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A Sociological Perspective on Failed Expectation in the Watchtower Society |
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from the Bethel Ministries Newsletter May/June 1990 (now the Free Minds Journal) Few aspects of the Jehovah's Witness movement are more fascinating to the outside observer than their predictions of the end of the world. Yet the predictions themselves are just the surface ripples of a much deeper current in the lives of the movement's adherents. How the prophecies affect the members, how their belief in the prophecy gets stronger, and how they cope with disillusionment and finally regroup with greater strength is far more fascinating food for thought. There have been plenty of end-times scenarios that could be studied since the time of Christ. As early as the second century, the charismatic leader Montanus gained a following around the belief that the second coming of the Lord was at hand, and that this would occur at a specific location according to his "New Prophecy". Harold O.J. Brown says, "Montanus' conviction that the end of the age was at
hand led him to call on Christians to abstain from marriage,
dissolve marriages already contracted, and gather in an appropriate
place to await the descent of the heavenly city. The heavenly
city did not descend when expected, and consequently Montanus
and his followers had to come to terms with its delay, as the
whole church had to learn to deal with the postponement of Christ's
Second Coming." 1 Leon Festinger's Theory Festinger observes: "A man with a conviction is a hard man to change. Tell him you disagree and he turns away. Show him facts or figures and he questions your sources. Appeal to logic and he fails to see your point. "We have all experienced the futility of trying to change a strong conviction, especially if the convinced person has some investment in his belief. We are familiar with the variety of ingenious defenses with which people protect their convictions, managing to keep them unscathed through the most devastating attacks. "But man's resourcefulness goes beyond simply protecting
a belief. Suppose an individual believes something with his whole
heart; suppose further that he has a commitment to this belief,
that he has taken irrevocable actions because of it; finally,
suppose that he is presented with evidence, unequivocal and undeniable
evidence, that his belief is wrong: what will happen? The individual
will frequently emerge, not only unshaken, but even more convinced
of the truth of his beliefs than ever before. Indeed, he may
even show a new fervor about convincing and converting other
people to his view. 3 (italics ours) Of particular interest in Festinger's book is how the followers of Mrs. Keech reacted to each disconfirmation (failed date). Little attempt was made to deny the failure. The strength to continue in the movement was derived, not largely from the rationalizations , but from the very energy of the group itself and its dedication to the cause. This explains why proselytizing was so successful later in reinforcing the group's sagging belief system. Festinger relates: "But whatever explanation is made it is still by itself
not sufficient. The dissonance is too important and though they
may try to hide it, even from themselves, the believers still
know that the prediction was false and all their preparations
were in vain. The dissonance cannot be eliminated completely
by denying or rationalizing the disconfirmation. But there is
a way in which the remaining dissonance can be reduced. If more
and more people can be persuaded that the system of belief is
correct, then clearly it must, after all, be correct. Consider
the extreme case: if everyone in the whole world believed something
there would be no question at all as to the validity of this
belief. It is for this reason that we observe the increase in
proselytizing following disconfirmation. If the proselytizing
proves successful, then by gathering more adherents and effectively
surrounding himself with supporters, the believer reduces dissonance
to the point where he can live with it." 4 "Summarizing the evidence on the effect that disconfirmation
had on the conviction of group members, we find that, of the
eleven members of the Lake City group who faced unequivocal disconfirmation,
only two, Kurt Freund and Arthur Bergen, both of whom were lightly
committed to begin with, completely gave up their belief in Mrs.
Keech's writings. Five members of the group, the Posts, the Armstrongs,
and Mrs. Keech, all of whom entered the pre-cataclysm period
strongly convinced and heavily committed, passed through this
period of disconfirmation and its aftermath with their faith
firm, unshaken, and lasting. Cleo Armstrong and Bob Eastman,
who had come to Lake City heavily committed but with their conviction
shaken by Ella Lowell, emerged from the disconfirmation of December
21 more strongly convinced than before..." 5 "Our fondest hopes and expectations were blasted, and
such a spirit of weeping came over us as I never experienced
before. It seemed that the loss of all earthly friends could
have been no comparison. We wept, and wept, till the day dawn.
