The Jehovahs Witnesses Jesus who is also a created being, much like a tree or a rock was created.
In short lets see what these people believe.
The greatest mistake of the Witnesses is that they are expecting the coming of Jesus but they start saying that Jesus is not God, but just the "son of God", like you and I. The Jehovah's Witnesses discard most orthodox doctrines of the Bible, conflicting with those of historic Christianity: The Holy Trinity is seen as a demonic doctrine, Jesus Christ is stripped of his deity, is not God!, the Holy Spirit is robbed of his personality... they deny the physical resurrection of Christ, and there is not eternal Hell... their doctrines on the sufficiency of Christ's atonement, on human government, and on the existence of the soul are not biblical... The worst of them all is to say that "Jesus is not God"
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Jehovahs Witnesses
Jehovahs Witnesses are well-known for their aggressive door-to-door evangelism, their stance against blood transfusion, and their prophecies of the end of the world. This group was started in 1879 under the leadership of Charles Taze Russell, who was born on February 16, 1852, in Old Allegheny, Pennsylvania. Russells followers became known as Bible Students. After Russells death in 1916, Joseph Franklin Rutherford won control of the movement. In 1931 the group adopted the name Jehovahs Witnesses. Since 1971, leadership has been invested in a group known as the Governing Body.
At the end of 2004 there were almost ninety-seven thousand congregations of Jehovahs Witnesses in the world. With headquarters in Brooklyn, New York, Witnesses believe they constitute the one true church of Jesus Christ. Witnesses teach that the Trinity doctrine is satanic, that Jesus was originally Michael the archangel, and that his Second Coming took place in 1914. Witnesses also believe that Jesus died on a stake and not on a cross. The group denies the physical resurrection of Jesus and the personal nature of the Holy Spirit. They believe that only 144,000 Witnesses will go to heaven. Jehovahs Witnesses are against Christmas and Easter celebrations, observance of birthdays, participation in the military, and saluting the flag of any nation.
Since Russells day, Jehovahs Witnesses have been fixated on prophetic calculations. Their leaders, who claim to be prophets, can be viewed as false, given their penchant for error-laden apocalyptic pronouncements. The end of the world was predicted for 1914, 1918, 1925, the 1940s, and 1975. Sadly, generations of young Witnesses have skipped college because of Watchtower Society teaching that the earth was facing its demise. The Governing Body issued an apology in 1980 for the false predictions and confusions surrounding 1975.
Witness life is strictly controlled by the mother organization in Brooklyn. Members are forbidden to read material critical of the movement. At one time Witness leaders even stated that faithful disciples should believe what they are told even if they know it is untrue! Witnesses who disagree with Watchtower policy find themselves disciplined, sidelined, or excommunicated. The totalitarian spirit of the movement explains why members remain aloof about evidence of corruption and hypocrisy at headquarters and oblivious to doctrinal and scholarly blunders in Society teaching.
The most significant critic is Raymond Franz, a former member of the Governing Body. His memoirCrisis of Conscience is a powerful work against the legalism and hypocrisy of the Witness hierarchy. Franz is a nephew of longtime Society president Frederick W. Franz (18931992). The best scholarly study of the Witnesses is Apocalypse Delayed, the work of James Penton, a former member of the Society.
In 2000 William Bowen of Calvert City, Kentucky, discovered that one of his fellow elders in the local Kingdom Hall had been guilty of molesting a child many times. The Watchtower Society told Bowen that the person would be removed as an elder but that Bowen was not to report the person to the police. Bowen disobeyed the Society, resigned as an elder, and went public. He started silentlambs.org to provide a setting where victims of abuse can protest Witness cover-ups, thus serving as a place for the lambs to roar.Bowen was kicked out of the Society in the summer of 2002