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  1. Mar 24, 2023 · Who was Charles Taze Russell? Answer. Charles Taze Russell was the founder of a religion that eventually became the modern-day Jehovah’s Witnesses. His example demonstrates how untrained and un-discipled people can twist Scripture to fit their own preferences and spread those errors to others.

  2. May 29, 2018 · RUSSELL, CHARLES TAZE. Founder of the movement known since 1931 as jeho vah's witnesses; b. Pittsburgh, Pa., Feb. 16, 1852; d. Pampa, Texas, Oct. 31, 1916. He was baptized a Congregationalist, but his study of the Bible led him to deny the existence of hell and the doctrine of the Trinity and to express Arian views of the nature of Jesus Christ ...

  3. Charles Taze Russell was an American Christian Restoration minister in the late 19th and early 20th centuries. He was the founder of the International Bible Students Association which is also known as the forerunner of the Jehovah’s Witness group. Hailing from Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, he spearheaded what is now known as the Bible Student Movement.

  4. Charles Taze Russell (February 16, 1852 – October 31, 1916), or Pastor Russell, was an American Adventist minister from Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, and founder of the Bible Student movement. He was an early Christian Zionist.

  5. Charles Taze Russell, born February 16, 1852 in Allegheny, now a suburb of Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, is best known for his religious views. He expressed these views through journals, books, and lectures.

  6. Linked to Jehovah’s Witnesses. Details. Terms of Use. Charles Taze Russell, pictured in 1917, founded the Watch Tower Bible and Tract Society, the forerunner of the modern-day Jehovah's Witnesses, in Pennsylvania in 1884. As of 2005 approximately 16,000 Witnesses made Georgia their home.

  7. www.ewtn.com › library › charles-taze-russell-1143Charles Taze Russell | EWTN

    The nineteenth-century obsession with prophetic speculation molded the founders of some now well-known faiths, including Ann Lee (Shakers), Joseph Smith (Mormons), and Ellen Gould White (Seventh-Day Adventists). This era of millennial expectation also produced Charles Taze Russell, spiritual father of the group known as the Jehovah's Witnesses.

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