorted the believers to lay aside their differences in order to unite for the cause of the Kingdom? CINDY: Yes, I see your point Karen, but I don’t understand how Christians can work together in unity if they disagree on spiritual issues? KAREN: Cindy, do you remember how the Corinthian believers had a dispute over whether a Christian should be allowed to eat meat that was offered in sacrifice to idols? What was Paul’s advice to the believers? Did he make the eating of idolatrous meat used in false worship a disfellowshiping offense? CINDY: No he didn’t, Karen. In fact at 1 Corinthians chapters 8 and 10, Paul seemed to be more concerned about offending the conscience of a weak brother, than he was about settling the dispute by an organizational policy. KAREN: You are right, Cindy; and look at how Paul addressed this issue at Romans 14:1-3: “Now accept the one who is weak in faith, but not for the purpose of passing judgment on his opinion. One man has faith that he may eat all things, but he who is weak eats vegetables only. Let not him who eats regard with contempt him who does not eat, and let not him who does not eat judge him who eats, for God has accepted him.”9. Did you notice, Cindy, how Paul specifically told the Christians not to judge a brother who has a different opinion on an issue? CINDY: Yes, that’s a good point. Oh, and look at verse five! It says: “One [man] judges one day as above another, another [man] judges one day as all others, let each [man] be fully convinced in his own mind.”10. Is this saying that Christians have the freedom to disagree on what days to regard as holy? KAREN: That’s right, Cindy. Some of the believers observed all of the Jewish holidays and others didn’t. Paul’s response to this was to “let each [man] be fully convinced in his own mind.” Can you see how, far from enforcing organizational conformity to a uniform system of beliefs, true Christianity allows for freedom on peripheral issues as long as there is unity on the central teachings pertaining to the Kingdom? CINDY: Yes, I see your point Karen. KAREN: Since the Watchtower organization does not allow for freedom in disagreeing with any of its doctrines and policies, can you see why my mom is concerned that the Watchtower organization is a cult? CINDY: I can see why she’d be concerned, Karen, but I wouldn’t be so quick to view Jehovah’s Witnesses as a cult. There are many other points the Society examined in that 1994 Watchtower article. Could we discuss the others next week? KAREN: Sure, Cindy. I’ll be here. COMMENTS: For more information see:
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They are all there for me!
“I had Jehovah’s Witnesses visiting for six years. … The sad thing is now I have their beliefs in my head. So I put myself into God’s hands and asked for direction. …Well, the feeling of freedom is amazing. I am like a child, learning again for the first time. The reason I had to write to you was the Karen and Cindy conversations. Instead of me asking for help, one question at a time, they are all there for me!! It seems as if ‘Karen’ could read my mind.
It’s so lovely for things to fall into place, mainly that ‘What happens when we die?’ This was a very big issue for me. I was scared while I did not understand even the tiny bit I do now. It’s such a joy. Instead of feeling unworthy(were all sinners I know) and feeling I would never be saved or go to Heaven. So, please thank God and Jesus with me for such help.”
I have to tell you how your website saved my life.
“I have been a baptized Witness since 1995, and I have to tell you how you have saved my life. Every couple of years I get this gnawing sense that this is not quite right, that I am not 100% vested in what the Watchtower Society says. …Lately, I have stopped attending meetings and my daughter, 13, has begged me not to make her go back. So I have been praying and chatting with friends outside the organization…
…I can’t tell you my sense of relief when I stumbled upon your site and started to read the articles. I want to cry, but I’m at work. I can’t wait to get home because I am so excited I can barely stand it! Please, please, how can I meet others who feel this way? I sure could use the fellowship. Again, thanks for the work you do.”
God bless you for the difference you are making.
“My brother and I were raised by a Jehovah's Witness mother. I am 52 years old now and still haven't been able to shake the stigma of the experience. My brother wasn't as lucky as me and ended up taking his own life at 17. I have been through everything ... I can't express how much I appreciate what you are doing... God bless for the difference you are making.”
I do not feel so alone!
“Thank you for creating this website. After reading stories of former Jehovah's Witnesses, I do not feel so alone. My resolve to stay out of that religion has also strengthened. I have also come to realize that my depression, anxiety, and many other emotional scars inflicted by the organization and those in the ‘truth’ will take time to heal. But your website has also come to help me ... Thank you.”
Just as I was about to enter the Jehovah’s Witnesses again, God led me to your website.
“Hi…I am an Ex-Jehovah’s Witness from South Africa. ...I left the Jehovah’s Witnesses not because I did not agree with their beliefs, but because my wife could not handle it with me being a Jehovah’s Witness and she not. I became an anti-religious person. Then, just as I was about to enter the Jehovah’s Witnesses again, God led me to your website… Today, I prayed to Jesus for salvation after I read your article on your website…”
I’m so glad that I have run across this site.
“After reading the article that David Reed wrote on your site, I’ve looked at things in ‘a new light’ so-to-speak. ...I’m so glad that I have run across this site. I’m sure that it was the Holy Spirit that directed me to all of you!”
Your website is a great source for truth
“Your website is a great source for those seriously seeking the truth.… The Jehovah’s Witness elders shun me. I’ve known these guys for 30 years... Well, when I walk into the Hall they turn their backs to me. I have not seen my Jehovah’s Witness ex-wife, or daughter for two years. ...They hide my family from me. When I go to their homes, they smile with arms folded and say nothing.
The stories I read at your website were loud and clear - conditional love by the ‘brothers’! I have learned more in the Christian Church about unconditional love than 30 years as a Witness. When I accepted Christ, who He really is, the Holy Spirit opened my eyes to see both sides clearly. ...Without the Holy Spirit it is impossible to know the real TRUTH! Keep up your good work.”