End of the Loving Time

Some of it is true

PROPHECIES OF THE WATCHTOWER SOCIETY OF JEHOVAH’S WITNESSES Lorri MacGregor

(Note to reader: Reference numbers refer to a documentation package index (includ-
ing photocopies of the actual articles quoted). It is available from MacGregor Ministries for
$3 plus postage. Please see their address and web site information at the end of this
article.)
JEHOVAH’S WITNESSES CLAIM TO BE PROPHETS
The Watchtower of April 1st, l972, page 197, had this statement:
So, does Jehovah have a prophet to help them, to warn them of dangers and
to declare things to come?…These questions can be answered in the affirmative.
Who is this prophet?…This “prophet” was not one man, but was a body of men
and women. It was the small group of footstep followers of Jesus Christ, known at
that time as International Bible Students. Today they are known as Jehovah’s
Christian witnesses….Of course it is easy to say that this group acts as a
“prophet” of God. It is another thing to prove it. The only way that this can be
done is to review the record. What does it show?
(1)
Since the Jehovah’s Witnesses claim to be God’s prophet, we are free to put them to
the Bible test for a prophet, found in Deuteronomy 18:18-20. Verse 22 of this same chap-
ter says, “When a prophet speaks in the name of the LORD (YHWH), if the thing does not
come about or come true, that is the thing which the LORD has not spoken.”
Verse 20 plainly says, “that prophet shall die”. False prophecy cannot be “explained
away” and treated lightly. The Watch Tower has invited us to examine their record, and we
will! All quotes are from publications of the Watch Tower Bible & Tract Society and avail-
able at headquarters in Brooklyn, New York. Some of these publications may also be
found in local Kingdom Hall libraries. Judge this self-proclaimed “prophet” for yourselves!
6,000 YEARS OF HUMAN HISTORY PROPHECIES
6,000 years from Adam ended in A.D. 1872.
(Daily Heavenly Manna, inside cover page).
(2)
6,000 years of human history ended in 1873.
(Thy Kingdom Come, page 305).
(3)
6,000 years of human history ended in 1972.
(The Truth Shall Make You Free, p. 152, 1943 edition).
(4)
6,000 years of human history ended in 1975.
(Awake!, October 8th, l968, page 15).
(5)
ARMAGEDDON PROPHECIES
Armageddon would end in 1914. (The Time is At Hand, page 101, 1911 Edition).
(6)
Armageddon would end in 1915. (The Time is At Hand, page 101, 1913 Edition).
(7)
Today, Jehovah’s Witnesses expect Armageddon any minute!
Page 2
THE RETURN OF CHRIST PROPHECIES
Since Christ failed to show up for any of the Watchtower dates, Jehovah’s Witnesses
altered their teaching to make his coming conveniently “invisible”. Christ returned in 1874.
(The Finished Mystery, page 395).
( 8)
The Watchtower publications taught this 1874 date right up to 1929. The “Prophecy”
book, published in 1929, states on page 65, “The Scriptural proof is that the second pres-
ence of the Lord Jesus Christ began in 1874 A.D.”
(9)
Christ returned in 1914. (The Truth that Leads to Eternal Life, page 87).
(10)
THE MILLENNIUM PROPHECIES
The Millennium began in 1873. (Thy Kingdom Come, page 305).
(11)
The Millennium began in 1874. (Finished Mystery, page 386).
(12)
PROPHECIES ON THE RESURRECTION
The resurrection would occur in 1878. (Thy Kingdom Come, page 234).
(13)
Abraham, Isaac, Jacob and the faithful prophets of old would return in 1925.
(Millions Now Living Will Never Die, page 89.)
(14)
The Watchtower Society even published a book telling their followers to add a room
onto their houses, and get an undertaker to decorate it. Undertakers, of course, would be
looking for employment, since there would be no more deaths in 1926. When the room
was completed, Watchtower devotees were to call up Jerusalem, where Abraham would
have an office, and request that their parents be “awakened” from death. They would soon
appear in the new room! (The Way to Paradise, pages 228, 229).
(15)
PROPHECIES ON SPACE TRAVEL
“Man cannot by airplane or rockets or other means get above the air envelope which is
about our earthly globe….” (The Truth Shall Make You Free, page 285, 1943 edition.)
(16)
THE BOOK OF RUTH
The Book of Ruth is “not prophetical”. (Watchtower Reprints IV, page 3110, 12/7/02).
(17)
The Book of Ruth “is prophetic”. (”Preservation”, page 169).
(1 8)
PROPHECIES ON SODOM AND GOMORRAH
Will the men of Sodom be resurrected?
