A Jehovah's Witness just called me

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This worked with Pat Madrid asking this question to Isaiah Bennett, a priest who became a Mormon, and then reverted back to Holy Mother Church.
I read about Bennett in one of the LDS mags’ my boss had on his desk. I about melted into the floor. The unthinkable had happened: a Catholic priest turned LDS. Thought to myself what on earth did his seminary NOT teach him?

Anyway, last year bought Bennett’s book “Inside Mormonism” - pretty good but tragic he’s no longer a priest.
 
a brief and good effort. I likely wouldn’t have much more patience than you did.

You possibly could’ve gone with the tactic, “The Bible is a Catholic book, the New Testament was written, compiled, and discerned by Catholics, I think it’s amusing that you think a Catholic book doesn’t support Catholic beliefs.”
Hi,

Here is a thought from a Jehovah’s Witness, soon to be ex-Jehovah’s Witness. It was just this argument that helped me see the truth. The problem is that they are truly brainwashed. I had to become a ‘weak’ JW in order to finally think for myself and realize that the BIBLE WAS COMPILED BY THE CATHOLIC CHURCH. JWs believe that the Catholic Church is from Satan. So the next question is, ‘Why do you use a Catholic book if the Catholic Church is so evil?’.
 
Another great question that helped me leave the Jehovah’s Witnesses was the argument a priest used in the 1800s to convert thousands of people. That is this:
#1 QUESTION: When was the Bible available to the average person?
ANSWER: The Catholic Church compiled the Bible around 397 ad. In the 1400s the printing press was invented but printing was extremely expensive. Around the year 1800 the printers were able to produce Bibles at a price most middle class people could afford.

#2 QUESTION: If the Bible wasn’t available to anyone until 397, how did Christians learn about Jesus?
ANSWER: Verbally when attending services at the only Christian church organization, the Catholic Church.

#3 QUESTION: If the Bible wasn’t available to even the wealthy (only Catholic clergy had access to the expensive hand written Bible until the 1400s, how did Christians learn about Jesus?
ANSWER: As read and preached to them while attending services at the only Christian church organization, the Catholic Church.

#4 QUESTION: If the Bible wasn’t available to the masses (only Catholic clergy had access to the expensive printed Bibles until the 1800s, how did Christians learn about Jesus?
ANSWER: As read and preached to them while attending services at the only TRUE Christian church organization, the Catholic Church.

So for the first 1800 years, only the Catholic Church had the means to bring the truth about Jesus to the masses, and it is through a Catholic Book that people learn about Jesus even up until today.

#5 QUESTION: Why would God use an evil religion to write the Bible and be the ONLY source of information about Jesus Christ for the first 1800 years of Christianity?
ANSWER: The Catholic Church is still the ONLY source about TRUE information about Jesus Christ.
 
Another great question that helped me leave the Jehovah’s Witnesses was the argument a priest used in the 1800s to convert thousands of people. That is this:
#1 QUESTION: When was the Bible available to the average person?
ANSWER: The Catholic Church compiled the Bible around 397 ad. In the 1400s the printing press was invented but printing was extremely expensive. Around the year 1800 the printers were able to produce Bibles at a price most middle class people could afford.

#2 QUESTION: If the Bible wasn’t available to anyone until 397, how did Christians learn about Jesus?
ANSWER: Verbally when attending services at the only Christian church organization, the Catholic Church.

#3 QUESTION: If the Bible wasn’t available to even the wealthy (only Catholic clergy had access to the expensive hand written Bible until the 1400s, how did Christians learn about Jesus?
ANSWER: As read and preached to them while attending services at the only Christian church organization, the Catholic Church.

#4 QUESTION: If the Bible wasn’t available to the masses (only Catholic clergy had access to the expensive printed Bibles until the 1800s, how did Christians learn about Jesus?
ANSWER: As read and preached to them while attending services at the only TRUE Christian church organization, the Catholic Church.

So for the first 1800 years, only the Catholic Church had the means to bring the truth about Jesus to the masses, and it is through a Catholic Book that people learn about Jesus even up until today.

