Divine name Jehovah
God should be identified and invoked by the name Jehovah.
What it is: Jehovah's Witnesses teach that God's personal name is Jehovah and that this name should have a prominent place in worship, teaching, and Bible reading.
How the religion understands it: In official formulation, titles such as God and Lord do not replace the Creator's personal name. For that reason, the name Jehovah appears in preaching, prayer, songs, publications, and denominational identity.
Textual basis and context: Texts such as Psalm 83:18 and Isaiah 42:8 are used to support the importance of the divine name. There is academic debate about the original vocalization of the Hebrew tetragrammaton, but the organization considers Jehovah a legitimate and widely recognized form in modern languages.
Supportive
Isaiah 42:8
Biblical statement used to highlight God's personal name.
Reference: Isaiah 42:8.
Content: The text states that Jehovah is God's name and contrasts that name with the glory due only to him.
Use in debate: It is cited to argue that the divine name should not be omitted from worship and religious instruction.
Psalm 83:18
Text used to support the divine name Jehovah.
Reference: Psalm 83:18.
Content: The verse identifies God by the name Jehovah and presents him as the Most High over all the earth.
Use in debate: It is a key text in defense of the use of the divine name and appears frequently in the religion's publications, preaching, and introductory materials.
Saddleback Church and Rick Warren
Rick Warren and Saddleback shaped contemporary evangelism.
Reference: Saddleback Church and Purpose Driven movement.
Content: Church founded by Rick Warren in California in 1980; developed Purpose Driven model that influenced thousands of churches worldwide; book The Purpose Driven Life was global phenomenon.
Use in debate: Source to discuss megachurches, contemporary evangelism, and leadership.
What Are the Main Beliefs of Jehovah's Witnesses?
Official summary of core beliefs published on jw.org.
Reference: Frequently asked questions page on jw.org about the main beliefs of Jehovah's Witnesses.
Content: The text presents in a concise way beliefs about God, the Bible, Jesus, the Kingdom, death, morality, blood, neutrality, and worldwide unity.
Use in debate: It is one of the best official sources for formulating the religion's public and contemporary position without depending only on secondary literature.
Neutral
Who Are Jehovah's Witnesses?
Official institutional page with self-definition and statistics.
Reference: Institutional section of jw.org on identity and global presence.
Content: The page defines the group as a worldwide religious organization that worships Jehovah, follows Jesus, and bases its beliefs on the Bible, while also presenting global statistics.
Use in debate: It serves for institutional origin, public self-image, mission, and basic descriptive data.