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How Christians Can Talk Jehovah’s Witnesses

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Many years ago when I was still a Jehovah’s Witness, I was going door to door with my mother offering literature. At one door, an older lady asked us to come into her house. I thought I was going to have a chance to give her my presentation, but she stopped me and said she didn’t want to hear it. What she really wanted to do was to tell me about a few of the many encounters she’d had with the Lord. She told me story after story of having her prayers answered in obvious and spectacular ways. 

As JWs, we had been taught that members of “Christendom” (Christians) were deceived by the devil. Even so, I could not get this lady’s stories out of my head. I had a very hard time believing that she had been lying. My only option other than questioning my indoctrination, which I could not do, was to make myself believe that demons had been answering her prayers. 

That encounter lived rent free in my mind for a long time. Actually, I never forgot it, and when I eventually began to question my allegiance to the Watchtower organization, like a dormant seed, it started to grow. I wish I could thank that lady now. She didn’t have to invite us in and tell us her stories. She could have simply ignored our knock or told us she wasn’t interested. Instead, she cared enough to make an attempt to reach our hearts.

In case you didn’t know, the religion of Jehovah’s Witnesses is considered by many to be a dangerous, pseudo-Christian cult. The reason for that is two-fold. The first reason is that the level of control exerted over the faithful is extreme and, in some cases, even dangerous. The second reason is exclusive to Christianity. Jehovah’s Witnesses teach unscriptural doctrines that are so far outside what could be considered orthodox Christianity that it cannot be called Christian. They teach what most Christians would call “another gospel.” (Galatians 1:8) Many question whether or not JWs are even saved.

For JWs, waking up is dangerous. Depending on how long they have been associated, they stand to lose what to them may feel like everything they hold dear – their worldview, their family, and possibly all or nearly all of their friends. They are taught that dissidents, called “apostates”, are spiritual poison and must be completely shunned, which is why, if they have any doubts, they will often hide them at all costs. I remember feeling like I was bound and gagged. Once a JW is either expelled from the organization, called “disfellowshipping”, or formally disassociates themself, they are treated as if they had died, or worse, as if they had never even existed in the first place. This is unimaginably painful, often leading to severe mental illness or even suicide. 

My Christian friends often ask me how they can talk to JWs in a way that might help them to wake up. First, remember what they stand to lose and be gentle and kind. Second, they probably won’t listen to you unless they are already questioning. If they are not ready to be intellectually honest, any effort at waking them up will probably prove fruitless. In that case, pray for them.

If you think your JW friend might be open to hearing you, try giving your testimony. (Revelation 12:11) Very rarely does arguing doctrine help, but it does happen. (I will write a future post on how to discuss doctrine with JWs.) Most JWs are well-trained to frustrate the average Christian with their labyrinthine eisegesis of the New World Translation of the Holy Scriptures. A die-hard JW will reject even the most biblically sound, well-thought-out argument because they are conditioned to believe that no one can understand the Bible except for the Governing Body of Jehovah’s Witnesses. But it is much harder for them to reject or explain away your encounters with God.

The above approach is my favorite because it bolsters faith in God. If a JW loses faith in the Watchtower organization before they have had a genuine encounter with God, they almost inevitably become atheist or agnostic. In fact, it has been estimated by some that up to 90 percent of ex JWs are unbelievers. So, if you decide to use any approach other than giving your testimony or discussing the Bible, do everything you can to help them hang on to their faith in God.

What kicked my own awakening into high gear was the Covid lockdowns. The emotional manipulation and spiritual abuse perpetrated by the leadership became so painfully obvious during that time that I finally felt that I had to question my beloved organization. Most JWs will not be able to question their indoctrination until they can clearly see that the organization is suspect and may not deserve their trust. They will defend the interpretations of the organization to their dying breath unless they at some point are able to see the humbug behind the curtain, the flawed, imperfect, and even devious men behind the impeccable facade.

If you decide to try to show a JW the truth about the organization, make sure that you stick to the facts. There is a lot of unprovable conjecture on the internet about the Watchtower organization. But hard, verifiable facts are available. JWs are extremely suspicious of outside information about the organization and will almost inevitably dismiss any negative information as “apostate lies” unless you can prove beyond a shadow of a doubt that what you are presenting is true. Even then, they may either claim you are lying or that your source is biased and unreliable. And again, emphasize that just because the Watchtower organization is untrustworthy does not mean that God is.

Making JWs aware of their own history can also be a good way to wake them up. If the foundation is rotten, the building cannot stand. For many, all it took was to read some of Charles T. Russell’s original works and the scales fell from their eyes. Russell, the founder of the Watchtower organization who fancied himself a prophet of God, was very fond of setting dates for the second coming of Christ, and every date that he set was wrong. This made him a false prophet. For more on the history of the Watchtower organization’s many bizarre teachings and doctrinal flip flops, see jwfacts.org.  In fact, that website is a treasure trove of information, not only on Watchtower history, but on all things JW.

Can you imagine being immersed in a reality that is really a mirage? Can you imagine then waking up to that fact? Can you imagine the disorientation and pain? The movie The Truman Show was an amazingly applicable parable about just that. There is a quote from that film that I find especially apt for helping people to understand JWs, especially those who were brought up in the organization. It is this: “We accept the reality with which we are presented.” That is true. But what happens when that reality starts to crumble? It can be both exhilarating and terrifying.

My Christian brothers and sisters, next time the JWs come knocking, maybe think twice about hiding in the back room or telling them to get lost. They are precious to God, and they need what you have. They are trapped and silenced in a cruelly seductive and demanding system of psychological control from which it is very difficult to escape. Many of them are genuinely seeking God, and what they have been taught by the organization really seems true to them. They deserve your love and compassion, not rejection or cruelty. “It is for freedom that you were set free.” (Galatians 5:1) JWs need the freedom that you probably take for granted. The most loving thing you can do is to learn how to speak to them effectively. And if your efforts are rejected, pray, pray, pray. Give them time. Give them grace. It could literally mean their lives.

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Deliverance

(All scripture citations are taken from the New King James Version of the Bible)

“We think caged birds sing when, indeed, they cry.” – John Webster

The enemies of God like to “kill, steal, and destroy.” (John 10:10) In my last post, I wrote about the freedom that Christ Jesus has given to his followers and explained how to experience and hang on to that freedom through strong faith in the promises and truths found in the scriptures. But some people find that even after coming to Christ and putting their faith in Him, they still feel as if they are under attack: depressed, anxious, angry, and stuck. Why is this? Often, it is because of unresolved trauma and deception from their past, which I believe was the case for me.

I am going to share my own very personal story of deliverance, knowing that it will likely bring much criticism, because I believe that true stories are powerful. I want others to experience the freedom and joy in the Lord that I have come to know. I want you to know that if you love Jesus, you do not have to live your life in continual struggle and defeat. There is freedom to be had right now, not sometime in the future.

After leaving Jehovah’s Witnesses and giving my life to Christ, I finally began to feel safe. I finally felt some measure of peace. But it wasn’t long before I started having episodes of deep depression. The intensity of these episodes did not make sense. They seemed to suddenly come out of nowhere. One day I got some clarity about this when I got fed up with what I was feeling and shouted, “get off me, Satan!” By the next day, I felt as if a massive weight had been lifted. The depression and heaviness disappeared, poof! It was replaced by a sense lightness and peace.

I wish I could say that that was the end of my battle, but it was just the beginning. The night that it was announced at the local Kingdom Hall that I was “no longer one of Jehovah’s Witnesses,” the spiritual warfare I had been experiencing intensified greatly. The enemy does not like to lose people, and he will fight tooth and nail when someone begins to escape his grasp.

Involvement with false religion is a major open door to demons. As a Jehovah’s Witness, I thought I had been serving the God of the Bible by serving the Watchtower organization. I was completely ignorant of the fact that I had been deceived by “doctrines of demons.” (1 Timothy 4:1) I thought that by my involvement with the organization, I had total protection from demons. But in fact, it was quite the opposite. Just like many occultists, I was not conscious of any overt demonic opposition while I was in the organization, although I was experiencing an enormous amount of anxiety and depression. It was not until I tried to leave and serve Christ that the wheels fell off and I was able to see the truth.

The warfare intensified even further when I started going to church. I had been taught as a JW that all Christian churches were demonic. Although that was something I no longer believed, the demons used that indoctrination to try to deceive me into believing that going to church was making me demonized. Saturday nights, I would often not be able to sleep at all so that it was extremely difficult to drag myself to church the next day. Sunday nights after church, I would wake up at around 3 AM and experience a barrage of negative, fearful thoughts. I would also sometimes hear knocks and taps in my room. For a short time, the deception worked, and I quit going to church thinking that it was making God angry.

