LANGUAGE AND IDENTITY AT THE KINGDOM HALL:
THE DISCURSIVE STRATEGIES
OF THE
WATCHTOWER SOCIETY
by Joel Elliott
Please do not quote or reproduce this
document
without my permission.
© 1993
Send me email at elliott@email.unc.edu
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.
A whole mythology is deposited in our language.
.... We must plough over the whole of language.
--Ludwig Wittgenstein, Remarks on Frazer's Golden Bough
For then I shall give to peoples the change to a pure language,
in order for them all to call upon the name of Jehovah,
in order to serve him shoulder to shoulder.
--Zephaniah 3:9, (New World Translation)
Introduction
An extraordinary linguistic iconoclasm permeates the discourse
of Jehovah's Witnesses.[1]
One must exhibit impeccable moral behavior, but one must convincingly
"talk the theocratic talk" as well.[2] This special
theocratic language plays an important role in community self-definition
and boundary maintenance. Witness lexicons are gradually and
thoroughly purged of the evil traces of both "the World" and
"Christendom" (i.e., other Christian groups). The Watchtower
Society[3] constitutes a highly obtrusive "community
of discourse" that generates and monitors the theocratic language.[4]
New members gradually learn their new vocabulary, and the symbolic
repertoire of the Watchtower eventually permeates mature Witness
discourse. Witnesses reject "the World" and its demonic seductions;
they resist contamination from corrupt "Christendom." Yet they
must engage the world in their occupations and in their indefatigable
efforts to disseminate Jehovah's message to lost souls otherwise
doomed for slaughter at Armageddon. An important means by which
they constitute themselves and maintain symbolic distance from
"the World" and "Christendom" is through the cultivation and
deployment of a communal dialect.
Witness discourse is heavily jargonized; it is filled with "buzz
words" that immediately differentiate themselves from both the outside
world and from other Christian groups. In some cases, common Christian
words are appropriated and transformed. They call themselves "Witnesses,"
and speak of "Jehovah's Organization" or the "Theocracy." Local
congregations are called "Kingdom Halls," not churches. Gary and
Heather Botting argue that:
The 'theocratic language' includes the redefinition of standard
English words, the emotional charging of words, the peculiar use
of metaphor in argument, and the adoption of particular mannerisms
of speech.[5]
In this arsenal of theocratic jargon, traditional words are subverted
with special nuances, conventional ideas and concepts renamed, new
terminology constructed. This theocratic language even permits Witnesses
quickly to identify other Witnesses and evaluate levels of maturity.
Since their origins in late nineteenth-century America,[6]
the Jehovah's Witnesses have evolved into a distinct and mature
American religious group.[7] The movement has grown
at an impressive rate. In addition to their active and successful
mission work in North America, Witnesses have also pursued aggressive
missionary work globally. The Watchtower Society has become an international
movement of significant proportions.
Witness literature regularly invokes their impressive statistics
as proof of divine approval. Those statistics are "major symbols
of success and proof positive of Jehovah's continued blessing upon
his organization."[8] A recent issue of The
Watchtower proclaims:
. . . the global work of witnessing about God's Kingdom is strong
evidence that we are near the end of this wicked system and that
true freedom is at hand. The ones calling on people with the hope-filled
message of God's new world are described at Acts 15:14 as "a people
for [God's] name." Who bear Jehovah's name and give the global
witness about Jehovah and his Kingdom? The historical record of
the 20th century answers: only Jehovah's Witnesses.
Today they number more than four million in more than 66,000 congregations
all over the world.[9]
Recent
statistics indicate there are over four million Watchtower members
worldwide, with less than one-fourth now residing in the United
States. The 1996 Yearbook of Jehovah's Witnesses reports
statistics from 232 countries (including 25 countries where Witnesses
are banned), with the following totals:
| Worldwide
Report: 1995 Totals |
| Number of Countries |
232 |
| Number of Branch Offices |
101 |
| Peak Publishers |
5,199,895 |
| Average Publishers |
4,950,344 |
| Percentage Increase over 1994 |
5 |
| 1995 Number Baptized |
338,491 |
| Average Pioneer Publishers |
663,521 |
| Number of Congregations |
78,620 |
| Total Hours |
1,150,353,444 |
| Average Bible Studies |
4,865,060 |
| Memorial Attendance |
13,147,201 |
| Memorial Partakers |
8,645 |
The yearbook reported the number of Witness Publishers in the United
States in 1995 as 956,346 (peak) / 912,002 (average) with a
3% increase over 1994.[10]
Witness statistical criteria are rigorous and generally reliable.[11]
Individual Publishers are encouraged to spend 10 hours a
month in field ministry -- but to be considered active, Publishers
must submit at least one hour per month. Regular Pioneers
average 90 hours per month, Auxiliary Pioneers 60 hours per
month, and Special Pioneers 140 hours per month.
Witnesses argue that the divine name "Jehovah" identifies
God in a way that generic titles like "Lord" and "God" do not.[12]
They are, after all, witnesses for Jehovah, and they claim
as one of the identifying marks of the "true church" its invocation
of God's personal name.[13] A Watchtower publication
declares that:
. . . God's people must treat his name as holy and make it known
throughout the earth . . . There is only one people that is really
following Jesus' example in this regard. Their main purpose in
life is to serve God and bear witness to his name, just as Jesus
did. So they have taken the scriptural name "Jehovah's Witnesses."[14]
Witnesses abhor the systematic exclusion of the name "Jehovah"
from the text of some modern Bible translations (e.g., the Revised
Standard Version translates the Tetragrammaton consistently
as "the lord"). In their New World Translation, Witness translators
have not only restored the word "Jehovah" to the English text of
the Hebrew Bible, but have also introduced it into their translation
of the New Testament.[15] The word is familiar enough
to those of Christian and Jewish background, but for Witnesses "Jehovah"
is the special name of God. For them the divine name possesses an
almost mantric quality; frequent invocation of God's personal name
is a regular feature of Witness discourse. One recent Watchtower
publication even counsels pronouncing the divine name aloud as an
effective strategy for warding off demons.[16]
Discursive Strategies of the Theocratic Order
In a recent publication, Scott Montgomery explored discursive strategies
deployed in contemporary scientific discourse.[17]
Building on the work of M. Bakhtin, T. Todorov and R. Barthes, Montgomery
argued that this highly jargonized discourse effectively dichotomizes
the speaking world into insiders and outsiders. While one normally
thinks of language as a communicative system employed to bridge
semantic gaps, this jargonized discourse is equally as effective
at excluding and repelling, generating limits and maintaining boundaries.
The discriminating power of language exalts and assures those inside
this rhetorical space, while rejecting and offending discursive
Others. Scientific discourse ideally purges itself of all social
and private processes that condition and situate knowledge. What
remains is pure Truth, exorcised of all historical and personal
contingencies. Ideally, the author's presence is excised; the reader
glimpses the authorial presence only in moments of literary failure.
