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English Wikipedia references for Watchtower.org 101-120 of 176
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Soydevon
User:Soydevon
Ministerial Training School
The Ministerial Training School is an 8½ week intense bible based educational programme for single elders and ministerial servants of Jehovah's Witnesses. The school covers many areas including detailed bible study, public speaking skills, teaching, preaching and organisational arrangements.
Ministerial_Training_School
Jehovah's Witnesses/Archive 21
Talk:Jehovah's_Witnesses/Archive_21
Jehovah's Witnesses and congregational discipline
Jehovah's Witnesses employ various levels of congregational discipline as formal controls administered by elders in the congregation. The determination of guilt or innocence is judged by a tribunal of elders.
Jehovah's_Witnesses_and_congregational_discipline
Joshbuddy/Beliefs and Practices of Jehovah's Witnesses
User:Joshbuddy/Beliefs_and_Practices_of_Jehovah's_Witnesses
Archola/Robsteadman's Jesus Draft
User:Archola/Robsteadman's_Jesus_Draft
Beliefs and practices of Jehovah's Witnesses
The beliefs and practices of Jehovah's Witnesses are based on the Bible teachings of its founder, Charles Taze Russell and his successors, Joseph Franklin Rutherford and Nathan Homer Knorr. Since about 1976 they have also been based on decisions made at closed meetings of the religion's Governing Body.
Beliefs_and_practices_of_Jehovah's_Witnesses
Jehovah
Jehovah is an English reading of , the most frequent form of the Tetragrammaton , the name of God in the Hebrew Bible, in the text with vowel points handed down by the Masoretes.
Jehovah
Tetragrammaton in the New Testament
Archaeologists have discovered papyrus fragments of works which were later included in the canon of the New Testament dating as far back as the middle of the second century. Of all 5,000 extant manuscripts, none contains the Hebrew יהוה (the Tetragrammaton), the Paleo-Hebrew (), or Greek transliterations (for example: ιαω, ιαουε, ΠΙΠΙ) of the Hebrew name (יהוה).
Tetragrammaton_in_the_New_Testament
Whitentine
User:Whitentine
Stevencho
User_talk:Stevencho
Hell
Hell, according to many religious beliefs, is a location in the afterlife, which may be described as a place of suffering. Hell is usually depicted as underground.
Hell
Controversies regarding Jehovah's Witnesses
Talk:Controversies_regarding_Jehovah's_Witnesses
Jesus/Archive 61
Talk:Jesus/Archive_61
Trinity/archive 4
Talk:Trinity/archive_4
216.146.70.166
User_talk:216.146.70.166
Hell in Christian beliefs
Hell, in Christian beliefs, is a place or a state in which the souls of the unsaved will suffer the consequences of sin. The Christian doctrine of hell derives from the teaching of the New Testament, where hell is typically described using the Greek words Gehenna or Tartarus.
Hell_in_Christian_beliefs
144000 (number)
144,000 is a positive integer. It has a religious significance for Christians because of its use in the Book of Revelation of the New Testament.
144000_(number)
Cross or stake as gibbet on which Jesus died
Writers hold different views on the form of the gibbet used in the execution of Jesus, the
Cross_or_stake_as_gibbet_on_which_Jesus_died
Christianity and alcohol
Throughout the first 1,800 years of church history, Christians consumed alcoholic beverages as a common part of everyday life and nearly always used wine (that is, fermented grape juice) in their central rite — the Eucharist or Lord's Supper. They held that both the Bible and Christian tradition taught that alcohol is a gift from God that makes life more joyous and that overindulgence, which leads to drunkenness, is a sin.
Christianity_and_alcohol