Jehovah’s Witnesses

January 19th, 2006 | Posted in: Doctrine & Changes | Keywords: , , , ,

Jehovah\'s Witnesses This extensive article on Jehovah’s Witnesses is based on a Wikipedia article. I want to keep this article up to date with the help of the visitors of this site. You can suggest changes by commenting below this article. Because I want to keep this article as objective and accurate as possible you have to use evidence to substantiate your suggestions. Read the rest »


On Socialisation and Rebellion: A Sociological Analysis of the Religious Experiences of Young Jehovah’s Witnesses

October 23rd, 2005 | Posted in: Psychological & Social Issues | Keywords: , , ,

Jehovah\"s Witnesses children
This paper examines the socialisation of second and subsequent generation members and describes how the movement deals with those who refuse to comply with its regime. Extracts are presented from interviews with young members who recall their childhood memories of growing up in the movement and explain what happened when they rebelled against its quasi-totalitarian doctrines. The main argument advanced in the paper is that parents who socialise their children in accordance with this particular creed are protecting them from a modern world of relativism and uncertainty. Read the rest »

Returning to Eden: Futuristic Symbolism and its Effects on Jehovah’s Witnesses

October 23rd, 2005 | Posted in: Psychological & Social Issues | Keywords: , , ,

jehovah paradise This paper examines the ways in which the movement promotes its millenarian message to prospective recruits. It also considers how the Witnesses are able to hold futuristic beliefs and at the same time, lead active lives in the present. The methods of data collection include unstructured interviews with devotees and content analysis of the movement’s own literature. The paper concludes that while the Witnesses’ futuristic symbolism is a form of escape from the modern world, it is also part of their own pseudo-corporate ‘branding’ which has contributed to their international success. Read the rest »

Peering Through the Watch Tower: How Jehovah’s Witnesses Learn to Worship and Evangelise

October 23rd, 2005 | Posted in: Psychological & Social Issues | Keywords: , , ,

Praying Jehovah\'s Witnesses This paper examines the ways in which the movement has managed to retain a millenarian orientation in a world that is, for the most part, indifferent to its beliefs. The Witnesses reject many commonly recognised accoutrements of sacred practise such as mystical concepts, awesome rituals and transcendental symbolism in favour of a rationalised form of religion based on the study of published texts.  Ethnographic analysis reveals the dependency of this quasi-totalitarian movement on the very physical and cultural resources it condemns.  The paper concludes that the Witnesses’ anti-mystical faith is both an inverted form of corporate ‘branding’ and an anti-modern quest for certainty in a hostile world of relativism. The movement’s relationship with the modern world is, therefore, ambivalent and paradoxical. Read the rest »

Doing Tolerance: How Jehovah’s Witnesses Live with Unbelieving Relatives

October 23rd, 2005 | Posted in: JWs vs. the World | Keywords: , ,

Jehovah\"s Witnesses family This paper examines the effects of Witness conversion on the family lives of non-Witness relatives.  Interviews with couples in mixed marriages reveal discrepancies in how devotees deal with the dissonance between personal feelings and religious principles, and demonstrate that there is, in effect, no uniform or stereotypical Jehovah’s Witness response to domestic scenarios in which beliefs may need to be tempered. The paper exposes some of the problems that arise in a modern secular society for those who hold millenarian convictions.  It concludes that mutual tolerance is essential for amicable domestic relations. Read the rest »