Content is everything and discourse confronts the reading
subject with disembodied, anonymous Truth.
Montgomery argues that in its approach to language, the natural
sciences manifest a monological discursive strategy.[18]
The so-called human sciences reflect a dialogical approach to language,
since they necessarily converse with other discourses. But the natural
sciences pursue a monological language game, vanquishing all other
forms of discourse and establishing itself as the only legitimate
means of excavating and representing genuine knowledge of the world.
Witness discourse reflects a monological discursive strategy similar
to Montgomery's presentation of contemporary scientific discourse.
I have pursued this analysis of Witness discursive strategies under
three headings: (1) The Rhetoric of Sheep and Goats,
(2) Speaking the Truth in Formulas, and (3) The Watchtower's
Cult of Anonymity. I argue that the heavily jargonized Theocratic
discourse splits human society in two: the corrupt world system
is dominated by Satanic forces, and the pure theocratic order is
currently manifested in those faithful witnesses of Jehovah separated
from the world, recognizable by their righteous lifestyle and pure
theocratic speech.
I offer this essay as a perspectival rendering of some particularly
salient dynamics operative in Witness life and experience. I do
not claim that this analysis of Witness discursive strategies
is total or comprehensive. With Nietzsche I believe that there is
no knowing or seeing in general, only seeing in particular and embodied
knowing that is perspectival and provisional.[19]
Hopefully the questions raised and issues explored by this heuristic
adventure into the rhetorical cosmos of Jehovah's Watchtower will
facilitate further inquiries and generate new perspectives.
The Rhetoric of Sheep and Goats
For Witnesses the world is essentially composed
of sheep and goats, insiders and outsiders, "Babylon the Great"
and the pure theocratic order. In principle Witnesses reject
the "World" as both moot and evil. It is moot because this corrupt
and corruptive world order is scheduled for immediate destruction.
It is under the domain of Satan and will be obliterated in the
imminent battle of Armageddon. Witnesses therefore refuse to
participate in any substantive way in religion or politics in
the present world order. Witnesses do not support political
solutions to world problems like the United Nations, since only
Jehovah can redeem the earth from sin and satanic corruption.
The Watchtower proclaims:
Today people talk a lot about living together in peace, and have
even set up a "United Nations" organization. Yet people and nations
are divided as never before. What is needed? The hearts of people
need to change. But it is simply impossible for the governments
of the world to perform such a miracle. The Bible's message about
God's love, however, is doing it.[20]
Witnesses also refuse participation in interfaith or ecumenical
endeavors, since they cannot commune with the corrupt religion of
Babylon the Great. Watchtower ideology demands nothing less than
immediate and complete separation from the world.[21]
If their eschatology demands disengagement, it paradoxically compels
Witnesses to confront the world in apocalyptic proclamation of Jehovah's
kingdom. The urgency of the times constrains Jehovah's modern-day
witnesses to adapt the privileged theocratic discourse to the apparently
dialogical task of world-engagement. God's will for his witnesses
today is that they engage in the momentous task of preaching, since
"Bible prophecy reveals unmistakably that we are living now during
'the conclusion of the system of things.'"[22] With
their discourse securely rooted in Jehovah's monological cosmos,
Witnesses engage in a separating work, proclaiming the message of
the imminent kingdom and calling out those "sheeplike" ones who
heed the voice of Jehovah. Those who listen and obey possess the
hope of resurrection and life on the renovated "new heavens and
new earth." They may even avoid death altogether if they are alive
when God ushers in his millennial kingdom.
Witnesses are suspended in a kind of liminality; they are "in Satan's
world, but still. . . no part of it."[23] Witnesses
exist "between the times," subsisting in their righteous communitas,
living with the knowledge that Jehovah's kingdom has been inaugurated,
and that the return of Jesus will occur before the generation alive
in 1914 passes away. Despite the apparent delays and re-calculations
of the End-time, Witnesses continue in their tenacious struggle
to proclaim Jehovah's imminent kingdom on earth.[24]
Penton argues that in fact the Witnesses have "preached millenarianism
longer and more consistently than any major sectarian movement in
the world."[25] The year 1914 is a pivotal date for
Witnesses, as it signifies the time when Watchtower prophetic interpretation
indicates that "Jesus Christ began to rule as king of God's heavenly
government."[26] One Watchtower publication summarizes
that:
Christ as King did not immediately proceed to destroy all who
refused to acknowledge Jehovah's sovereignty and himself as Messiah.
Instead, as he had foretold, a global preaching work was to be
done . . . . As King he would direct a dividing of peoples of
all nations, those proving to be righteous being granted the prospect
of everlasting life, and the wicked being consigned to everlasting
cutting off in death . . . . In the meantime, the very difficult
conditions foretold for "the last days" would prevail . . . .
Before the last members of the generation that was alive
in 1914 will have passed off the scene, all the things
foretold will occur, including the "great tribulation"
in which the present wicked world will end.[27]
Their unyielding devotion to the imminence of the End commits Jehovah's
latter-day witnesses to a kind of permanent liminal existence, in
which their allegiances and connections to the social order are
pared to a minimum.[28] Their earnest hopes and longings
are focused on the return of Jesus, on the renovated earth and an
eternally blissful existence in that Edenic paradise. The evil world
order will immediately disappear at the great and climactic battle
of Armageddon when Jehovah will install his new order of things.
Jesus and the Anointed 144,000 will then preside in the heavens
over that "great multitude" of the righteous faithful resurrected
on the newly renovated earth.[29] Together Jehovah's
faithful will gradually and thoroughly restore the earth to its
original Edenic tranquility. This posture of world rejection entails
the rhetorical exorcism of Witness discourse in which words and
doctrines are purged of their "Babylonish" associations. This purge
of all vestiges of corrupt Babylon demands more than simple lexical
correctness. Jehovah's people must be theocratically correct
in every way. This desire for theocratic correctness involves not
only the eradication of the corrupt language of Babylon; it also
requires the theological exorcism of ideological remnants of corrupt
Babylon. Watchtower literature proclaims that:
A religion may claim to advocate worship of the true God
of the Bible and it may use the name of his Son, Jesus Christ,
but of what value is this if it is contaminated with Babylonish
doctrines and practices? . . . . [W]e need to make a clean break
from any and all organizations of Babylon the Great. We need to
quit sharing in their activities . . . .[30]
Thus Witnesses reject the traditional Christian doctrine of the
Trinity because it is neither rational nor scriptural, but also
because the very notion of triune gods evidences pagan corruption.
The traditional doctrines of the immortality of the soul and eternal
torment in Hell are rejected by Witnesses because they too originated
in pagan antiquity, not in the Bible.[31] What appears
as a particularly gratuitous claim is the Witness' insistence that
Jesus was crucified on a single-beamed "torture stake," not on a
tau-shaped cross. Witnesses argue that the tau- shaped cross has
ancient pagan fertility associations, although the obvious phallic
imagery of a single-beamed stake gives them no pause.[32]
The Watchtower declares that:
. . . there are common threads going through the confused tapestry
of the world's religions. Many religions have their roots in mythology.
