Jehovah's Witness History

The Jehovah's Witnesses was begun by Charles Taze Russell in 1872. He was
born on February 16, 1852, the son of Joseph L. and Anna Eliza Russell. He had great
difficulty in dealing with the doctrine of eternal hell fire and in his studies came to
deny not only eternal punishment, but also the Trinity, and the deity of Christ and the
Holy Spirit. "In 1870, at the age of 18, Russell organized a Bible class in
Pittsburgh." In 1879 he sought to popularize his aberrant ideas on doctrine. He
co-published The Herald of the Morning magazine with its founder, N. H. Barbour and by
1884 Russell controlled the publication and renamed it The Watchtower Announcing Jehovah's
Kingdom, and founded Zion's Watch Tower Tract Society (now known as the Watch Tower Bible
and Tract Society). The first edition of The Watchtower magazine was only 6,000 copies
each month. Today the Witnesses' publishing complex in Brooklyn, New York, churns out
100,000 books and 800,000 copies of its two magazines--daily!"
Russell claimed that the Bible could be only understood
according to his interpretations. A dangerous arrangement since he controlled what was
written in the Watchtower magazine.
After the death of Russell on Oct. 31, 1916, a Missouri
lawyer named Joseph Franklin Rutherford took over the presidency of the Watch Tower
Society which was known then as the Dawn Bible Students Association. In 1931 he changed
the name of the organization to "The Jehovah's Witnesses."
After Rutherford's death, Nathan Knorr took over. After
Knorr, Frederick William Franz became president.
Today the Society is led by Mr. Henschel. The group has
over 4 million members world wide. The Watchtower Society statistics indicate that 740
house calls are required to recruit each of the nearly 200,000 new members who join every
year.
The J.W.'s have several book studies' each week. The
members are not required to attend, but there is a level of expectation that gently urges
converts to participate. It is during these book studies' that the J.W. is
constantly exposed to counter Christian teachings. The average J.W., with his constant
Watchtower indoctrination, could easily pummel the average Christian when it comes to
defending his beliefs.
The J.W.'s vehemently portray the doctrine of the Trinity
as pagan in origin and that Christendom, as a whole, has bought the lie of the devil.
Along with denying the Trinity is an equally strong denial of the deity of Christ, the
deity of the Holy Spirit, the belief in hell, and eternal conscious punishment in hell. |