What exactly do Jehovah's Witnesses believe?

by chashathaway 36 Replies latest watchtower beliefs

  • chashathaway
    chashathaway

    I hear a lot, both on this forum and elsewhere, about all kinds of things Jehovah's Witnesses believe. But I've never felt that outsiders were a good source of information about what faithful Watchtowers actually believe. In fact, I've discovered that the worst source of information about a religion is from those who were members but left the faith. Generally, they are bitter about some doctrine, practice, person, or trend, and that bitterness always comes out in their "explanations" of what the faith believes.

    Anyway, I would just like to hear from some active, faithful, studying, practicing Jehovah's Witnesses (or do you prefer to be called Watchtowers?) to learn more about what they actually believe. I have questions, but I don't want to hear all the reasons a belief is ridiculous. I want to hear it from the source. I don't want the unbiased response. I want the response that is bias in favor of the religion - if that's not too much to ask. I'm not looking to join the faith. I just would like to understand it better.

    I do have Watchtower missionaries come by, but it's much easier to ask questions on an anonymous forum than face-to-face.

    So I guess I'll just start with, what are the basic tenants of the faith? What do Jehovah's Witnesses consider the core teachings of their religion?

    Thanks!

    Chas

  • sherah
    sherah

    That's a broad question. Check out jwfacts.com for detailed explanation of jw doctrine and then direct your specific questions to the forum members.

  • beksbks
    beksbks

    Whatever they tell you to

  • Judge Dread
    Judge Dread

    Are you kidding me?

    You came HERE to ask a question that can be answered all over the web?

    For some reason, I doubt your sincerity.

    Judge Dread

  • dgp
    dgp

    I don't think I am the right person to post here, as I have never been a JW. I won't pretend to know more than anybody on this forum. But I can say this much: if you want to hear a BIASED story, and you don't think former believers are a good source of information, why are you here?

    You know, smart entrepreneurs take very seriously whatever comes from "disgruntled customers". That is how they know what goes wrong in their companies. So maybe you could be equally smart and not hear just what the salesman wants you to hear about his product.

    I smell nonsense here. If you're currently having bible studies with witnesses, and you don't want to hear bad stuff about the Watchtower, what are you doing here? Why don't you just ask them questions?

    I have one question you could ask your Bible study conductor (for whom, by the way, you are a "study", not a friend). Ask him how it is that you can know for sure that Charles Taze Russell didn't just read too deep into the Bible when he came out with his chronology. Ask him what "generation" means, and then come back and ask what "generation" means.

    If you go through life without questioning what you're told, then you're as good as dead.

  • moshe
    moshe
    -I want the response that is bias in favor of the religion-

    So you want to ignore the 99.9% who have negative bias and seek out the 1/10% who say something nice about the WatchTower publishing corporation pseudo-religion? You are looking for someone like the sweet loyal mother of misunderstood Charlie Manson.

  • jonathan dough
    jonathan dough

    I. Summary of the Jehovah’s Witnesses’ teachings as they relate to the contents of this paper.[Home]

    A) The revolving door of ever-changing doctrine[Home]

    Every now and then the Jehovah's Witnesses make significant changes to their doctrine that reach to the very core of their belief system. As such, it can be a real challenge to pinpoint exactly what they believe from one year to the next. The changes they make are to be expected given the weakenesses in their dogma and the need to accommodate mountains of theological criticism. Invariably these changes bump up against other tenets of Society doctrine resulting in an ever-growing tangled mass of contradictions. Due to the nature of these shifting sands one should take their asserted beliefs with a grain of salt.

    B) The New Testament was written primarily for the 144,000 who alone go to heaven to ultimately rule over all remaining JWs and the resurrected on earth [Home]

    The Jehovah’s Witnesses believe that only 144,000 people go to heaven (Reasoning from the Scriptures (Reasoning) [New York, Watchtower Bible and Tract Society, 1985], 166). These are the bride of Christ, God’s children, the elect, and often referred to as the “anointed” of Christ (Insight on the Scriptures (Insight), 2 vols. [New York, Watchtower Bible and Tract Society, 1988], 786). The New Testament Greek Scriptures (New Testament) were written primarily for these brothers of Christ. They are specially chosen because they live especially good lives while on earth (Insight, 786-788). Once resurrected to heaven, a process which began in 1918 and will soon be concluded (the first resurrection) (Revelation - Its Grand Climax at Hand (Revelation Climax), [New York, Watchtower Bible and Tract Society, 19__] 103, 277) they will become a kingdom of priests and kings who will rule with Christ for one thousand years over humans on earth (Insight, 170, 524, 525).