What helped me was to hear the stories of other Christians who had experienced similar warfare after coming to Christ. Often, they had a background in the New Age, witchcraft, or in a false religion similar to the one I left. (See the testimony of Naela Rose) I started to realize that now, just as was the case after I officially left JWs, my experiences were not evidence that I was angering God, but that I was angering the demons.

That knowledge gave me the strength to fight hard. I decided that no matter what, I would not allow the demons to stop me from meeting with other Christians. But they were not giving up. I experienced all manner of attack – the nighttime attacks continued, my car broke down in multiple and bizarre ways, and I got hurt over and over in ways that made no sense. All of these things can be chalked up to coincidence if you take each incidence on its own, but taken together, it formed a bizarre pattern that could not possibly be blamed on chance.

Gradually, the Lord clearly showed me the path to freedom. He began to make me aware of the reality of demonization and how to find deliverance. I repented of anything I could think of that I had done that was related to occultism. I got rid of books that I had that were related to New Age practices such as meditation and yoga. I also got rid of crystals that I had used for healing. After that, I thought I was done purging. But there was one more health practice that the Lord himself had to warn me of personally, since I had not even considered that it could be dangerous.

One night, I had a vivid dream that woke me up to a pitfall I had been unaware of before. In the dream, I was being followed around by a big, ugly, scary-looking man. I came up to a bookcase and pulled out a familiar-looking book about homeopathy that I had used for years to help me prescribe remedies. I told the ugly man that I knew a lot about that book. Immediately, he attacked me, and then I woke up. I knew the dream was from God and that it meant something. As soon as I began to ponder the dream, in my mind I heard God say, “Get rid of all of your homeopathy books. Burn them!” I could hardly believe it! I had begun to understand that I had been involved in some ungodly health practices, but I was shocked to find out that homeopathy was one of them. I asked the Lord for confirmation, and I found it in this video. So, I took everything I had that was related to homeopathy, hundreds of dollars’ worth of books and remedies, and got rid of them. I tried burning a few of the books, but they were difficult to burn, and I ended up trashing most of it. After that, the knocking and tapping in my room stopped for a time, but I still had a long way to go.

One night, I prayed for help and relief and for God to provide someone to teach me about deliverance. The very next evening after I said that prayer, I was at church and a group of loving brothers and sisters surrounded me and prayed for me. I began to cry intensely and uncontrollably. I was feeling deep guilt and shame for the way I had raised my children. I was also in a lot of pain. One brother mentioned that he thought I might need deliverance. I realized in that moment that God had answered my prayer.

Although ultimately that couple did not feel able to directly help me with deliverance, they gave me a book and directed me to a church where I could find help. That book was Break Free by Vlad Savchuk, and the church was his church, Hungry Generation in Pasco, Washington. I knew about pastor Vlad, but I was afraid to go to his church. I had heard scary things about Pentecostals and about Hungry Generation in particular. My friend tried to reassure me, but I was not yet ready for something like that.

I knew I needed to find help, though, and although I was not ready for Hungry Generation, I thought maybe I could find some Christians to help me privately. Through Torben Sondergaard’s ministry, The Last Reformation, I found two ladies who were willing to take me through some deliverance prayers privately. The day that they prayed for me, I do not believe I experienced any true deliverance, although the process I went through may have set me up for what happened three days later.

For weeks, I had been slowly throwing away all of my old JW literature. I had an enormous amount of it, and I had been gradually adding it to the outdoor trash can week by week. The day that I went to those ladies for prayer, I had not yet been able to get rid of all of it. In fact, that day was trash day. When I returned home, the outside bin had been emptied, and I was ready to toss the rest of my literature. As I was throwing things in the bin, I hesitated when I came to my old New World Translation Bibles. I figured it would be fine to keep them since they’re just Bibles. But as I pulled them out of the box, I distinctly heard in my mind, “NO!” But even then, I doubted that the NO could have come from God. I convinced myself that it was okay to keep them.

That night, I woke up from a nightmare at 3 AM feeling sick and anxious. I was under attack again. I was so frustrated that this was still happening after I tried so hard to get delivered. I asked God to show me why he was allowing this attack to happen to me. In my mind, I saw the Bibles. I saw myself receiving one of them at the first annual meeting of Jehovah’s Witnesses that we had been able to attend in our Kingdom Halls via video link. I saw how worshipful I had felt about the Governing Body of Jehovah’s Witnesses and about the newly revised Bible that we called the “Silver Sword.” The Lord was showing me that the organization had been my idol and that those Bibles represented my idol. I also knew by that time that the NWT is a very bad translation. There are many problems with it, but probably the most serious issue is that the translators made terrible translation decisions that reflect their denial of the deity of Christ. (Click here for a playlist of videos on the problems with the NWT.)

I was completely aghast. I actually argued with God, “But they’re BIBLES, Lord!” All I heard from him was “NO!” So that morning, I dutifully marched those Bibles out to the trash bin and threw them in. It was a little painful, if I were to be honest. Just a couple hours later as I was sitting in on a Zoom Bible study, I started to feel very nauseated. Soon, I was in the bathroom throwing up. This didn’t feel like a normal illness. I had not eaten anything that could have given me food poisoning and I did not have a fever. I felt sort of panicky as everything came out. Sitting totally drained on the bottom of my shower, I started to form a question in my mind about what had just happened. Immediately I clearly heard in my mind, “this is your deliverance.” Again, it was hard for me to believe that it was the Lord speaking. I had expected someone to lay their hands on me and I would maybe manifest a little and then be free. But this happened at home in my bathroom, completely spontaneously, apparently in response to my intense desire to be free and probably even more, to my willingness to rid myself of all vestiges of the bondage to idolatry and false religion in which I had lived my entire life. I thanked the Lord. I think my exact words were, “if this is really deliverance, thank you Jesus!” He said to me, “Never again follow anyone but me!”

I experienced quite a lot of relief from demonic attack after that experience. But soon, the Lord started to speak to me about going to Hungry Generation. For about 4 months, he never stopped trying to get through to me. I continued to resist out of fear and because I felt very happy and comfortable in my church. I didn’t want to have to start over in a new church, 45 minutes away from where I lived. I had already been rejected and shunned by my entire family and all my JW friends. I was just barely getting established in a new life and feeling like I had been given a new family. I just could not believe God would uproot me again. But when I said, “Lord, don’t you want me to go to my church?” He gave me a firm NO.

But when, after a period of time of feeling relatively free, I had a vile nightmare, I realized that maybe I wasn’t really done with deliverance. I also noticed that I was having a very difficult time being respectful to my husband. Then, I caught two severe viruses in a row and was sick for two months straight. So, I finally gave in and decided to go to Hungry Generation, not to the Sunday service, but to the deliverance service that they hold once a month, hoping that if I went just once and got some more deliverance, that I would be able to stay at my old church.

On the drive to Pasco, I felt the Holy Spirit on me, showing me that I was doing the right thing. I really did not believe that anything was going to happen to me. But as I stood in that prayer line, I asked God to show me why He had me there. When the minister came and laid his hand on my head, I immediately started shaking uncontrollably. It felt as if my bones were going to come out of their joints. When he demanded that the demon inside of me speak out and answer his questions, I felt as if I was receiving clear answers in my mind, so I spoke out. It said that its name was Jezebel and that it had been in me since I was a baby. It said that it had ruined my health and my life. I don’t know if it was telling the truth about any of that, but what I do know is that something evil was in me and that that night it came out. It wasn’t long before I felt all the strength leave my legs and I fell down. I was declared free and sent into a room for counseling. (If this sounds bizarre, just remember the account where Jesus interrogated the demon who called himself Legion at Mark 5:9)

As you can imagine, I was very shaken by that experience. Afterwards, I felt like I’d drunk an entire pot of coffee. On the drive home, I asked the Lord, “Am I done now?”, and he said “no!” I asked him how much involvement he wanted me to have in that church, and he responded, “Total.” Even then, I thought maybe I could try going to both churches. But in the end, I had to obey the Lord and devote my time and energy to Hungry Generation.

For some people, deliverance seems to happen gradually, like peeling layers off of an onion. I have been one of those people. I think the reason for this is because demons hang on to us through mental strongholds, ways of thinking that are not in agreement with God’s truth. As we heal and bring our thoughts into agreement with truth, this removes whatever hold the demons have had, and they have to leave upon command. I had a lot of mental blocks which could only be dismantled through the process of renewing my mind. (Romans 12:2)

After my experience at prayer line, I actually experienced increased spiritual warfare for a time. The demons that I had given place to and which had not yet left me were angry and restless, likely knowing that I was on a journey that would ultimately lead to their ousting.

