A LETTER AND RESPONSE FROM A JEHOVAH'S WITNESS
I received the following letter from a Jehovah's Witness. Of course she did not come out and reveal herself as that, but the tract she enclosed did. It seems that the Jehovah False Witnesses are trying a new technique. I received this letter, even though the writer does not know me. It was addressed to Sir or Madam. The letter itself was written in a very beautiful hand written script on nice stationary. If I had to sit down and write something by hand like this letter, it would have taken me 15-20 minutes. I am sure I am not the only person she wrote to. Imagine the time she has taken! This was not a copy, but handwritten with a nice pen, you can tell.
I am amazed at the zeal of these folks. They have been to my home about 4 times in the last two years. When I am visiting on Saturday on my bus route, they are out there. Of course, I go a lot faster than they do, and thus warn the families on my route that they are coming behind me! :)
I have never let them in my home, but I will stand outside and talk to them. My main goal is to give them the gospel. I won't spend a lot of time, but I still will do that. The last time a couple of men came, they got mad at me and left in a huff! I caught them in a lie, and they were embarrassed.
We as Baptist maybe should take a hint from the JFWs. Knocking on doors and witnessing and trying to get people saved is the key. I don't see many Baptist out there. :)
Now for the letter and then my response. Oh yea, I did include a 5 page expose of their cult that exposes their false teaching.
Dear Sir or Madam,
Hello, my name is Su--- Pi-----. I would very much like to know you and speak with you personally. It seems, though, that this world takes up much of our time and it's hard for someone like me to find many people at home. So I am taking this opportunity to tell you the message we have been leaving with your neighbors. This message is being distributed worldwide and I did not want you to miss out.
Enclosed is a small tract that is entitled, "Would You Like to Know More About The Bible?" I encourage you to take 5 to 10 minutes to read it, along with your own personal copy of the scriptures. It offers you an exciting opportunity to enhance your Bible education. As Psalms 1:1-3 indicates, it can make your life successful!
If you don't want to miss out, please contact me at the number below and we can set up a time convenient for you. Either at your home or over the phone.
Thank you for your time!
Sincerely,
Su--- Pi---
770-96-----
P.S. Just to put your mind at ease, I am not on a membership drive. Just simply offering a chance for you to add to your Bible knowledge, free!
Dear Susan,
I received with interest your letter concerning your offer to get to know more about the Bible. It is obvious that you spent much time in writing this, and I am probably not the only one you sent it to.
On the back (P.S.) you say, "I am not on a membership drive..." That sounds nice, but you and I know that is exactly what you are concerned with. I find it interesting how deceptive the Jehovah Witnesses are in they're "witnessing." I have talked to many of them, and you, like they, are not completely honest in what you say.
In 1975 I was lost and on my way to hell, with no desire for God. I was confronted by a men concerning my life, and what the future of eternity held for me. On that day, they opened up the Bible (KJV 1611) and showed me my condition, that I was a lost helpless sinner that needed a Savior and that the Bible teaches that those who will put their faith in Him will be born again. I believed on the Lord Jesus Christ and was gloriously saved on that day. My how the power of God works through His wonderful Word. I have been serving Him ever since. Although I am not perfect and have a ways to go, I know I am going to heaven, not because of what I have done, but because of what Jesus did for me on the cross of Calvary. He died for my sins, and paid the price for me. What a wonderful truth that is, that I don't have to work my way to heaven!
Eph 2:8-9
8 For by grace are ye saved through faith; and that not of yourselves: it is the gift of God:
9 Not of works, lest any man should boast.
KJV
Titus 3:5
5 Not by works of righteousness which we have done, but according to his mercy he saved us, by the washing of regeneration, and renewing of the Holy Ghost;
KJV
You too, can be saved by placing your faith in the Lord Jesus Christ and what He has done for you.
John 3:16
16 For God so loved the world, that he gave his only begotten Son, that whosoever believeth in him should not perish, but have everlasting life.
KJV
1 Tim 2:5-6
5 For there is one God, and one mediator between God and men, the man Christ Jesus;
6 Who gave himself a ransom for all, to be testified in due time.
KJV
Rom 10:9-10
9 That if thou shalt confess with thy mouth the Lord Jesus, and shalt believe in thine heart that God hath raised him from the dead, thou shalt be saved.
10 For with the heart man believeth unto righteousness; and with the mouth confession is made unto salvation.
KJV
Rom 10:13
For whosoever shall call upon the name of the Lord shall be saved.
KJV
You too, Susan, can be saved by placing your faith in Him and His finished work on the cross for you. Simply trust Him today, and nothing else and receive the free gift of Salvation!
