The Jehovah's Witnesses
and the Theocratic Subversion of Ethnicity
by Joel Elliott
A Paper Presented to the American Academy of
Religion
Washington, DC, November 21, 1993
Send me email at elliott@email.unc.edu
Please do not quote or reproduce this document
without my permission.
© 1993
This paper is very much work-in-progress, and I would love
to hear your responses to this essay as I begin to revise
it.
Since their origins in late nineteenth-century America, the Jehovah's
Witnesses have evolved into a well-defined and efficiently organized
religious group of global proportions. Recent Society statistics
indicate that less than one fourth of contemporary Witnesses live
in the country of the movement's birth; the Society now claims a
world-wide core membership of over four million.1 The
Watchtower Bible and Tract Society--the movement's legally incorporated
name--takes special pride in its international membership. One of
its recent publications proclaims that "Christian brotherhood unmarred
by racial distinctions is a reality among Jehovah's Witnesses in
the 20th century."2 Witnesses worldwide routinely gather
together in their circuit and district conventions to "rejoice in
the same- ness" that transcends their national, ethnic and cultural
differences.3
Witness scholar M. James Penton acknowledged that the Watchtower
Society "has emphasized the value of ethnic and racial tolerance
among its adherents to a greater degree than is the case with most
other religious organizations."4 Even in the segregated
American religious South, Witness congregations, assemblies and
conventions have been fully integrated for decades.5
Based on his research on Witnesses in Africa, Bryan Wilson argued
that Witnesses "are perhaps more successful than any other group
in the speed with which they eliminate tribal discrimination among
their own recruits."6
Yet there are dissident voices that call into question those utopian
claims to racial and ethnic transcendence proffered by the Watchtower
Society. For example, Werner Cohn and H. H. Stroup (among others)
noticed that for years the Witnesses maintained segregated congregations
and assemblies in the United States and abroad.7 Barbara
G. Harrison claimed that in fact the Witnesses "were among the last
of all religious groups to be integrated in the South"; a claim
difficult to sustain, given that the Christian church remains one
of the most segregated social institutions in the United States.8
The integration of Witness congregations in the United States transpired
silently and cautiously during and after the Civil Rights movement.
The Society's most recently produced history evidences no awareness
of that inconvenient chapter in the American Witness experience.9
Although official statistics do not break membership figures down
by ethnicity or color, Americans of African descent appear to be
significantly overrepresented in the Watchtower Society; estimates
in the 1960s placed African- American membership at 20-30% of their
American constituency.10 Given the escalating presence
of African- Americans among American Witnesses, it is curious that
historically few Blacks have attained positions of prominence within
the Society.11
But it is not my intention here either to accuse the Watchtower
Society of racism or to exonerate it of such charges. I propose,
rather, to explore conspicuous mechanisms within the Watchtower
Society that appear particularly crucial to its mission of creating
and sustaining its diverse global constituency. I intend, therefore,
to draw critical attention to that global, inter-ethnic character
of this originally American religious group and to inquire into
the strategies by which the Society negotiates those complex and
volatile human issues of ethnicity, color and race.
The Globalizing Strategies of an American Religion
The Society's international vision is not a recent development
in its 100-year old history. Charles T. Russell engaged in numerous
preaching tours around the globe, and sponsored others anxious to
distribute Bible Student literature in foreign lands. The Society's
second president, J. F. Rutherford, was equally committed to global
missions. Under his guidance, numerous developments occurred in
Society organization that proved crucial to its escalating international
success. Perhaps the most important development during the Rutherford
era was the 1938 announcement of theocratic organization that ensured
the Society's centralized control over local congregations and uniformity
of belief and practice among all Witnesses.12 Under
the presidency of N. H. Knorr (1942-77) the Watchtower Society experienced
unparalleled growth and expansion. During his tenure of 35 years,
the society's worldwide membership grew from 117,209 to 2,248,390;
the number of branch offices expanded from 25 to 97. Shortly after
he assumed office, Knorr initiated the Theocratic Ministry School
for the training of Kingdom Publishers in theocratic knowledge and
rhetoric. President Knorr also established the Watchtower Bible
School of Gilead (1943) to train missionaries for global service.