I mused in my own heart, saying, my advent experience has been
the richest and brightest of all my Christian experience. If
this had proved a failure, what was the rest of my Christian
experience worth? Has the Bible proved a failure? Is there no
God, no heaven, no golden home city, no paradise? Is all this
but a cunningly devised fable? Is there no reality to our fondest
hope and expectation of these things? And thus we had something
to grieve and weep over, if all our fond hopes were lost. And
as I said, we wept till the day dawn." 6 Historian M. James Penton tells us that Barbour had gone far beyond Wendell and his associates, who had originally believed that 1873 would see the second advent and the consummation of the earth by fire. When nothing visible had happened in that year, they were at first quite perplexed until B.W. Keith, a reader of the Herald, discovered Benjamin Wilson's translation of parousia as "presence" Then, like Russell, Barbour and Paton began to believe in the idea of an invisible presence of the Christ, which they felt had begun on schedule in 1874." 7 Penton, a Watchtower historian and critic of the movement, relates additional information regarding the prophecies of Russell: "No major Christian sectarian movement has been so insistent
on prophesying the end of the present world in such definite
ways or on such specific dates as have Jehovah's Witnesses, at
least since the Millerites and Second Adventists of the nineteenth
century who were the Witnesses' direct millenarian forbears.
During the early years of their history, they consistently looked
to specific dates-1874, 1878, 1881, 1910, 1914, 1918, 1920, 1925,
and others-as having definite eschatological significance...When
these prophecies failed, they had to be reinterpreted, spiritualized,
or, in some cases, ultimately abandoned. This did not deter Russell
or his followers from setting new dates, however, or from simply
proclaiming that the end of this world or system of things was
no more than a few years or perhaps even months away." 8
"The Watch Tower, and its companion publications of the Society, for forty years emphasized the fact that 1914 would witness the establishment of God's kingdom and the complete glorification of the church. During that period of forty years God's people on earth were carrying on a witness work, which work was foreshadowed by Elijah and John the Baptist. All of the Lord's people looked forward to 1914 with joyful expectation. "When that time came and passed there was much disappointment,
chagrin and mourning, and the Lord's people were greatly in reproach;
They were ridiculed by the clergy and their allies in particular,
and pointed to with scorn, because they had said so much about
1914, and what would come to pass, and their `prophecies' had
not been fulfilled." 9 "God has promised that He will give His true children
the light at the time appointed, and that they shall have the
joy of understanding His Plan at the appropriate season ... Even
if the time of our change should not come within ten years, what
more should we ask? Are we not a blessed, happy people? Is not
our God faithful? If anyone knows anything better, let him take
it. If any of you ever find anything better, we hope you will
tell us. We know of nothing better nor half as good as what we
have found in the Word of God." 10 At the death of C.T. Russell in 1916, J.F. Rutherford took over the role of the `prophet,' proclaiming in 1920 that Millions Now Living Will Never Die in a booklet and lecture by the same name. Rutherford set a new date for the end for 1925, also claiming that it would bring the resurrection of the ancient men of God to the earth, such as Abraham, Isaac, David, etc. So sure was Rutherford of this that he made the following statements: "Therefore we may confidently expect that 1925 will mark the return of Abraham, Isaac, Jacob, and the faithful prophets of old, particularly those named by the apostle in Hebrews chapter 11, to the condition of human perfection." 12 "The date 1925 is even more distinctly indicated by the
scriptures than 1914." 13 Rutherford kept the Witnesses occupied with proselytizing during the thirties. As with the flying saucer cult, Rutherford began teaching that there was some great significance in their disappointment over the disconfirmed prophecies and that the dates were somehow important, but they eventually decided against setting dates: "There was a measure of disappointment on the part of
Jehovah's faithful ones on earth concerning the years 1914, 1918,
and 1925, which disappointment lasted for a time. Later the faithful
learned that these dates were definitely fixed in the Scriptures;
and they also learned to quit fixing dates for the future and
predicting what would come to pass on a certain date ..."