I'm sorry that you have gotten into this cult. I will pray that you might read the scriptures I have given, and consider the paper I also have included to you concerning the Jehovah Witnesses and their teachings. Please note that many of the inconsistencies and contradictions are found in the literature published by the Watch Tower itself.
My hope and prayer is that you will study this out for yourself and find the truth. If I can be a help to you to find true peace and His salvation, please let me know.
Martin Cook
6765 Darrell Ct.
Morrow, GA. 30260
Jehovah's Witnesses
Christian or Cult?*
Jehovah's Witnesses, also known as the Watch Tower Bible and Tract Society (with
headquarters in Brooklyn, New York), was officially founded in 1884 [as the Zion's Watch Tower
and Tract Society (originally the Zion's Watch Tower in 1879), officially adopting the name of
Jehovah's Witnesses in 1931], by Charles Taze Russell (1852-1916). In 1870, Russell was
exposed to the teachings of William Miller, one of the founders of the Second Adventist
Movement and acquired an interest in end time prophecies. Russell originally denied the
doctrine of Hell, and would go on to reject nearly every other Christian doctrine, as well as add
many physically and spiritually dangerous doctrines of his own making. Many of these unique
and bizarre teachings were to be found in his six volume series titled, Studies in the Scriptures.
For the year 2000, the Watchtower Society claims a worldwide membership of over six million
(about one million U.S.) in more than 91,000 congregations in 235 countries speaking 340
languages, and takes in approximately 300,000 new members each year (288,907 in 2000).
According to JW statistics, yearly proselytizing is accomplished via 4.8 million home Bible
studies and 1.2 billion hours of witnessing. The JWs field over 500,000 full and part-time
missionaries. Instruction and training are provided for all JWs at five meetings a week, held
primarily in "Kingdom Halls." Every week, an average of 45 new JW congregations are formed.
[In the year 2000 in the United States alone, it was reported that 988,000 Jehovah's Witnesses spent more than 181 million hours in
field service (i.e., door-to-door witnessing and Bible studies).]
JW leadership claims its victims by asserting itself to be the sole Christian religion and authority
on the earth today, as well as God's mouthpiece or prophet. The Watchtower further disrupts
families through its harsh and unbiblical interpretation of "disfellowshipping" and the practice of
"shunning." Family members who are former JWs are labeled by Watchtower adherents as
"apostates" and prevented from even social contact. Disfellowshipped or disassociated children,
parents, and grandparents are kept from any type of communication with active members of the
organization. Divorces are common within the sect when one member becomes disillusioned
with Watchtower teaching and mind-control.
Not only has the name of this cult been changed time and again, but they also change their
doctrines regularly -- between 1917 and 1928, they changed their doctrines 148 times! (Prior to
1931, Jehovah's Witnesses had also gone by the names of Millennial Dawn, People's Pulpit
Association, The Brooklyn Tabernacle, and the International Bible Students Association.)
Russell died in 1916 and was replaced by the second president, Joseph F. Rutherford. "A
process of replacing Russell's writings with Rutherford's began in 1921 with the publication of
Rutherford's Harp of God. Between 1921 and 1941, Rutherford was to write twenty books and
numerous pamphlets, which would slowly revise the doctrine and structure left him by Russell"
(Encyclopedia of American Religions, G. Melton, Vol. 1, p. 485). One of Rutherford's books that
caused a great amount of controversy was the seventh volume of the Studies in the Scriptures.
Russell adopted many of his doctrines from the Seventh-Day Adventists, but the JWs began to
emphasize door-to-door evangelism and literature distribution after Russell's death and
subsequent leadership assumption by Joseph Franklin Rutherford. The JWs have published
over ten billion pieces of literature since 1928. Its main periodicals are The Watchtower
magazine (circulation of over 20 million in more than 130 languages) and Awake! (about 16
million copies in more than 80 languages), both published semi-monthly.
Historically, the JWs are best known for their practices of refusing: (1) to serve in the military; (2)
to salute the flag; (3) to celebrate Christmas, birthdays, or other holidays; and (4) to give or to
accept blood transfusions. [Rejecting the medical practices of vaccinations, organ transplants,
and blood transfusions, the Watchtower has caused the deaths of many of its members
throughout its history. Interestingly, vaccinations and organ transplants have now been
acknowledged by the Watchtower as acceptable practices, contradicting their previous doctrinal
position.] (Although some of these practices are neither Biblical nor unbiblical in and of
themselves, depending upon one's motives and the exact nature of the practice, the reasons the
JWs give for them often are unbiblical.)
