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SNAP denied the allegations. Outreach Director Barbara Dorris told the St. Louis Post-Dispatch, "That's simply just not true," outreach director Barbara Dorris said about misrepresenting the best interest of abuse victims. "We have been and always will be a self-help support group for victims."
Jehovah's Witnesses being baptized. Jehovah's Witnesses believe salvation is a gift from God attained by being part of "God's organization" and putting faith in Jesus' ransom sacrifice. They do not believe in predestination or eternal security. They believe in different forms of resurrection for two groups of Christians: that the 144,000 ...
Publications of Jehovah's Witnesses teach that God's kingdom is a literal government in heaven, established in 1914, [97] ruled by Jesus and 144,000 humans raised to heaven. [98] The kingdom is viewed as the means by which God will accomplish his original purpose for the earth, [ 99 ] bringing about a world free of crime, sickness, death and ...
Jehovah's Witnesses believe that God's kingdom is a literal government in heaven, ruled by Jesus Christ and 144,000 "spirit-anointed" Christians drawn from the earth, which they associate with Jesus' reference to a "new covenant". [1]
Victims of Helene and the volunteers who have gathered to help them gathered in churches and parking lots for prayer and services Saturday and Sunday, a week after the disastrous storm’s initial ...
The basic charter for CRI began with the aim of serving as a bureau of information on cults, other religions, and Christian apologetics. [13] Walter Martin subsequently gave this summary profile about CRI: "The Institute's purpose is to supply primary data on all the cults, and non-Christian missionary activities, both here and abroad.
The Lord's Evening Meal, also known as the Memorial of Jesus' Death, is an annual commemoration of the death of Jesus by Jehovah's Witnesses.Witnesses consider it the only religious event that Christians are commanded to observe by the Bible, as well as the most important day of the year.
Using the writings of the early Church Fathers, the Greek and Latin manuscripts and the testimony of the earliest extant manuscripts of the Bible, Newton demonstrated that the words "in heaven, the Father, the Word, and the Holy Ghost: and these three are one", that support the Trinity doctrine, did not appear in the original Greek Scriptures.