Under Knorr's guidance, the Society also completed its own translation
of the Bible; that translation now appears in a dozen other languages.13
The Theocratic Deployment of Technology
From its unpromising origins as an informal, loosely organized
group of Bible Students under the leadership of Russell in late
nineteenth-century America, the Watchtower Society has evolved into
well-organized global religious organization. That impressive growth
is in part attributable to the Society's enthusiastic embrace of
innovative information technologies to further its evangelistic
goals. Russell realized that "The newspaper has become the great
factor in the daily life of the civilized world." By 1904 his sermons
were syndicated and by 1913 those sermons appeared in over 2,000
newspapers.14 In 1912 the "Photo-Drama of Creation"
appeared, which was an eight- hour long presentation (viewed in
four parts) that combined motion pictures and slides with synchronized
sound.15 The Society also temporarily invested in radio.
Rutherford's sermons first aired in 1922; by 1924 the Society owned
its own radio station in New York; and by 1933 over 400 stations
were carrying the Society's broadcasts.16 By 1940 over
40,000 portable phonographs were also in use by Kingdom Publishers,
playing those radio sermons of Rutherford for the edification of
interested householders.17
But it was under the presidency of the late F. W. Franz (1977-92)
that the theocratic deployment of technology escalated most significantly.
By 1980 the Society had committed itself fully to the computerization
of its publishing operations. By the end of the Franz presidency,
the Society's central journal The Watchtower was translated
into over 111 languages, sustained by a committed translation staff
of over 800. The Society developed its own computerized system (MEPS
="Multilanguage Electronic Phototypesetting System") to facilitate
the publication of Watchtower materials in over 200 languages. By
1992 the biweekly magazine The Watchtower claimed an average
print run of over 16 million copies.
In his provocative study of the emergence of modern nationalism,
Benedict Anderson argued that the newspaper served a vital role
in the rise of national self-consciousness. The appearance of regional
papers contributed to the stabilization of vernacular languages
and facilitated the emergence of substantial reading publics. The
newspaper became a kind of one-day bestseller, rendered obsolete
by the daily mass ritual of "almost precisely simultaneous consumption"
in which the nation first conceived itself as an "imagined community."18
The Governing Body similarly believed that "if Jehovah's Witnesses
could study the same material in their meetings week by week, and
distribute the same literature in the field ministry, this would
have a powerful unifying effect."19 Sometime in the
early 1980s Society leaders made the simultaneous publication of
its two main journals, The Watchtower and Awake! in
the major world languages a top priority. With the aid of the Society's
sophisticated new multilingual publishing capabilities, by January
1992, 66 out of 111 language editions of The Watchtower appeared
at the same time as the English edition.20 Since The
Watchtower magazine is a weekly source of spiritual nourishment
for all Witnesses, that meant "95 percent of Jehovah's Witnesses
receive the same spiritual food at the same time."21
This highly self-conscious mobilization of information technologies
is intended to cultivate a sense of a global "imagined community,"
in which persons of every nation, color and language are joined
together by their theocratic same-ness.
But Jehovah's global theocratic organization is inhabited by persons
who currently reside in over 200 countries, speak a bewildering
array of languages and manifest every imaginable variation in physical
appearance and skin color. If the theocratic deployment of modern
information technologies has significantly mitigated the disruptive
potential of human language, the Society's pervasive iconography
reflects a similar attempt to transcend the potentially divisive
effects of phenotypical variation within its global constituency.
Current Society publications abound in idyllic depictions of earthly
life in the millennial paradise. Humans of every distinguishable
race and color constitute the "great multitude" of the redeemed
who will enjoy that eschatological existence. In the last few decades
Society iconography has become increasingly multi-ethnic, and it
potentially serves as an index of the movement's rising international
composition and of its escalating self- consciousness as an international
community.
Theocratic Organization and Discipline
The Watchtower Society functions as a global community, efficiently
networked through the theocratic deployment of technology and knowledge.
This international sense of community is in part accomplished by
the Society's bureaucratic organization, its centralized production
of theocratic knowledge and literature, and by the carefully monitored
flow of information between its Brooklyn headquarters and local
assemblies of Witnesses.