The friend and teacher that I had prayed for months earlier appeared the day that I stood up in church and shared my testimony. Ann Chojnacki is a mighty woman of God who answers the telephone prayer line for Hungry Generation. She has a passion for bringing people to Christ, praying for them, and building them up in the faith. She asked me to visit her in her home so that she could help me spiritually. This she did, praying for me, letting me talk, and helping me to understand my position in Christ. This considerably accelerated my spiritual growth. I also received more freedom through her prayers.

I enrolled in Hungry Generation’s Life Class, which is a 6-week-long discipleship program that ends in a three-day retreat where we received additional instruction, encouragement, inner healing, and deliverance. My experience there was beautiful. I received another deliverance when a friend laid hands on me and prayed that ungodly soul ties would be cut. Since I had received deliverance prayer the night before and nothing had happened, I assumed I was not in need of any more deliverance. But this illustrates the importance of pinpointing issues. As soon as she started praying, I instantly started to shake and cry and lose strength in my legs. Later, I got filled with the Holy Spirit and spoke in tongues for the first time. I can’t even describe the joy of that moment! The only thing that comes close is the joy a mother feels when she holds her baby for the first time. It is pure love!

Many have objections to the idea that a Christian could have demons. My question for those people would be this: since Jesus commanded his followers to cast out demons, from whom, then, do you cast demons out? I would submit that a Christian can have whatever they open themselves up to. It would be pointless if not dangerous to try to cast demons out of unbelievers unless they were willing to accept Christ before or immediately after deliverance because the demons are usually unwilling to leave a person who has given them permission to stay, and if they do leave, they will often come right back. It’s like a revolving door. But those who disagree feel that their objections to the ministry of deliverance are scriptural, ignoring or recategorizing the lived experience of Christians who have been through demonization and deliverance. I want to take a close look at two of those objections and scrutinize them in the light of scripture.

Objection #1: A Christian cannot be possessed by a demon because he is already possessed by the Holy Spirit.

This objection seems to be based on the fact that many translations of the Bible use the phrase “demon possessed” to translate the Greek term, daimonizomai. Literally, it means “demonized.” It does not signify ownership, but partial control of an aspect of a person’s life. A Christian cannot be possessed by a demon because he is, or ought to be, possessed by the Holy Spirit. But a Christian can be demonized, which means that there is some aspect of their life that is being unduly influenced by a demon or demons. How could this be?

Paul warned fellow Christians that they should not “give place to the devil.” (Ephesians 4:26-27) How might a person do that? Living a carnal life, given over to the works of the flesh, is an open invitation to demons. (Galatians 5:19-21) Some of the works of the flesh include:

  1. Sexual immorality, including sex before marriage, adultery, and pornography.
  2. Occultism, including certain New Age practices such as astrology, reiki, and yoga.
  3. False religions.
  4. Antisocial and narcissistic behaviors such as rage, jealousy, envy, and abusive speech.
  5. Addictions, which are a form of idolatry.
  6. Getting high or drunk.
  7. Murder, including abortion.

One of the most prevalent ways that Christians give place to the devil is through unforgiveness. Jesus was very serious when he said that we must forgive in order to be forgiven. (Matthew 6:14) Very often, when a person needs deliverance, but no progress is being made, it is because that person harbors unforgiveness in their heart towards someone. When true forgiveness is expressed, that opens the way to freedom.

Objection #2: Holy Spirit and an evil spirit cannot exist in the same vessel.

2 Corinthians 6:14 states “Do not be unequally yoked together with unbelievers. For what fellowship has righteousness with lawlessness? And what communion has light with darkness?” This scripture is often used to teach the idea that a Christian cannot have a demon. But is it saying that light and darkness cannot coexist? Or is it saying that it should not? Can a Christian be unequally yoked together with an unbeliever? Of course, it happens all the time. Should they? Absolutely not! So, this scripture cannot be used to defend the position that an evil spirit and the Holy Spirit cannot exist in the same vessel. They shouldn’t, but they can. If it were true that the Holy Spirit could not coexist with evil spirits, He would have to leave the earth entirely, as it is overrun with evil spirits.

Jesus made it clear that deliverance is for the children of God in his conversation with a Canaanite woman who wanted him to deliver her daughter from demons. Here is the passage:

“And behold, a woman of Canaan came from that region and cried out to Him, saying, “Have mercy on me, O Lord, Son of David! My daughter is severely demon-possessed.” But He answered her not a word. And His disciples came and urged Him, saying, “Send her away, for she cries out after us.” But He answered and said, “I was not sent except to the lost sheep of the house of Israel.” Then she came and worshiped Him, saying, “Lord, help me!” But He answered and said, “It is not good to take the children’s bread and throw it to the little dogs.” And she said, “Yes, Lord, yet even the little dogs eat the crumbs which fall from their masters’ table.” Then Jesus answered and said to her, “O woman, great is your faith! Let it be to you as you desire.” And her daughter was healed from that very hour.” – Matthew 15:22-28

During his ministry, Jesus considered the Jewish people the children of God. (Deuteronomy 14:1) His death and resurrection paved the way for Gentiles (non-Jews) who believe on the Lord Jesus to be grafted into the rootstock of Israel and to be called God’s children. (Romans 11:17-18) As the children of God, we are entitled to the bread of deliverance. It is “the children’s bread.”

The casting out of demons was a prominent part of Jesus’s ministry. (Mark 1:34) And he commanded his followers to do likewise. (Matthew 10:8; Luke 10:17, 19) We have ‘authority over…all the power of the enemy,’ and we are expected to use that authority.

When I was a JW, I used to wonder, if Jesus cast out so many demons, why weren’t we doing as he did? It didn’t make any sense to me to believe that demonic activity had ceased since the first century. In fact, it seemed that it had only increased. It was a major revelation to me to find out that there are modern day Christians who cast out demons just as Jesus did, and that demonization is not, in fact, rare, but just as common nowadays as it was in Jesus’s time, maybe more. Although at first the idea of seeing a demonic manifestation made me very uncomfortable, I knew that Jesus dealt with that very thing all the time, and that his willingness to deal with it resulted in freedom and sanity for the people he ministered to. (Luke 8:35)

I am no longer uncomfortable with deliverance. In fact, I often pray deliverance prayers and command demons to come out in Jesus’s name. I have seen many demons cast out. Sometimes they manifest in ugly ways, crying, screaming, or causing a person to gag, cough, or vomit. Notice in the following scriptures that it was not uncommon in Jesus’s day for demons to cause a raucous as they came out: Mark 1:23-26; 5:2-13; 9:25-27; Acts 8:7. But once the person being prayed for receives their freedom, it is a beautiful thing to behold. There is such joy and relief. It is a miracle from God. If you would like to see a striking example of what I am talking about, watch this video.

People need deliverance. It is vital that as Christians, we receive our full freedom in Christ and that we also help others to receive their freedom. In my next post I will go into greater depth on how people can become demonized, how they can close doors to the demons so that they can be fully delivered, and how, afterward, they can remain free.

Related information:

What you Need to Know About Deliverance Ministry

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Are Spiritual Gifts for Today?

The first time I ever attended a Christian church, the pastor prayed that those in attendance would speak in tongues (the phenomenon where a person is miraculously able to speak in another language) and that someone there would also have an interpretation (1 Corinthians 12:10). Having been raised as a Jehovah’s Witness, I had been taught that spiritual gifts such as tongues had passed away after the first century and that any supposed miraculous gift was actually the work of the Devil. I panicked a little. I was beginning to believe that JWs were wrong about the gifts, but I was still very nervous. What if this pastor was actually inviting demons into his church?

Jehovah’s Witnesses are not the only religious group that teaches cessationism (the idea that the miraculous spiritual gifts spoken of in the New Testament have passed away). Many denominations that are in other ways considered doctrinally orthodox are also cessationist. As far as I can see, this teaching is not at all scriptural but seems to be based upon the fact that over the centuries, the church appeared to have largely lost the ability to operate in what many call the “sign gifts” (speaking in tongues, prophecy, miracles, and healing).