1. Yes…Watchtower 7/18/79, page 7.
(19)
2. No….Watchtower 6/1/52, page 338.
(20)
3. Yes…Watchtower 8/1/65, page 479.
(21)
4. No….Watchtower 6/1/88, page 31.
(22)
5. Yes…Live Forever (old Ed.), page 179.
(23)
6. No….Live Forever (new Ed.), page 179.
(24)
7. Yes…Insight, vol. 2., page 985.
(25)
8. No…Revelation book, page 273.
(26)
These changes are more like flashing lights, on and off again. How can they
be trusted?
THE “HIGHER POWERS” OF ROMANS 13:1
“Higher Powers” refers to earthly governments. (The Time is at Hand (1915) pg. 81).
(27)
Page 3
“Higher Powers” refers to Jehovah God and Jesus. (The Truth Shall Make You Free, page
312).
(2 8)
“Higher Powers” refers to earthly governments. (Man’s Salvation…at Hand (page 326)
(29)
Notice how the “brighter light” dimmed back again!
THE REVELATION NAME “ABADDON-APOLLYON”
Refers to Satan. (The Finished Mystery, page 159).
(30)
Refers to Jesus Christ. (Then is Finished the Mystery of God, page 232).
(31)
Quite a change!
THE “ALPHA AND OMEGA” OF REVELATION
Refers to Jehovah God. (Awake!, August 22, 1978, page 28).
(32)
Refers to Jesus Christ. (Watchtower, October 1, 1978, page 15).
(33)
Notice the rapid change of “truth” and “interpretation of scripture” in just two months!
THE FAITHFUL AND DISCREET SLAVE
Refers to their founder, Charles Taze Russell. (The Finished Mystery, page5).
(34)
Refers to the “Remnant of Spiritual Israelites” (the supposed remnant of the 144,000 “heav-
enly class”). (From Paradise Lost to Paradise Regained, page 193).
(35)
THE 1914 GENERATION FIASCO
Until October 22nd, 1995, each Awake! magazine proclaimed, “…the Creator’s prom-
ise of a peaceful and secure new world before the generation that saw the events of 1914
passes away.”
(36)
Beginning with the November 8th, 1995 Awake!, the reference to 1914 disappeared.
Why? Because it is another false prophecy! 1914 plus 80 years (the longest time possible
for a “generation” by their own admission) ran out in 1994. This prophecy was attributed to
Jehovah as “the Creator’s promise”. Therefore this particular false prophecy was done in
the name of the Lord, and is subject to His condemnatory judgment on false prophets.
There is no escape! Time is the enemy of a false prophet.
IN CONCLUSION
Although the official publication of the Jehovah’s Witnesses claims, “…Jehovah’s
witnesses today make their declaration of the good news of the kingdom under angelic
direction and support,” according to the Watchtower of April 1, l972, page 200, they have
proved to be an embarrassment to the angels!
(37)
Undaunted, the Watchtower of July 1, l973, page 402, goes on to claim, “Consider too,
the fact that Jehovah’s organization alone in all the earth is directed by God’s holy spirit or
active force.”
(3 8)
Obviously the Holy Spirit did not prompt these false prophecies!
Not only does the Bible give us a simple test for prophets, which we considered at the
beginning of this article, namely that their prophecies will fail, but the word of God has more
to say about prophecies and prophesying.
The Bible reveals three sources for prophecy. One, it is from God, and inspired by
Him. Two, it is from the Devil and inspired by him. Thirdly, prophecies can come out of
“the flesh”, or out of our “own spirit”.
Since the Watchtower Society of Jehovah’s witnesses has so many failed prophecies,
Page 4
we know they are not prophesying by God’s direction, and through His Holy Spirit, or by the
angels.
This leaves us with two alternatives for the false prophecies of the Watchtower Soci-
ety. They are from Satan, or they are from “the flesh”.
The Watchtower has chosen the latter, claiming that “we all make mistakes,” etc. “We
have new light”. Is this an “out” for them? No, for Jehovah’s witnesses should carefully
read Ezekiel chapter 13. This chapter is a judgment of God on prophets who hope for a
fulfillment of their words, after prophesying falsely. Verse 8, says, “‘Because you have
spoken falsehood and seen a lie, therefore, behold, I am against you’, declares the Lord
God.”
The Watchtower Society of Jehovah’s Witnesses is a proven false prophet, and the
Lord, by His own decree, is against them. Why would you want to remain in this doomed
organization and share in its judgment?
MacGregor Ministries (in Canada: Box 294 Nelson B.C. V1L 5P9) (in the US: Box 454
Metaline Falls WA 99153)
WEB http://www.macgregorministries.org