The Watchtower's model for an international, inter-racial society
is the theocracy. Currently Jehovah's theocratic kingdom
appears on earth in the global network of congregations consisting
of individuals representing almost every race and culture.22
Jehovah's Witnesses maintain 98 branch offices in over 200 countries
worldwide, with each branch overseeing a portion of the Society's
69,000+ congregations.23 Through its circuit and district
overseers, each congregation answers to its branch office, and that
office operates under the direct oversight and authority of the
world headquarters in Brooklyn. The Governing Body, located at the
Brooklyn headquarters, is composed of contemporary representatives
of the "faithful and discreet slave" class, those "anointed" ones
of the 144,000 destined to reign with Christ in heaven over his
millennial kingdom.
The members of the Governing Body are Jehovah's apostolic emissaries
on earth, and as such possess unequivocal--though apparently not
infallible--authority within the Society. There is no professional
clergy, although special pioneers, missionaries and circuit and
district overseers may receive minimal remuneration. Local congregations
are under the care of elders, but those men are chosen under the
Governing Body's supervision and are directly answerable to Society
headquarters. Their major role consists of instructing local publishers,
cultivating unquestioned loyalty to Jehovah's visible organization.
Communication in the Society is vertical and ultimately one-way:
the Governing Body communicates its will and individual members
accept and implement it. It possesses a totalizing exegetical vision
that provides clear and unambiguous theocratic answers to all human
questions. A recent Society publication warns that:
Do no conclude that there are different roads, or ways, that
you can follow to gain life in God's new system. There is only
one. There was just one ark that survived the Flood,
not a number of boats. And there will be only one organization--God's
visible organization -- that will survive the fast-approaching
"great tribulation." It is simply not true that all religions
lead to the same goal . . . . You must be part of Jehovah's
organization, doing God's will, in order to receive his blessing
of everlasting life . . . .24
Consequently, the responsibility of individual members is to accept,
digest and proclaim that authoritative interpretation that flows down
from that apostolic Watchtower.
The Watchtower Society functions as a kind of total community
that provides its members with a totalizing life-world, where all
questions are answered and life-saving Truth dispensed.25
Jehovah's Kingdom tolerates no rivals; its claims are omnivorous;
commitment must be absolute and unequivocal. Witness lives are thereby
constituted by submission and obedience to the Truth revealed to
them in scripture through the apostolic aegis of the Governing Body.
And those divinely-supported decisions of Jehovah's theocratic representatives
encompass all aspects of Witness life, including family relationships,
choice of marital partners, and potentially even sexual and reproductive
choices.
If it is the Governing Body's responsibility to provide authoritative
theocratic guidance in the proper interpretation of God's word,
it is the task of local Kingdom Halls--under the careful supervision
of Society-appointed elders--to ensure that individuals are properly
indoctrinated in Bible Truths before baptism, and to provide opportunities
for the education of its members. Each congregation holds five weekly
meetings in which members are trained in theocratic knowledge.26
Based on fieldwork with an urban Jehovah's Witness community in
the 1960s, Lee R. Cooper confirmed that: "the Society is noted for
taking people who are ill at ease in public and training them to
be accomplished public speakers who have confidence and ability
to articulate their faith to total strangers."27 In
their Theocratic Ministry School participants rehearse appropriate
conversation introductions for their door-step sermons; they learn
to anticipate and respond to potential "conversation stoppers."28
Publishers receive counsel on proper grooming and dress; in Theocratic
Ministry School they learn the proper use of gesture, analogy and
the rhetorical arts.29 They are taught to keep careful
logs on the number of homes visited, the amount of literature distributed
and the number of hours spent in Service Ministry. As members mature
in their faith, their minds and bodies are methodically transformed
by the theocratic discipline. The claims of Jehovah's theocracy
are total; allegiance to Jehovah's visible organization transcends
all regional loyalties and ethnic identities. The Watchtower's theocratic
narrative is aggressive, omnivorous and monological; it has
no room for local stories and ethnic particularities.
