Regarding doctrines, the denominations of Christendom believe in the Trinity, immortality of the soul, and hellfire, which are all of pagan origin. They have also adopted many pagan rituals into their religious services.
Early Biblical stories, as well as early understanding of the divine (in the Hebraic tradition) derive from earlier Babylonian and assyrian myth, and we can track the similarities. The creation story in Genesis came from earlier "pagan" accounts. So what? Neither Christian belief, nor its parent Judaism are as pure as you seem to think.
They have even blotted out the name Jehovah from their Bible translations, thus showing that they do not want to be Gods representatives.
The original Hebrew word is not "Jehovah." In one early tradition, it's
Elohim (the gods, or the God). In another early tradition, it's YHWH. (Since original Hebrew contains no vowels, the later Masoretes added vowels to the text, to make it
YaHWeH.) The word,
Jehovah is a much, much later construct of German origin, placing the vowels of one word in the middle of the consonants for another word, ending up with
Jehovah. (Out of respect for the Jewish tradition of not speaking God's true Name.) The name
Jehovah was taken out and replaced with the more accurate term "God" (for
elohim) and LORD God (for
YHWH elohim).
and believe me most people are not willing to be humble and feed from the channel Jesus is using.
Here, you are
clearly making a judgment as to what the "correct" channel is. You
are passing judgment on who is "in" and who is "out."
We can use this criterion to identify the organization that represents God today.
And how do you determine (by this particular criterion) which is which? One still has to make a judgment as to what one feels is "worthless" or "fine." The Church has made all kinds of mistakes. That's normal -- it's a human organization. That does not indicate that the fruit the Church produces (love, forbearance, compassion, mercy, inclusion, kindness, a servant spirit) is "worthless." (BTW, in what way is making a summary judgment against organizations not one's own showing forbearance, compassion, kindness or inclusion?)