When I contrast my experience with those who came into the JWs in adulthood, it is to make the point that I didn't get to make an informed choice in the matter. I didn't have an opportunity to "make sure of all things" at age 7, to decide for myself whether it was really "the truth". My mind was too immature to make choices about such things. Instead the religion was presented as the unquestionable "truth" with the authority of adult "elders". It wasn't until my teens when I started to think for myself and figure things out. I began to research things out to discern whether what I had been taught for many years was really "the truth". When I concluded that it wasn't, I left. But I have to say that when I researched "the truth", it felt like it was a sin. What I was doing would have been considered "apostasy"...it definitely was not encouraged. I was once brought before the elders who wanted to know if I was "trying to disprove the truth". Yet I was just trying to do what people who study are encouraged to do. The funny thing is that the Society suggests in its literature that youths can do this:
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g90 4/8 pp. 16-17 Am I Ready to Get Baptized? ***Terry says that she believed the Bible’s truths. Yet she confesses: "I had never satisfied myself by asking my own questions and then answering them. Recently, I began to do this." The result of such a program of Bible study? "My faith is increasing, and I now find I’m able to talk to people with real conviction. I tell all Witness youths not to be afraid to ask themselves if this is the truth. Find out! Research, study. ‘Make sure of all things.’ Then you’ll be able to dedicate yourself wholeheartedly to Jehovah."—1 Thessalonians 5:21.
Yet I know from my experience that such research can only have approval if there was already one foregone conclusion in mind...that it is the truth.