Countervailing Signals from the Watchtower
Certainly the Jehovah's Witnesses are a rapidly expanding international
group firmly committed to a theocratic organization that claims
to transcend all national, racial or ethnic allegiances. But the
Watch Society's centrifugal dynamics of world mission and ethnic
transcendence also reveal equally powerful--though perhaps less
obvious--centripetal forces that qualify the Society's otherwise
universal claims and aspirations. For one, The Watchtower Society
remains firmly centered--organizationally and ideologically--in
the United States. James Beckford observed that:
The fact that all editorial facilities are concentrated in Brooklyn,
critical decisions are taken there and economic resources are
distributed from there accentuates the complete dependence of
all Branch organizations . . . on the international centre of
the movement. It is from Brooklyn that the unitary ideological
thread is produced that links all the diverse parts of this vast
organization and that suppresses most opportunities for the production
and circulation of deviationist views.30
Predictably, this systematic centralization of theocratic power
"has wielded [the Jehovah's Witnesses] into a more self- consciously
unified and more determinedly united religious group than almost
any other. . ."31
While the Society frantically publishes enormous amounts of literature
in over 200 languages, the fact remains that their literature is
still written in English in Brooklyn, NY, under their supervision
of the exclusively male, white, and predominantly American Governing
Body.32 The Society's celebrated New World Translation
was translated from the original biblical languages into English.
But it subsequently appeared in a dozen or more world languages
as a retranslation of the original English version.33
Apparently, only after composition in the Governing Body's "truth
language" (i.e., English) is theocratic literature cautiously translated
into the less privileged world dialects and safe for global export
and consumption.
The colorful illustrations that currently adorn Society publications
routinely emphasize the multi-ethnic composition of Jehovah's organization;
persons of every color and physical appearance constitute the "great
crowd" of faithful Witnesses and populate those idyllic scenes of
the millennial paradise on the renovated earth. But this official
awareness of Jehovah's Organization as an ethnically diverse, international
community has not always been obvious in the Society's iconography.
In 1969 Lee Cooper's careful inspection of Society publications
revealed that only occasionally did illustrations of Awake!
or The Watchtower magazines include Black families or individuals.34
In her insightful autobiography of her life as a Witness in the
1950s and 60s, Barbara Harrison drew attention to what she perceived
as the unmistakably American flavor of those utopian scenes of life
in the millennium:
America gave birth to this religion; and it remains in essence
American. The law-and-order God of the Witnesses is Middle American.
. . . And Paradise restored, if the illustrations in Watchtower
publications are to be taken literally, will look exactly like
an endless Kansas picnic--or a Texas barbecue. Most of the survivors
of Armageddon will be attired in clothes from Montgomery Ward;
and they will have crew cuts and bouffant hairdos, and skirts
decorously short. (Innocence, to the Witnesses, suggests a shirt
and tie.) The Witness dream of Eden is a dream of American suburbia--with
a few people in exotic foreign dress to lend exoticism to the
proceedings.35
Society publications--including its new 750 page history--manifest
a pervasive amnesia about those embarrassing ethnocentric traces
that linger in its past. One cannot learn, for example, that the
Society once required segregated congregations and conventions for
Americans of color, or that it once maintained a separate so- called
"Colored" Branch in the United States during the 1920s and 30s.36
Since its beginnings in late-nineteenth century America, the Watchtower
Society has embraced the most advanced information technologies
available. For the most part those technologies were treated as
neutral media in the service of worldwide Kingdom proclamation.
The Society's unqualified investment in modern technology brings
with it perhaps unforseen liabilities that threaten or compromise
its claims to timeless, trans-cultural Truth. What becomes of utopian
rhetoric and vision in the age of mechanical reproduction? The Society
must delicately negotiate the accumulative, potentially transgressive,
memories of the printing press and computerized text. A recurrent
strategy has been to discourage researchers from digging too deeply
in the past. And to explain that Jehovah has only gradually revealed
his Truth to the faithful, strategically divesting the organization
of claims to infallibility while conversely regarding anything less
than unequivocal submission as heresy and grounds for disfellowshiping.