Nearly all are tied together by some form of belief in a supposed
immortal human soul that survives death and goes to a hereafter
or transmigrates to another creature. Many have the common denominator
of belief in a dreadful place of torment and torture called hell.
Others are connected by ancient pagan beliefs in triads, trinities,
and mother goddesses. Therefore, it is only appropriate that they
should all be grouped together under the one composite symbol
of the harlot "Babylon the Great."[33]
Witnesses likewise reject the traditional celebration of festivals
and holidays (including Christmas, New Year's Day, Easter, and personal
birthdays) since--Witnesses argue--they actually originated in Babylon
the Great. Witnesses believe that:
Those that make up the Christian organization of Jehovah's witnesses
are persons who have separated themselves from the many religions
of both pagandom and Christendom. By attending meetings at one
of their Kingdom Halls, you can see for yourself the difference
this has made.[34]
Witnesses actively and creatively cultivate their so-called sectarian
identity in a process of symbolic differentiation. This is accomplished
in part by the construction of demonic Others (e.g., "the World,"
"Babylon the Great") and the identification of their own community
as a proleptic manifestation of the pure theocratic order in the
midst of the corrupt world system.[35] Jehovah's Witnesses
operate within a moral cosmos in which there is a clear and unambiguous
contrast between God and Satan, right and wrong, good and evil.
Everything is in principle polarized between these two extremes.
Witnesses claim a monopoly on divine Truth; one Watchtower publication
proclaims 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 . . . .[36]
Almost every dimension of Witness life manifests strategies of
symbolic differentiation and calculated distinctiveness in which
Witnesses actively cultivate their identity. Joseph F. Zygmunt observed
that while there has been some weakening of the Watchtower's obstinate
anti-worldly posture, "[the movement] has maintained its polarity
vis-à-vis the world, actively striving, in fact, to cultivate
new marks of distinctiveness, to put greater symbolic distance between
itself and the world."[37] Witnesses have produced
their own translation of the Bible (the New World Translation,
1961, 1984), written their own hymns (their hymnals include only
Watchtower-composed hymns, all ostensibly based on scripture passages);
they spend enormous amounts of time faithfully reading and distributing
the prolific literature generated by their profuse Watchtower presses.[38]
Competing tensions permeate Witness life. They are at once compelled
to proclaim Jehovah's message to a doomed world, to salvage whom
they can from the impending apocalyptic catastrophe. Their rejection
of the World and corrupt Christendom requires disengagement from
worldly activity. Yet their intense apocalyptic beliefs demand the
imminent destruction of the corrupt world system and the eternal
annihilation of everyone not protected by the redeeming love of
Jehovah. The logic of their position appears to require communitarian
withdrawal from the world into an enclave of theocratic righteousness
and ideological homogeneity.
What fellowship do righteousness and lawlessness have? Or
what sharing does light have with darkness? . . . "Therefore get
out from among them, and separate yourselves," says Jehovah
. . . [2 Cor. 6:14-18 NWT]
Yet an urgent conviction demands that Witnesses announce Jehovah's
message to whomever would listen and accept God's gracious redemption
from the coming world destruction. Those centrifugal and centripetal
dynamics of apocalyptic proclamation and world rejection are profoundly
important for Witness life and identity. Witnesses are compelled
to reject the world, yet must engage it in apocalyptic proclamation.
Having ideally rejected associations with the present evil world
system, the Watchtower cultivates its own pure theocratic language
supposedly exorcised of all vestiges of that corrupt system. The
cultivation of the theocratic language facilitates the creation
and maintenance of the homogeneous theocratic order in the midst
of the Satanic world system. Those fluent in the theocratic dialect
can bravely enter the discursive worlds of demonic Others. Beckford
observed that:
the very obligation to engage in evangelism necessitates frequent
interaction with people of widely differing outlooks and increases
the risk that Jehovah's witnesses will either compromise the purity
of their outlook or replace it with an entirely different one.[39]
But the integrity of the Watchtower's monological superstructure
remains intact; the dangerous dialogical implications of evangelistic
engagement are successfully mitigated by the deployment of theocratic
discourse.[40] The remarkable generation of consensus
found among Witness communities worldwide is accomplished in part
by the cultivation and deployment of this theocratic language.[41]
Local Kingdom Halls appear to function as "total communities" for
members.[42] The Watchtower encourages engagement
with the outside world only for purposes of proselyting. Otherwise,
the local Witness community ideally serves as the primary institution
of reference for all dimensions of Witness life including recreation,
friendship, marriage, and education. In this sense, most Witnesses
become to a great degree "hermetically sealed" from the outside
world.[43] The Watchtower has long harbored a pervasive
ambivalence toward higher education; members are generally discouraged
from pursuing post-secondary education.[44] A Watchtower
publication explains that:
Even though Witness youths are interested in a good education,
they do not pursue schooling with the intention of obtaining prestige
or prominence. Their main goal in life is to serve effectively
as ministers of God, and they appreciate schooling as an aid to
that end. So they generally choose courses that are useful for
supporting themselves in the modern world. Thus, many may take
vocational courses or attend a vocational school. When they leave
school they desire to obtain work that will allow them to concentrate
on their principle vocation, the Christian ministry.[45]
But the Watchtower has no opposition to theocratic education; their
five weekly meetings and the steady torrent of Watchtower literature
provides most members with their entire diet of educational materials.
Under President Knorr's guidance, the Watchtower initiated (in 1943)
theocratic ministry schools (held once a week at Kingdom Halls)
to train all Witnesses (male and female) in rhetorical strategy
and theocratic knowledge.[46] Lee R. Cooper observes
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."[47]
Witnesses are therefore intellectually and educationally self-sufficient.
Official Watchtower literature embodies the wisdom and insight of
those representatives of the "faithful and discreet slave" class--the
Governing Body--who present their flock with a totalizing interpretive
framework that addresses all dimensions of Witness life and experience.
The Governing Body has ruled on proper sexual conduct between marriage
partners; it provides wise counsel for proper grooming and dress;
and it guides Witnesses in the proper use of gesture, analogy and
the rhetorical arts.[48]
The Watchtower magazine is more or less the official journal
of the Society, and local Kingdom Halls regularly devote one hour
per week studying its contents. The Watchtower publication entitled
Awake! appears as a popular magazine in which Jehovah's message
is found alongside stories of current human interest. The publication
claims that it is:
for the enlightenment of the entire family. It shows how to cope
with today's problems, It reports the news, tells about people
in many lands, examines religion and science. But it does more.
It probes beneath the surface and points to the real
meaning behind current events, yet it always stays
politically neutral and does not exalt one race above another.
