Research has shown that Jehovah’s Witnesses are disliked throughout the world. Jehovah’s Witnesses see themselves as a worldwide brotherhood that transcends national boundaries and national and ethnic loyalties. There is no doubt about it that Jehovah’s Witnesses are to be thanked for speech freedoms. There are many reasons for Jehovah’s Witnesses being thrown in jail in different parts of the world. Some of the pros are they speak the truth about what they know, and what the Bible says. Some cons are they are thrown in jail, killed, and kicked out of the country. Jehovah’s Witnesses have certain opinions because of their beliefs and religion Jehovah’s Witnesses are persecuted for their religious beliefs. Jehovah’s Witnesses don’t accept …show more content…
blood transfusions from anyone. Jehovah’s Witnesses cannot date anyone that is not in the truth (Jehovah’s Witness). Jehovah’s Witnesses are persecuted for their religious beliefs.
For example, when Eleanor Roosevelt was first lady Witnesses were jailed when they preached, fired from jobs, and their children were expelled from public schools. Witnesses were attacked by mobs in more than forty states. In addition if one group’s speech is snuffed out on the whims of whoever has the most power or popularity, then a toxic environment is left behind that can quickly suffocate any unpopular group that follows. For instance, Jehovah’s Witnesses were subjected to intense persecution under the Nazi regime. For refusing to be drafted or perform military-related work, and for continuing to meet illegally, increasing numbers of Jehovah’s Witnesses were arrested, tried by judicial authorities and incarcerated in prisons and concentration camps. By 1939, an estimated 6,000 Witnesses (including some from Australia and Czechoslovakia) were detained prisons or camps. Some Witnesses were tortured in attempts to make them sign declarations renouncing their faith, but few capitulated to this pressure. Of the 20,000 Witnesses remaining active, about half were convicted and sentenced at one time or another during the Nazi era for anywhere from one month to four years. The number of Jehovah’s Witnesses who died in concentration camps and prisons during the Nazi era estimated at 1,000 Germans and 400 from other countries, including about 90 Australians and 120 other
Dutch. Jehovah’s Witnesses don’t accept blood transfusions from anyone. “While God did not intend for man to contaminate his blood stream by vaccines, serums or blood fractions, doing so does not seem to be included in God’s expressed will forbidding blood as food. It would therefore be a matter of individual judgement whether one accepted such types of medication or not. Witnesses view them as ruling our transfusion of our whole blood, packed RBC’s, and plasma as well as WBC and platelet administration. Take for example at Acts 15:21 it is recorded that the Apostles and Old Men gave a decree to “abstain from blood’’. At first glance this may be taken to imply that the Mosaic Law was to continue applying to Christians in regard to consumption of blood. For instance, this is Jehovah’s Witnesses currently understand this scripture and is their predominate support for refusing blood transfusions. Witnesses’ religious understanding does not absolutely prohibit the use of components such as albumin, immune goblins, and hemophiliac preparations: each Witness must decide individually if he can accept these. In 2000, the rule was greatly simplified. A “major” component cannot be used, but a “minor” one can, though the following section will show there is no basis or logic behind such reasoning. Jehovah’s Witnesses cannot date anyone that is not in the truth. (Jehovah’s Witness) Casual dating for example is not ok. The purpose of dating is marriage. Jehovah’s Witnesses obey the Apostle Paul who said: “Do not be yoked together with unbelievers. For what do righteousness and wickedness have in common? Or what fellowship can light have with darkness? Here’s what the Watchtower says, ‘when necessary, a loving friend will kindly remind a companion about Jehovah’s standard. (1 Cor. 7:39) For example’ what would you do if you noticed that an unmarried friend was becoming emotionally attached to an unbeliever? A good friend would seek the help of loving shepherds in assisting a companion who has taken a false step. Even though Jehovah’s Witnesses believe they are Christians’ it is not alright for them to date or marry a Christian who belongs to another religion. Jehovah’s Witnesses do not believe in dating people outside their religion because dating is supposed to lead to marriage. Paul told early Christians not to be ‘unevenly yoked’ i.e. they should not develop close friendships and partner with unbelievers. After all Jehovah’s Witnesses do all they can to do what is pleasing to Jehovah their God. In conclusion’ you should not have a bad opinion about Jehovah’s Witnesses because of their beliefs and religion. Jehovah’s Witnesses have certain opinions on things. Jehovah’s Witnesses are the same as you but they have different views.