The Watchtower Society manifests a pervasive preoccupation with
rational efficiency and technical competence. It is clearly pleased
with its complex and sophisticated publishing operations. A recently
produced videotape, "Jehovah's Witnesses: The Organization
Behind the Name" (1990) proudly rehearses the technological
marvels of the Society's massive publishing enterprise, claiming
that in the last seventy years the Society had printed over eleven
billion pieces of literature. Society officials fastidiously maintain
attendance records of their weekly meetings, assemblies, conventions,
and Annual Memorial. The organization's yearbooks faithfully reproduce
that year's grand totals, followed by pages of statistics meticulously
arranged by country. Other Society publications detail the number
of journals, books, cassettes, and videos published by the inexhaustible
Society presses and distributed by the organization's dedicated
members.
Those carefully nurtured statistics of the organization's tangible
operations provide quantified proof of Jehovah's unqualified approval
of his Watchtower Society. And That deliberately cultivated sense
of institutional momentum not only underwrites confidence in the
Society's divine guidance, but it also potentially serves as effective
medicine--preventative and therapeutic--against the Society's unstable
prophetic timetable.37 But there are those who contend
that the Society's pretensions of theocratic rationality and efficiency
are more apparent than real. Regardless of the technological wizardry
accomplished by the Society's publishing enterprise, most copies
of The Watchtower and Awake! probably wind up in the
trash can--hopefully nowadays they find their way into recycling
bins. And it is not unusual to find dusty boxes of unwanted Society
books piled up in the corners of used book stores.38
Empirically-based research projects (Bryan Wilson in Japan and Kenya;
James Beckford in Britain) suggest that the Society's traditional
technique of door-to-door ministry is also seriously overrated.
Routinely no more than half of their respondents report that they
first encountered the Witnesses in that manner; frequently just
as many respondents recalled that they made their first acquaintance
with the Society through informal contact with Witness friends and
relatives.
That image of rationality is apparent not only in the Society's
global organization and operations, but in the individual's gradual
enculturation into the theocratic practice. Publisher's are trained
to keep careful logs of the number of home bible studies conducted,
amount of literature distributed, number of return visits to interested
householders, and total hours spent in field ministry. As Society
missionaries encounter distant cultures and customs, not only must
they teach the natives to forsake their pagan beliefs and practices,
but they must "[help] the brothers to learn the value of a schedule,
how to keep records, the importance of files."39 During
his extensive field research with British Witnesses, James Beckford
noticed a pervasive ambience of "utilitarian moderation" in appearance,
dress and grooming. He observed, for example, that male Witnesses
tended "to wear rather sober suits of traditional design, white
shirts and dark ties for congregational meetings," to carry their
literature in leather briefcases, and "adopt an air of business-like
purposiveness" in meetings and field- ministry.40 The
Society's confident claims to have transcended those mundane issues
of race, ethnicity and nationality perhaps obscure the wholesale
exportation of western ideals and values, transforming Watchtower
converts into models of middle-class Americans with impeccable western
dress, well-groomed appearance, leather briefcases and--at least
for English-speaking converts--Standard American English accents.
Conclusion
The Jehovah's Witnesses appear remarkably successful in their
attempts to sustain an ethnically diverse, yet spiritually integrated
global community. Jehovah's theocratic organization makes no concessions
to the racial and social inequalities that exist outside its righteous
boundaries. Witnesses deny all "worldly" distinctions based on race,
skin color, ethnicity, nationality and class. In Jehovah's theocratic
kingdom ethnic particularities, political allegiances and socioeconomic
distinctions are (ideally) repudiated and dissolved. Witness ideology
declares that "soon God's kingdom will destroy the present ungodly
system of things," and that persons "out of all nations and tribes
and peoples and tongues" will assemble in that great millennial
paradise on the newly-renovated earth.41 Within the
Watchtower's firm but loving embrace, Jehovah's Witnesses congregate
worldwide at the same times, speaking the same theocratic language,
listening to the same Truth, proclaiming the same kingdom message
to any and all who would listen and obey. But there is another,
more complicated dimension, to this triumphalist millenarian rhetoric.
During public showings of the innovative "Photo-Drama of Creation"
in New York City in 1914, Charles Russell noticed that as the number
of blacks in attendance increased, his white audience diminished.
