You Can Live Forever on a Paradise Earth
The Visual Rhetoric of Jehovah's Witness Iconography
by Joel Elliott
NOTE: This essay is based on a
slide-show presentation I delivered in November, 1995, at the
joint annual meeting of the Society for the Scientific Study
of Religion / Religious Research Association, in
St. Louis, MO. This is work-in-progress, and I would love to
hear your responses to this essay.
Send me email at elliott@email.unc.edu
Please do not quote or reproduce this document
without my permission.
© 1995 Joel Elliott
Minor revisions, October 1999
Introduction
Call attention to the pictures and illustrations that serve
to impress the thoughts of the text on the mind of the student.
Many of the pictures portray the international scope of Jehovah's
organization and the unity that exists among God's people, without
regard for race, social background, or nationality. Only such
an organization [as the Watchtower Society] can truly fulfill
the commission Jesus gave to preach the good news worldwide.-Matt.
24:14
"Directing Interest to the Organization," Our
Kingdom Ministry, March 1987, p. 3
Kierkegaard once observed that while we understand our lives backward,
we must live them forward (see Kierkegaard's Journals
and Papers, vol 1, #1030). He suggested that life can therefore
never be completely comprehensible, since we can never achieve that
plenary moment of "perfect repose" when we gain absolute
retrospective insight into the meaning of life and history. But
Jehovah's Witnesses do claim to have that privileged retrospective
insight. The regular iconographic invocation of life on a paradise
earth functions as a kind of visual prolepsis, when the original
Edenic paradise is remembered and restored. In those scenes of life
in paradise that appear regularly and prominently in Witness literature,
paradise is visualized as a present reality, an apocalyptic certainty
whose redemptive and transformative power is currently available
to the faithful. The visual rhetoric of Witness iconography nurtures
the hope of this final, totalizing millennial perspective beyond
the circumscribed horizons of bodies and time.
For Witnesses the millennial return to the paradise conditions
of Eden means that Jehovah will reverse the curse of Babel, replacing
the divisive cacophony of fallen humanity with the pristine concordance
of life and language in paradise. A fervent desire to provide this
evil world with a faithful witness before its imminent destruction
dominates the lives of Jehovah's contemporary witnesses. They wish
to salvage a faithful remnant out of Satan's kingdom and fulfill
their prophetic destiny to proclaim the kingdom message to the entire
world before its tragic end in the great eschatological purge of
Armageddon.
Witnesses believe that Jehovah is now laying the organizational
infrastructure for his millennial theocracy. Within God's visible
organization, the redemptive power of the millennium is already
operative, transforming the confusion of tongues, the divisive claims
of nationalism and the corrosive power of racial prejudice and ethnic
identity into a global organization characterized by racial and
ethnic harmony, universal brotherhood and ideological univocality.
Jehovah's Witnesses proclaim that the solution to the otherwise
intransigent problems of racism, nationalism and ethnic tribalism
lies in unequivocal submission to Jehovah's theocratic direction
and active association with his visible organization, the Watchtower
Bible and Tract Society.
In God's theocratic kingdom, those divisive particularities that
have continually plagued human social existence are repudiated and
dissolved. But that proleptic realization of racial and ethnic harmony
among Jehovah's Witnesses coexists with the Society's conviction
that the present world system is hopelessly corrupt, irredeemable
by human means. While Society literature does occasionally acknowledge
that racial prejudice is not completely eradicated from Jehovah's
contemporary organization, it insists that the harmony and unity
within its righteous boundaries are unparalleled by all other religious
and social institutions.
A special objective of this presentation was to explore specifically
how Witnesses negotiate those complex and divisive issues of race
and ethnicity. I chose to focus on the Watchtower Society's iconography
because it offers a significant yet unexplored dimension of Witness
history and culture. This examination of Witness iconography provides
an interesting index by which to observe the evolving international
and multiethnic self-consciousness of the Watchtower Society.
Part One
The image of Jehovah's theocratic organization as a transnational,
multiethnic community is not a novel development in Witness history.
The movement's founder, Charles Taze Russell, clearly indicated
his interest in spreading his message around the globe, touring
not only in Britain and western Europe, but also in the Middle East,
Africa, and Central and South America. While early Society illustrations
were clearly dominated by persons of Anglo-Caucasian appearance,
Witness iconography included persons of Asian, African and even
Native American dress and physical appearance as early as the Rutherford
era (1917-42).