The first question to ask is this: is it actually true that the sign gifts ceased after the first century? The quick answer to that question is an emphatic no. We have record of the fact that the gifts were still in operation centuries after the apostles passed off the scene, although they seem to have become less commonly reported. Another important question to consider: if operation of the gifts did become more of a rarity as time went on, why would that have been? Was it because God had always meant to remove those gifts at that time, or because of something else? Is it possible that as Christianity became more mainstream and accepting of pagan traditions, that God withdrew those gifts from the majority of professed Christians because of their lukewarmness and/or idolatry?

Some cessationists claim to have biblical backing for their beliefs. The scripture they often use to back their claim is 1 Corinthians 13:8:

Love never fails, but if there are gifts of prophecy, they will be done away; if there are tongues, they will cease; if there is knowledge, it will be done away.” (LSB)

Taken out of context, this text does indeed seem to indicate that spiritual gifts would cease. But the question is, when would they cease? Read in context, the meaning of this text becomes clear:

“Love never fails, but if there are gifts of prophecy, they will be done away; if there are tongues, they will cease; if there is knowledge, it will be done away. For we know in part and we prophesy in part, but when the perfect comes, the partial will be done away. When I was a child, I used to speak like a child, think like a child, reason like a child. When I became a man, I did away with childish things. For now we see in a mirror dimly, but then face to face. Now I know in part, but then I will know fully just as I also have been fully known.” – 1 Corinthians 13:8-12, LSB

What is “the perfect” spoken about in that passage? Some cessationists claim that it refers to the completed canon of scripture. They say that once the scriptures were complete and available for Christians to read, there was no more need of the sign gifts. But does that make sense? Do the scriptures anywhere teach that once all the inspired writings were compiled and canonized that there would be no more need of the miraculous? Do the scriptures anywhere explicitly state that “the perfect” referred to in 1 Corinthians is the completed canon of scripture? Of course not. But in the very same chapter we see a clear clue as to what is being referred to by the phrase, “the perfect.” In verse 12, we see that when the perfect comes, we will be able to see “face to face.” See who? Well, who is it that is prophesied to return to earth? Who are we going to see face to face? Matthew 5:8 says that “the pure in heart…shall see God.” Revelation refers to God as “the one who is and who was and who is to come…” In Revelation 3:11, the glorified Jesus is recorded as having said, “I am coming to you quickly…”

What can we conclude? It seems very clear to me that 1 Corinthians 13:8 is stating that when Jesus returns, there will be no more need of the gifts because we will be with him. Jesus has not yet returned; therefore, the gifts have not yet ceased. They are still available and in operation in the church today. And it is my opinion that the reason why we see the gifts operating so much more today than in the past is because we are getting very close to the return of Christ and those gifts are needed to empower the body of Christ to accomplish and to accelerate the work of the great commission. (Matthew 28:19, 20; Luke 24:49; Acts 1:8)

Another argument that cessationists often use is that because people in pagan religions experience supernatural experiences such as speaking in tongues, that the supernatural experiences of charismatic Christians must also be demonic. This is the argument that affected me the most and took the longest for me to overcome in my own mind.

It is true that demons are able to give power to their followers. Witches and warlocks do have supernatural experiences and can cause others to have supernatural experiences. But are demons the only spirit beings that have power? Of course not! The Bible is very clear about the fact that our God is much more powerful than Satan and that he does intervene miraculously in the lives of humans. (1 Kings 18:20-40) Throughout the Old Testament and the New we see example after example of God’s miraculous power and His desire to use that power to help His people.

When Moses and Aaron performed miracles before Pharo in Egypt, Pharo’s sorcerers were able to imitate some of those miracles. When Aaron threw down his staff and it became a snake, the sorcerers also threw down their staffs and they also became snakes. Does this mean that Aaron’s power came from the same source as the power displayed by those sorcerers? The answer became clear when Moses’s snake swallowed the snakes of the sorcerers. (Exodus 7:8-13) The devil may be able to imitate the works of God, but he will never be more powerful than God. And that is all he can do: imitate, and weakly at that.

If both Pagans and Christians can speak in tongues, does that mean that all tongues come from the same source? What was the source of the tongues spoken by the first century Christians? The Bible clearly states at Acts 2:4 that the Spirit, that is God’s Holy Spirit, “gave them utterance.” If the gifts of the Spirit have not ceased and they are all available for Christians now, then it logically follows that God must be the source of the miraculous tongues spoken by true Christians today, and that the same principle applies to all of the miraculous gifts. Satan’s weak imitations do not nullify God’s genuine displays of power.

The gifts of the Spirit are not an optional bonus that some Christians have access to but not others. We all have access to all of the gifts. We need them. Jesus instructed his followers to wait in Jerusalem until they received power from on high. They had already been given the authority to preach the gospel and cast out demons. So why did they need to wait in Jerusalem for the power?

We see a clue to the answer in what actually happened after the disciples received the baptism of the Holy Spirit and spoke in tongues. (Acts 2:5-13; 40-47) Three thousand people were saved and baptized because of what they saw and heard. Likewise, today when people hear miraculous tongues or see miraculous healings and deliverances, those experiences are often what convinces them that God is real, that he loves and helps people, and that they should listen to the gospel of Jesus Christ and be saved.

I have a friend who is a Christian now because he witnessed the miracle of deliverance from demons. He attended a church service where demons manifested and left people in response to commands for them to come out in Jesus’s name. Going into that service, he doubted even the existence of God or of the supernatural. He came out a believer.

The baptism of the Holy Spirit also endues Christians with great power and boldness to declare the gospel. (Acts 4:31) We need that power and boldness in order to accomplish our assignments as Christians. It is not natural for us to desire to speak to strangers about something that may make them angry or uncomfortable. But with the power and direction of the Holy Spirit, we both desire and are able to clearly and lovingly speak out.

Since I left the Watchtower organization and have become a born-again Christian, I have experienced the supernatural power of God in ways that I never thought I would. I have appreciated the reassurance I have received from those experiences because as a Christian, I am in a constant war with “the rulers of the darkness of this age.” – Ephesians 6:12 (NKJV). We have a powerful enemy, which is one of the reasons why our much more powerful God fills us with His power.

The first time I experienced a healing miracle was on a day when I felt the most powerless. I had severe pain in my hips which made it excruciatingly difficult to walk. In fact, I had to crawl even to get to the bathroom. But it was a Sunday, and I desperately wanted and needed to go to church for encouragement. I said a very bold prayer. I told God how much I wanted to be at church and asked him to put the bones in my hips back in place and take away all the inflammation. By that evening, I was walking without pain and was able to attend the evening Bible study at church. After the service, one of my friends informed me that the whole church had been praying for my recovery. It brought tears to my eyes to think of the great love of a God who would do something like that for me.

Since then, I have heard of, witnessed, and experienced many more miracles, but there is one in particular I want to share. Last Summer, I attended a Christian conference where many miracles occurred. I myself felt the tangible presence of the Holy Spirit while I was there and experienced the healing of my hip pain. But what was really amazing was the experience of one woman who had suffered from MS for 30 years with many, many symptoms. Several weeks after the conference, she came to my church and gave her testimony. She reported that before the conference, she could barely walk, needed oxygen to breathe, and was in enormous pain. This woman encountered the power of God at that conference in such a way that she fell down. She reports feeling heat all over her body and that when she got up, her pain was gone, her breathing was normal, and she could walk normally. Weeks later, she was able to report that she was off all medications but one which had to be tapered, she still did not need supplemental oxygen, and she was still pain free and able to walk normally. She shared doctor’s reports from before the healing and after and the documented changes were miraculous. God did that in response to her great faith, the faith of the minister who prayed for her, and the faith of the many who attended that conference. And I can confidently say that this is not a once in a lifetime experience. I regularly hear amazing healing testimonies from people that I know and trust.

The gifts of the Spirit are real, they are for today, and they are for you if you are a believer. The teaching that the gifts have ceased is a wicked lie designed to disempower God’s people and dampen their faith. Our God loves us very much and He wants us to enjoy all that He gave us when he sent His Holy Spirit to dwell within us.

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After the Org

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The true follower of Christ will not ask “If I embrace this truth, what will it cost me?” Rather he will say, “This is truth. God help me to walk in it, let come what may!” – A.W. Tozer

LIFE IN THE ORG

I must have been 5 or 6 years old. I was at my little friend’s house across the street from where I lived.

“You’re going to die in Armageddon,” I blurted out in cruel, childish innocence.

My friend’s father happened to overhear my statement. “Jesus loves everybody!” he said, “I think you had better go home now!”

This is such a long-ago memory that I can’t be sure of our exact words. But I do remember the feeling of confusion and rejection brought on by the neighbor’s reaction to my foolishness. I could not at that time possibly have understood that I had been taught regrettable religious lies by my family, who loved me dearly, and who themselves had been brought up with the same lies.