Most important, this magazine builds confidence in the Creator's
promise of a peaceful and secure new world before the generation
that saw the events of 1914 passes away[49]
At first glance Awake! appears as the Society's dialogical
attempt at world-engagement. Yet its stories about Finnish ice bathing
and hot saunas, the East African antelope called the Kudu, color
blindness in humans, Alzheimer's disease, acid rain, icebergs and
AIDS provide a broad range of human interest stories permeated with
pervasive allusions to distinctive Witness teachings. The broader
educational or intellectual designs of the magazine--and for that
matter, of all Watchtower publications--are unambiguously subordinated
to the pedagogical monologue of theocratic discourse.
Speaking the Truth in Formulas
Witnesses appear as biblical rationalists, rejecting such traditional
doctrines as the Trinity as neither rational nor biblical.[50]
They assert that they "believe that the entire Bible is the
inspired Word of God, and instead of adhering to a creed based on
human tradition, they hold to the Bible as the standard for all
their beliefs."[51] Watchtower literature insists
that "Their beliefs and practices are not new but are a restoration
of first-century Christianity."[52] Witnesses contend
that the cryptic apocalyptic material contained in biblical books
like Daniel and Revelation are decipherable, since all scripture
is inspired of God and is necessarily understandable and edifying.
The Witnesses manifest a pervasive contempt for the mysterious and
the inscrutable.[53] Beckford explains that the Society:
deprecates mystery and affect while explicitly lauding certainty
and reason. . . . [Its] conception of Jehovah, . . . is an unemotional
amalgam of all principles of truth, reason and goodness. Similarly,
the idea of death holds no mystery for them: it means simply a
period of total unconsciousness terminating in the process of
resurrection.[54]
Individual Witnesses manifest what I call "scripted" or rehearsed
behavior. Their lives are gradually and thoroughly systematized
to the point where their very discourse appears to outsiders as
a memorized and rehearsed performance.[55] Their lives
ideally revolve around kingdom proclamation; members must literally
publish or perish. Witness lives are constituted by submission to
the Truth, by obedience to the revealed will of Jehovah. As members
mature in their faith, their lives and morals are systematically
brought under the control of Jehovah's will. They are consumed with
Jehovah's work, devoting enormous amounts of time to reading their
Bibles and Watchtower literature, constantly engaging in field ministry.
Publishers are always persistent in conversation, and have a ready
comeback for most any comment or question. They appear well-equipped
for a type of pedagogical discourse frequently incompatible with
the interrogative (or dialogical) strategies of ethnographic inquiry
and historical investigation.
The Watchtower Society is an extremely efficient bureaucracy, and
this concern with rational efficiency can be observed even at the
congregational level.[56] All meetings are designed
to last a specific amount of time, and meetings rarely, if ever,
go overtime. At one Service Meeting I attended, the presiding elder
actually spent about 10-15 minutes discussing why meetings should
begin and end on time. Publishers are trained on how to make contact
with the public and present Jehovah's message in clear and palatable
terms. They are taught to anticipate potential "conversation stoppers"
and respond to them appropriately.[57] Publishers
keep careful logs on the number of homes visited, the amount of
literature distributed and the number of hours spent in Service
Ministry. In the foyer of a local Kingdom Hall (Carrboro, NC), a
large map of the local community and county appeared on the wall.
Sections were marked off and territories assigned to different publishers
in an attempt to ensure that Jehovah's message was efficiently proclaimed
to everyone in their district. The Watchtower also employs advanced
electronic equipment to control their PA system and pre-recorded
music, and publishers distribute videotapes and cassettes along
with other printed materials. The Society apparently utilizes state-of-the-art
computer and printing equipment in their massive publishing efforts.[58]
Nothing is left to accident or chance in the business of Kingdom
proclamation, and every attempt is made to ensure that one is indeed
a faithful servant of Jehovah. Only then can one gain the certainty
that they will survive the horrors of Armageddon and live forever
on the renovated earth.
"Simple" questions posed to scrupulous Publishers often provoke
long, rehearsed responses and extensive Bible quotations. Witnesses
are masters of the rhetorical question, and learn to anticipate
responses and counter them with rehearsed answers. Attempts to coax
Witnesses into speaking "off the record" are usually unsuccessful.
During public Bible studies at Kingdom Halls (e.g., the Watchtower
study hour on Sundays), members faithfully look up references
in their Bibles, although the entire text of the passage is usually
printed in their study guide. During meetings open Bibles are everywhere
on display, with pens in the hands of readers dutifully marking
passages under discussion. This scripted behavior, this constant
flipping of thin pages in search of the right biblical passage,
manifests with singular clarity the ritual seriousness of Jehovah's
Witnesses.
The Cult of Anonymity
All Witness discourse--whether that employed in their printed literature
or in the conversations of the persistent Witnesses at your doorstep--is
in principle anonymous. Since 1942 all official Watchtower literature
is published anonymously. Although all correspondence from the Watchtower
Society is also anonymous, the Society actually signs "Watchtower
Bible and Tract Society, Inc." on all official correspondence with
local congregations.[59] Even the names of the translators
of the New World Translation have never been divulged publicly.[60]
The organization of the Watchtower Society greatly facilitates
this de-personalizing tendency. The centripetal power of the Watchtower
Society jealously protects its organizational omnipotence. Beckford
observes 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.[61]
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.
. ."[62] Jehovah's kingdom is, after all, a theocracy,
not a democracy; therefore no single individual can lay claim to
authorship or genuine creativity.[63] Harrison argues
that for the Watchtower: "creative work has one's personal signature;
it is far better to labor anonymously, without credit . . . . Only
God may have a name: Jehovah. For an individual to have a
"name" is seen as a diminishment of God."[64] The
Governing Body as an apostolic institution possesses absolute authority
within the movement. 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 theoretically wield no autonomous power. Their major role consists
of instructing local publishers, cultivating unquestioned loyalty
to the Governing Body. There appears to be "a relatively weak affective
attachment" of Witnesses to their local congregations.[65]
Communication in the Society is strictly vertical and one-way: the
Governing Body communicates its will and individual members accept
and implement it.
If the Bible is the central authoritative source for Witness life,
its interpretation lies firmly in the hands of the Governing Body,
God's apostolic institution and interpretive agency on earth. For
Witnesses the Bible is an organizational book whose meaning is not
for private interpretation. The Governing Body alone possesses the
right to discern Jehovah's will as revealed in His scriptures; individual
witnesses are not encouraged to engage in independent and creative
biblical hermeneutics.[66] The Governing Body claims
exclusive rights to all exegetical creativity by which they discern
Jehovah's "new light" on his scriptures. Consequently, the responsibility
of individual members is to accept, digest and proclaim that authoritative
interpretation that flows down from the apostolic Watchtower. Those
representatives of the "faithful and discreet slave" class present
Jehovah's organization with a totalizing exegetical vision that
provides clear and unambiguous guidelines for all relevant moral
and religious issues. There is no moral uncertainty or ambiguity
in Jehovah's kingdom; there remains only Truth and certainty. 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. All personal and subjective dimensions are
removed from Witness discourse; only the pure truthful content remains.
