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.:SECTION ONE: QUESTION THREE
A:
IS THE WATCHTOWER ORGANIZATION A CULT—PART
1?
(WDGR LESSION 4: “Who is the Devil?”)
View Book Table of Contents
Are personal opinions and independent thinking
condemned by God? How can Christian unity exist in a religion
that allows its members to disagree on spiritual issues? Do true
Christians need the guidance of an organization to understand
the Bible? What are the mental manipulation techniques of a cult?
CINDY: Hi Karen, how was your week?
KAREN: Oh, it was all right. It’s just
that my mom is giving me a hard time because I’m studying
with Jehovah’s Witnesses. I guess she’s afraid that
I’m going to end up in a cult.
CINDY: Karen, we hear that a lot from people
who don’t understand our religion. Just like usual we’ll
be studying today in the Watchtower brochure, What Does God Require
of Us?. “Satan may use persecution or opposition to get
you to leave Jehovah.” As you are seeing, Karen, “Some
of your loved ones may become very angry because you are studying
the Bible.…Satan wants to frighten you so that you will
stop learning about Jehovah.”1. You won’t let Satan win by listening to your mom,
will you Karen?
KAREN: Cindy, my mom is not upset that I’m
studying the Bible. It’s just that she’s worried that
I’m studying with Jehovah’s Witnesses. She thinks
that the Jehovah’s Witness religion is a cult and she doesn’t
want me to end up in it.
CINDY: Karen, do you know what a “cult”
is? A few years ago, in the February 15, 1994 issue of The Watchtower,
the Society described what a “cult” is. Let me read
some of the things they said in that article: “Cult leaders
are known to use manipulative methods to control the minds of
their followers. Is there any evidence that Jehovah’s Witnesses
do this?.…Outstanding is a recent ruling by the European
Court of Human Rights. It declared that the Witnesses should enjoy
freedom of thought, conscience, and religion and that they have
the right to speak about their faith and teach it to others. This
would hardly be the case if Jehovah’s Witnesses…used
manipulative methods to control the minds of their followers.”2. Karen, you see what we are like. Do you think we use “manipulative
methods” to control your mind?
KAREN: I’m not sure, Cindy. My mom said
that Jehovah’s Witnesses are not allowed to question any
of the doctrines and policies of the Watchtower organization and
that if they don’t believe absolutely everything the Society
teaches, they will be disfellowshiped from the organization. She
said that fear of being rejected by the organization, manipulates
many Witnesses into not accepting blood transfusions,3. refusing any kind of political activities,4. and not participating in anything that is disapproved of by the
Watchtower organization. Is this true that the Watchtower manipulates
its members in this way?
CINDY: I wouldn’t call it “manipulation,”
Karen. The Watchtower Society doesn’t tell us what to believe.
Based on our conscience, we make our own personal decision in
regard to blood transfusions and politics.
KAREN: Really, Cindy? You are allowed to make
your own personal decision? So what happens if the conscience
of a Witness permits him to vote; are you saying he wouldn’t
be disfellowshiped for such an action?
CINDY: Well, no, Karen. He would be disfellowshiped
if he persists in this action because a Jehovah’s Witness
must believe and act in harmony with the Watchtower organization.
KAREN: Then are you saying, Cindy, that a Witness’
personal conscience is determined by the Watchtower organization’s
doctrine and policies?
CINDY: Well, I guess so. . .
KAREN: Listen to this Watchtower article and
tell me how this is not mental “manipulation” in controlling
what people think and believe. The Society said: “…Satan
called into question God’s way of doing things. He promoted
independent thinking.…How is such independent thinking manifested?
A common way is by questioning the counsel that is provided by
God’s visible organization.…Why is it so dangerous?
Such thinking is an evidence of pride.…Really, can we get
along without the direction of God’s organization? No, we
cannot!”5. Cindy, when personal judgment of determining Scriptural truth
is viewed as pride against God, how can this not be a means of
controlling what people believe? If a person is not allowed to
question the doctrines of an organization, how can he follow the
Biblical command to “make sure of all things”?6.
CINDY: That’s a good question, Karen,
but once we prove that this is Jehovah’s organization, we
must not question its doctrines any longer. Jesus told us that
we must be “one” even as he and the Father are one,7. and the apostle Paul exhorted the Corinthian believers to: “all
speak in agreement, and that there should not be divisions”
so that they would be “united in the same…line of
thought.”8. So in order to have unity of thought, we must not question the
counsel provided by the organization.
KAREN: Cindy, is unity the same thing as uniformity
or is there a difference?
CINDY: What do you mean by is there a difference
between unity and uniformity? Aren’t they the same thing,
Karen?