July 1, 2008 Posted by Admin Staff | Christianity, Jehovahs Witnesses, Prophecies, Religion | | No Comments

“So, does Jehovah have a prophet to help them, to warn them of dangers and to declare things to come?

IDENTIFYING THE “PROPHET”

These questions can be answered in the affirmative. Who is this prophet? The
clergy of the so-called “Christian” nations hold themselves before the
people as being the ones commissioned to speak for God. But, as pointed out
in the previous issue of this magazine, they have failed God and failed as
proclaimers of his kingdom by approving a man-made political organization,
the League of Nations (now the United Nations), as “the political expression
of the Kingdom of God on earth.” However, Jehovah did not let the people of
Christendom, as led by the clergy, go without being warned that the League
was a counterfeit substitute for the real kingdom of God. He had a “prophet”
to warn them. This “prophet” was not one man, but was a body of men and
women. It was the small group of footstep followers of Jesus Christ, known
at that time as International Bible Students. Today they are known as
Jehovah’s Christian witnesses. They are still proclaiming a warning, and
have been joined and assisted in their commissioned work by hundreds of
thousands of persons who have listened to their message with belief. Of
course, it is easy to say that this group acts as a “prophet” of God. It is
another thing to prove it. The only way that this can be done is to review
the record. What does it show?” 1*

So in there OWN word they have claimed to be a prophet. This brings up the
question what exactly is a prophet again we turn to the WTS for this
information.

“The three essentials for establishing the credentials of a true prophet, as
given through Moses, were: The true prophet would speak in Jehovah’s name;
the things foretold would come to pass (De 18:20-22); and his prophesying
must promote true worship, being in harmony with God’s revealed word and
commandments (De 13:1-4). The last requirement was probably the most vital
and decisive, for an individual might hypocritically use God’s name, and by
coincidence, his prediction might see fulfillment” 2*

So now we have seen what establishes a prophet of Jehovah god 1 the things
foretold would come to pass (De 18:20-22); 2 his prophesying must promote
true worship, being in harmony with God’s revealed word and commandments 3
The last requirement was probably the most vital and decisive.

so has the WTS ever said anything that even remotely makes them look like a
prophet? Yes, remember Ezekiel, A great Prophet from the bible. Well If I
made a statement like this would you consider me claiming to be a prophet?

” Who is Ezekiel’s present-day counterpart, whose message and conduct
correspond with that of that ancient prophet of Jehovah? ” “. Jehovah has
found and commissioned his modern-day “Ezekiel.” It is a composite
Ezekiel.It is composed of those dedicated, baptized proclaimers of God’s
kingdom, who have been anointed with His spirit for their work. (Isaiah
61:1-3) It is manifest that in the year 1919 the invisible heavenly
organization of Jehovah” “Thus, like Ezekiel, they became Jehovah’s
witnesses” 3*

So now the WTS has claimed to be the counter part or a modern day Ezekiel.
But how does the WTS make a prophecies and are they inspired? First what is
inspired mean. Easy again lets use the watchtower’s own understanding of it.