As common knowledge, people normally recognize the term “concentration camp” and immediately refer to the prison camps the Jews were sent to during the Holocaust. In Corrie Tenboom’s famous collective story of her imprisonment, The Hiding Place, she writes in visual description of exactly how the Jews were treated in these camps. Women were forced to stand naked in front of Nazi guards for not much reason at all and made them feel less than human and animalistic. The people were beaten and killed on a regular day basis. One of the worst parts of these camps were the barbaric gas chambers. Men, women, and children would be fooled and dragged into chambers in groups to stand and be slaughtered by the dozen. Concentration camps are what can be known as the cruelest and most barbaric part of World War II history.
According to dictionaries a cult is 1) a system of religious worship or ritual. 2) A religion or sect considered extremist of false. 3) Obsessive devotion to a person or principle. It is believed that every cult ties into some kind of religion, and religions all have a common basis of “a leap of faith”. Whether this so-called leap of faith is going to heaven or being reincarnated, or moving on to some other planet, depends on the beliefs of the cult itself.
Quakers didn’t like the French and Indian war they opposed everything that may harm or threaten someone. Quaker’s refused to support war also. They were the ones to help slaves escape through the underground railroad. They didn’t consider themselves Christians, they regarded themselves as a universal religion. Quaker’s don’t celebrate christian festivals like Easter and Christmas(BBC). The Quakers worship a lot.
In March of 1933 the first Nazi concentration camp was opened and by the end of World War II there was over 40,000 camps all together. While in these camps Jewish people were subjected to cruel and inhumane punishments
The Heaven’s Gate Cult was founded in the early 1970’s by Marshall Applewhite and Bonnie Nettles. Applewhite was recovering, under the care of his nurse Ms. Nettles, when he claimed to have has a near death experience. Applewhite claimed that he and Nettles were the two witnesses spoken of in the Book of Revelation. And they were to prepare the worlds inhabitants for recycling.
Through this short presentation, we will try to identify the true nature of Jehovah’s Witnesses. And, as there is limitation on time we will not go too deep in details but we will try to learn them better so that we may be ready to face them next time.
During the Holocaust many people were targeted including homosexual men. The estimated amount of homosexuals involved in the holocaust ranges from 5,000 to 15,000. They faced persecution not only from German soldiers but also from other prisoners living in the concentration camps. Between 1933 and 1945, an estimated 100,000 men were arrested as homosexuals, and of those 100,000 men, 50,000 were officially sentenced.
The Nazi Party, controlled by Adolf Hitler, ruled Germany from 1933 to 1945. In 1933, Hitler became the Chancellor of Germany and the Nazi government began to take over. Hitler became a very influential speaker and attracted new members to his party by blaming Jews for Germany’s problems and developed a concept of a “master race.” The Nazis believed that Germans were “racially superior” and that the Jewish people were a threat to the German racial community and also targeted other groups because of their “perceived racial inferiority” such as Gypsies, disabled persons, Polish people and Russians as well as many others. In 1938, Jewish people were banned from public places in Germany and many were sent to concentration camps where they were either murdered or forced to work. Many individuals and groups attempted to resist Nazism in Germany, but were unsuccessful. The White Rose, The Red Orchestra and the Kreisau Circle all advocated non-violent resistance to oppose the Nazi regime and even with the high risk of getting caught and potentially killed, the courageous members of these groups went after what they believed was right despite the serious consequences.
“A cult is a religious or semi-religious sect whose members are controlled almost entirely by a single individual or by an organization.” (“What”). Families are forced to leave their homes and life behind by a dream that the cult will take them to bigger and better places. Some of these cults also cost these members their lives. There is always that question of why they do it because it is far from believable. These leaders are manipulators dragging in their pray in like flies. Heaven’s Gate is a cult. People don’t just have their mind set and say “I’m going to go join a cult,” they are looking for a safe haven. They have different beliefs and rituals. A religious cult isn’t just a group of people left to their beliefs, but yet it is a threat to our nation and the people in it. “The mind of the fanatic” wants but more so “needs something to worship, even to the point of annihilation.”(Katherine Ramsland).