#5 QUESTION: Why would God use an evil religion to write the Bible and be the ONLY source of information about Jesus Christ for the first 1800 years of Christianity?
ANSWER: The Catholic Church is still the ONLY source about TRUE information about Jesus Christ.
BRAVO!!! I’m going to PRINT this out - it’s a GEM! 👍
 
A couple of winters ago I came home and some JW’s had been there and had dropped off material with my wife, caliming that Christmas should not be celebrated. I think they were trying to appeal to parents who could not afford to buy stuff for their kids. Which is disturbing. At any rate, one of the big points they had was that there was no way that sheep hearders would be out of doors that time of year tending their flocks. (So what were they supposed to do back then? Pin a 50 sheckel coin to their wool coats and wish them the best of luck each fall (as the commedian Ron White would say)? And see which ones wondered back in the Spring?) Seriously though, I went to weather.com and printed out the weather report for Bethlehem that week, it showed lows in the 40’s. As one would one expect of a Medeteranian climate. Waited for them to come back to give it to them, but they never showed up again.

I try to keep a pamphlet by the door, an old pamplet by the KOC that explains that the Bible was a product of the Church and that we are not to follow it alone. Apparently they (JW) are forbidden to take non JW materials, so one can then politely inform them that you’ll take their material when they take yours.
 
a brief and good effort. I likely wouldn’t have much more patience than you did.

You possibly could’ve gone with the tactic, “The Bible is a Catholic book, the New Testament was written, compiled, and discerned by Catholics, I think it’s amusing that you think a Catholic book doesn’t support Catholic beliefs.”
I’ve always wondered about that! People are always using the Bible to show the Catholic church is “false”. Yet, the Catholic church compiled it. Ironic.
 
Another great question that helped me leave the Jehovah’s Witnesses was the argument a priest used in the 1800s to convert thousands of people. That is this:
#1 QUESTION: When was the Bible available to the average person?
ANSWER: The Catholic Church compiled the Bible around 397 ad. In the 1400s the printing press was invented but printing was extremely expensive. Around the year 1800 the printers were able to produce Bibles at a price most middle class people could afford.
A minor quibble, but labels can be confusing, and some reading “Catholic Church” may take that to mean Roman Catholic, which didn’t exist as a separate church til much later. For the OT, the Orthodox have always used the Septuagint, which I believe includes a bit more than is in the list compiled at the third council of Carthage, held in A.D. 397.
#2 QUESTION: If the Bible wasn’t available to anyone until 397, how did Christians learn about Jesus?
ANSWER: Verbally when attending services at the only Christian church organization, the Catholic Church.
It’s not that the Bible wasn’t available until 397, it’s only that we don’t have record of an authoritative listing of the books of the NT til a fairly late date (whether you take St. Athanasius’s letter of 367, or a council at Hippo Regius in 393, or the one at Carthage in 397). The Septuagint, of course, predated the time of Christ by well over a hundred years, so was not in question. The New Testament writings were in wide circulation and read in the churches from the time they were written.
#3 QUESTION: If the Bible wasn’t available to even the wealthy (only Catholic clergy had access to the expensive hand written Bible until the 1400s, how did Christians learn about Jesus?
ANSWER: As read and preached to them while attending services at the only Christian church organization, the Catholic Church.
By the 1400’s, there was a separate Roman Catholic church, but all churches still had their bibles.
#4 QUESTION: If the Bible wasn’t available to the masses (only Catholic clergy had access to the expensive printed Bibles until the 1800s, how did Christians learn about Jesus?
ANSWER: As read and preached to them while attending services at the only TRUE Christian church organization, the Catholic Church.
By the 1800’s, it was not only Catholic clergy that had access to bibles. There was still the Orthodox, the Anglicans, and an ever-growing number of Protestant churches, too.
So for the first 1800 years, only the Catholic Church had the means to bring the truth about Jesus to the masses, and it is through a Catholic Book that people learn about Jesus even up until today.
The bible is not a Catholic book, it is the Christian scriptures, and all Christian churches had and have access to it.
#5 QUESTION: Why would God use an evil religion to write the Bible and be the ONLY source of information about Jesus Christ for the first 1800 years of Christianity?
ANSWER: The Catholic Church is still the ONLY source about TRUE information about Jesus Christ.
The Catholic priest you mentioned may have used this argument to convert thousands of people, but the Catholic church was far from the only source of information about Christ for the first 1800 years of Christianity. Still, for any group believing in some form of apostasy which necessitated either a restoration or reform to once again have the true Christian faith, the question of why or how God used an apostate “church” to preserve his written word is a question well worth asking.
 
