The Girl Who Took On The Watchtower – Candace Conti Speaks Out
For the first time since her stunning victory in an Alameda courtroom, Candace Conti has appeared before a select group
Read moreFor the first time since her stunning victory in an Alameda courtroom, Candace Conti has appeared before a select group
Read moreIn the minds of Jehovah’s Witnesses all over the world, there are fewer more potent symbols of Christ’s authority as
Read moreDramatic news is emerging that the Watch Tower Society has lost its first lawsuit since the Olin Moyle libel case
Read moreThe 2012 “Safeguard Your Heart” District Convention has already generated controversy among thinking Jehovah’s Witnesses with the release of a
Read morePart 4 – Was our organization chosen in 1919? In the fourth and final installment of my “Under The Microscope”
Read moreI am a British citizen and a taxpayer. I am also one of Jehovah’s Witnesses, and have been since I
Read moreAttention: if you are in regular contact with any members of the Governing Body, please notify them of this message.
Read more“Lord, whom shall we go away to? You have sayings of everlasting life; and we have believed and come to know that you are the Holy One of God.”
When Peter spoke the above words, the last thing on his mind was any question of leaving an ‘organization’ of any kind. Jesus, and no human organization, was the one with sayings of everlasting life.
Watchtower publications define the role of a Christian wife who finds herself married to a husband who does not share her faith. The scripture they use advises women in such situations that they can win over their husbands “without a word,” or by letting their actions rather than their words give evidence that faith can make one a better person.
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