I was raised as a Jehovah’s Witness. My parents, grandparents, and great grandparents had all been Jehovah’s Witnesses. It was all I knew for 46 years of my life until, during the recent pandemic lockdowns, I finally woke up.

My mother taught me about Jehovah God from a dark red book called “You Can Live Forever in Paradise on Earth.” I loved that book, especially the illustrations. It had bright, technicolor paintings of “the New System”, as we called it then. I wanted with all my heart to be there in paradise with the lions and elephants. And I loved Jehovah, who promised that everyone who obeyed him by being part of his organization would get to live there.

Jehovah’s Witnesses put enormous emphasis on evangelism. From the time I was a small child, I went “from house to house and door to door” (lyrics to a song we sang) distributing Watchtower and Awake magazines, brochures, and books. We were taught that canvassing our communities with the “good news of the Kingdom” was the most important thing we could possibly do for Jehovah. A core early memory of mine was was walking down a street while in the door to door ministry in a tiny town in north Idaho with my grandma. I was looking at my little brown shoes when grandma told me that I had beautiful feet because those feet were carrying a life saving message. (Isaiah 52:7) That conversation never left me and contributed greatly to my spiritual formation.

I was taught that everyone outside of “Jehovah’s organization” would be destroyed by God’s fire balls and earthquakes in the battle of Armageddon. We had graphic pictures of that in the red book too. This was worrisome to me, because it seemed like the kids in my fourth grade class at school were mostly pretty nice. I didn’t want them to die like that. So I tried to tell them. I even wrote a note about it during class and passed it around the entire classroom. As you can imagine, that did not go over well with my teacher.

Although I wanted to get baptized probably from the age of 8 on, my parents wisely made me wait until I was 12, almost 13 before I was allowed. By that time, much of my excitement about it had worn off, but I was still thrilled to officially “symbolize my dedication to Jehovah” through water baptism at the 1988 international convention of Jehovah’s Witnesses in Vancouver B.C. It meant that I could finally auxiliary pioneer (spend a 60 hours per month in the door to door evangelizing ministry).

Nearly every summer during my teens, I spent several weeks staying with my grandparents in Moscow, Idaho, where we spent nearly every day all day in the door to door ministry. I dearly loved and respected my grandparents. Their devotion to God and his organization impressed me. The skillfulness with which they explained their faith to perfect strangers inspired me. They were my role models and I hoped to someday be as adept and devoted as they were.

After I graduated from high school, I immediately went into the full-time ministry, which for Witnesses entailed spending 90 hours per month evangelizing from door to door and on city streets. Soon, I was also serving in a Spanish-speaking congregation, having learned some Spanish in school. My pioneer partner also wanted to be a missionary and was saving up to go to Ecuador. Although I didn’t have the funds to go, I wanted very much to go there with her. I hoped I would eventually be invited to Gilead, a school for the training of missionaries. My motives for all of this were good – I loved God and I loved people. All I cared about was pleasing Jehovah and doing the highest good for the greatest number of people possible. I truly believed that baptizing people into my religion was the way to do that.

Instead of moving to Ecuador or going to Gilead, I met and married my husband. We had three beautiful boys, all of whom we raised as Jehovah’s Witnesses, just as we had been.

Through the years, I had many experiences as a Witness that should have given me pause about the organization in which I had been raised. I saw much domestic abuse, physical as well as verbal, among my Witness friends. I heard about a case of child molestation at the hands of a Witness man. I had many severely depressed friends, heard about suicides, and went through several of my own nervous breakdowns. All was not well in our “spiritual paradise”, as Witnesses are taught to call the organization. But even so, I could not conceive of ever leaving it. In my mind, there was absolutely no way that “the truth” was not really the truth.

Although I would not have admitted it then, I believe things began to unravel for me during one of our annual memorial celebrations. Jehovah’s Witnesses do not celebrate communion the way Christians do it. Once a year, they gather to hear a talk about how Jesus died for our sins. During that talk, we are reminded that since only 144,000 anointed followers of Christ will go to heaven, that most of us will not need to drink the wine or eat the bread – the emblems, as they call them. Only the anointed get to partake. The rest of us observed by passing the bread and then the wine among us without partaking. We were taught that only the anointed know that they are anointed and that we were not to ask them questions about how they knew. They just knew, and if we had any question at all in our minds about whether or not we were anointed, we weren’t.

During one particular memorial of this kind, I had an extraordinary experience. At the time, I had no way to understand what was happening to me. Now I know that I was experiencing the presence of God through the Holy Spirit. I was given a vision inviting me to go heaven to be with Jesus. Embarrassingly, I could not hold back my tears. I just felt flooded with love and acceptance and I didn’t know what to do about it. I wasn’t supposed to feel this way. I was not supposed to be having this experience. It terrified me so much that I actually told God that if I was not really of the “anointed”, that I wanted him to take away the feelings. He did, so I assumed that I had merely had a psychotic break and that I should try to go back to normal.

However, over the years, I could not forget what had happened to me. I grew increasingly interested in finding out from “anointed” ones what kind of experiences they had had. I also grew increasingly impatient with some of the attitudes I observed towards Witnesses who claimed to be anointed. Instead of being believed, many were accused of being mentally ill. I dreaded that happening to me, especially since I had already had bouts of depression and knew that if I claimed to be anointed, it would likely be blamed on that. So, year after year, I would pass that bread and wine like everyone else, all the time wondering if it was wrong of me to reject it.

The only other time in my life that I remember feeling the way I did at that memorial was when I was a little child. It must have been during the time my mother had studied the red book with me. I was just becoming aware of God and learning to pray for real, not the recited prayers I was taught as a little one. I remember standing in my bedroom and suddenly being flooded with the presence of God. All I could think of was that I wanted him to hold me in his arms. I wanted to just crawl into his lap and stay there forever. I thank God for that experience and for the one I had at the memorial, because they eventually led me back to him. Unlike many others who had been raised as Witnesses, I knew there was more. I knew what it felt like to be in the presence of the Almighty.

Shortly before the recent pandemic, probably sometime in 2018 or 2019, I asked God to let me feel again the way I had felt about him as a child. With the exception of my experience during the memorial, it had been decades since I had felt the weight of his loving presence. He answered that prayer, but not in the way I expected. What I didn’t know then was that in order to get that back, I would need to come out of my beloved religion.

The organization of my childhood was simpler than it is now. There was no JW broadcasting, no JW.org, no digital Bibles or publications, no music videos. We just had our Bibles and our magazines. We had our meetings where my piano teacher played piano to accompany our singing of the “Kingdom Melodies.” But in 2014, everything began to change. Everything went digital and our governing body members overnight became celebrities after the launch of JW Broadcasting. I wanted to like this. I wanted to appreciate it. But something about it felt wrong. Something about it felt fake.

After several years, I got used to the new digital format. Although that niggling doubt in the back of my mind never completely left, I truly felt privileged to be able to remotely attend every annual meeting and every Gilead graduation, which in the past had been reserved for only a select few. I enjoyed the new music videos and getting to hear our beloved governing body members speak to us on a regular basis. But something changed in 2020.

WAKING UP

Most thought we would be back to our Kingdom Halls within a couple of weeks after we were shut down due to a novel virus. Somehow, though, I didn’t think so. I had seen enough of what it had done to China to know that this was going to be big. So when we first got the announcement that we would not be having in-person meetings, I cried and cried. I prayed for every single family in my congregation, asking God to protect them both physically and spiritually. Because our regular door to door ministry was also curtailed, we began to write letters to people in our communities instead. I wrote piles of them. I wanted people to know we hadn’t forgotten about them and that we still cared.

Soon, we started to hear news of a new vaccine being formulated. This was supposed to avert the worst of the danger and get us all right back to work and to church. Ever the medical sleuth, I decided to dive in and do as much research as I could about the virus and the potential for a successful vaccine. What I discovered could fill a book of its own. It had me very worried.

When it comes to medical treatments, the organization had never been overly controlling (except on the matter of blood transfusions, which is a whole other topic.) But for the most part, we had always been told that medical treatment was a matter of personal choice and that we should never try to manipulate one another in that very personal area. Sometimes we would have articles in our magazines about certain treatments, but the final choice on how to handle medical matters was always left up to us. That is how I assumed the pandemic would be handled – that the facts might be presented, but that we would be left alone to make our own decisions. My assumptions turned out to be incorrect.