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The bible is not a Catholic book, it is the Christian scriptures, and all Christian churches had and have access to it.
All the Churches were Catholic until Martin Luther came on the scene.

If not for the Catholic Church and the monks hand copying the scriptures and the Catholic Church deciding which books were inspired or not we would not have the bible.

And because of the printing press we all have the bible. Remember also that the first Bible to be printed was the DR Catholic bible.

Don’ t forget that it was the first followers of Jesus that were first called Christians and since Martin Luther the Protestants have hijacked the name.
 
.All the Churches were Catholic until Martin Luther came on the scene.
Martin Luther nailed his theses in 1517. Somewhere between 850 and 1200, the Roman Catholics and the Orthodox churches had split. The traditional date is 1054, and by 1190 we have this statement from Theodore Balsamon, Patriarch of Antioch:

“For many years [he does not say how many] the western Church has been divided in spiritual communion from the other four Patriarchates and has become alien to the Orthodox … So no Latin should be given communion unless he first declares that he will abstain from the doctrines and customs that separate him from us, and that he will be subject to the Canons of the Church, in union with the Orthodox.” orthodoxinfo.com/general/greatschism.aspx

So there were at least two different bodies claiming to be Christian churches long before Luther came around.
If not for the Catholic Church and the monks hand copying the scriptures and the Catholic Church deciding which books were inspired or not we would not have the bible.
One of the reasons the word “Catholic” with a capital C is confusing is because at least three distinct groups refer to themselves as “catholic”: the Orthodox Christians, the Roman Catholics, and the Anglicans. As mentioned before, the Orthodox have always used the Septuagint, which was in place long before Christ was born, so the Catholic Church did not determine the Old Testament. The earliest record existing that lists the 27 books of the New Testament is an annual Easter letter written by Athanasius, Bishop of Alexandria, in 367. The church at Rome was a bit behind the East in formally recognizing the 27 NT books:

“The West began to realize that the ancient Apostolic Churches of Jerusalem and Antioch, indeed the whole Orient, for more than two centuries had acknowledged Hebrews and James as inspired writings of Apostles, while the venerable Alexandrian Church, supported by the prestige of Athanasius, and the powerful Patriarchate of Constantinople, with the scholarship of Eusebius behind its judgment, had canonized all the disputed Epistles. St. Jerome, a rising light in the Church, though but a simple priest, was summoned by Pope Damasus from the East, where he was pursuing sacred lore, to assist at an eclectic, but not ecumenical, synod at Rome in the year 382. . . The Damasan catalogue presents the complete and perfect Canon which has been that of the Church Universal ever since.” newadvent.org/cathen/03274a.htm

So yes, the church decided which books were to be included in the New Testament, but to say that it was decided by the Catholic Church, if by that you mean the Roman Catholic Church, is not supported by history.
 
Martin Luther nailed his theses in 1517. Somewhere between 850 and 1200, the Roman Catholics and the Orthodox churches had split. The traditional date is 1054, and by 1190 we have this statement from Theodore Balsamon, Patriarch of Antioch:

“For many years [he does not say how many] the western Church has been divided in spiritual communion from the other four Patriarchates and has become alien to the Orthodox … So no Latin should be given communion unless he first declares that he will abstain from the doctrines and customs that separate him from us, and that he will be subject to the Canons of the Church, in union with the Orthodox.” orthodoxinfo.com/general/greatschism.aspx

So there were at least two different bodies claiming to be Christian churches long before Luther came around.