The Cosmic Drama:
Rutherford era illustration from the Enemies book.
Notice the Native American in the left front row
Lee Cooper noticed, however, that even in the late 1960s African-Americans--by
then a substantial constituency within the Watchtower Society--rarely
appeared in Society illustrations and photographs.[1]
But that changed significantly in the late 1970s and early 1980s,
as the Society realized that the world had become "very picture
oriented," and set about to make its publications "more
visually appealing."[2] Since that time
the major iconic motifs of Society publications routinely emphasize
the interracial and multiethnic composition of Jehovah's visible
organization; the Society even regionalizes its iconography to enhance
its local appeal.[3]

An illustration of life in paradise from the Knowledge book.
Perhaps the most important iconic motif in Witness literature is
the representation of life on paradise Earth.[4]
Many of the slides in this presentation focused on that Society
leitmotif and illustrated how those scenes of paradise have become
increasingly interracial and ostensibly multicultural in the last
few decades.
Several tensions and polarities seem particularly salient in Witness
culture, especially evident in the Society iconography as well as
its pedagogical practices.
Part Two
There is a significant tension in Witness discourse between the
Watchtower Society representation of itself as a global culture
or international organization that has transcended the divisive
particularities of race, ethnicity, nationality, language, etc.,
and the Society's desire to encompass and accommodate various expressions
of cultural diversity and local particularities. To express this
global/local, transnational/provincial tension another way: not
only are Jehovah's Witnesses historically an "American religion"
in that they originated in late nineteenth-century America, but
Witness leadership--especially at its geographic and ideological
center--is clearly overrepresented by an Anglo-American gerontocracy
with American English as its privileged language of discourse. Witness
literature and iconography indicates that uniformity and univocality
within the Society exists not only at the level of explicit belief
and formal practice, but that this homogenizing dynamic extends
even to uniformity of dress and grooming, as well as a conspicuous
tendency toward lexical univocality at least among American English-speaking
Witnesses.[5]
That emphasis on uniformity and univocality stands in provocative
contrast with the Society's selective celebration of cultural and
ethnic diversity in, for example, its contemporary iconographic
representations of life in paradise and in the routine inclusion
in Society publications of photographs taken at Witness assemblies
and conventions around the world. The participants' obvious ethnic
dress and phenotypical appearance apparently signify the existence
of ethnic and culture diversity within Jehovah's global theocratic
organization, present and future.

Note the ethnic / racial diversity in this
scene of the "great crowd"
ascending "the mountain of Jehovah"
A point that needs more development: I might also contrast the
apparent indigenization of local Kingdom Halls, i.e., the standard
practice of appointing local Witnesses to positions of responsibility
at the congregational level. But the organizational reality is that
those leaders are always directly appointed by the Society
and that individuals with minimal connection to or investment in
the life and culture of their subordinates populate the intermediate
and higher levels of leadership (e.g., circuit and district overseer).
It does appear, however, that at least in the US ethnic/racial minorities
are significantly represented in those intermediate positions of
leadership and responsibility above the congregational level (e.g.,
in the US, African-Americans and Hispanics appear to be well-represented
among the Society's Circuit and District Overseers, as well as by
the large volunteer staff at Brooklyn "Bethel"). At this
time, however, the Governing Body--the highest level of (human)
leadership within Jehovah's visible organization--is still clearly
dominated by white males primarily of Anglo-American descent. That
fact is likely to change with the announcement of new doctrinal
developments by the Society, i.e., the revision of the 1914 / "this
generation" doctrine (i.e., the insistence that Armageddon
must occur within a literal generation of 1914) and the doctrinal
legitimation of an ancillary leadership class (the Nethinim or "given
ones") potentially eligible to serve on the Governing Body.
That right was previously reserved only for the "faithful and
discreet slave" or anointed class that primarily consists of
individuals who were Witnesses before 1935.
Part Three
One of the most interesting contrasts in Witness culture is its
apparent aniconic style, manifested in the simple, utilitarian aesthetic
embodied in the architecture of Kingdom Halls and in the Witness
ideal of ascetic moderation, discipline and "balance."

Samples of Kingdom Hall architecture
from the Proclaimers book.
But that apparent austerity of Witness culture contrasts sharply
with the Watchtower Society's lavish and pervasive iconography in
which Witness ideology is visually inscribed. I have frequently
observed the direct appeal to the pleasures and beauty of life in
paradise both in the Society's literature and in the pedagogical
and proselyting practices of local Witnesses. The Society tract
Life in a Peaceful New World (1987, 1994), adorned with a
beautiful illustration of life on the paradise earth, begins with
the following appeal:
When you look at the scene on this tract, what feelings do
you have? Does not your heart yearn for the peace, happiness,
and prosperity seen there? Surely it does. . .

Compared to the ascetic culture of discipline and moderation idealized
in Society literature and pedagogy, the fertility and pleasures
of life in paradise--frequently symbolized by the abundance of fruit
and emphasized by Witnesses' speculation about the delectability
of that millennial fruit--appears to nurture a kind of millenarian
sensuality reminiscent of early Christian chiliasm.[6]

Fruit is a major visual motif in
Witness scenes of paradise.
Perhaps this contrast is not as stark or incommensurable as one
might initially imagine. The apparent aniconism of local Kingdom
Halls is easily exaggerated and misunderstood. Rather than reject
outright the persistent human "will to image," Witnesses
have instead redefined "the rules of signification" and
nurture a sectarian aesthetic that contests the dominant symbols
and paganized architecture of corrupt "Christendom." The
following iconic motifs are frequently inscribed in the architecture
and organization of Kingdom Halls: the Watchtower symbol--perhaps
embedded in the brickwork of the building's exterior, the map of
the congregation's territory, the local congregation's schedule
of meetings, the information board with assignments and official
correspondence from the Society's Brooklyn headquarters, and the
year-text printed on a banner displayed at the front of the auditorium.[7]

