If you think so, prove it. This is not a matter of "He said. She said". Show us from Scripture even one false doctrine that you believe I have presented.
Present me with a doctrine Enoch and I will refute it with scripture....
Lets start with "hellfire".....
Have you ever witnessed someone being tortured? Have you heard of people being tortured by fire?
This was done in the Spanish Inquisition...
What about the burning of the witches...
Can you imagine Jesus and his apostles standing there approving of this? Was torture ever used in Israel to punish anyone? Can you even imagine what it is like to see the flames and feel them burning your body?
Can you tell me what punishment was for...what did it achieve when someone did something against God's law?
Punishment was administered according to God's perfect justice. If a man took a life...he forfeited his own. Was he tortured to death? No, even when offenders were stoned, a well placed rock could kill a man instantly.
The highest penalty under God's law was death. It ensured that the person never re-offended and that God's justice was satisfied. The life taken was atoned for by the life of the murderer.
What about other crimes? What was the purpose of punishment? Wasn't it to teach them something? Wasn't it designed to move a person to repent and turn back from his bad ways? What does hell accomplish from God's perspective? Can you tell me? If we are made in his image and we are repulsed at the thought of torturing anyone, don't you think God would be too?
Ezekiel 33:11...
"Say to them, ‘As I live!’ declares the Lord (Yahweh) God, ‘I take no pleasure at all in the death of the wicked, but rather that the wicked turn from his way and live. Turn back, turn back from your evil ways! Why then should you die, house of Israel?’"
Even the death of the wicked brings no joy to God, let alone torturing them eternally.
What does punishment for punishment's sake, accomplish? That is not the God of the Bible, nor is it anything that Jesus Christ would approve.
God's words to his people after they were sacrificing their infants in the fire to the god Molech...(Jeremiah 7:31)
"They have built the high places of Topheth, which is in the Valley of Ben-hinnom, to burn their sons and their daughters in the fire, which I did not command, and it did not come into My mind."
Another example is the city of Nineveh, the capital of ancient Assyria. As reported in the Bible, the inhabitants of that city became so wicked that Yahweh was going to destroy them. Nevertheless, he gave them an opportunity to abandon their wrongdoing. In his boundless love and mercy he sent the prophet Jonah to them.
“Only forty days more, and Nineveh will be overthrown,” was the startling announcement of God’s prophet. (Jonah 3:4)
The Ninevites knew that they had made a bad record for themselves. Their God-given conscience condemned them. Though not worshipers of Jonah's God, they were still given to the fear of deities. So when they heard a foreigner, who had no conceivable personal interest in them, declare with boldness their coming destruction, the Ninevites were shocked to their senses. The whole city, including the king, repented in sackcloth and ashes.
Mercifully the God of love spared the repentant Ninevites from the calamity that his prophet had pronounced against them.
So could this same God torture people after death in an eternal fire with no possibility of repentance and forgiveness?
Where does this teaching originate? Some point to Jesus' description of "Gehenna" erroneously translated as "hell" in their Bible, but nothing could be further from the truth.....Gehenna was Jerusalem's garbage dump in the Valley of Hinnom, just outside the city's walls.....where the bodies of wicked evil doers were cast into the flames for disposal, not torture. Nothing alive ever went in to Gehenna. The flames were kept burning day and night to consume the rubbish and what the flames missed, the maggots finished off.....so what you base your belief on is not true and never was. Gehenna was used by Jesus to represent a death from which no resurrection was possible. Like the "lake of fire" in Revelation, it is a symbolic place because "death and hades" are also thrown into this lake to be destroyed.
"And the sea gave up the dead who were in it, and Death and Hades gave up the dead who were in them; and they were judged, each one of them according to their deeds. 14 Then Death and Hades were thrown into the lake of fire. This is the second death, the lake of fire." (Revelation 20:13-14)
Hades is not an eternal "hell". The "lake of fire" is "the second death"....a death from which no one is resurrected.
Jesus spoke again of Gehenna saying...
"And do not be afraid of those who kill the body but are unable to kill the soul; but rather fear Him who is able to destroy both soul and body in hell.[Gehenna]"
So the whole person "body and soul" is "
destroyed" in "Gehenna".
What makes "Hell" a place of conscious torment to those in Christendom who believe in it? Belief in an immortal soul that survives the death of the body....and yet this is not a Bible teaching either.....the Bible teaches that death is the opposite of life...not a continuation of it. Jesus believed in the resurrection and he raised people from the dead....he even experienced it himself. It is a restoration of life, not a continuation of it.
So argue those with me from scripture and lets see where we get?
But we all know that the Watchtower Society has been promoting heresies for ages.
Not nearly as long as Christendom has.....the weeds sown by the devil were not a recent event....