One of the reasons the word “Catholic” with a capital C is confusing is because at least three distinct groups refer to themselves as “catholic”: the Orthodox Christians, the Roman Catholics, and the Anglicans. As mentioned before, the Orthodox have always used the Septuagint, which was in place long before Christ was born, so the Catholic Church did not determine the Old Testament. The earliest record existing that lists the 27 books of the New Testament is an annual Easter letter written by Athanasius, Bishop of Alexandria, in 367. The church at Rome was a bit behind the East in formally recognizing the 27 NT books:

“The West began to realize that the ancient Apostolic Churches of Jerusalem and Antioch, indeed the whole Orient, for more than two centuries had acknowledged Hebrews and James as inspired writings of Apostles, while the venerable Alexandrian Church, supported by the prestige of Athanasius, and the powerful Patriarchate of Constantinople, with the scholarship of Eusebius behind its judgment, had canonized all the disputed Epistles. St. Jerome, a rising light in the Church, though but a simple priest, was summoned by Pope Damasus from the East, where he was pursuing sacred lore, to assist at an eclectic, but not ecumenical, synod at Rome in the year 382. . . The Damasan catalogue presents the complete and perfect Canon which has been that of the Church Universal ever since.” newadvent.org/cathen/03274a.htm

So yes, the church decided which books were to be included in the New Testament, but to say that it was decided by the Catholic Church, if by that you mean the Roman Catholic Church, is not supported by history.
Your arguments are like so many I have looked into over the years. It is just a bunch of intellectual fairy tales. Just enough truth mixed in to make it believable. Kind of like the argument that Jesus and Mary Magdalene were having an affair. Just enough truth to be believable. She was with Jesus almost all the time, followed him most every where he went. But it is just more fairy tale used by Satan to lead us to destruction.

Sad to say, as a more naive young man, I listened to an argument used by someone similar to yours many years ago and it made me doubt the church. It worked. Congratulations. I left the church as a teenager and wandered looking for truth for 30 years. What a waste of valuable time I could have been serving God. But after much prayer, study of history, the Bible, the Church fathers, and the guidance of Holy Spirit, I found that I had it right before I listened to arguments like yours.

There is no reason to argue with you on your history because it all depends on what you want to hear. Hopefully no one else here will take your fairy tales seriously.
 
A Jehovah’s Witness just called me.
There’s usually always two of them, a master and an apprentice. If only one called you they can’t be recruiting very many new apprentices in your area. Praise the Lord. :harp:
 
Your arguments are like so many I have looked into over the years. It is just a bunch of intellectual fairy tales. Just enough truth mixed in to make it believable. . . There is no reason to argue with you on your history because it all depends on what you want to hear. Hopefully no one else here will take your fairy tales seriously.
It is not my intent to make anyone doubt their faith, but the arguments you listed from the 1800’s priest and some of the statements by Phyllo did not seem consistent with the history that I’ve read. I’m happy to be corrected where I’ve made factual errors. The second quote I used above is from the Catholic Encyclopedia. Is that generally regarded as an unreliable source?
Sad to say, as a more naive young man, I listened to an argument used by someone similar to yours many years ago and it made me doubt the church. It worked. Congratulations. I left the church as a teenager and wandered looking for truth for 30 years. What a waste of valuable time I could have been serving God. But after much prayer, study of history, the Bible, the Church fathers, and the guidance of Holy Spirit, I found that I had it right before I listened to arguments like yours.
I can certainly relate to the wandering, looking for truth part of your story. Growing up in first a Baptist, then Presbyterian, then a different Baptist conference, I adopted atheism in my mid-teens. By 18, I had been converted to Mormonism, eventually dropping away due to doubts about Joseph Smith and many doctrinal points, particularly their rejection of the doctrines of grace (Calvinism). Attended a Reformed Baptist church for many years, but never got to the point of being able to say that I knew I was one of God’s elect and therefore eligible for baptism. Did some church-hopping before finding a home at an AFLC Lutheran church. That church split over various issues including property decisions, and I left along with about half the congregation and the pastor (who became a professor at a local seminary). There being no other AFLC congregations in the area, more church-hopping followed, including time spent at Methodist, Orthodox, and Roman Catholic churches. Finally settled on a church in the continuing Anglican tradition (one of those adhering to the Affirmation of St. Louis).

