It could be answered by either yourself as a past JWitness or a practicing one. It does not matter to me. I originally thought you had asked the question to which I am responding.
Here is an added question: Is it true that the founder of the JWitness Religion was a Catholic or is that just a myth or poor historical account?
The Trinity
Because Jehovah’s Witnesses believe that the authoritative form of revelation from God is limited to what is written in Biblical texts, they tend to read the same texts in a vacuum.
In an attempt to read the Bible literally, they mistakenly apply an Anglicized definition of “son” to texts in the Bible that call Jesus the “Son of God.” In Semitic life, and in the Hebrew and Aramaic language, calling someone a “son of” didn’t immediately mean “male offspring” as it does in English. Like John 17:12 where Jesus calls Judas “the son of destruction,” the term also means “one in the same.” Using this same meaning, Jesus also held the titles “Son of David,” even though he was actually a descendant, and “Son of Man” literally meaning “Son of Adam” stating that he was the equivalent of the perfect man Adam. (See 1 Corinthians 15:45) Even the Hellenistic and Roman worlds of the day used the expression “son of god” (in Latin ““divi filius”) to mean that the emperor was the physical incarnation of a god. From the beginning Christianity understood the title “Son of God” to mean the same thing in reference to Jesus.–See the Roman centurion’s words at Matthew 27:54 as he uses the secular description to describe what he came to believe about Jesus.
Jehovah’s Witnesses ignore this culturally influenced reading and interpret the text to mean what it does in English, namely that the word “Son” in the title “Son of God” means that Jesus is a created offspring of God. He has been identified in issues of their official doctrine journal, The Watchtower, as one and the same with St. Michael the Archangel.
Blood Transfusions
Jehovah’s Witnesses are no longer as strict about members taking blood transfusions as they were up to the 1990s. They strive to be merciful these days, understanding that it can be difficult when one is sick to use one’s facilities of judgment to adhere to their doctrinal demands. Some of the older ones might use the terms from the previous days, equating it to cannibalism, but that is generally gone.
The Witnesses do accept organ transplants, but there was a time this was forbidden also.
All this is due to the same mistake of forcing an Anglicized reading of Scriptural texts, namely Acts 15:28. 29. The text refers to dietary considerations for early Gentile Christians that would allow them to fellowship with Jewish Christians at table (to this day many Jewish Christians keep kosher because it is the only culture they know). As the New American Bible footnote shows, as well as Jewish history, the restriction against “blood” meant “blood-meats.” Since the subject is about the application of kashrut (Jewish dietary law), an implication that blood transfusion was meant is absurd.
The Virgin Mary
They admit that Jesus is unique and divine, but they do not mean “divine” in the sense of being one with YHWH. They mean “divine” in the sense that an angel can be described that way. As the archangel Michael, he is the head of all the angels, and therefore to them he is the most important of all God’s created beings.
While they accept the virginal birth of Jesus, they do not view Mary as the “Mother of God” since Jesus, to them, is not God. However their brochure “Should You Believe in the Trinity” admits that if Jesus does turn out to be God, then it would be dishonor not to call Mary the Mother of God.
Charles Taze Russell
Mr. Russell’s family joined the Presbyterian faith early in his life, but he later became associated with the Congregational Church as he got older. In 1870 he attended a presentation by Adventist minister Jonas Wendell from which Russell developed his belief that Christ’s return was in 1874 and that the world would end in 1914. While he believed in these dates till his death in 1916, the Witnesses would later claim that Jesus returned invisibly to the naked eye in 1914, and that before those old enough to hear their proclamation in the late 1800s and witness the events of 1914, the world would definitely end.
Of course we are here 100 years later.