17 "The Kingdom is here, the King is enthroned. Armageddon
is just ahead. The glorious reign of Christ that shall bring
blessings to the world will immediately follow. Therefore the
great climax has been reached. Tribulation has fallen upon those
who stand by the Lord." 18 "So firmly did Jehovah's Witnesses believe this to be
true that there were those who, in 1944, refused to get their
teeth filled, postponing all care of their bodies until God saw
to their regeneration in His New World. (One zealous Witness
I knew carried a supply of cloves to alleviate the pain of an
aching molar which she did not wish to have treated by her dentist,
since the time was so short till Jehovah would provide a new
and perfect one. To this day, I associate the fragrance of cloves
with the imminence of disaster.)" 19 In lectures given to the members of the headquarters staff in New York, Franz stated (regarding the end) that "we don't know now if it will be weeks or months," before a crowd of 2000 Witnesses. 21 Many other statements were made in print. One traveling overseer even gave a public talk indicating it would be a total lack of faith to doubt that 1975 would be the end! 22 Franz became the fourth president of the Watchtower a year later. Unlike the flying saucer cult and the Millerites, the Watchtower was at first unwilling to accept blame for the disconfirmation, shifting it to "over-zealous brothers." Many Witnesses, however, were outraged and the Watchtower finally accepted much of the blame publicly. Friends of those who were Jehovah's Witnesses often noted the changes in their lives as 1975 approached. Janice Godlove relates this regarding her JW brother and sister-in-law: "As 1975 approached, the signs of tension increased.
Strange bits and pieces of the family atmosphere came to our
attention. There was an almost morbid fascination with flocks
of birds gathering in the fall. We were given all of their canned
goods since they wouldn't need them anymore. An access panel
had been cut in the wall behind their washing machine and the
boys (who were 5 and 3 at the time) were told to run to the kitchen
and hide if they heard screams. Bill was so disappointed by the
failure of 1975 that he attempted suicide. But the tract we left
by his hospital bed went unread and the family remained in the
organization." 23 A Pattern for the Future It may seem incomprehensible how the Witnesses could ignore the implications of each disconfirmation. Outsiders view the Witnesses as lacking common sense for not leaving the organization after numerous failures. They fail to understand the dynamics of mind control as used by cults. Even many ex-JWs fail to understand that the further disconfirmation of the importance of 1914 and "this generation" will not seriously affect the numbers of those swelling the ranks of the Watchtower. The results of mind control and unquestioning obedience will have the same effect today as it did in Russell's day. His view was, "Where else can we go?" Harrison writes regarding this attitude, "That, of course, is one of the keys to survival of the
organization Russell founded on soft mysticism, glorious visions
and worldly disaffection. The Witnesses had nowhere else to go.
Their investment in their religion was total; to leave it would
have meant spiritual and emotional bankruptcy. They were not
equipped to function in a world without certainty. It was their
life. To leave it would be a death." 24 Over 110 years and several failed prophecies later, the Watchtower movement is testimony enough that failed predictions do not mean the dissolution of a cult following. The failure of 1975 resulted in a decrease of less than 2%. 25 The Watchtower will always be able to develop clever rationalizations regarding their changing dates, as their history documents. Today, the Watchtower grows at a rate of about 5% per year worldwide, with over 3.7 million door knockers and over 9 million sympathizers! 26 When the dissolution of the Watchtower movement comes, as it inevitably will, it will more likely be due to dissension from within than from the disconfirmation of prophecy. Until that day, let us hope and pray that the eyes of many Witnesses will be opened up to the grace and mercy of our Lord Jesus Christ and come to Him. FOOTNOTES:
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