When he realized that many whites resisted the idea of intermingling
with blacks, Russell decided to segregate the blacks into the theater's
gallery. To those understandably offended by that compromising maneuver,
Russell explained that he must place God's cause over issues of
race. He comforted them with the assurance that very soon all those
issues would be resolved in the millennial kingdom, when the faithful
would receive "new bodies"--presumably white--where color and sex
distinctions would be no more.42
In a question-and-answer column in a 1973 issue of The
Watchtower magazine, an anonymous Society writer pondered
the submitted question: "What is the view of Jehovah's Witnesses
toward interracial marriage?" After carefully rehearsing all relevant
biblical evidence, the writer assured his querist that interracial
marriages are not intrinsically wrong. But, he added, deep-seated
prejudices remain in the world and "A Christian, being realistic,
must face life as it is--not as he wishes it might be." One must
be theocratically circumspect about such matters; while not wrong
per se, if such a marriage would compromise one's potential to give
a witness for Jehovah, it might be theocratically imprudent to pursue
the marriage.43 On the one hand the Watchtower Society's
millenarian discourse offers utopian visions of racial harmony,
revolutionary images of the overthrow of existing world governments,
idyllic scenes of life in an Edenic paradise. But from another perspective
those radical claims seem to leave our troubled world relatively
undisturbed. Jehovah's revolutionary witnesses may then appear more
as supporters of the status quo than as apocalyptic harbingers of
a new world order, compromised by their complicitous silence and
political indifference. Perhaps both dimensions of this millenarian
discourse are to some extent true. Sylvia Thrupp has suggested that
millenarian movements may offer their devotees an "imaginative perception"
of another life in "dramatic contrast" with the mundane demands
and troubled horizons of the present. But unlike the reader of a
enchanting novel or the viewer of a mesmerizing play, the believer
can enter that perfect world and collaborate in its construction.44
While dismissing all attempts to reform this corrupt and doomed
world system, Jehovah's Witnesses are certainly not a quiet and
passive people. A Watchtower publication declares that:
a small preview of what will make living on the paradise earth
after Armageddon such a pleasure. Truly, God's kingdom will bring
to pass what no human government could even hope to do.45
Witnesses imagine a perfect world on a renovated earth, ruled by
a heavenly government of Jesus and his Anointed, in which all sin,
suffering and discrimination are forever banished from human experience.
They are fervently engaged in a world mission, harnessing every
available resource and technology in their task of Kingdom proclamation
and in their collective efforts to create and sustain an imagined
theocratic community right here on earth.
ENDNOTES
1. The Yearbook reported the number of Witness Publishers
in the United States in 1992 at approximately 860,000, with a 2%
increase over 1991. 1993 Yearbook of Jehovah's Witnesses
(WTBTS, 1993), pp. 40-41. While most non-Witnesses (and Witnesses)
do not have access to Watchtower records, Witness statistical criteria
are rigorous and appear reliable. Raymond Franz remarked that "I
have never known of any instance where statistics were altered,
at least by the international headquarters. Individuals and "pioneers"
might fluff up their figures for "hours," etc., but branch offices
were expected to be scrupulously accurate in the figures they forwarded
on to the headquarters. I think one can accept published statistics
as valid." Personal correspondence from Raymond Franz, July 14,
1992. The Society urges individual publishers to average
10 hours a month in field ministry, Regular Pioneers 90 hours
per month, Auxiliary Pioneers 60 hours per month, and Special
Pioneers 140 hours per month. But Franz argues that "any person
who reports even one hour a month is counted as a "publisher.' 10
hours a month . . . is a sort of unspoken goal but not necessary
for qualifying as a publisher." Personal correspondence from Raymond
Franz, July 14, 1992.
2. Reasoning from the Scriptures, p. 305.
3. Barbara Grizzuti Harrison, Visions of Glory: A History and
a Memory of Jehovah's Witnesses (New York: Simon and
Schuster, 1978), p. 268.
4. M. James Penton, Apocalypse Delayed: The Story of the
Jehovah's Witnesses (Toronto: University of Toronto Press,
1985), p. 286.
5. [Documenting the integration of Witnesses in the US South is
extremely difficult. I make this assertion based on interviews with
Witness experts like Raymond Franz and Jerry Bergman.] 6. Bryan
R. Wilson, "Jehovah's Witnesses in Africa," New Society (12
July 1973), p. 75.