Below are the highlights of what JWs believe concerning their source of authority, the Godhead,
Christ, sin, salvation, heaven and hell, etc.:
1. Source of Authority. JWs claim the Bible as their final authority, but Russell's writings,
especially Studies in the Scriptures, are considered "the light of the Scriptures." JWs have their
own translation of the Scriptures (New World Translation, published in 1961), which reflects the
binding interpretations of the group's leaders. The JWs' New World Translation greatly perverts
the Scriptures to avoid placing themselves under the judgment of God (cf. Jn. 1:1; 8:58; I Tim.
2:6; Ac. 10:36; Col. 1:16-17; 2:9-10; etc.). Hence, the leader's interpretation of the Bible, not the
Bible itself, is the final authority of JWs. The Watchtower magazine is one of the JWs main
sources of doctrine, and is considered authoritative by its members.
2. Trinity. JWs believe that God is not a triune God, but only "Jehovah God" (Let God Be True,
pp. 100-101); they teach that Trinitarianism is a belief in three gods, and thereby, Satan-inspired
polytheism. Rutherford wrote: "... sincere persons who want to know the true God and serve him
find it a bit difficult to love and worship a complicated, freakish-looking, three-headed God. The
clergy who inject such ideas will contradict themselves in the very next breath by stating that
God made man in his own image; for certainly no one has ever seen a three-headed human
creature" (Let God Be True, 2nd ed., pp. 101-102).
3. God the Father. Known as Jehovah, the Watchtower considers Him to be the only true
eternal God, the Almighty. They write, "There was, therefore, a time when Jehovah was all
alone in universal space" (Let God Be True, p. 25). Being alone, the first creative act of Jehovah
was to create His Son.
4. Jesus Christ. Since JWs do not believe in the Trinity, they also do not believe that Jesus is
God in the flesh. They add the word "other" four times to Colossians 1:16,17, teaching that
Christ was God's first creation, i.e., the reincarnation of Michael the archangel created by
Jehovah, rather than the Creator. [The "Watchtower" teaches that Jehovah God created
Michael the Archangel before the foundation of the world; Michael was His only begotten son by
virtue of the fact that he was the only creature directly created by Jehovah. It was this created
Michael who became the JW Jesus (i.e., a denial of the eternality of Christ). JWs say that "Since
actual conception took place, it appears that Jehovah God caused an ovum or egg in Mary's
womb to become fertile, accomplishing this by the transfer of the life of his first born son
(Michael) from the spirit realm to the earth" (Aid to Bible Understanding, p. 920). "Marvelously,
Jehovah transferred the life-force and the personality pattern of his first born heavenly son
(Michael) to the womb of Mary. God's own active force, his holy spirit, safeguarded the
development of the child in Mary's womb so that what was born was a perfect human"
(Reasoning, p. 255).] JWs also add an "a" in John 1:1, making the verse read, "the Word was a
god" (which in essence, makes the JWs guilty of the same polytheism of which they accuse
Trinitarians).
5. Use of Name Jehovah. JWs use the name "Jehovah" only for God (in order to distinguish
between God and Jesus Christ), while failing to recognize that Jesus is the fulfillment of
"Jehovah" in Isaiah 40:3 and Matthew 3:3. [HJB]
6. Resurrection of Christ . JWs deny the bodily resurrection of Christ through their teaching
that the body of Christ was annihilated by God -- not risen -- but rather a new one was created
three days after His death. This they call the "resurrection" of Christ. Thus, Jesus was
"resurrected" as a "glorious spirit creature" and does not now have a glorified physical body.
Instead, they claim Jesus arose spiritually and only "materialized" at various times after His
resurrection so He could be seen alive. (Awake!, 7/22/73, p. 4)
7. The Holy Spirit. JWs deny the deity of the third person of the Trinity, as either God or as a
person; they claim that the Holy Spirit is only an impersonal "active force of Almighty God which
moves His servants to do His will" (Reasoning From the Scriptures, pp. 406-407; The
Watchtower, 6/1/54, p. 24). They have written, "But the holy spirit has no personal name. The
reason for this is that the holy spirit is not an intelligent person. It is the impersonal, invisible
active force that finds its source and reservoir in Jehovah God and that he uses to accomplish
his will even at great distances, over light years of space" (Let Your Name Be Sanctified, p.
269).
8. Sin. JWs believe that the first man, Adam, disobeyed Jehovah when tempted by the angel
Lucifer, who was jealous of man. As a result of disobedience, Adam and all his descendants lost
the right to life and so became liable to death. This liability is applied to temporal death only.
