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DelsonJacobs
Guest
I had to face some pretty cold-hard facts about myself, and that was the real key.This is interesting. I can see how a teenager, or someone who was searching for answers without having a solid religious foundation could be attracted to it - it seems so straightforward and full of answers. The Watchtower magazines are like that too, very colorful, full of interesting articles on science and religion.
How were you able to extracate yourself from them? It sounds like they get a pretty strong hold on people, once you are in their church.
While I was inspired to leave the Witnesses due to experiencing God directly acting among non-JWs in a manner that I was taught was impossible and could not possibly occur, leaving the Witnesses was about leaving something about myself that was not good: my pride that “I” had “the Truth” (and pride that you didn’t have it).
People are often attracted to religions because the people in a group may appear to live good, clean lives, or perhaps family groups seem strong, or the religion promises some type of security and brotherhood you don’t find in the outside world or in other faiths. None of this is a good reason to join a religion.
Like the LDS and other faiths of the evangelistic fundamentalist type, the Jehovah’s Witnesses held out such “benefits” along with a “key,” namely the “secret” that ‘only they had’ because they were “the only mouthpiece of God.”
Their “key” was the claim that only they had the “chosen few” who could decipher the written Word of God. And like the LDS, JWs belong to that family of denominations that believe Holy Writ—and not Christ—is the ultimate and final revelation from God and that only their particular group has chosen ones—like the Gnostics—that can interpret the meaning of these inspired texts.
I had to tell myself that I was being foolish believing that I was so special that I had something others just didn’t have. I also had to reject the JW belief that only they truly worship God (they officially believe and teach that everyone else, including the LDS, worship and are servants/agents of Satan). The fact that they pride themselves in being included in the Holocaust Memorial Museum in Washington, DC alongside the Jews who they teach deserved to suffer in concentration camps because, as their Governing Body preaches, they were ‘blood-guilty for having rejected Jesus as the Messiah’—well things like that just didn’t add up and seemed very, very evil in themselves.
People should join the Church not because of what “benefits” they can get out of it, but because they love God and want to be obedient to him out of love. There is no “secret” that only a “chosen few” have that others cannot have access to. The truth is there for everyone who wishes, not for a select group but for all. (Isaiah 55:1)
And while there is only one Church that has the fullness of truth, God is not bound by denominational lines in regards to who gets saved and who doesn’t.
Most important and most effective to leaving was coming to the realization that a Person—Jesus Christ—is the ultimate and final revelation of God. People were finding salvation in Christ before a single word of the New Testament was written because the Church was preaching this salvation via its oral Tradition. The gospel and testament of Christ is more than a book, it is found in the testimony of his Church, the Tradition that inspired the written words, the words which say: “Jesus did many other signs in the presence of his disciples that are not written in this book.” —John 20:30.
The only place to get the full witness to Christ that is “not written in this book” could only be the one Church that started everything in the first place among those first witnesses that Christ lived among.
Of course, I believe that without God’s grace and mercy I would not have realized how wrong I was in the first place. The human ego is so very hard a whirlpool of pride that I doubt any man can swim against its prideful current without the help of God and his Church.