Tag Archives: Charles T. Russell

Who’s That Knocking At Your Door?

It was late afternoon when I arrived at my destination—a quiet, old cemetery on the outskirts of Pittsburgh.  I walked up a small hill to a stone pyramid about six feet high.  Each of the four sides had a carved image of an open book surmounted by a cross and crown.  Nearby was a headstone whose inscription read “Charles T. Russell…  The Laodicean Messenger.”  I had journeyed several hours just to see this grave of a man considered by many to be an end-time prophet of God. Continue reading

Heresy? It’s Simple!

Charles Taze Russell was nothing if not troubled.  Much of his life was motivated by fear.  It is said that as a young man he would walk the streets of Pittsburgh, writing “There is no hell!” on the sidewalks in chalk.  His fear of hell dominated his thinking and profoundly affected his theology.  He was also troubled by what he could not understand.  What could not be discerned through human reason was unacceptable to him.  For instance, the Christian doctrine of the Holy Trinity was nonsense to him.  It is no surprise then that when he founded the Watchtower Bible and Tract Society in Pittsburgh in 1884 that the denial of hell and the rejection of the Trinity became hallmark doctrines of this organization.  To this day the Jehovah’s Witnesses reject what they cannot understand or accept as rational. Continue reading