Approximately six million Jews were killed by the Nazi regime during the Holocaust. When Hitler was appointed Chancellor of Germany on January 30th, 1933 there were 566,000 Jewish people living in Germany. The first concentration camp, Dachau, was created on March 22, 1933. Other concentration camps to be created during this time include Buchenwald and Ravensbruck. The first people to be arrested were Communists, labor leaders, and Communists. From 1933-1938 Jews gradually have their rights stripped away beginning with not being able to own land to not being considered citizens according to the Nuremberg Race Laws. Attacks on Jewish businesses and synagogues began on November 9th, 1938 when over the course of two days over 7,000 Jewish businesses and 250 synagogues were destroyed by Germans. Also, Jews were arrested and killed while these tragedies occurred. This series of events is known as Kristallnacht. It marks the beginning of the extreme discrimination and eventually genocide of the Jewish population.
6,000 Jehovah witnesses, over 15,000 homosexuals, 400 “colored” children, and over 5,000,000 Jews were killed. Hitler’s anti-Semitism grew out of anger because the Germans lost the war. He blamed the Jews for Germany’s defeat in the war. Hitler also used the Jews as an excuse for all the problems that Germany was facing. To get the Jews to get deported, Hitler and his Nazis made the Jews think that they were moving to a better, happier place, when in reality, they were moving to concentration camps, or death camps.
First of all, to get a proper understanding of the events in my book, I did some research to paint a picture of the holocaust. The reason that the Germans started the holocaust a long time ago was because they believed that the Jewish people were minions of the devil, and that they were bent on destroying the Christian mind. Many Christians in Germany were also mad at them for killing Jesus in the Bible. Throughout the holocaust, Hitler, the leader of Germany at the time, and the Nazis killed about six million Jewish people, more than two-thirds of all of the Jewish people in Europe at the time. They also killed people who were racially inferior, such as people of Jehovah's Witness religion, and even some Germans that had physical and mental handicaps. The concentration camp that appears in this story is Auschwitz, which was three camps in one: a prison camp, and extermination camp, and a slave labor camp. When someone was sent to Auschw...
For my field experience activity I choose to go and visit the Jehovah’s Witness Kingdom Hall in Cumming, Georgia. I choose this particular location because not only did it represent a religious sector that I was very uninformed of, but this specific building is one that has been there for almost 15 years now and I would say I have driven by it without paying it any mind just about 5-6 times a week for several years. The Kingdom Hall is made entirely out of red brick. The Kingdom Hall building is a simple setup. They have a general meeting area with about 150 seats inside and a podium for speaking purposes. They have a couple of additional rooms for storage purposes and multipurpose areas like a kitchen and other open areas for different things.
German Jews responded to the Nazi attacks in many ways. Departing was not a simple task, especially for those with families and deep roots in Germany, but nevertheless some still left the country. There was no place for Jews to go because of immigration policies. Economic problems caused by the Great Depression made governments hostile to immigrants. Thirty-seven thousand Jews fled Germany during Hitler’s first year of rule despite the restricted immigration policies. German Jews tried to come together within Germany by self-help efforts. They tried to reduce social isolation by providing social and educational opportunities for themselves. A group of Jewish leaders created the Reich Representation of the German Jews in September 1933, to preserve
I personally think that the 7th Day Adventist and Jehovah Witnesses have faced opposition from established forms of Christianity and government because of their different interpretations of their beliefs. One of the ways is that Jehovah’s Witnesses do not consider themselves to be Protestants as the 7th Day Adventist believes. The Jehovah’s Witnesses and the 7th Day Adventist have become separated because of their different ways of working toward to God and of the teachings from the Bible. For instance, in the book of World Religions in America, Chapter 13 by Dell deChant mentions, “Still, the Witnesses share common elements with many Protestant groups. First among there is its acceptance of the Bible as the inspired Word of God. The official Bible of the Witnesses is the New World Translation of the Holy Scriptures, a text produced by the movement. Although it contains the sixty-six books found in Protestant Bibles.” Since the 7th Day Adventist considers them Protestant, they do follow the Bible and they do not use New World Translation which the Jehovah’s Witnesses do. This is one of the problems that will interfered with the different believes between these two religions and will place a different thought. By the Jehovah’s Witnesses using these different version makes them conclude that God dies in a stake not a cross which 7th Day Adventist make it conclude in a different way base on the original version of the