Things began to feel ominous when we began having “governing body updates” once a month on JW Broadcasting. The niggling doubts I had had before about the direction the organization seemed to be headed turned into alarm bells as I became painfully aware of the fact that these updates were becoming more and more manipulative. The apparent purpose of the updates was to keep Witnesses informed about how the pandemic was affecting the organization and to instruct us on what the governing body felt was the best course of action regarding safety measures and medical treatment. This seemed like a radical departure from their normal stance on most types of medical decisions. And the videos used blatant forms of manipulation which were at the same time deceptive and persuasive to Witnesses who felt that the governing body was speaking for God. The outcome was that Jehovah’s Witnesses walked in lockstep when it came to their thinking and decisions regarding public health and personal medical decisions. Although the governing body claimed that Witnesses had personal choice on these matters, the truth is that there was no room for deviation. Those who fell out of step with the majority were often shamed or even excluded.

We were made to feel that if we didn’t fall in line with everything the governing body said, we were rebelling against God himself. If I had had no love for God, that wouldn’t have hurt so much. But I did, and it was excruciating. I had finally come to a place in my life where my conscience was at odds with direction coming from the organization. The problem was, I had always been taught that those men were the only ones in the world who had a direct line of communication to God and that to disobey them was to disobey God. How, after having that drilled into my mind for a lifetime, was I supposed to deal with the fact that these supposedly Godly men seemed to me to be manipulating in a way that was harming the people I loved the most?

Because of what I was seeing in the organization, I decided to engage in an act of rebellion. Though we were forbidden to look outside the organization for information on the Bible or the organization itself, I did it. I read a book written by an ex governing body member, Raymond Franz, who was kicked out of the organization in 1980 for holding a different opinion on certain theological matters. His book, Crisis of Conscience, is sort of a right of passage for ex JWs. Once you read Franz, for many there’s no going back. All is revealed, pandora’s box is open, you’ve taken the red pill.

Imagine dealing with the psychological pain of what I just described and at the same time being hit with the most painful disease you have ever faced. Right after I read Crisis of Conscience In the autumn of 2021, I came down with a severe case of Covid-19. Fortunately, I avoided the hospital. But probably because I already had an autoimmune disease, I became completely debilitated and non-functional. I stopped sleeping, could barely eat, and endured excruciating stomach pain and all-over body pain for many, many months. Probably the most painful aspect of the illness was that it caused severe depression and brain fog. I would have bouts of horrible physical pain and suicidal mental anguish. The level of suffering was utterly demonic. But it was through this suffering that I began to wake up to a greater spiritual reality.

Once I was well enough to think and read some of the time, I decided, as my dear friend Vivian describes it, to “take off my Watchtower goggles” and for the first time read the Bible without an agenda other than the desire to know God and to discover what he had really revealed through the pages of the scriptures. It didn’t take long for me to realize that there really didn’t seem to be any scriptural basis for many of the doctrines I had been taught. Even so, I had a lot of fear. I wondered if maybe I really was just a rebellious apostate. Maybe I was wrong and the organization was right.

One day I took a walk and had a little talk with God. I very insistently told him that if I was wrong about the organization, I needed him to show me NOW, and I mean NOW. I told him that if I was wrong, that I was maybe making the biggest mistake of my life, and I didn’t want to do that. As soon as I got home, I decided to do my daily Bible reading. I wasn’t doing it to find any answers. It was my habit to read every day. I opened the Bible to where I had my ribbon, 2 Corinthians 11. When I came to verse 3, I started to suspect I was having a supernatural encounter. By the time I came to verses 13-15, I knew I had my answer. I had received a rhema word from God, though at the time I had no vocabulary to describe it. Here are the verses I read which spoke to my heart:

“But I am afraid that as the serpent deceived Eve by his cunning, your thoughts will be led astray from a pure and sincere devotion to Christ. For if someone comes and proclaims another Jesus than the one we proclaimed, or if you receive a different spirit from the one you received, or if you accept a different gospel from the one you accepted, you put up with it readily enough…For such men are false apostles, deceitful workmen, disguising themselves as apostles of Christ. And no wonder, for even Satan disguises himself as an angel of light. So it is no surprise if his servants, also, disguise themselves as servants of righteousness. Their end will correspond to their deeds…For you gladly bear with fools, being wise yourselves! For you bear it if someone makes slaves of you, or devours you, or takes advantage of you, or puts on airs, or strikes you in the face.” – 2 Corinthians 11:3-4,13-15, 19-20 (ESV)

All at once, I understood the implications of the word I had just received. The Governing Body of Jehovah’s Witnesses were false apostles. They were disguising themselves as angels of light. I began to cry my heart out. My whole world, my whole belief system, had come crashing down. And I knew that eventually, I was going to lose everything, including my parents, my friends, and my reputation. It was even possible that I could lose my marriage and my children, though I am happy to report that that has not happened and I hope it never will.

Through my studies, I saw clearly that all true Christians, not just the 144,000 “anointed ones,” are born again and would all see Christ and be with him forever. I eventually understood that Jesus is Lord and God and that I could actually talk to him, not just through him. I understood that the Father was my Abba Father and that I was his daughter. What joy to realize that Jesus really had been calling me all those years ago at the memorial! He really had been trying to get my attention, and I had told him no. I told my Lord no because of a man-made religion. It still hurts my heart to think that I did that.

After spending a few months alone with God and my Bible, I started attending the online Bible studies of David and Vivian Aspinall, an ex JW couple who have made it their mission to reach out to and help people who have been hurt by the Watchtower organization. I started to take communion at home while in Zoom meetings with those friends. It gave me such peace and joy! But at the same time, I was horribly conflicted about my relationship with my family, most of whom are Jehovah’s Witnesses. I was having to be more and more circumspect in my conversations with them to avoid having them discover my true beliefs. I knew that if they understand fully, they would disown me, and this caused massive internal conflict.

LEAVING

When I started to develop a strong desire to find a church to attend, I realized that I couldn’t go on pretending to be a “weak” and inactive JW. I needed to tell my parents the truth both for my mental health and simply out of obedience to God. I remember feeling stabbed to the heart when I read Jesus’ words at Matthew 10:37-39:

“He who loves Father or Mother more than me is not worthy of me. And he who loves son or daughter more than me is not worthy of me. He who finds his life will lose it, and he who loses his life for my sake will find it.”

Nabeel Qureshi, an ex Muslim Christian apologist, quoted the above text in his testimony as he explained how the scriptures convicted him of his need to tell his parents, knowing that they would likely disown him, about his decision to follow Christ and leave Islam. The religion of Jehovah’s Witnesses is similar to Islam in some ways. Muslims living in countries governed by strict Islamic regimes risk their actual lives by leaving the religion. Nabeel was an American Muslim, which fortunately exempted him from that risk, but he knew that he could lose his family. JWs also risk losing all of their family and friends, especially if their families have been in the organization for several generations as mine had. Nabeel described the agony that I, too, felt as I contemplated the massive loss that I would endure and the horrible pain my family would suffer if I were to tell them the truth. And as I listened to his story, I knew that in spite of what would happen, I had to reveal the truth.

The hardest thing I have ever had to do in my life was to make myself drop in the mailbox the letter to my parents revealing my decision to leave the Watchtower organization. As soon as it left my hands into that box and I knew I couldn’t retrieve it, a deep and and uncontrollable sob shook my body and I couldn’t stop crying for hours. It was like having a limb torn off.

About a month after I sent that letter, I became aware that my local elder body had been alerted to what I had written and wanted to have a meeting with me. This sent shock waves of panic through my body as I realized I had several choices – one was to meet with the elders and tell them in person why I no longer believed that the organization was the only path to God, another was to simply refuse to meet or communicate with the elder body, and the third was to send of a letter of disassociation that I had preprepared for an occasion such as this. Choice number one, although the most honorable and possibly beneficial to my friends, seemed physically and psychologically impossible at the time. Just telling my parents had made me feel as if I was having a heart attack. I didn’t feel capable of facing a judicial committee. Choice number two could have preserved for a time some of my relationships, although it would have drawn out that stressful period of transition as well as very likely ending in my eventual disfellowshipping en absentia. I chose to send my letter. I felt a deep need to completely disconnect myself from the organization that had almost stolen my salvation, had stolen my relationship with my family, and had destroyed my mental and spiritual health. And I wanted to taste the freedom of living my life without feeling the need to look over my shoulder wondering if an old JW friend had seen me walking into a church or having a meal with my disfellowshipped son.

