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  • Around the world, there are estimated to be thousands of different Christian denominations,

  • with Catholics alone making up more than one billion adherents.

  • And while all of these denominations have different beliefs about aspects of Christianity,

  • none are quite as well known for their unique views as the Jehovah’s Witnesses . You yourself

  • may have even been visited by one on your doorstep.

  • But what exactly sets Jehovah's Witnesses apart, and what do they believe?

  • Well, unlike Christianity as a whole, the Jehovah's Witnesses were founded relatively

  • recently, in the late 1800s, just about forty years after Mormonism got its start.

  • The founder was Charles Taze Russell, a biblical scholar, who, like other religious founders,

  • had his own interpretation of the Bible.

  • Russell would say that the world was soon coming to an end, and expressed this and other

  • thoughts in a journal called The Watchtower.

  • Supporters of Russell would meet to study the Bible, and eventually became a small religious

  • ministry.

  • After Russell’s death, the group was taken over by a high ranking member and former judge,

  • Joseph Franklin Rutherford.

  • Rutherford a number of failed predictions, including that the biblical Abraham and Isaac

  • would be resurrected in 1925.

  • This eventually forced a split within the ministry in 1931.

  • The remaining group was led by Rutherford, and renamed the Jehovah’s Witnesses, operating

  • out of Brooklyn, New York.

  • Today Jehovah’s Witnesses claim to have roughly 8 million adherents worldwide, or

  • publishersas theyre called, and yet, most people know very little about the

  • religion’s unique views.

  • For one, it is taught that Satan was thrown out of heaven and came to earth around October

  • 1st, 1914, and that Armageddon would occur during the lives of those living in 1914.

  • The door-to-door proselytizing for which Jehovah’s witnesses are famous for is, in part, based

  • on the urgency of thisend timesprophecy.

  • But in 1995, when it was clear that most of the people alive in 1914 were dying, the prophecy

  • was officially revised to have no clear end date.

  • Jehovah’s Witnesses also deny Trinitarianism, which is the Christian belief that God, Jesus,

  • and the Holy Spirit are one entity.

  • Instead, they believe that Jesus, being the Son of God, is a lesser entity, and call the

  • Trinity a form of pagan idolatry.

  • Along those lines, they also do not celebrate birthdays or any non-Christian holidays, seeing

  • them also as pagan.

  • Jehovah’s Witnesses stress that the only date to be commemorated is the death of Jesus.

  • They don’t even celebrate his birth, Christmas.

  • In 1945 it was established that Witnesses could not give or receive blood transfusions

  • based on a unique reading of a bible passage, calling blood itself sacred.

  • However, it’s not all alternative beliefs.

  • There is also a strong emphasis on cleanliness, both physical and spiritual, manifesting as

  • honesty and modesty.

  • While these are inherent in many religions, they are especially paramount for Jehovah’s

  • Witnesses.

  • Between believing the world is about to end, never celebrating a birthday, and not being

  • allowed to receive blood in a life or death situation, the Jehovah’s Witnesses are an

  • interesting group, with some very unique beliefs.

  • Another religious group, often compared to Jehovah’s Witnesses, and stemming from roughly

  • the same recent time period, are Mormons.

  • Mormons wield considerable influence in the United States, and in the 2012 election, Mormon

  • Mitt Romney nearly became president.

  • So, just how powerful is the Mormon Church?

Around the world, there are estimated to be thousands of different Christian denominations,

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