I didn’t join the Jehovah’s Witnesses, but I did go through their “What Does the Bible Really Teach” study guide with them last year. I told them up front that there was no possibility of my converting, but they were happy to go through the lessons with me anyway. It was an enjoyable experience, and I met a lot of truly kind, generous, dedicated people. They didn’t convert me, and I didn’t convert them, but I think we both learned a great deal about the other’s belief and practice.

The exchange the OP related in the first post didn’t strike me as in any way rude, just two people feeling out whether prolonged discussion as to the merits of their respective religions would bear any fruit. The JW’s I’ve met are fully aware that many consider them to be a cult, but they don’t seem to find that view offensive; rather, they seem to take it with a bit of humor, a sense of challenge, and possibly some good-natured exasperation–like a Roman Catholic explaining for the umpteenth time, no, we don’t worship Mary.
 
It is not my intent to make anyone doubt their faith, but the arguments you listed from the 1800’s priest and some of the statements by Phyllo did not seem consistent with the history that I’ve read. I’m happy to be corrected where I’ve made factual errors. The second quote I used above is from the Catholic Encyclopedia. Is that generally regarded as an unreliable source?

I can certainly relate to the wandering, looking for truth part of your story. Growing up in first a Baptist, then Presbyterian, then a different Baptist conference, I adopted atheism in my mid-teens. By 18, I had been converted to Mormonism, eventually dropping away due to doubts about Joseph Smith and many doctrinal points, particularly their rejection of the doctrines of grace (Calvinism). Attended a Reformed Baptist church for many years, but never got to the point of being able to say that I knew I was one of God’s elect and therefore eligible for baptism. Did some church-hopping before finding a home at an AFLC Lutheran church. That church split over various issues including property decisions, and I left along with about half the congregation and the pastor (who became a professor at a local seminary). There being no other AFLC congregations in the area, more church-hopping followed, including time spent at Methodist, Orthodox, and Roman Catholic churches. Finally settled on a church in the continuing Anglican tradition (one of those adhering to the Affirmation of St. Louis).

I didn’t join the Jehovah’s Witnesses, but I did go through their “What Does the Bible Really Teach” study guide with them last year. I told them up front that there was no possibility of my converting, but they were happy to go through the lessons with me anyway. It was an enjoyable experience, and I met a lot of truly kind, generous, dedicated people. They didn’t convert me, and I didn’t convert them, but I think we both learned a great deal about the other’s belief and practice.

The exchange the OP related in the first post didn’t strike me as in any way rude, just two people feeling out whether prolonged discussion as to the merits of their respective religions would bear any fruit. The JW’s I’ve met are fully aware that many consider them to be a cult, but they don’t seem to find that view offensive; rather, they seem to take it with a bit of humor, a sense of challenge, and possibly some good-natured exasperation–like a Roman Catholic explaining for the umpteenth time, no, we don’t worship Mary.
I appreciate your kind reply. My concern is that, as you have experienced, truth and history basically depend on what you want to believe at the time. I had reasons to want to believe the JWs some 25 years ago. I was lonely, they were more than willing to be friends, I wanted to marry, they had six single young ladies in the Kingdom hall, I didn’t want to wander looking for truth, they said they had the truth and all of them agreed on those truths (even though those truths change ever year or so).

I have come to understand that intellectual pursuits and looking into history can only get you so far when searching for religious truth. At some point Holy Spirit has to guide you. Some will pray for guidance, but when it is given, they reject it for some selfish subconscience reason. I rejected it for many years.

The thing about the Catholic Encyclopedia, is that it is not a holy book, a God guided book, or a book about Catholic truths. To find this one must go to the Bible and the Catholic Catechism. Much of what is in the Catholic Encyclopedia is just the best history the academics that create source content come up with. I have found places in one part of the Catholic Encyclopedia that give history on an incident that is completely different from how it is presented in another part of it. So don’t go to the Catholic Encyclopedia and think you will find the teachings of the church. Most of it is accurate and trustworthy but they tried to use all history rather than picking and choosing just what made the Catholic Church look good. So much of that history is displayed from one aspect or another as one would get from four different witnesses to an accident. They all may vary quite a bit.