Penton remarks that "the Witness community [is made] to feel that
it must be loyal to an organization, the Lord's organization, rather
than to any man."[67] Witnesses are thereby animated
by an "organizational mindedness" that systematically devalues the
role of individuals and individual prominence.[68]
Race and Ethnicity at the Kingdom Hall
One of the most intriguing dimensions of Witness life is its globally
inter-ethnic and inter-cultural character. Penton acknowledges 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."[69] Witnesses
declare that humans of all races and cultures are to be united in
faith. Ethnic particularities, political allegiances (Witnesses
do no vote, salute the flag or serve in the military) and socioeconomic
distinctions are repudiated and dissolved in Jehovah's theocratic
kingdom. Witnesses effectively deny all "worldly" distinctions based
on race, skin color, ethnicity, language, nationality and class.
They appear remarkably successful in their global attempts to establish
and sustain racially/ethnically integrated communities. Even in
the traditionally segregated American religious South, Witness communities
are consistently inter-racial.[70] Lee R. Cooper's
ethnographic study of a Witness community in Philadelphia convinced
him that the Watchtower Society provided "a functionally adaptive
alternative life style for certain segments of [American Blacks]
living in the urban ghettos of the U.S."[71] In Africa,
the Witnesses "are perhaps more successful than any other group
in the speed with which they eliminate tribal discrimination among
their own recruits."[72] Individual witnesses manifest
little concern with ethnic or racial issues, and display minimal
interest in pursuing such apparently moot realities in conversation.
The Watchtower takes special pride in its multi-ethnic fellowship.
One of its recent publications proclaims that "Christian brotherhood
unmarred by racial distinctions is a reality among Jehovah's Witnesses
in the 20th century."[73]
The Watchtower's model for an inter-cultural, 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. A Watchtower publication
declares that:
Right now people of all races and nationalities who will make
up part of the "new earth" are being gathered into the Christian
congregation. The unity and peace that exists among them is only
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.[74]
The theocratic model serves as a master narrative that subsumes
all regional and ethnic identities. The theocratic vision of the
Watchtower--this eschatological metanarrative to be finally and
eternally realized at the conclusion of the battle of Armageddon--has
no room for local stories and ethnic particularities. The theocratic
discursive strategy reveals an aggressive and omnivorous ideology
that obliterates and consumes all other narratives. Its intent is
not merely to displace or de-center existing narratives and identities,
but to subvert and re-place them. The theocratic narrative embodies
a monological language game that excludes all others and denies
them legitimacy. This monocultural vision of utopian social existence
embodies a critique of the dominant social order--the corrupt world
system--pervaded by racial/ethnic prejudice and inequality. The
theocratic language facilitates the generation of consensus required
by this global yet astonishingly homogeneous organization. Thus
in a special article on the progress of the theocratic Kingdom in
Africa, the 1992 Yearbook proclaims that "Over a hundred
languages are spoken in Ethiopia alone, including a 'pure language'
that will unite not only Eastern Africa but the whole world."[75]
Indeed, Witnesses worldwide routinely gather together in their circuit
and district conventions to "rejoice in the sameness" that transcends
their national, ethnic and cultural differences.[76]
In practice the theocracy actually represents a hierarchical cosmos,
with Jehovah as its chairman and Jesus as executive vice- president.[77]
On earth, the Governing Body consists of those Anointed ones (the
144,000, the "faithful and discreet slave" class, the "little flock")
who appear as Jehovah's apostolic representatives to that "great
multitude." That multitude consists of all those who will survive
the ravages of Armageddon and participate in the Edenic paradise
on the renovated earth.[78]
Epilogue
From an unsympathetic perspective the Watchtower apparently demands
nothing less than the sacrifice of autonomy, responsibility, freedom
and self. But other voices within the Watchtower relate a form of
life constituted by absolute obedience and unquestioned submission
to the Truth. Individuals frequently relate their interminable exasperation
with traditional religious institutions that provided no cogent
solutions to their pressing questions. But if one has any
questions, Witnesses stand ready with Bible in hand to provide theocratic
answers. By resignation to the Truth and surrender to the wise and
all-knowing counsel of Jehovah, many have discovered therein a kind
of freedom and dignity unattainable elsewhere. Jehovah's organization
makes no concessions to the racial and social inequalities outside
its righteous boundaries. Witnesses declare that "soon God's kingdom
will destroy the present ungodly system of things," and persons
"out of all nations and tribes and peoples and tongues" (Rev. 7:9)
will assemble in the great millennial paradise on the renovated
earth.
Drawn together by worship of the true God, by faith in
Jesus Christ, and by love for one another, they will truly
make up a united human family.[79]
Within its firm but loving embrace, the Watchtower harbors servants
of Jehovah who congregate at the same time, speak the same theocratic
language, hear the same Truth, and proclaim the same redemptive
message to any and all who would listen and obey. The theocratic
discursive strategy manifests a robust posture of rhetorical defiance
and linguistic iconoclasm. It reflects a conviction that the management
and manipulation of language is serious business for these devout
messengers of Jehovah's apocalyptic kingdom. Truly Jehovah's Witnesses
embody in a particularly cogent way Wittgenstein's observations
that:
A whole mythology is deposited in our language.
*
* * * * * * *
We must plough over the whole of language.[80]
Compressed in the jargonized lexicons and discursive strategies
of Jehovah's Witnesses is a militant ideology powerful enough to
transcend national boundaries, subvert political allegiances and
dismantle ethnic identities, reconstituting them in Jehovah's theocratic
image.
ENDNOTES
[1] The Witnesses exclusively used a lower-case
"w" to spell "Jehovah's witnesses" until 1976. On the significance
of the change, see Heather and Gary Botting, The Orwellian World
of Jehovah's Witnesses (Toronto: University of Toronto
Press, 1984), pp. 84-5.
[2] The term "theocratic" is used "to describe
the organizational structure of the Witnesses," but it is also used
"to modify any 'godly' or 'faithful' or 'good' behavior on the part
of the Witnesses--behavior that sets them apart as Witnesses."
Botting, Orwellian World, p. 84.
[3] In this essay I use the terms "Watchtower
Society" and "Jehovah's Witnesses" synonymously. The movement officially
adopted the name "Jehovah's Witnesses" in 1931. Prior to that they
were known as Bible Students, International Bible Students, Millennial
Dawnists, and Russellites. See Jehovah's Witnesses: Unitedly
Doing God's Will Worldwide (Brooklyn: Watchtower Bible and Tract
Society of New York, Inc., 1986), pp. 10-11; M. James Penton, Apocalypse
Delayed: The Story of the Jehovah's Witnesses (Toronto: University
of Toronto Press, 1985), p. 62.
[4] See Michel Foucault, "The Discourse
on Language," The Archaeology of Knowledge, trans.
A. M. Sheridan Smith (New York: Harper & Row, 1972), pp. 225-6.
[5] Botting, Orwellian World, p.