9. Salvation . JWs claim everlasting life is a reward for doing the will of God and carrying out
one's dedication -- in other words, salvation is a reward for good works. (JWs are expected to
spend five hours per week in door-to-door visitation and witnessing, are responsible for selling
twelve subscriptions to The Watchtower magazine each month, and are responsible for
conducting a "Bible study" each month in the homes of their converts.) According to JW
theology, a person has one of three possible destinies. The Anointed (144,000) will be in
heaven to reign with Jehovah God. The rest of the faithful Jehovah's Witnesses (not of the
144,000) will live forever on a paradise Earth. Both of these classifications are determined to a
great extent on membership in the Watchtower organization as well as going door-to-door
spreading the message of the Watchtower. Those people who are not members of the
Watchtower organization will be destroyed by Jehovah God and cease to exist. There is no
concept of eternal punishment or hell in Watchtower theology (Let God Be True, pp. 90-95,
289). They also believe that men will have a second chance, after death, to be saved.
10. The Body of Christ. JWs believe that the members of the spiritual Body of Christ, or
"Christian Congregation," number only 144,000 (Rev. 7:4-8). Most of those members of Christ's
Body are now deceased and are reigning with Jesus in heaven since 1918. (Anybody born after
1936 cannot be in that number.) The remaining members still on earth, approximately 8,000 (out
of whom are selected the "Governing Body"), are known as the "Remnant." They are collectively
known as Jehovah God's "channel of communication" to men. They are the only ones "born
again" and are the only ones who have a hope of going to Heaven. The rest of Jehovah's
faithful witnesses only hope to be worthy enough to inherit the Earth, and will never see
"Jesus/Michael," nor will they ever go to Heaven. All "so called Christendom" will be destroyed
at Armageddon.
11. Soul Sleep. JWs deny the immortality of the soul. They do not believe the soul can exist
apart from the body, but that a corpse remains in an unconscious state in the grave waiting for
the resurrection.
12. Annihilation of the Wicked. JWs teach that the "second death" is annihilation and
extinction -- the wicked will cease to exist and will not suffer everlasting torment. They claim that
a "doctrine of a burning hell" is "wholly unscriptural," "unreasonable," "contrary to God's love,"
and "repugnant to justice." [HJB] They claim that "hell" is the grave.
13. Prophecy . The Bible lists six identifying marks of false prophets, any one of which is
sufficient for identification: (1) through signs and wonders they lead astray after false gods (Dt.
13:1-4); (2) their prophecies don't come to pass (Dt. 18:20-22); (3) they contradict God's Word
(Isa. 8:20); (4) they bear bad fruit (Mt. 7:18-20); (5) men speak well of them (Lk. 6:26); and (6)
they deny that Jesus, the one and only Christ, has come once and for all in the flesh (1 Jn. 4:3),
thereby denying His sufficiency in all matters of life and godliness (2 Pe. 1:3). Most cults are
founded upon false prophecies, which, if pointed out, offer an effective way to open blind eyes
and rescue cultists. Russell's false prophecies formed the basis for what became The
Watchtower Bible and Tract Society and the Jehovah's Witnesses. Russell declared that the
Second Coming had taken place invisibly in October 1874, and the Lord was truly present, and
that in 1914 the faithful (the 144,000) would be translated to heaven and the wicked destroyed.
Armageddon (which began in 1874) would culminate in 1914 with the complete overthrow of
earth's rulers and the end of the world. C.T. Russell, still on earth, died in 1916.
In the early 1920s, JWs zealously distributed on the streets and from door to door a book titled
Millions Now Living Will Never Die. It was prophesied, "The year 1925 is a date definitely and
clearly marked in the Scriptures, even more clearly than that of 1914 ... we may confidently
expect that 1925 will mark the return of Abraham, Isaac, Jacob and the faithful prophets of old ...
to the condition of human perfection" ("Millions Now Living Will Never Die," The Watchtower,
7/15/24, p. 89). The JWs even built a house in San Diego where the patriarchs were to live and
tried to deed it to King David. (The house was quietly sold in 1954.) In the early 1940s, JWs
were declaring that Armageddon, only months away, would end World War II and the defeat of
the Nazis would usher in God's rule on earth (The Watchtower, 12/41). Their book, Children,
suggested that plans to marry and have children be postponed until after Armageddon. It's been
a long wait! Not giving up, they later prophesied that God's millennial kingdom would commence
in 1975. Again JWs were told not to engage in any plans for this world, including marriage and
having children. Many quit their jobs, sold their homes, and dedicated themselves to going door
to door. (Source: 3/97, The Berean Call.) All in all, the Watchtower has predicted the end of the
world for 1914, 1918, 1925, 1975, and 1989.