“Gretchen Guzman is no longer one of Jehovah’s Witnesses.” That was the terse announcement that was made at the Kingdom Hall I had attended. It is the same exact announcement that is made when a JW is kicked out of the organization for committing adultery, or molesting a child, or for any number of other heinous acts. When that announcement is made, no one is ever informed as to the reasons for it. Friends who don’t already understand the circumstances are left wondering what in the world happened. Was I an adulteress? An alcoholic? An abuser? Who would know? There is no honorable way to leave the organization of Jehovah’s Witnesses. You can slink away, trying to remain unnoticed, while telling white lie after white lie about why you’re slowing down in your meeting attendance, all the time avoiding talking about the truth that is burning in your breast. Or you can tell that truth and get the disgraceful public announcement.

The freedom was amazing. I remember walking through the grocery store parking lot and looking at every person I passed with new eyes. These were beautiful, valuable people! They weren’t other. They were human just like me. I loved them although I knew nothing about them. You truly don’t realize the extent of the psychological and social damage a high control group can do until you leave one and that damage starts to heal.

CHURCH

The first Sunday evening I walked into a church, a local Calvary Chapel called Revival Church, it was like stepping through a wall of fire. I had been taught from the time I could remember that “Christendom” was the greatest evil in the world because they were misrepresenting Jehovah and had introduced idolatry into their worship. Although I no longer believed those lies, I had a visceral panic reaction to that place. My mind was in a fog and my body was in a cold sweat. Fortunately, a kind man saw that I was new and came up to talk to me. As soon as he discovered a little of my history, he took my hand and prayed for me. This was new! About halfway through the Bible study my mind cleared enough that I was able to pay some attention and appreciate the depth of the teaching. But afterwards, the lights went down and the pastor began to pray…and sing! That was new too and it set off another set of alarm bells in my head. “This is emotionalism and manipulation!”, I thought. I had been over exposed to cessationist “discernment ministries” on the internet and it added to my fear. But in spite of that, I found myself enjoying the music and prayers. After the service, I found the man I had earlier spoken to on the phone about this church. He took my hand and prayed for me too. And then he took me to meet the Pastor. The more we talked, the more I shook. It was overwhelming to be able to speak so freely to a religious authority. It was strange to see him in a T shirt and jeans instead of a suit and tie. But I liked him. I was already very familiar with his teaching because of having watched his live streams online. I knew he loved God and that he loved the word. That was enough for me.

My introduction to church life was bumpy. Past indoctrination had left me unbelievably fearful. There were so many triggers – the big cross above the stage, the worship band (drums!), contemporary worship music, casual clothing in church, unfamiliar doctrines…It was all so strange and uncomfortable. At one point I went weeks without attending because I would get so triggered. But that felt wrong too. I didn’t like being isolated without any friends or family to lean on. And I knew that meeting with other Christians was important according to the Bible.

So I prayed for guidance. I asked God to show me what he wanted me to do. I’m pretty sure it was not much more than 5 to10 minutes after I said that prayer that my friend, the elder at the church who had prayed for me, showed up unexpectedly at my house. He said some encouraging words and prayed with me again. How could I deny that was an answer from God? I started going to church again the very next day. I also made arrangements to be water baptized, which took place a couple of weeks later on May 14, 2023. That was the day that I declared in front of the entire church that Jesus Christ is my Lord and Savior.

CONCLUSION

There is so much more to tell. But I will leave the rest for future posts. But for now, I just want to tell you that if you are in a high control religious group or in any other negative situation and feeling lost, there is hope in Jesus Christ. Call out to him. Ask him to show you the truth. If you do, I feel sure he will, and you will be made to understand what it means that he himself is “the way the truth and the life” (John 14:6), and that he loves you far more than you could ever have imagined!

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I Can See Clearly Now

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I see now that this place is beautiful.  After 18 years, I see.

I was so homesick when I moved here as a young bride.  I wanted my mom.  I wanted pine trees and yellow bells and buttercups.  I wanted lakes to swim in and hills to sled down.  I just wanted to go home.

The more trapped I felt, the uglier this place became.  Ugly and mean.  Smelly and dirty.  Poisonous.  My ruin.  My hatred magnified every crime, bad smell, or dusty wind a thousand-fold.  I loathed this place.  How many times did I say it?

This place was not my ruin.  My hatred for it was. Those dark ugly feelings about my home. The ground I walk on. The earth that feeds me.  I hated that which nourished my body and could have nourished my soul.  I hated it so much that my wish to leave became a desperation, a frenzy.  And when there were no jobs and the sale of our house fell through, when staying became the only option, I disintegrated.  I fell completely apart at the seams.  My grief for my old dream of that other home was profound.  Eighteen years of striving towards my jail break had come to nothing.

That’s what it took to bust the tough outer coating of my heart-seed so that it could put tender root tendrils down into this soil.  I knew only love could save me.  The hatred finally melted and a veil was lifted.  Finally, I could see:

The lilacs and apple blossoms are heavenly.  The water on the canal sparkles, jewel-like in the sun.  The mallards and the rabbits, the robins and the meadowlarks are enchanting. The smell of sage on a rainy day, how the light and shadows play on the distant hills, the smell of river trees in the summer, and the distant snowy peaks make this place beautiful.

None of God’s creation deserves to be hated.  I may hate what man does to it, but I cannot hate the ground, the grass, the birds, the water.  All nature is capable of healing, and there is beauty everywhere for those with eyes to see and a heart to understand.

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Kids Need Nature

 

By Mary Richmond

By Mary Richmond

One wet spring, the hills behind my childhood home came alive.  The usually dry ground sprung leaks so that the hills seemed to be crying for joy.  I discovered one of those leaks, a small hole in the ground from which sweet, icy-cold water burbled forth.  I knew that this ground-level fountain was different from the puddles from which the dog lapped.  This was clean water from deep within the earth.  I got on all fours and took a long pull.  It was the best drink I’ve ever had.

That was the first and last time I ever had the privilege of discovering a spring, and it made a lifelong impression.  It worries me that so many kids are deprived of the opportunity to have experiences like that.  Daily, intimate contact with nature is vital to the well-being of children, a point which Richard Louv brought home in his book, Last Child in the Woods: Saving Our Children From Nature-Deficit Disorder.

In the introduction to the book, Richard Louv describes a conversation he had with his son.  The boy had wondered why “it was more fun” when his dad was a kid.  My own boys wonder the same thing.  They pine for open spaces where they would be free to play and create.  Places with trees.  Places like my childhood home.  What science is beginning to make clear to us, my children seem to instinctively understand: kids need nature.

Nature and Health

“Those who contemplate the beauty of the earth find reserves of strength that will endure as long as life lasts.” – Rachel Carson

I used to run up the steep hills behind my house without getting winded.  My daily tramps through the fields and woods had made me strong.  My friends loved to come romp with me in the hills, but they often could not keep up.  Lives spent parked in front of the television had made them soft.

I know that if I had lived in a suburban subdivision, there would have been little to propel me into the out-of-doors.  What got me outside was not the thought that I needed some fresh air and exercise, but the prospect of all those acres to explore – “scope for the imagination”, as Anne Shirley would have said.  I didn’t care a snit about the condition of my muscles or lungs, or how much my play was increasing blood-flow to my brain.  All I knew is that outside felt good, and that is where I wanted to be.

Nature and Spirituality

“I go to nature to be soothed and healed, and to have my senses put in tune once more.”  – John Burroughs

I could see out over the plains all the way to the distant mountains from my perch on the hill.  That was where I went to be alone with God.  Above it all, I was able to put my troubles in perspective and gain a sense of peace.  All children should have the opportunity to find a special place, a thinking spot.  They should, but they do not, which is why frequent family outings to the woods or the mountains, the lake or the river are so important.

On one such outing, I had invited a student and friend to join me and my family.  On a trail in Mt. Rainier National Park, she stopped to admire the chain of jagged peaks marching off into the horizon.

“How could anybody deny that God made this?”  she exclaimed in wonderment.

By Mike Baird

By Mike Baird

My own son said something similar once.  When he was 5 years old, I took him on a camping trip to the Olympic Peninsula on the Strait of Juan de Fuca.  We could see all the way to Canada from our side of the straight, and daily we would watch the cargo ships, sailboats, and even a submarine pass by.  But what really impressed my son was not anything man-made.  One day we were examining the anemones and starfish in a tide-pool.

“I just love Jehovah!” said my son.

Such is the power of nature to inspire awe and appreciation.

Nature and Intelligence

Howard Gardner is known for his theory of multiple intelligences.  He originally theorized that there are 7 intelligences: linguistic, logical-mathematical, spatial, bodily-kinesthetic, musical, interpersonal, and intrapersonal.  He more recently added an eighth intelligence:  naturalist.