84. See their "Glossary of Terms Used by Jehovah's Witnesses" contained
on pp. 187-94.
[6] Charles H. Lippy's essay on "Millennialism
and Adventism," in Encyclopedia of the American Religious Experience:
Studies of Traditions and Movements, eds. Charles H. Lippy
and Peter W. Williams (New York: Charles Scribner's Sons, 1985),
II: 831-44, helpfully locates the Watchtower Movement within the
larger context of American adventism.
[7] The most important historical work on
Jehovah's Witnesses is Penton's Apocalypse Delayed. For recent
important works on the Witnesses, see Botting, The Orwellian
World (1984) [based in part on Heather Botting's "The Power
and the Glory: The Symbolic Vision and Social Dynamic of Jehovah's
Witnesses" (Ph.D. dissertation, University of Alberta, 1982.)];
James A. Beckford, The Trumpet of Prophecy: A Sociological Study
of Jehovah's Witnesses (New York: John Wiley & Sons,
1975); Alan Rogerson, Millions Now Living Will Never Die: A Study
of the Jehovah's Witnesses (London: Constable & Co.,
Ltd., 1969); Timothy White, A People for His Name: A History
of Jehovah's Witnesses and an Evaluation (New York: Vantage
Press, 1967); Barbara Grizzuti Harrison, Visions of Glory: A
History and a Memory of Jehovah's Witnesses (New York:
Simon and Schuster, 1978). See also the dissertations by Joseph
F. Zygmunt, "Jehovah's Witnesses. A Study of Symbolic and Structural
Elements in the Development and Institutionalization of a Sectarian
Movement" (Ph.D. dissertation, University of Chicago, 1968); Alberta
Jeanne Brose, "Jehovah's Witnesses: Recruitment and Enculturation
in a Millennial Sect" (Ph.D. dissertation, University of California,
Riverside, 1982); Melvin Dotson Curry, "Jehovah's Witnesses: The
Effects of Millenarianism on the Maintenance of a Religious Sect"
(Ph.D. dissertation, Florida State University, 1980). Institutionally
controlled or approved histories include: Marley Cole, Jehovah's
Witnesses: The New World Society (New York: Vintage Press, 1955);
idem., Triumphant Kingdom (New York: Criterion Books, 1957);
[WBTS], Jehovah's Witnesses in the Divine Purpose
(Brooklyn, NY: WBTS of New York, Inc., 1959); [WBTS], Jehovah's
Witnesses: Unitedly Doing God's Will Worldwide (1986). For a
comprehensive bibliography, see Jerry Bergman, Jehovah's
Witnesses and Kindred Groups: A Historical Compendium and Bibliography
(New York: Garland Press, 1984).
[8] Botting, Orwellian World, p. 52. Beckford also
argues that the invocation of these impressive growth statistics
has helped "to retain the commitment of Jehovah's Witnesses for
several generations," and also serves "to obviate by anticipation
the dangers of [prophetic] disruption in the future." See Beckford,
Trumpet of Prophecy, p. 221.
[9] "Hailing God's New World of Freedom," [italics added]
The Watchtower (April 1, 1992), p. 12.
[10] [WBTS], 1992 Yearbook of Jehovah's Witnesses
(Brooklyn, NY: WBTS of New York, Inc., 1992), pp. 33-41. The annual
service report is also included in the January 1 issue of The
Watchtower magazine. See The Watchtower, January 1, 1992,
pp. 10-13. For statistical information, see also Constant H. Jacquet,
Jr. and Alice M. Jones, eds., Yearbook of American and Canadian
Churches, 1991 (Nashville: Abingdon Press, 1991), pp. 78-9,
262.
[11] On the other hand, there is no way to confirm Watchtower
statistics since outsiders (and probably most Witnesses) do not
have access to Watchtower records.
[12] Witnesses are aware that the original pronunciation
of the tetragrammaton was not "Jehovah." Watchtower literature explains
that while the original pronunciation is unknown, "Jehovah" should
be retained since it is commonly used and readily recognized. See
WBTS, Reasoning from the Scriptures (WBTS of Pennsylvania,
Inc., 1985, 1989), pp. 195-6.
[13] The "marks of the true church" is a standard topos
in Watchtower literature. See, e.g., [WBTS], The Truth That
Leads to Eternal Life (Brooklyn, NY: WBTS, 1968), pp. 122-30
(a chapter entitled "How to Identify the True Church"); Reasoning
from the Scriptures, pp. 328-30 (in answer to the question,
"How can a person know which religion is right?");
[WBTS], Mankind's Search for God (Brooklyn, NY: WBTS,
1990), p. 377; [WBTS], You Can Live Forever on Paradise
on Earth (Brooklyn, NY: WBTS, 1982, 1990), pp. 184-90.
[14] You Can Live Forever, p. 185.
[15] See New World Translation of the Holy Scriptures
(Brooklyn, NY: Watchtower Bible & Tract Society, 1984 ed. [orig.
1961]), p. 1640-1. The translators acknowledge that "we have been
most cautious about rendering the divine name in the Christian Greek
Scriptures . . .," yet the name "Jehovah" appears 237 times in their
translation of the Greek Bible. One recent Witness publication even
includes a photograph of a papyrus fragment of the Septuagint (a
Greek translation of the Hebrew Bible) in which the tetragrammaton
appears for the name of God. Mankind's Search for God, p.
259. Witnesses reason that Jesus and the early Christian community
knew and used God's "unique name" (frequently represented in English
as YHWH). "In spite of Jewish tradition at that time, Jesus would
surely have used the name. He did not allow the traditions of men
to overrule the law of God." See Mankind's Search for God,
p. 258-9. That Watchtower publication explicitly cites for support
George Howard's "The Tetragrammaton and the New Testament," Journal
of Biblical Literature 96 (1977), pp. 63-8. For critical reviews
of the translation, see Bergman, Jehovah's Witnesses
(1984), pp. 168-70, and Jack P. Lewis, The English Bible/From
KJV to NIV (Grand Rapids, MI: Baker Book House, 1981), pp. 397-8
(bibliography), pp. 229-35 (analysis).
[16] See You Can Live Forever, p. 96.
[17] Scott L. Montgomery, "The Cult of Jargon: Reflections
on Language in Science," Science as Culture 6 (1989), see
esp. pp. 46-55.
[18] See Tzvetan Todorov, Mikhail Bakhtin: The Dialogical
Principle, trans. Wlad Godzich, Theory and History of Literature,
13 (Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press, 1984).
[19] See Nietzsche's comments in Genealogy of Morals,
trans. F. Golfing (Doubelday, 1956), p. 253 [III.xii].
[20] You Can Live Forever, p. 163.