More Documentation of JW Beliefs
1. There is one God in one person (Make Sure of All Things, p. 188).
2. There is no Trinity (Let God be True, pp. 100-101; Make Sure of All Things, p. 386); i.e.,
Unitarian.
3. The Holy Spirit is a force, not alive (Reasoning from the Scriptures, 1985, pp. 406-407).
4. The Holy Spirit is God's impersonal active force (The Watchtower, June 1, 1952, p. 24).
5. Jehovah's first creation was his "only-begotten Son" ... was used by Jehovah in creating all
other things (Aid to Bible Understanding, pp. 390-391), i.e., deny the eternality of the Son).
6. Jesus was Michael the archangel who became a man (The Watchtower, May 15, 1963, p.
307; The New World, p. 284).
7. Jesus was only a perfect man, not God in flesh (Reasoning from the Scriptures, 1985, pp.
89-90) i.e., Scripture is wrong.
8. Jesus did not rise from the dead in his physical body (Awake! July 22, 1973, p. 4).
9. Jesus was raised "not a human creature, but a spirit" (Let God be True, p. 276).
10. Jesus did not die on a cross but on a stake (Reasoning from the Scriptures, 1985, pp.
89-90), i.e., Scripture is wrong.
11. Jesus returned to earth, invisibly, in 1914 (The Truth Shall Make You Free, p. 300).
12. Jesus' ransom sacrifice did not include Adam (Let God be True, p. 119).
13. The JW church is the self-proclaimed prophet of God (The Watchtower, February 15, 1979,
p. 30).
14. JWs claim to be the only channel of God's truth (The Watchtower, February 15, 1981, p. 19).
15. Only their church members will be saved, i.e., 144,000 of them (The Watchtower, February
15, 1979, p. 30).
16. Good works are necessary for salvation (Studies in the Scriptures, Vol. 1, pp. 150, 152).
17. The soul ceases to exist after death, i.e., annihilation (Let God be True, pp. 59, 60, 67).
18. There is no hell of fire where the wicked are punished (Let God be True, pp. 79-80).
19. Only 144,000 Jehovah's Witnesses go to heaven (Reasoning from the Scriptures, 1985, pp.
166-167, 361; Let God be True, p. 121).
20. Blood transfusions are a sin (Reasoning from the Scriptures, 1985, pp. 72-73).
21. Salvation is by faith and what you do (Studies in the Scriptures, Vol. 1, pp. 150, 152).
22. It is possible to lose your salvation (Reasoning from the Scriptures, 1985, pp. 358-359).
23. The universe is billions of years old, though created by a Creator, i.e., theistic evolution
(Your will Be Done on Earth, p. 43).
24. Each of the six creative days of God in Genesis 1, was 7,000 years long. Therefore, Man
was created toward the end of 42,000 years of earth's preparation (Let God be True, p. 168).
The Jehovah's Witness "Jesus" -- what JWs confess and what they mean are two
totally different things: (Source: 1/94, Mount Carmel Outreach Newsletter.)
(1) "Jesus Christ is the Son of God." -- The first created son of God was known as Michael the
Archangel. This angel was recreated as a perfect man on earth and named "Jesus." This Jesus
died on a torture stake (not a cross), so that men could work their way into God's Kingdom.
This Jesus/Michael now rules over his Kingdom invisibly since 1914. (Since he failed to show
up then, to destroy the unfaithful, he was declared by the Watchtower "powers that be," to be
invisible!)
(2) "We believe in the second coming of Jesus Christ." -- The angel Michael turned his attention
to the affairs of the Earth in 1914 by establishing an invisible heavenly kingdom. This is what is
meant by "second coming." He will never return visibly to Earth, but will rule through his
"anointed" or "remnant" group of JWs here on Earth.
(3) "Jesus was resurrected." -- God (Jehovah) placed a newly created copy of Jesus' life pattern
(or personality) into a newly created Michael the Archangel's spiritual (not physical) body. Since
Jesus had been totally annihilated, Jehovah had to recreate Jesus from his memory, and he is
now Jesus/Michael in heaven.
* Unless otherwise cited, three primary sources were used for this report: (1) Grolier's 1995
Multimedia Encyclopedia, (2) Funk & Wagnall's Encyclopedia, and (3) What They Believe,
Harold J. Berry [HJB], BTTB:1990, pp. 51-70; (4) "Watchtower Bible and Tract Society," Rick
Branch (Watchman Fellowship Profile, 1993); and (5) Examining & Exposing Cultic & Occultic
Movements, Jack Sin, "Focus on JWs," April 2000, pp. 16-20.