Jesus on the single-beam "torture stake."
From the Knowledge book.
The Witnesses' sectarian aesthetic is singularly evident, for example,
in the Society's regular depiction of Jesus fastened to a single-beamed
"torture stake" (the New World Translation's translation
of stauros). Witnesses regard the traditional t- shaped cross
as a pagan fertility symbol and yet another example of the pervasive
infiltration of paganism into corrupt "Christendom." The
removal of that defiling cross-beam visually contests the traditional
iconography of fallen Christianity and additionally manifests in
condensed form the Watchtower Society's historic anti-Catholicism.
A spirit of utilitarian moderation and disciplined pragmatism pervades
Witness culture and practice. Society literature acknowledges that
after WWII the world became more "visually oriented" and
that the Society developed its lavish iconography as another practical
strategy for marketing the Witnesses' urgent message of the imminent
apocalyptic purge of Armageddon and the healing beauty and global
redemption of life in the millennial paradise.[8]
Part Four
Finally, an important tension that pervades Witness discourse is
the transformative and revolutionary potential of the Society's
iconoclastic millennialism, contrasted with the Society's posture
of apocalyptic ennui and social resignation that rejects any attempt
to reform or redeem the present world system hopelessly dominated
by satanic power. The striking irony of this contrast is seen most
clearly in the Society's advice toward those who would consider
interracial marriage. The Society counseled that: "A Christian,
being realistic, must face life as it is--not as he wishes it might
be."[9] An earlier column on the same issue instructed readers that:
Christians cannot change prevailing human customs, prejudices
and laws but must put up with them. They should therefore take
a very realistic view of matters [emphasis added] and recognize
the added difficulties such a marriage will have to face.[10]
The Society concludes the issue by conceding that while such marriages
are not formally wrong, they are usually unwise given the nature
of popular prejudice and hence better avoided.
But surely the utopian hope that nurtures the vision of the total
resolution of all evil and injustice in a millennial paradise on
earth is precisely the consequence of the Witnesses' obdurate
refusal to accept "life as it is." It is instead the hope-indeed,
the passionate certainty-of eternal life in an Edenic paradise
when humanity's fallen nature will be redeemed and Jehovah will
finally harmonize the divisive cacophony of human voices into the
perpetual theocratic harmony and univocal same-ness of life on a
paradise Earth.
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ENDNOTES:
1.See Lee R. Cooper, "'Publish'
or Perish: Negro Jehovah's Witness Adaptation to the Ghetto."
In Religious Movements in Contemporary America, edited by
I. I. Zaretsky and M. P. Leone, 700-721. Princeton, NJ: Princeton
University Press, 1974.
2.See Jehovah's Witnesses: Proclaimers
of God's Kingdom. (Brooklyn, NY: Watchtower Bible and Tract
Society, 1993) pp. 595- 6.
3.For an example, see Firpo Carr,
A History of Jehovah's Witnesses from a Black American Perspective
(Hawthorne, CA: Scholar Technological Institute of Research, Inc.,
1993), p. 204.
4.Other major iconic motifs include:
scenes of loved ones rejoined at the resurrection; Adam and Eve
in paradise; suffering and destruction at Armageddon; Jesus hanging
on a single-beamed stake; various depictions of the "great
crowd" (e.g., ascending "the mountain of Jehovah").
5.From my correspondence with Witnesses,
ex-Witnesses and anthropologists, similar tendencies toward lexical
uniformity and rhetorical iconoclasm (e.g., resisting the established
vocabulary of dominant religious groups by developing idiosyncratic
terms for apparently common practices, beliefs, etc.) exist among
Witnesses outside the US. An invaluable source for Witness linguistic
practice and jargon is Lynn D. Newton's Glossary of American
English Hacker Theocratese, available on the World-Wide Web
at:
http://www.eecs.umich.edu/~lnewton/glossary
6.Cf. the depiction of the millennium
in the fragment from Papias preserved in Irenaeus's Against Heresies,
V.33.3,4.
7.For this paragraph I am very dependent
here on David Freedberg, The Power of Images: Studies in the
History and Theory of Response (Chicago: The University of Chicago
Press, 1989). The quotes are from p. 55 where Freedberg is himself
quoting Robin Cormack, Writing in Gold: Byzantine Society and
Its Icons (New York: Oxford University Press, 1985), p. 105.
See especially Freedberg's chapter entitled "The Myth of Aniconism,"
pp. 54-81, as well David Morgan's "Imaging Protestant Piety:
The Icons of Warner Sallman," Religion and American Culture
3 (1993): 29-45.
8.Proclaimers, pp. 595-6.
9.The Watchtower, 12/1/73,
p. 735.
10.The Watchtower, 7/15/60,
p. 447.
Author: Joel Elliott
Email: elliott@email.unc.edu
World-Wide Web: http://www.unc.edu/~elliott
Please Do NOT quote or reproduce without permission
© 1995
© 2001 Posted with permission of Joel Elliott
on Watchtower Information Service

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