Neighbor News
βLutz residents are once again seeing receiving visits.
Witnesses Return to Knocking on Doors

Lutz residents are once again seeing receiving visits.
Witnesses Return to Knocking on Doors
Jehovahβs Witnesses in Dunedin Return to
Find out what's happening in Lutzfor free with the latest updates from Patch.
Door-to-Door Ministry After 30-Month Pandemic Pause
Jehovahβs Witnesses will resume their trademark door-to-door ministry beginning September 1; the two-and-a-half-year suspension of the work will end just in time for the launch of a global campaign featuring an interactive program for Bible study.
Find out what's happening in Lutzfor free with the latest updates from Patch.
The decision to resume their door-to-door ministry marks the complete restoration of all pre-pandemic in-person activities for the nearly 1.3 million Jehovahβs Witnesses in the 12,000 congregations in the United States. Houses of worship (called Kingdom Halls) were reopened on April 1, witnessing in public places resumed on May 31 and in-person conventions are again being planned for 2023.
βCommunication is much more fulfilling when we can see the person face-to-face,β said Dunedin resident Jonathan Burns. βFor this reason, we are glad to be going back to people's doors.β Jonathan and his wife Mary will be heading out to the neighborhood together in the coming weeks. Mary shared that βwhile letters and phone calls were able to reach areas we could not during the pandemic,β she has looked forward to the time when she could βgo out and meet the neighbors in person again and show them how much God cares.β
The suspension of the public ministry was a proactive response by the organization to keep communities and congregants safe. The move was also unprecedented. Jehovahβs Witnesses had been preaching from house to house without interruption for more than 100 years through an economic depression, two world wars and global unrest, but COVID-19 demanded a different response.
βWe believe that the early decision to shut down all in-person activities for more than two years has saved many lives,β said Robert Hendriks, U.S. spokesperson for Jehovahβs Witnesses. βWeβre now ready and eager to reconnect with our neighbors once again β person-to-person, face-to-face. Itβs not the only way that we preach, but it has historically been the most effective way to deliver our message of comfort and hope.β
The return to an in-person ministry coincides with a global campaign to offer an interactive Bible study program, available in hundreds of languages and offered at no cost. The course comes in the form of a printed book, online publication or as an embedded feature within the organizationβs free mobile application, JW Library. Released in late 2020, the interactive study platform combines text, video, illustrations and digital worksheets to help learners of all ages.
βThis study program is designed to match the learning style of the 21st-century student,β said Hendriks. βWeβre excited to begin sharing it with our neighbors as we return to making personal visits.β
The pandemic forced Jehovahβs Witnesses to quickly pivot to virtual meetings and conventions while conducting their ministry exclusively through letters, phone calls and virtual Bible studies. This has led to growth in meeting attendance and the number of congregants, with more than 400,000 newly baptized witnesses joining the ranks of 120,000 congregations globally in just the first two years of the pandemic.
For more information about Jehovahβs Witnesses, their history, beliefs and activities, visit their official website, jw.org, with content available in more than 1,000 languages.