7. See, e.g., Werner Cohn, "They Hope for Armageddon." [Review
of Marley Cole, Jehovah's Witnesses: The New World Society]
The New Leader, October 17, 1955, pp. 24-6; and Herbert
Hewitt Stroup, The Jehovah's Witnesses (New York: Russell
& Russell, 1945), p. 29.
8. Given their resistance to any direct form of social reform,
it is no surprise that the Witnesses did not participate in civil
rights movement in the American South (or anywhere for that matter).
See Harrison, Visions of Glory, p. 261; also pp. 159 (anti-Semitism),
254-5.
9. See Jehovah's Witnesses: Proclaimers of God's Kingdom
(WTBTS, 1993).
10. This is based on a total African-American population of ca.
12% in the United States. Such estimates are simply an guesses,
but the percentage could be significantly higher. See William J.
Whalen, Armageddon Around the Corner: A Report on Jehovah's
Witnesses (New York: The John Day Co., 1962), p. 203; Lee
R. Cooper,"'Publish' or Perish: Negro Jehovah's Witness Adaptation
to the Ghetto," in Religious Movements in Contemporary America,
I. I. Zaretsky and M. P. Leone, eds. (Princeton, NJ: Princeton University
Press, 1974), p. 705.
11. Firpo Carr's claim that Bill Jackson, who served on the Governing
Body until his death in 1981, was Black seems a rather desperate
attempt. Others who knew Jackson personally (e.g., Raymond Franz,
Randy Watters) confirm that not only did Jackson appear white, but
to their knowledge he never claimed otherwise. See Carr, A History
of Jehovah's Witnesses from a Black American Perspective
(Hawthorne, CA: Scholar Technological Institute of Research, Inc.,
1993), pp. 45-8; see also Jackson's birth certificate reproduced
on p. 398, where both his parents are listed as "white" (sic!).
See also the unpublished paper of Jerry Bergman, "Blacks and Jehovah's
Witnesses" which cites Randy Watters, "Was There a Black Man on
the Governing Body?," [review of Carr's book] Free Minds
12 (2, March/April, 1993), p. 11. 12. Other developments include:
in 1931 the name "Jehovah's Witnesses" was officially unveiled by
Watchtower leaders as the Society's proper designation. In 1935
it was announced that "new light" on Jehovah's word indicated that
membership was no longer restricted to that "little flock" of the
144,000 who would reign in heaven with Christ during the millennium.
Rather, Society leaders revealed the existence of a "great multitude"
or Jonadab class entitled to a glorious existence on the renovated
earth. 13. The New World Translation of the Greek Christian
Scriptures was completed in 1950, and the complete translation was
available in 1961. For the most recent revision, see New World
Translation of the Holy Scriptures (WTBTS, 1984 ed. [orig.
1961])
14. Proclaimers, p. 58.
15. By 1914 that production had appeared all over North America,
Europe, New Zealand and Australia, thrilling audiences with its
innovative panorama of the unfolding of God's plan from the Creation
to the Millennium. See Proclaimers, p. 60.
16. Proclaimers, pp. 80-1.
17. Proclaimers, pp. 565.
18. Benedict Anderson, Imagined Communities, 2nd ed. (New
York: Verso, 1991), p. 35.
19. Proclaimers, pp. 597-8.
20. At the same time, the Society also claimed an average printing
run of 13 million copies of Awake! magazine in 67 languages,
30 of which appeared at the same time as the English edition.
21. The Society also claimed an average printing run of 13,110,000
copies of Awake! in 67 languages; 30 of which appeared at
the same time as the English edition. See the 1992 Yearbook
of the Jehovah's Witnesses, p. 18.
22. JWs are legally present 229 countries and are currently under
legal restrictions in perhaps 25 countries (?).
23. See 1993 Yearbook of Jehovah's Witnesses (WTBTS, 1993),
p. 33.
24. You Can Live Forever on Paradise on Earth (Brooklyn,
NY: WTBTS, 1982, 1990), p. 255 [italics added].
