S
St_Donatus
Guest
Honestly, after being in for 20 years, I still don’t really understand it. Basically, the explanation is that they will not say prayers that are standardized. I think the real reason is that it is too much like what most Christians do. If you look at their teachings and practices, the main thrust is to do whatever is opposite of historic Christian teachings. We believe in the Trinity, they don’t, we believe Jesus is God, they don’t, we celebrate Christmas, they don’t, we use a Cross, they have a stake, we believe the faithful will go to heaven, they believe only a small percent go to heaven, the rest go to Earth. It goes on and on.Interesting. I never knew that! What is their objection to the Our Father?
Basically, I think it is a bit contrived to separate them from everyone else. If you can separate them, you can keep them from being influenced by other people outside the religion. It appears to work fairly well too, but they still loose about two thirds of their membership over time (otherwise, 66% or more people who become JWs, leave (according the several surveys including Pew). When you consider that most of their teachings have changed over the last 100 years and all of their predictions of Armageddon have failed, it is amazing that they can even keep 33%. Most groups like this just fade away after a couple of missed predictions.
But they have a great excuses. Usually, as the time approaches, they start downplaying the prediction. After it is over, they start teaching everyone that they never taught the prediction that failed but that some JWs were just making bad assumptions on their own. Usually these predictions will be preached at Assemblies and Sunday meetings but are never explicitly made in the literature, yet hinted at quite a lot. Then they can easily say what they want. Since it is so difficult to leave, it is easier to force yourself to believe the lie that the prediction was never made. Really, I think many of the leadership don’t believe their own lies but continue things because as they say ‘where else would we go?’.