The following Blackadder quote would be appropriate to use on them:
“Sod off, and if I ever meet you again, it’ll be twenty billion years too soo”’
Seriously, don’t bother debating them. I had a visit from them a couple of days ago. They also mentioned natural disasters, which has been a big issue in New Zealand this year because of the Christchurch earthquake. They tried to give me a Watchtower and an Awake! magazine, but I just said “I’m a Christian” and they left.
JWs attend several religious meetings each week beside the Sunday service. They are heavily indoctrinated and told that Jehovah will annihilate all non-JWs come Armageddon. Mind control is used on members, and those who have committed certain offences are “disfellowshipped”. This is much more serious than excommunication in the Roman Catholic Church because JWs are not allowed to speak to a disfellowshipped member and must shun them. If they do talk to someone who has been disfellowshipped, they can be disfellowshipped themselves. So convincing them to leave the Watchtower Society is
much more difficult than convincing a Methodist to become a Catholic, for example. If their family are all JWs, then they’ll be cutting themselves off from them, and if they have children, the JWs have good lawyers who will fight hard for the JW spouse to gain custody of the kids after the highly likely divorce. Convincing them to leave the WS can be done, but it is difficult.
JWs use the original question in this thread “Why do you not call God by his real name” to get the interest of “non-believers” working in their favor. They will usually follow up with something like “It says all throughout the bible we are to call upon the name of YHWH” or “…and YHWH is my name” even in a context where a personal name could never mean anything. As you know this is in fact all through the bible. Then they will try to go as far back as possible to find the BEST translation of this YHWH (which is called the Tetragrammaton) to get to Yehovah (or Jehovah in English) see
lectio.unibe.ch/05_2/troyer_names_of_god.htm. The problems with this thought process begins with the literal translation. As Christians know “in the name of God” (or whatever name you may call God) means much more than a personal name. Moses had to ask God for his name. Until then, God was fine with “God”, “YHH”, “YA”, Elohim”… as long as it was He we worshiped. We take “ in the name of God, YHWY…” to mean “in the name of all goodness” or” in the name of all righteousness” and therefore when the NT comes along and now Jesus (God) is referred to as kyrios (lord) and we make the Trinitarian connection – hence where in the Hebrew (OT) writings you will see the translation of YHWH to Lord. This change to a JW is blaspheme. This to a JW is blasphemy as they do not believe in the Trinity.
I have debated the Jehovah issue with JWs in the past. They responded by saying that Jesus’ name was not originally Jesus, but Yeshua, but we have no problem calling Him Jesus. So they do the same thing with Jehovah (although the transliteration “Jehovah” is actually a mistake). When I asked them about the word Jehovah being used in the NT to translate ‘Kyrios’, they told me that it was done because the instances of ‘Kyrios’ that were translated Jehovah were quotes from the OT (where the Name of God appears in the original Hebrew).
Bringing up the issue of their founder falsely predicting the end of the world probably won’t get you anywhere either. I did it and the JW lady flatly denied that any false predictions have ever been made. You can prove that they were made from old Watchtower issues, but of course I didn’t have those with me at the time.
If you’re going to debate them, then I suggest you first have a good knowledge of Scripture and a good knowledge of their teachings and how to refute them. Be prepared for a long battle.
Some of the problematic beliefs that they hold are:
- Not believing in the Trinity
- Believing that Jesus is St Michael the Archangel
- Believing that Jesus was crucified on a torture stake, not a cross
- Believing that only the 144,000 mentioned in the Book of Revelation will go to heaven, and that all other JWs will live forever on a paradise earth
- Believing that the soul is not immortal (i.e. your soul is ‘you’, not a separate part that survives bodily death)
- Believing that there is no Hell (i.e. Jehovah will annihilate all non-JWs and they will simply cease to exist)