[21] Witnesses in principle reject all attempts at social
reform of the present evil world order. But their efforts to secure
legal protection for the free exercise of their religion have resulted
in significant reforms in civil liberties. Similarly, their strong
stand against blood transfusions in any form has provoked invaluable
medical research now relevant in the prevention and treatment of
AIDS. See William Kaplan, State and Salvation: The Jehovah's
Witnesses and Their Fight for Civil Rights (Toronto :
University of Toronto Press, 1989); David R. Manwaring, Render
Unto Caesar: The Flag Salute Controversy (Chicago: University
of Chicago Press, 1962); M. James. Penton, Jehovah's Witnesses
in Canada: Champions of Freedom of Speech and Worship
(Toronto: Macmillan of Canada, 1976); Jerry Bergman, "Jehovah's
Witnesses and Blood Transfusions," in Jehovah's Witnesses
II: Controversial and Polemical Pamphlets, ed. Jerry Bergman,
Sources for the Study of Nonconventional Religious Groups in Nineteenth-
and Twentieth-Century America (New York: Garland Press, 1990), pp.
453-631.
[22] The Truth That Leads to Eternal Life, p. 185.
[23] You Can Live Forever, p. 212.
[24] Timothy P. Weber declared that "No group in modern
times has been more successful at surviving their prophetic disconfirmations
than have the Jehovah's Witnesses." Review of M. James Penton's
Apocalypse Delayed (1985), The American Historical
Review 91 (1986), p. 1279. Because of their tenacious millenarianism
and resistance to disconfirmation, the Witnesses have drawn the
attention of scholars interested in the long-term effects of apocalyptic
expectation and its inevitable delays. The foundational work here
is Leon Festinger et al., When Prophecy Fails: A Social
and Psychological Study of a Modern Group that Predicted
the Destruction of the World (New York: Harper & Row, Pub.,
1956) which explores the phenomenon of cognitive dissonance and
failed millenarian expectation. See also Joseph F. Zygmunt "Prophetic
Failure and Chiliastic Identity: The Case of the Jehovah's Witnesses"
American Journal of Sociology 75 (1970), pp. 926-48;
Bryan R. Wilson, "When Prophecy Failed," New Society (January
26, 1978), pp. 183-4. Melvin Curry's dissertation argues that the
Witnesses' "peculiar type of millenarian theology . . . has been
a primary factor in maintaining their sectarian identity." Curry,
"Jehovah's Witnesses: The Effects of Millenarianism on the Maintenance
of a Religious Sect" (1980), p. 1. Penton (Apocalypse Delayed,
p. 9) argues, in fact, that while the Witnesses' "millenarianism
has long been the basis of their growth and success, it is also
their greatest weakness."
[25] Penton, Apocalypse Delayed, p. 7.
[26] You Can Live Forever, p. 141.
[27] Reasoning from the Scriptures [italics added],
p. 97.
[28] See Jean Comaroff's discussion of the African Zionist
churches and their existence in "permanent liminality." Body
of Power, Spirit of Resistance: The Culture and History of a
South African People (Chicago: The University of Chicago
Press, 1985), p. 231. See also Victor Turner, The Ritual Process:
Structure and Anti-Structure (Ithaca, NY: Cornell University
Press, 1969), pp. 145-7.
[29] Witnesses believe that only the anointed 144,000 (the
"little flock") will actually reside in heaven, where they will
exist as co-rulers with Jesus over his Millennial Kingdom. This
belief is based on Luke 12:32 (the "little flock"); Rev. 7:4, 14:1,3
(the 144,000). In 1935 President Rutherford disclosed that the "great
multitude" (Rev. 7:9) and the "sheep" class (Matt. 25) were in fact
one class who would receive eternal life on the renovated earth.
For the historical development of this idea, see Penton, Apocalypse
Delayed, p. 72.
[30] The Truth That Leads to Eternal Life, pp. 134-5.
[31] See The Truth That Leads to Eternal Life, pp.
134-5. [32] See Botting, Orwellian World, p. 26. They
remark that "Most Witnesses have no knowledge of the world view
of Freud; however, when it comes to concrete symbols, they are very
Freudian in outlook, making a major issue of the decadent sexual
symbology of Christendom."
[33] Mankind's Search for God, p. 369-70.
[34] The Truth That Leads to Eternal Life, p. 138.
[35] Roman Catholicism historically has functioned as the
primary Other for the Watchtower. Ironically, ex-Catholics now make
up the largest proportion of Jehovah's Witnesses. Penton, Apocalypse
Delayed, p. 254.
[36] You Can Live Forever, p. 255 [italics added].
[37] See "Jehovah's Witnesses in the U.S.A., 1942-1976"
Social Compass 24 (1977), p. 54. Zygmunt argues that this
trend is discernible in the group's translation of the Bible (the
New World Translation of the Holy Scriptures, originally
published in 1961), and in their opposition to blood transfusions
(which the movement embraced in 1945).
[38] For example, The Watchtower magazine claims
an average printing 15,570,00 (sic!) for each issue. It is
translated into 111 languages, and 66 of those appear simultaneously
with the English edition. "In other words, 95 percent
of Jehovah's Witnesses receive the same spiritual food at the
same time" [italics added]. Awake! claims an average
printing of 13,110,000 issues in 66 languages; 30 appear simultaneously
with the English edition. See the 1992 Yearbook of the
Jehovah's Witnesses, p. 18. A major portion of a recently produced
videotape focuses on the technological aspects of Brooklyn Bethel's
publishing enterprise. See [WBTS], "Jehovah's Witnesses: The Organization
Behind the Name" (Brooklyn, N.Y.: WBTS of Pennsylvania, 1990). [39]
Beckford, Trumpet of Prophecy, p. 89.
[40] So Beckford speaks of the dangers of "ideological contamination."
Beckford argues that the practice of witnessing door-to-door in
pairs, and the pressing need to fulfill service- work quotas or
objectives "help minimize the risks of ideological contamination
from prospective converts." Trumpet of Prophecy, p. 89. Beckford
does not contemplate the rhetorical potency of the theocratic language
as a protective mechanism.
[41] The presence of dissent within the apparently monolithic
unanimity of the Watchtower Society has been amply documented by
Penton, Apocalypse Delayed, pp. 117-23. Penton himself was
involved in a schism that occurred in Lethbridge, Alberta. For information
on his role in the controversy and his subsequent excommunication,
see Apocalypse Delayed, pp. 122-3; Bart Testa, "Bearing Witness
to a Mass Exodus," Maclean's (March 16, 1981), pp. 47-9;
and James A. Beverley, Crisis of Allegiance (Burlington,
Ontario: Welch Pub. Co., Inc., 1986). For bibliographic data (with
some narrative introduction) on dissenting groups, see Bergman,
Jehovah's Witnesses and Dissenting Groups, pp. 242-352.
[42] So Harrison describes the Society as "an all- consuming
religion." Visions of Glory, p. 39.
[43] Attributed to ex-Governing Body member Raymond V. Franz.
See Richard N. Ostling, "Witness Under Prosecution," Time
(February 22, 1982), p. 66.
