
As of April 1st, Jehovah's Witnesses resumed in-person meetings, yet still are not engaging in the door to door ministy.
Carmela Clayton would rarely go more than a few days without knocking on a door or visiting a Bible student as part of her volunteer ministry. That abruptly changed in the spring of 2020 when Jehovahβs Witnesses suspended their in-person public ministry, meetings and large conventions.
Two years later, the Lakeland resident is busier than ever. βA lot of people are struggling. For me, there is no greater service that we can do than to share the Bibleβs message of comfort and hope with people because thatβs whatβs needed β¦ especially for the times weβre living in now.β
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With this historic change, the number of Jehovahβs Witnesses grew 3% in the United States in 2021 alone, matching the most significant increase for the organization over the past decade and the second-largest percentage increase since 1990.
βStaying active in our ministry while remaining safe has had a powerful preserving effect on our congregants and communities,β said Robert Hendriks, U.S. spokesman for Jehovahβs Witnesses. βThe wise decision not to prematurely resume in-person activities has united us and protected lives while comforting many people in great need. The results speak for themselves.β
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For congregants like Carmela Clayton, the virtual pivot has meant trading her bookbag for a tablet and smartphone, and her walking shoes for slippers. Her tools have changed, but her message is the same. She regularly shares scriptures with dozens of community members and conducts free Bible courses via telephone and Zoom. Even late into the evening, in her pajamas and about to turn in, Clayton has answered phone calls requesting a Bible study on the spot. How did she respond?, βSo I got up and gathered my stuff, and we had the study.β
Last year, the international organization reported all-time peaks in the number of people participating in their volunteer preaching work, increased attendance in Zoom meetings and more than 171,000 new believers baptized. In the past two years, more than 400,000 have been baptized worldwide.
Some whose ministry or attendance at religious services had slowed because of age and poor health said they feel re-energized with the convenience of virtual meetings and a home-based ministry.
Despite dealing with memory loss and diminished energy, Joseph Fuoco, 81, and his wife Sarah, 88, are now nicknamed βthe dynamic duo.β
The Fuocos use Zoom to worship twice a week with their Hollis, New Hampshire, congregation and regularly join online ministry groups to comfort neighbors and family through phone calls, letters, texts and email.
βWhat could have been quite a disadvantage, weβve made into an advantage,β Joseph Fuoco said. βThe fact that we can work right from home is a great advantage. Iβm happy with it.β
By sharing the Bibleβs hope remotely, the fewer than 3,000 Jehovahβs Witnesses in Alaska can rapidly preach across the 586,000 square miles of their sparsely populated state. βWeβre talking to more people in a day than we did in a month,β said Marlene Sadowski of Ketchikan.
The official website of Jehovahβs Witnesses, translated into more than 1,000 languages, has also leveraged the organizationβs outreach.
After starting a free self-paced Bible course on jw.org in December 2019, Lisa Owen requested a free, interactive Bible study over Zoom. She was one of nearly 20,000 baptized as one of Jehovahβs Witnesses last year in the United States in private settings, including backyard swimming pools, tubs and even rivers.
βJW.ORG gave me somewhere to learn, somewhere to land, and to start living the way God wants me to. It taught me so much,β said Owen of Moriarty, New Mexico.
To start an online Bible study course, receive a visit or attend a virtual meeting locally, visit jw.org.