    C) The Great Crowd on earth will engage in perfecting resurrected flesh-and-blood humans to a sinless condition [Home]

    This reign will involve their judging resurrected humans during the thousand year reign, and after the thousand year reign when resurrected mankind will undergo a final decisive test before being destroyed forever, or having their names written permanently in God’s book, or scroll, of life (Insight, 251, 788). Whereas the 144,000 are resurrected to heaven as spirit creatures, all other billions of humans worthy of the resurrection during the thousand year reign will be resurrected as corrupt flesh and blood humans with the possibility of immortality on earth (Reasoning, 333-336; Insight, 251). During the thousand year reign the Great Crowd will engage in “perfecting” resurrected humans to a sinless condition enjoyed by Adam and Eve before the fall (Reasoning, 337, 338).

    D) The Great Crowd must pass a final test to gain eternal life[Home]

    The Great Crowd (or large multitude) is a term found at Revelation 7:9. The Great Crowd are those Jehovah’s Witnesses who survive the Great Tribulation. They do not die, do not need to be resurrected and are declared righteous through faith (Insight, 788) although it appears as though they also must pass a final, decisive test to gain eternal life (Insight., 251). Most Jehovah’s Witnesses today consider themselves to be members of the Great Crowd and according to their interpretation of Revelation 7:9-17 they will always be earthly, not heavenly, subjects of the kingdom of heaven (or kingdom of God). As to those Jehovah’s Witnesses who are not of the 144,000 and do not survive the Great Tribulation, it is believed they will be resurrected in God’s due time (Insight, 788).

    E) The New Covenant applies only to God, Christ and the 144,000; it shall expire shortly. Only the 144,000 have their sins forgiven from Calvary to the 1,000 year reign[Home]

    The Jehovah’s Witnesses believe that when Jesus Christ died and rose to heaven to sit on God’s throne he began to reign only as king over his congregation of 144,000 followers who at the time were still earthly subjects of this spiritual kingdom (Insight, 524). This rule began with Christ’s blood sacrifice which was initiated pursuant to the much-anticipated New Covenant which replaced the old Mosaic Law covenant (Law covenant). This New Covenant, to which only God, Christ and the 144,000 are parties, will expire shortly after the last of the 144,000 are resurrected to heaven (Insight, 524). The only people who have their sins forgiven through Christ's blood sacrifice from the time of Adam until the beginning of the thousand year reign are the 144,000 (Insight, 736).

    F) Pre-incarnate Christ was just a created angel, not eternal, and while on earth nothing more than a man, a human. Jesus returned to earth in 1914 (the parousia)[Home]

    The real kingdom of God, a much larger, expansive and lengthier kingdom, began in 1914 (the 1914 kingdom) when Christ supposedly sat on the throne to begin his rule over mankind (Insight, 169). Jesus, being a mere angel (Reasoning, 218) created hundreds of millions of years ago, only receives a subsidiary share of this kingdom of God (Insight, 169). 1914 A.D. is arguably the most important date in the Jehovah’s Witnesses’ belief system because it is the year that Jesus returned, or arrived (Great Man, ch. 133, 2; Reasoning, 344), to earth. This was the invisible Second Coming of Christ, or “parousia.” It also heralded the beginning of the first of three judgment days.

    G) The Jehovah's Witnesses were taught they're separating the sheep from the goats in their door-to-door ministry [Home]
    We are currently in the first judgment day period. Under the guidance of the remaining earthly anointed 144,000, the Great Crowd of Jehovah’s Witnesses were taught that they were separating the earth’s sheep and goats through their door-to-door ministry (The Greatest Man Who Ever Lived) (Great Man) [New York, Watchtower Bible and Tract Society, 1991] chapter 111, 12-15). This fundamental doctrine, however, changed in 1995. The separation of sheep and goats has been postponed, for now, until a time after the Great Tribulation begins (The Watchtower, Oct. 15, 1995, pg. 23). The sheep join God’s one and only earthly organization, thus becoming members of the Great Crowd (if they survive the Great Tribulation) and earn the opportunity to live life everlasting; all the goats, those who do not heed their invitation, will be destroyed forever during the Great Tribulation and Armageddon with no prospect of resurrection (Ibid.).