The core of naturalist intelligence is the human ability to recognize plants, animals, and other parts of the natural environment, like clouds or rocks.

–  Howard Gardner

Transcendent experiences in nature intensify our senses and ability to see connections.  Many of our most celebrated authors seem to owe much of their genius to their attunement to the natural world. Jane Austen, Henry David Thoreau, John Muir, Rachel Carson, and Barbara Kingsolver are a few that come immediately to mind.

Leslie Stevens views nature as an educational necessity, which is why she has moved her family to the edge of a canyon where her children might be free to roam and play.  Here, she describes how nature taught her about the concept of shelter:

A child who is allowed to run free in a place that is natural will very quickly begin to look around for a special shelter.  The interior framework of bushes is inspected and judged for its suitability to act as a fort.  Trees, especially mature ones, provide towering castles, and the best climbing branches are claimed as “rooms”.  In contrast, the exposure a child feels running across a grassy, sunny, slope or wide, open field allows her to feel the lack of shelter.  It is only through experiencing both opposites that children begin to understand each part more deeply.

I learned much about shelter from my own wanderings.  A big old ponderosa pine inhabiting some woods on a hill near my home provided the perfect skeleton for my playhouse.  The branches of the tree curved to the ground as if it were purposely sheltering the place around its roots.  I saw that with the addition of some sticks for more support, that I would be able to insulate the framework with bundles of pine-needles to create a cozy shelter.  I engaged the cooperation of my brother and sisters, and we soon had a little house to please any hobbit.  Many happy hours were spent there.

By Mike Petrucci

By Mike Petrucci

Other things I learned from my experiences in nature include the fact that snow berries are very bitter, lichens are edible but taste very bad, maple leaves are edible and taste very good,  red clover is an acceptable substitute for bubble gum, certain types of flowers contain so much nectar that it can be sipped from the blossoms, moss is one of the first green things besides crocuses to appear in the Spring, and pineapple weed tastes like chamomile.  I also learned that what we do makes a difference to the Earth.  Because I loved to see beautiful things, I deeply resented litter and would never have thought of tossing my candy wrappers on the ground.  For the same reason, I hated to see trees being cut down or streams polluted or the advancement of urban sprawl.

Important lessons I would say.

Nature and Creativity

Natural, more loosely structured environments encourage more creative play.  On the playground at my school, we played tether ball.  But in the hills behind my home, we played Crystal Kingdom, Lost, Train-wreck, and Indians.  We created entire fictional worlds up there.  It seems as if this type of play must be the stepping stone to the type of creativity that, in later years, writes great novels, paints beautiful pictures, and sculpts beautiful objects.

I could write pages about all the famously creative people who were inspired by their experiences in nature.  I will, instead, let a few of them speak for themselves.

“It is not the language of painters but the language of nature which one should listen to…The feeling for the things themselves, for reality, is more important than the feeling for pictures.” – Vincent van Gogh

“I am well again, I came to life in the cool winds and crystal waters of the mountains…” – John Muir

“And this, our life, exempt from public haunt, finds tongues in trees, books in the running brooks, sermons in stones, and good in everything.” – William Shakespeare

“Come forth into the light of things, let nature be your teacher.”  William Wordsworth

I wrote poetry when I was a girl.  The inspiration came from trees, sun, wind, and animals.  I don’t think I would have written things like the following haiku without intimate contact with those things.

Silence in the wood

A silence the wind can blow

With me there is peace

How many of our young Shakespeare’s and Van Gogh’s sit languishing in classrooms and in front of screens?

The Problem of Distraction

My kids would sit at the computer or with a tablet like punch-drunk social butterflies connected to the hive mind nearly all of the time, I believe, if I allowed it.  Television and internet have drastically changed the way that we relate to the world.  We are at once connected and disconnected.  I once heard electronic media described as WMDs, weapons of mass distraction.  That seems apt.

Henry David Thoreau had some thoughts on the social media of his time, newspapers and letters, that now seems almost prophetic:

You may depend on it that the poor fellow who walks away with the greatest number of letters, proud of his extensive correspondence, has not heard from himself this long while.

Change that to read “the greatest number of likes”, and you have a profound indictment of uncontrolled use of online social media.  There is nothing inherently wrong with social media, just as there is nothing inherently wrong with newspapers or letters.  But the point Thoreau was trying to make, and the one I want to make, is that those things may become a distraction from pursuits that are much more important.  We should not, as Thoreau, stated, “live for idle amusement.”

In his book, Data Smog – Surviving the Information Glut, David Shenk said this:

Turn the television off.  There is no quicker way to regain control of the pace of your life, the peace of your home, and the content of your thinking than to turn off the appliance that supplies, for all too many of us, the ambiance of our lives.  Millions of Americans have been discovering the serenity and empowerment that comes with using the OFF switch, not to mention hours and hours of newly acquired free-time with which they can begin to do some of the things they’ve never found time for in the past.

The point is this: for kids to gain the benefits of contact with nature, we have to help them unplug.  It’s amazing what happens when all the screens go dark.  The skateboards come out.  The dirt pile outside begins to look more attractive.  Young eyes begin to rest upon birds and rabbits and clouds rather than those flickering pixels.  A child begins to “hear from himself”, and I might add, from God himself as well, as God reveals himself in his creation.

The Problem of Access

I always get stir-crazy in the winter.  I miss green so much that I begin looking for ways to get somewhere, anywhere, that will soothe me.  One winter, after having researched Washington State Department of Fish and Wildlife river access points, I went looking for somewhere to walk where I could see water.  Every access point I checked was closed to the public.  The only way to approach the river anywhere near my home would have been to break the law.

I finally found a hill that overlooked the river that was not farmed (quite rare in my part of the world).  I parked my car and took a walk with my dog.  I enjoyed my solitude while Elsie bounded around in the brush, sniffing here and there, long tongue hanging out the side of her mouth.  She flushed a covey of quail out of the sage as we approached the crest of the hill where we could see the sparkling coils of the river below, gray, leafless trees flanking its sides.  I stood for a long while and let the scene penetrate and calm my beauty-hungry heart.

As I was driving away, I saw it.  NO TRESPASSING.

I had done the thing I had been hoping to avoid.  I had broken the law in my attempt to get close to the water.

As a property owner, I understand what it is to feel protective of my patch of ground.  I certainly don’t want herds of teenagers partying on the back forty (or in my case, the back 1/4), tossing their cigarette butts and empty beer bottles all over the place.  I don’t want hunters with their rifles tramping over my pasture in search of pheasants.  But why can’t I go to the river?

Nearly all riverside land in the 20 miles surrounding my town is privately owned, most of it by farmers who are in the process of completely destroying it.  They plow land right up to the river’s edge, encouraging soil erosion.  Chemical fertilizer and pesticide runoff  cause algal bloom and poison fish so that we take our lives into our hands if we try to eat anything from the river.  These farmers don’t want the general public tramping through their fields, orchards and vineyards to get to the river.  But we shouldn’t have to.  The state owns pieces of land all along the it.

One of the reasons people are denied access to state land is because ecologists want to protect what’s left of wildlife habitat.  Although I agree that protection of wildlife habitat is a necessary and laudable goal, the state shoots itself in the foot by failing to provide year-round access to state land not just to hunters and fisherman, but to all of us who just want to enjoy nature.  If we can’t find places near home where our children can go on a daily or weekly basis, there may be no one left in the future who even wants to protect wildlife habitat.  How can we encourage a love of nature in our children if they can’t even get near it?

It is difficult, but not impossible to find places close-by that might inspire love of nature in children.   We don’t have to go to Rainier National Park or the Oregon coast just to enjoy the natural world. Beauty is everywhere for those who have eyes to see.  Sometimes little patches of leftover wildness can be enough.  On our walks along an irrigation canal near our home, my kids and I often spot ducks lazily paddling in the water.  The blackberry brambles whose juicy, dark purple jewels are a delight to my boys also grow along that canal.  The sycamore in the yard, the flowers in the garden, and the butterflies in the grass all wait outside our door to be appreciated.

 

What price do our children pay for our disconnection from nature?  The price is stunted talent, soft, weak bodies, lost opportunities for learning, and a planet in ruin.  The price is depression, anxiety, and apathy.  The price is disconnection from God and from all he created.  The price is too high.

We must teach our children to unplug, go outside, and open their eyes.  Show them how important contact with nature is by driving them to the wildest places we can find.  Talk to them about what they see, about the significance of it.  Revel with them in the beauty.  Almost nothing could be more important.

richardlouv.com

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