KAREN: Not exactly, Cindy. Let me explain. Notice
that in the passage you referenced, 1 Corinthians 1:10, Paul does
not tell the believes to have uniformity of belief, but rather,
as he put it, to be: “united in the same…line of thought.”
Do you think it is possible for a group of people to be “united
in the same…line of thought” without having absolute
uniformity in beliefs? For example, Cindy. Suppose you and your
husband were to have a disagreement on whether you should eat
apples for breakfast. Now the Bible says that husbands and wives,
by being united in marriage, are as “one,” but does
this mean that you are required to like apples as much as your
husband does?
CINDY: Of course, not, Karen. I’m in unity
with my husband, but that doesn’t mean that we do not have
our differences of opinion on certain issues. He may like certain
kinds of food or clothing that I’m not particularly fond
of, but that doesn’t affect our relationship. We exercise
unity in our marriage by working together in spite of our differences.
When an issue comes up that we don’t see eye to eye on,
I defer to his leadership and support him in his decision, even
if I disagree with his viewpoint. Is this what you mean by the
difference between unity and uniformity?
KAREN: Yes, Cindy, that’s exactly what
I’m talking about. What you just described about your relationship
with your husband, is a beautiful picture of what being “one”
in unity is all about. While uniformity requires absolute conformity
in every aspect of life and thought; unity, on the other hand,
is more concerned about working together in the midst of diversity.
Given the context of the passage in which the Corinthian believers
were so divided that they could not work together, can you see
why Paul exhorted the believers to lay aside their differences
in order to unite for the cause of the Kingdom?
CINDY: Yes, I see your point Karen, but I don’t
understand how Christians can work together in unity if they disagree
on spiritual issues?
KAREN: Cindy, do you remember how the Corinthian
believers had a dispute over whether a Christian should be allowed
to eat meat that was offered in sacrifice to idols? What was Paul’s
advise to the believers? Did he make the eating of idolatrous
meat used in false worship a disfellowshiping offense?
CINDY: No he didn’t, Karen. In fact at
1 Corinthians chapters 8 and 10, Paul seemed to be more concerned
about offending the conscience of a weak brother, than he was
about settling the dispute by an organizational policy.
KAREN: You are right, Cindy; and look at how
Paul addressed this issue at Romans 14:1-3: “Now accept
the one who is weak in faith, but not for the purpose of passing
judgment on his opinion. One man has faith that he may eat all
things, but he who is weak eats vegetables only. Let not him who
eats regard with contempt him who does not eat, and let not him
who does not eat judge him who eats, for God has accepted him.”9. Did you notice, Cindy, how Paul specifically told the Christians
not to judge a brother who has a different opinion on an issue?
CINDY: Yes, that’s a good point. Oh, and
look at verse five! It says: “One [man] judges one day as
above another, another [man] judges one day as all others, let
each [man] be fully convinced in his own mind.”10. Is this saying that Christians have the freedom to disagree on
what days to regard as holy?
KAREN: That’s right, Cindy. Some of the
believers observed all of the Jewish holidays and others didn’t.
Paul’s response to this was to “let each [man] be
fully convinced in his own mind.” Can you see how, far from
enforcing organizational conformity to a uniform system of beliefs,
true Christianity allows for freedom on peripheral issues as long
as there is unity on the central teachings pertaining to the Kingdom?
CINDY: Yes, I see your point Karen.
KAREN: Since the Watchtower organization does
not allow for freedom in disagreeing with any of its doctrines
and policies, can you see why my mom is concerned that the Watchtower
organization is a cult?
CINDY: I can see why she’d be concerned,
Karen, but I wouldn’t be so quick to view Jehovah’s
Witnesses as a cult. There are many other points the Society examined
in that 1994 Watchtower article. Could we discuss the others next
week?
KAREN: Sure, Cindy. I’ll be here.
COMMENTS:
Friends, Colossians 2:16-17 warns: “Therefore
do not let anyone judge you by what you eat or drink,
or with regard to a religious festival, a New Moon celebration
or a Sabbath day. These are a shadow of the things that
were to come; the reality, however, is found in Christ.” 11.
NEXT DIALOGUE
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1. What Does God Require of Us?, 1996, p. 9:7
2. The Watchtower, February 15, 1994, pp. 4, 6
3.The
Watchtower, January 15, 1961, p. 64
4. The Watchtower, November 1, 1956, p. 648
5. The Watchtower, January 15, 1983, pp. 22, 27
6. 1 Thessalonians 5:21, New World Translation
7. John 17:21
8. 1 Corinthians 1:10, New World Translation Bible
9. New American Standard Bible
10. New World Translation
11. New International Version
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