    H. Only the Great Crowd survives Armageddon. The Great Crowd will restore the earth to a paradise and educate resurrected sinners to a state of perfection subject to even more laws and regulations; those to be re-educated include the patriarchs, Moses, etc.[Home]

    The only humans who survive the Great Tribulation and Armageddon, where all the enemies of God are destroyed, are members of the Great Crowd of Jehovah’s Witnesses (Ibid.); no one else. Then begins the thousand year reign of Christ and the 144,000 over the earth’s Great Crowd and the righteous and unrighteous - at least those who merit the resurrection during the thousand years (Reasoning, 339-340). This general resurrection during the millennium is the second resurrection according to the Jehovah’s Witnesses. One of the tasks of the Great Crowd during this peaceful thousand year reign is to restore post-apocalyptic earth to a paradise-like condition. The Great Crowd also assists in educating the 20 billion resurrected dead to the will of God, to get to know Jesus, and to live in accordance with new laws and regulations revealed through the Law Scrolls of God opened at Revelation 20:12 (Insight, 788). The purpose of educating the resurrected is to lift them to a state of perfection on par with Adam and Eve’s sinless state of perfection they enjoyed before rebelling against Jehovah God (Ibid.).

    I) The Great Crowd and resurrected humans are not judged for any sins committed in this life, but only for sins committed during the 1,000 year reign, and after[Home]

    The second judgment day period occurs during the thousand year reign. “Perfected” humans, now only corruptible rather than corrupt when resurrected, are tested and judged based not on their deeds and works in their previous lives (the one we experience today) but on their deeds during the thousand year reign (Ibid.). They believe this because all men are allegedly acquitted of sin in this life and pay for their sins with the wages of death (Insight, 788; Reasoning, 338). Therefore, the only deeds or sins for which they can be put on judgment for are those committed during the thousand year reign, and their conduct during the final test after the thousand years.

    J. Salvation can be gained only by passing a final test[Home]

    The final test of their fidelity begins after the thousand year reign, the third judgment day, when those remaining perfected humans are confronted with the unleashing of Satan from the abyss and all which that entails. If they pass the test successfully they will have their names permanently written in the scroll, or book, of life. If they fail they are cast into the Lake of Fire, which is the Second Death, that is, eternal destruction (Insight, 251).

    Thereafter, the services of Christ, the angel, are no longer required. He is no longer needed as a helper in terms of a propitiatory sacrifice, nor as a legal intermediary between God and man. Accordingly, he is dispensed with in this regard (Insight, 170).

    The Jehovah's Witnesses believe with all sincerity that they "have the truth" and "are in the truth." However given the very significant repudiation of past doctrines that have formed the essential core of their beliefs for over one hundred years it is doubtful they can make that claim. If their "truth" is not the "truth" by their own admission, then their theories were false.

    From:

    http://www.144000.110mb.com/144000/index.html#I

  • OnTheWayOut
    OnTheWayOut

    I've discovered that the worst source of information about a religion is from those who were members but left the faith. Generally, they are bitter about some doctrine, practice, person, or trend, and that bitterness always comes out in their "explanations" of what the faith believes.

    I don't hide the reality of their doctrines. I answer people's questions by giving them the fully bizarre straightforward explanation of JW teachings/beliefs.

    JW beliefs continually change. It's just easier to say that the Watchtower publications are written with spirit-direction, so somehow God doesn't "inspire" them and He allows error to creep in, then slowly changes it.

    Clearly, you are just here to stir us up to answer your mudslinging with more of the same. So have a nice day. Enjoy whatever your real beliefs are.

  • flipper
    flipper

    CHAS- Welcome to the board ! Nice to have you. " What exactly do Jehovah's Witnesses believe" ? My friend- their beliefs change so much- I don't even think THEY know what they believe anymore

  • GLTirebiter
    GLTirebiter

    Chas, welcome to you!

    OK, since you're new here I will tell you that I'm not a former JW, and not currently a Witness either--that is my Ex's religion, it has never been mine. So while I'm not an ex-Witness, after living with Witnesses for many years I do side with those who left the organization.

    I would suggest reading the works of their founder, Charles Taze Russell, but there are problems with doing that.

    First, they are hard to find, especially through loyal Watchtower channels as you requested. Ironically, your best source for early Watchtower teachings will be through "apostate" groups, such as freeminds.org.

    Second, the Watchtower has replaced many of those teachings with different ones since then. In particular, many doctrinal changes occurred when Joseph F. Rutherford took over the organization following Russell's death.

    So if you want to read all about Watchtower doctrines and don't want to learn them from "apostates", you will need to turn to third parties: perhaps the Knights of Columbus, an evangelical like Maurice Barnett, or the Institute for Religious Research.

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