This all is why I trust the Catholic Church today. It has a direct line of history leading back to Christ and its core teachings have never changed. By the grace of God, despite sometimes evil men in places of power in the Catholic Church, it has continued to preach Christ and his teachings as presented in the Bible. It is unchangable and unmovable in history and is larger than all protestant demoninations put together.

If one can’t know how accurate history is depicted and no guide to absolute truth is available, there is only one place left to look for truth and that is the Roman Catholic Church. (Even the Bible can be interpreted in a multitude of ways.)
 
There’s usually always two of them, a master and an apprentice. If only one called you they can’t be recruiting very many new apprentices in your area. Praise the Lord. :harp:
Ha! That is superb. Beware the Sith! 😃

Jesus sent his disciples out in twos. SO that is ideal.
However, we will go on our own if there is an odd number at one of our groups. I have often found people are more likely to talk if only one JW’s comes to their door. 😉
 
I don’t think you were rude, Holly. You were firm in your beliefs and even gave her the kind courtesy of a brief conversation, which many people would not do. She may have been offended at your calling her religion a cult, but you did not mean it in an offensive way and told her so. Sometimes when a potential customer continues to talk, it gives the salesperson the impression they may be able to make a sale. So she may have been slightly disappointed you hung up; but I’m sure she got over it very soon and went on to the next call.
I agree with Meltzerboy. I work in a call centre and make outbound calls selling insurance. So long as the other party is talking, I’ll generally keep them on the line. I believe in the product I sell and so long as they’re willing to discuss it I have a good chance at a sale.

If there is really no chance, I prefer to tell me so straight and then end of the call. Lets me get onto the next guy who might buy a policy.

I wouldn’t be worried that you were rude. Rude people slam the phone down after screaming “Don’t call me”. Or they swear at you for 10 minutes about something your company did 10 years ago to their best friends neighbours dog.

You don’t fit in either category.
 
Jesus sent his disciples out in twos. SO that is ideal.
He also sent them out in sandals and tunics. Is that what the JWs consider the “ideal” for evangelization also?

I do find it odd when some non-Catholic folks (and it’s not just JW’s) take one criterion from the Scriptures and apply it to their practice, ignoring the rest of the details limned in the passage.

For example, I’ve often heard, “We baptize the way Jesus was baptized: in a river! That’s the way it should be done because that’s the way Jesus was!”

Curious, this. Because Jesus was also baptized by his cousin, in his 30’s,* in the River Jordan,* wearing a tunic and sandals, walking (or riding a beast) to his destination. So why is this not also part of the baptism ritual in these churches who proclaim they baptize “the way Jesus was baptized”? :hmmm:
 
Consider this: A person could wait 100 years for any Catholic to call on the telephone or knock on the door of a non-Catholic, so as to teach them the Catholic Faith.

So, I believe, at least, any Catholic should honor and respect the desire of J.W.s to be helpful to their neighbors. That is how they see what they are doing. They are trying to SAVE us from ruin. That is not a bad motive.

Catholics do very, very, very, very little as regards to reaching out to lost people. Shame on us.

Lastly, I know some J.W.s. If you want to be helpful, never argue with them, never point out the flaws in their theology. Never argue at all. Never call them a “cult.” If you want to be helpful, and if you have time, let them teach you something, and listen respectfully, and try to understand their point of view. Always respect them, and thank them. Don’t join their religion. But let them continue to call you, or visit you, for brief periods of time, if you have time. Listen, don’t argue, don’t criticize. Over time they will come to see a beautiful, good and honest person who is NOT one of them. That will do more than anything to lead them doubt all the odd things that the J.W. organization demands that they believe.

I would say that you can gently point out verses in the Bible and facts of history that seem to disprove their doctrines, with the idea of asking them to explain. Be in the role of the student. Be patient. Let them teach. Do all if this you want to be helpful, if you have the time.

The truth is that J.W.s know their erroneous religion much better than Catholics know their true religion. Shame on us. The truth is that J.W. reach out to neighbors to teach them religious doctrine for the purposes of salvation much more than Catholics do. Shame on us.

