My wife and I happily flew to Sacramento last week to attend our younger son David’s graduation from UC Davis. We had booked a few rooms at the more than 500 room Hyatt Regency Hotel adjacent to the Sacramento Convention Center, settled in for a weekend of celebration when suddenly the hotel filled up with hundreds of folks wearing “Safeguard Your Heart” name-tags.
It was a blistering hot at 105 plus degrees, but the men and boys wore suits, white shirts and ties and the women and girls were formally dressed in skirts and pant suits all weekend long. The children were neatly clad and scrubbed. Everyone appeared consistently happy and content.
On the elevator I asked a young man, “What is the name of your group?”
“We’re Jehovah’s Witnesses!”
As it happened, thousands of an estimated 5.7 million American Jehovah’s Witnesses had come to Sacramento for their annual national conference.
Though I had met some of these folks over the years when they would come to my door to teach and preach to me, I really knew little about their beliefs and practices. After sharing a hotel with so many happy followers, however, I became curious. Here is some of what I learned plus my thoughts about the meaning of their seeming “happiness” and sense of certainty in their faith.
Jehovah’s Witnesses are unlike most Christian denominations. They follow first century New Testament texts, reject the doctrines of the trinity and immortality of the soul, and do not observe Christmas or Easter because they are post-testament holidays. They do not celebrate birthdays or observe national holidays claiming that such phenomena are inspired by Satan to draw unsuspecting Christians away from the True faith.
Jehovah’s Witnesses read the Bible literally, but at times also symbolically. They place their emphasis on God rather than Jesus Christ, and believe that Jesus is the only direct creation of God as his “only begotten son.” Everything else was created through the Christ.
They believe that the end of days is fast approaching and only those will be resurrected who follow the “true faith.” Every other religion is false.
Jehovah’s Witnesses are morally conservative and politically non-aligned. They stay clear of politics, forbid sexual relations outside of marriage, consider homosexuality a grave sin, and equate abortion with murder. They eschew gambling, drunkenness, illegal drugs, and tobacco. They teach that the Bible requires true Christians to be kind, good, mild, humble, subservient, and reasonable. They refer to their body of beliefs as “the truth” and see themselves to be “in the truth.”
Their families are patriarchal and their denomination is autocratically led by an all-male religious leadership that maintains discipline, demands obedience, compels commitment, forbids independent thinking, and insists on conformity. Those who violate communal belief and behavioral norms risk “disfellowship” and “shunning.” However, if an individual is judged adequately repentant, he/she can be reinstated.
One has to ask why would so many people would subject themselves to such dogma and strict doctrine?
Kathryn Schultz, in her book, Being Wrong, describes the basic human need that yearns for this kind of a lifestyle. She says that
“…[certainty] feels good. It gives us the comforting illusion that our environment is stable and knowable, and that therefore we are safe within it. Just as important, it makes us feel informed, intelligent, and powerful. When we are certain, we are lords of our maps: the outer limits of our knowledge and the outer limits of the world are one and the same…Seen in this light, our dislike of doubt is a kind of emotional agoraphobia. Uncertainty leaves us stranded in a universe that is too big, too open, too ill-defined…facing our own private uncertainty can … compel us to face the existence of uncertainty in general – the unconsoling fact that nothing in the world can be perfectly known by any mere mortal, and that therefore we can’t shield ourselves and our loved ones from error, accident, and disaster.”
Rabbi Leonard Beerman offered these thoughts on the occasion of his 90th birthday last year:
“I live with uncertainty and doubt. But what I have learned is that doubt may be the most civilizing force we have available to us, for it is doubt that protects us from the arrogance of utter rightness, from the barbarism of blind loyalties, all of which threaten the human possibility.”
To those who conclude that doubt and faith are incompatible, consider the words of Alfred, Lord Tennyson:
“There lives more faith in honest doubt, believe me, than in half the creeds.”
Oh – by the way, our son’s graduation was a peak moment in our lives, and I feel a measure of certainty when I say that Satan had nothing to do with it!
Mazel tov on David’s graduation and thank you for this compelling and important lesson about the religious practices and beliefs of Jehovah’s Witnesses. Adds further to the cultural sensitivity essential to my practice w/ parents of children w/ special needs, who at times find themselves trying to reconcile these religious beliefs w/ meeting their children’s social and health care needs.
Bravo John!
Jehovah’s Witnesses conventions sponsored by the Watchtower society corporation.
1) Convention serve mostly as the yearly vacation/social time get together for JW families,for many this is their ONLY ‘vacation’.
2) More on the dark side it also is mass indoctrination time for a high control religion some say cult.
3) The JW are not big spenders they will help the economy but the Watchtower energetic PR dept has 50 years expertise spinning their exaggerated tourism financial benefits.
4)Clever PR on getting free publicity for the Watchtower JW religion as in the course of a year,these summer convention that are held all over the world are their primary source of puff for a religion that has twice as many disgruntled former members as they do active members.
5) The creed of Jehovah’s Witnesses is Jesus return also know as his ‘presence’ or second coming in 1914 and only 144,000 go to heaven.
Google Jehovah Witness Watchtower
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Cheers to all.-Danny Haszard
Mazel Tov on the peak moment for all of you. Thoroughly enjoyed this piece. Helpful to hear right before a trip home to visit the very-confident-in-their-truth born again christian relatives who feel sorry for me and my life lived “in the gray” of doubt and questioning. Don’t miss Book of Mormon when it comes to town!
What a timely presentation when so many of those in the world and in our country are CERTAIN that they have the TRUTH and want to impose it on the rest of us. A former colleague of mine (a bankruptcy judge) used to say about his rulings (being somewhat tongue-in-cheek): “not always right, but never in doubt.” That is a nice balance to the equation. May those who are never in doubt be willing to recognize that they are not always right.
As a hematologist, I interface with Jehovah’s witnesses because they eschew blood transfusion based on a phrase in the Torah. Their refusal of blood products puts some of their members at risk of avoidable death. The consequences of refusing blood products can be an extraordinary challenge for treating physicians. I have seen a few Jehovah’s witnesses die for their religious beliefs. Or, should I say, for an institutionalized psychosis. I do not wish to imply that psychosis–a flaw in perceptual reality–is unique to Jehovah’s witnesses, because every religious persuasion holds to one idea or another. But we should all look at ourselves and assess objectively where reality leaves off and belief or faith begins.
mazal tov on David’s graduation. Yes, I am big on doubt!