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Post by rebel2020 on Aug 3, 2021 12:33:50 GMT
Well it looks like the Internet is "Shacking Up" many Churches, With the Internet Members of other Churches can check on the facts that they have been taught for perhaps decades, And its Changing Many peoples views, Now Jehovah Witnesses are seeing Great changes coming there way.
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Post by Les Brewer on Aug 3, 2021 19:57:17 GMT
Let's hope many more halls will close. Jehovah Witnesses are a false religion that is led by Satan and another cult that needs to be avoided.
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tdidymas
New Member
Trust in the Lord with all your heart...
Posts: 2
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Post by tdidymas on Mar 10, 2022 12:20:41 GMT
Let's hope many more halls will close. Jehovah Witnesses are a false religion that is led by Satan and another cult that needs to be avoided. "Another cult"? What other cult are you talking about?
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Post by Les Brewer on Mar 10, 2022 15:52:45 GMT
Let's hope many more halls will close. Jehovah Witnesses are a false religion that is led by Satan and another cult that needs to be avoided. "Another cult"? What other cult are you talking about? Are you a JW? Anyways, to clear things up, I will explain what is a cult:- When people hear the word cult, they often think of a group that worships Satan, sacrifices animals, or takes part in evil, bizarre, and pagan rituals. However, in reality, a cult rarely involves such things. In fact, a cult, in the broadest sense of the word, is simply a religious system with particular rites and customs. Usually, though, a cult is more narrowly defined, and the word refers to an unorthodox sect whose members distort the original doctrines of the religion. In a Christian context, the definition of a cult is, specifically, “a religious group that denies one or more of the fundamentals of biblical truth.” A cult is a group that teaches doctrines that, if believed, will cause a person to remain unsaved. A cult claims to be part of a religion, yet it denies essential truth(s) of that religion. Therefore, a Christian cult will deny one or more of the fundamental truths of Christianity while still claiming to be Christian. The two most common teachings of Christian cults are that Jesus was not God and that salvation is not by faith alone. A denial of the deity of Christ results in the view that Jesus’ death was insufficient to pay for our sins. A denial of salvation by faith alone results in the teaching that salvation is achieved by our own works. The apostles dealt with cults in the early years of the church: for example, John addresses the teaching of Gnosticism in 1 John 4:1–3. John’s litmus test for godly doctrine was “Jesus Christ has come in the flesh” (verse 2)—a direct contradiction of the Gnostic heresy (cf. 2 John 1:7). The two most well-known examples of cults today are the Jehovah’s Witnesses and Mormons.
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