So, I say we should be more like J.W., in terms of studying and knowing our religion, and in terms of reaching out to neighbors with offers of teaching them the Faith. Perhaps God views JWs as a prick on our conscience, and so, in that way, they are serving God.

Those are my views. I am not a great person. I am a nobody in the world. So, there is nothing in my biography that should lead you to respect my views. If what I’ve written seems off track to you, then I am sure it is off track.

Thank you and best wishes.
I humbly disagree with your position. If that’s what you’re comfortable with, then so be it. I think the OP handled this exactly correct…that comes from my 11 years experience being married to a JW who eventually converted to Catholicism…and two of her three children who also left the Witnesses. I agree that we should study our scripture and doctrine more as Catholics…but to not politely challenge a JW leaves the in ignorance.
 
Wow, I didn’t know they were telephoning now! When they come to the door, I am gentle, but firm, as I’m sure most are. But I do not get into a long discussion with them as they love to try to trick people up with circuitous “logic.”

I usually state that I am very much at peace with the Church which Christ Himself founded in handing the Keys of the Kingdom to St. Peter, and that that is the Kingdom of Heaven for me. Sometimes I’ll add that the Divine continuity of the Church Christ founded is greater than one that mere mortals founded. If they persist on trying to argue this point, I say , “I’m sorry but I don’t wish to argue. I’m rooted firmly in the Faith.” :heaven:
Actually, the Witnesses have been doing telephone witnessing for years. I first heard about around 1995 when I was married to a JW. It’s usually done by the elderly or those who for whatever reason can’t get out and do the door to door stuff…but it’s been around even longer than the 1995 date I have given.
 
I humbly disagree with your position. If that’s what you’re comfortable with, then so be it. I think the OP handled this exactly correct…that comes from my 11 years experience being married to a JW who eventually converted to Catholicism…and two of her three children who also left the Witnesses. I agree that we should study our scripture and doctrine more as Catholics…but to not politely challenge a JW leaves the in ignorance.
My take on it as an ex JW, is that it is a mixture of both. Sadly, most Catholics take their faith for granted, as I did, thus they are easy pickings for those who want to convert them. Personally, I think that ‘taking their faith for granted’ is due to the way many in the Church felt it was important to ‘fit in to the culture’ after Vatican II and thus make it easier to bring more people to Christ. In reality, it just caused weaker Catholics to become part of our modern selfish sex crazed culture. Prior to becoming a JW, I knew that Jesus was NOT part of the culture he lived in. He told people that if they followed him, they would become enemies of even family members. When I saw the way JWs seemed to all be so devoted and NOT part of the culture, I saw it as a sign of their Christianity. But of course, there are many religions that are not part of the culture and strictly follow their own form of ‘christianity’. Despite the constant drone of JW propoganda at the meetings, convetions, and the door to door ‘ministry’, Holy Spirit guided me to see the truth of the Bible and how the Catholic church that compiled the Bible, was the only true church started by Jesus Christ.

My feeling is that unless you are VERY knowledgeable about the Bible and VERY sure of your faith, you are in dangerous territory talking to JWs. While we go to Church to praise God, JWs go to the Kingdom Hall to learn more arguing points to prove their beliefs. While we spend an hour at mass praying to God, they spend four hours, 10 minutes of which is prayer to Jehovah and 3 hours and 50 minutes learning how to prove their beliefs. What I found most effective with JWs is to really understand and research information about the early Christians and the formation of the Bible. They don’t learn about this because it disproves their beliefs. For example, there are many practices of the worship of the early Christians that are described in the Bible which are not practiced by JWs, such as kneeling while praying, celebrating the festival of Penticost, having Communion and many more. These are Catholic practices but never are practiced by JWs. Read the Church fathers and see how they practiced their Christian faith. It will be totally different than that of JWs.

MOST IMPORTANTLY, don’t let them switch the subject to something they practice on at the Kingdom Hall. Either they keep to the subject about how the Bible was compiled by the Catholic Church and how the early Christians worshiped similarly to the Catholic Church today, or they can leave. Sadly, they won’t because it will bother them when it doesn’t fit their ideas.
 
Is this a woman that you know? If not, how did she get your telephone number? :confused:
 
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