25. I am dependent here on Erving Goffman, Asylums: Essays
on the Social Situation of Mental Patients and Other Inmates
(Garden City, NY: Doubleday & Co., Inc., 1961); and Lewis A.
Coser, Greedy Institutions: Patterns of Undivided Commitment
(New York: The Free Press, 1974). Goffman defines a total institution
as "a place of residence and work where a large number of like-situated
individuals, cut off from the wider society for an appreciable period
of time, together lead an enclosed, formally administered round
of life." Asylums, p. xiii. Koser argues that greedy
institutions rely, not on the physical sequestering of inmates,
but on "non-physical mechanisms" that separate insiders from outsiders,
and on the voluntary compliance of its subjects. Greedy Institutions,
p. 6.
26. In accord with the Society's unwavering commitment to transform
every member into an accomplished Kingdom minister, the weekly Theocratic
Ministry School was specifically "designed for the purpose of teaching
and equipping Jehovah's witnesses to preach the good news."
27. Lee R. Cooper,"'Publish' or Perish: Negro Jehovah's Witness
Adaptation to the Ghetto," p. 712.
28. See Reasoning from the Scriptures (WTBTS, 1985, 1989),
pp. 9-24. Publishers are always persistent in conversation, and
have a ready comeback for most any comment or question. 29. Raymond
V. Franz relates his involvement in the Governing Body's decision
to forbid all forms of non-genital copulation in marriage. See his
Crisis of Conscience: The Struggle between Loyalty to
God and Loyalty to One's Religion (Atlanta: Commentary Press,
1983), pp. 42-50. While the policy was reversed in 1978, for five
years it was used to disfellowship sexually disobedient members.
On dress and grooming, see "Why Do I Have to Be Different?," Awake!
(June 8, 1992), pp. 16-8. On rhetorical preparation, see the Theocratic
Ministry School Guidebook (WTBTS, 1971). 30. James A. Beckford,
The Trumpet of Prophecy: A Sociological Study of Jehovah's
Witnesses (New York: John Wiley & Sons, 1975), p. 81.
31. Beckford, Trumpet of Prophecy, p. 96.
32. While all members of the Governing Body are white, several
members were born outside the US, representing the British Isles,
northern Europe, the Mediterranean, New Zealand, etc.
33. Proclaimers, P. 611.
34. Cooper,"'Publish' or Perish: Negro Jehovah's Witness Adaptation
to the Ghetto," p. 710. Carr's explanation that the omission of
Blacks in the Society's illustrations was inadvertent and an "oversight"
surely misses the point. See Carr, A History of Jehovah's
Witnesses, pp. 201-18.
35. Visions of Glory, p. 50.
36. Carr has conveniently reproduced the activity records of the
"Colored branch" in the United States, 1927-32, from the Society's
Yearbook. See Carr, A History of the Jehovah's Witnesses,
pp. 423-31.
37. See Beckford, Trumpet of Prophecy, p. 221.
38. While this may be true of their more recent publications,
older society publications, especially those from the Russell and
Rutherford eras, are now considered collector's items. See Jerry
Bergman, "Witnesses to a New Area of Book Collecting," Book
Collector's Market 4 (May-June 1979), pp. 1-9.
39. Proclaimers, p. 539.
40. Beckford, Trumpet of Prophecy, pp. 144-5.
41. Reasoning From the Scriptures, 305.
42. The Watchtower, April 1, 1914, pp. 105-6.
43. The Watchtower, December 1, 1973, pp. 755-6. The texts
of the articles referred to in this and the preceeding paragraph
are reproduced in Carr's A History of the Jehovah's Witnesses,
pp. 107-8, 224-7.
44. Sylvia L. Thrupp, "Millennial Dreams in Action: A Report on
the Conference Discussion," in Millennial Dreams in Action:
Essays in Comparative Study (The Hague: Mouton & Co.,
Pub., 1962), p. 25.
45. [emphasis added] You Can Live Forever, p. 160.
Author: Joel Elliott
Email: elliott@email.unc.edu
World-Wide Web: http://www.unc.edu/~elliott
Please Do NOT quote or reproduce without permission.
© 1993
© 2001 Posted with permission of Joel Elliott
on Watchtower Information Service

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