[44] For Witness attitudes toward education, see Penton,
Apocalypse Delayed, pp. 270-74. See also Barbara Harrison's
comments in Visions of Glory, pp. 92-6.
[45] [WBTS], School and Jehovah's Witnesses (Brooklyn,
NY: WBTS of New York, Inc., 1983), p. 5.
[46] Knorr was also responsible for the establishment of
the Watchtower Bible School of Gilead (1943), a missionary
training school. For the Society's own account of the school's founding
and purpose, see Jehovah's Witnesses in the Divine Purpose,
pp. 202-5.
[47] 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. 712. [48]
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. [49] Awake!, Feb. 22, 1991,
p. 4 [italics added]. [50] See The Truth That Leads to
Eternal Life, p. 22. Beckford's article on "Accounting for Conversion,"
British Journal of Sociology 29 (1978), pp. 249-62,
argues that Witness conversion experiences usually relate a gradual
process of transformation in which the subject gradually learns
and obeys "the Truth." Sudden and emotional conversions are necessarily
suspect. For Witnesses, becoming a part of Jehovah's organization
is a matter in which the cognitive facilities ("the head") are initially
convinced by Jehovah's pure Truth, after which the emotions or passions
("the heart") are gradually transformed.
[51] Reasoning from the Scriptures, p. 199.
[52] Reasoning from the Scriptures, p. 203. Restorationist
themes frequently appear in Watchtower literature. See, e.g., Jehovah's
Witnesses: Unitedly Doing God's Will Worldwide (1986),
p. 5: " . . .how can you identify the true Christian congregation?
By examining the Scriptures about the first-century Christian congregation
and then by seeing who today follow the same pattern." See also
pp. 7, 12-3, 26.
[53] Harrison declares that this is "a religion that fears
magic, mystery, poetry--a religion that treats ecstasy as an aberration
and flees from passion with a passion that is thoroughly small and
dry." Visions of Glory, p. 213.
[54] Trumpet of Prophecy, p. 202.
[55] See ex-Witness Harrison's unflattering description
of the "lobotomized good behavior" of Witness children. Visions
of Glory, p. 90; and Botting's assertion that such scripted
action "obviates the necessity of thinking." Orwellian World,
p. 88.
[56] The rational self-sufficiency of the Society is a major
motif in the Watchtower-produced videotape, "Jehovah's Witnesses:
The Organization Behind the Name" (1990). Witnesses are thoroughly
modern, though they certainly reject the label or the ideology
of modernism. See Bruce B. Lawrence, Defenders of
God: The Fundamentalist Revolt Against the Modern Age (San
Francisco: Harper & Row, Pub., 1990), pp. 1-3. Penton, however,
argues that "this vaunted efficiency . . . is more apparent than
real." Apocalypse Delayed, p. 251. Quite probably most of
their literature goes unread, and it is at least questionable whether
their door-to-door proselyting efforts are really as effective as
members (and outsiders) frequently believe. See Penton, Apocalypse
Delayed, p. 231.
[57] See Reasoning from the Scriptures, pp. 9-24.
[58] E.g., at a recent service meeting, an elder announced
that the New World Translation is now available in computerized
form. The videotape, "Jehovah's Witnesses: The Organization Behind
the Name" (1990), frequently informs the viewer that the Society
was integrally involved in the development of much of the advanced
electronic and computer technology utilized in their enormous publishing
enterprise.
[59] See Penton, Apocalypse Delayed, p. 78.
[60] Although Raymond Franz's autobiography discloses the
names of those Witness scholars actually involved in the translation
process. See Crisis of Conscience, pp. 49-50. [61]
Beckford, Trumpet of Prophecy, p. 81.
[62] Beckford, Trumpet of Prophecy, p. 96.
[63] See Harrison, Visions of Glory, p. 33.
[64] Harrison, Visions of Glory, p. 253.
[65] James A. Beckford, "Organization, Ideology and Recruitment:
The Structure of the Watch Tower Movement," Sociological Review
23 (1975), p. 897.
[66] See Botting, Orwellian World, pp. 65-6. So Botting
argues that the decision to publish all Watchtower literature anonymously
was "a reflection of Knorr's insistence that all inspiration comes
directly from God through the organization, led by the faceless
'Writing Committee' of the Governing Body." Orwellian World,
p. 41.
[67] Apocalypse Delayed, p. 78.
[68] Penton observes that the Society takes a generally
dim view of individual Witnesses who take it upon themselves to
publish anything related to their religion. He argues that it is
now virtually impossible to publish anything as a Jehovah's Witness
scholar without risking the disciplinary wrath of the Society. See
Penton, Apocalypse Delayed, pp. 105-6.
[69] Penton, Apocalypse Delayed, p. 286.
[70] Harrison's claim that in fact the Witnesses "were among
the last of all religious groups to be integrated in the South"
is problematic, since most southern churches remain segregated.
Given their resistance to any direct form of social reform, it is
no surprise that the Witnesses did not participate in civil rights
reform in the American South (or anywhere for that matter). See
Harrison, Visions of Glory, p. 261; also pp. 159 (anti-Semitism),
254-5. Other attempts to document racism within the Watchtower movement
include 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.
[71] Cooper, "'Publish' or Perish: Negro Jehovah's Witness
Adaptation to the Ghetto," in Religious Movements in Contemporary
America, p. 705. Cooper argues that Witnesses present credible
responses and alternatives to commonplace criticisms of religion
expressed by ghetto residents (including greed, hypocrisy, emotionalism,
and the existence of personality cults that frequently develop around
ministers).
[72] Bryan R. Wilson, "Jehovah's Witnesses in Africa," New
Society (12 July 1973), p. 75.
[73] Reasoning from the Scriptures, p. 305. On the
other hand, leadership of the movement--especially at the
highest levels--is still primarily white, male and American.
[74] You Can Live Forever, p. 160.
[75] 1992 Yearbook, p. 68.
[76] Harrison, Visions of Glory, p. 268.
[77] See the "organizational charts" of the theocratic Kingdom
in Penton, Apocalypse Delayed, pp. 212-3. Penton (p. 211)
notices that the term "hierarchy" has pejorative overtones for Witnesses,
as it is traditionally associated with the Roman Catholic Church.
Penton's work displays a polemical strategy apparent in his recurrent
attempts to compare the society in different ways to Roman Catholicism
(see pp. 13, 35, 40, 69, 160, 162, 164, 211-124!, 220-1, 234).
[78] Watchtower iconography consistently represents that
"great multitude" as an ideal multi-racial or multi-ethnic community.
For examples, see Botting, Orwellian World, pp. 101- 3.
[79] Reasoning From the Scriptures, 305.
[80] Ludwig Wittgenstein, Remarks on Frazer's Golden
Bough, trans. A. C. Miles, ed. Rush Rhees (Highlands,
NJ: Humanities Press, 1979).
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
Last updated: May 12, 2000
© 2001 Posted with permission of Joel Elliott
on Watchtower Information Service

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