“What is here meant by the word “inspired”? It means that God, the Creator
of heaven and earth, moved these men by his spirit or invisible empowering
force, putting into their minds what they should write down as his “word,”
or message, for mankind. ” 4*

And of course it would only be fair to consult a dictionary, which I also
did. Funk & Wagnall’s Standard Dictionary defines the word “INSPIRE” as:
“direct or guide as by divine influence.” Notice it is the same wording as
used by the WTS.

So now that we have established that the WTS is a prophetic organization,
but is it inspired, remember what inspired means.

“This appeared in the issues of June 1 and 15 and proved conclusively that
Jehovah’s organization must henceforth be guided and directed by Jehovah’s
spirit through the visible governing body made up of those servants whom
Jehovah himself would appoint. ” 5*

Notice that Jehovah himself appointed the governing body so any comments
prophecies or teaching are as Jehovah personally dictates to them

With this statement for any witness to deny that the WTBTS is NOT an
inspired prophet would be nothing short of a lie and literal deception on
there part. So we have established that they claimed to be an inspired
prophet of Jehovah God, Have there ever been any claims or prophecies that
have NOT come to pass? the answer is Yes however to go threw each and every
prophecy would take some time lets just cut right to the WTS own literature
again. This may come to a shock to most people and it should because most
Christians and witnesses don’t know about this passage from the head of the
WTBTS a man named Judge Rutherford.

“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 clamed 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, but to rely (and they do rely) upon the Word of God as to the events
that must come to pass”.6*

I feel at this time would also be suitable to mention that the awake
magazine made a comment about what the watchtower had done in the past.

“True, there have been those in times past who predicted an ‘end of the
world,’ even announcing a specific date…The ‘end’ did not come. They were
guilty of false prophesying. Why? What was missing?…Missing from such
people were God’s truths and the evidence that he was guiding and using
them.” 7*

So in conclusion the evidence has been presented that the Jehovah’s
witnesses have claimed to be inspired prophets buy there own definition and
have by there own literature been accused of being false prophets.

Now some will say your using ” OLD LIGHT “. Well then let me
address that comment WT 4/15/1996 pg 12

More than 50 years ago, in the booklet entitled Religion Reaps the
Whirlwind, Jehovah’s Witnesses exposed Christendom’s involvement with
politics.

Notice the WTBTS has no problem with using the OLD LIGHT books and
teachings. So anyone who would even entertain this defense is simply side
stepping and looking for an excuse to face the teachings of there own
organization. So if the WTBTS can go back and use the old books , then they
should have no problem with Christians going back and using there old books,
unless they believe in double standards or have something to hide.

1. watchtower 4-1-72 pg 197

2. Insight on the Scriptures, Vol. 2, 1988, p.696

3. The Nations Shall Know That I Am Jehovah, 1971, pp. 58,66

4.Good News to Make You Happy, 1976, p.14

5. watchtower 6-1-65 p.352

6. Vindication vol. 1 pg 338-339

7. Awake October 8, 1968, p. 23

February 20, 2008 Posted by Admin Staff | Christianity, Jehovahs Witnesses, Prophecies, Spirit directed | | No Comments

THE LEAGUE OF NATIONS AND THE UNITED NATIONS IN PROPHETIC SPECULATION


And many false prophets shall arise,  and shall lead many astray. ” Matt. 24:11 (ASV.) How is it that so many individuals through the centuries have found such a pleasure in playing the role of prophet, despite the fact that their prophecies so seldom come true? Regularly their predictions fail, yet they go on with prophesying. One important reason is, without doubt, that being regarded by others as equipped with remarkable, God-given insights and abilities may give a person a certain feeling of power and importance. Doubtless the temptation of having the “ego” strengthened in this way has produced many a false prophet.

Others may honestly feel that they are divinely guided to a correct understanding of the Biblical prophecies and are commissioned by God to act as his prophet by giving warnings to mankind and declaring things to come. In The Watchtower of April 1, 1972, pp. 197-200, the leaders of the Watch Tower Society lay claim to such a position for their movement as a whole:

    This “Prophet” was not one man, but was a body of men and women. It was the small group of footstep followers of Jesus Christ, known at that time as International Bible Students. Today they are known as Jehovah’s Christian witnesses.

And prophesied they have done. It is well known to anyone who has examined the Watch Tower publications for the past hundred years that this literature is bristling with predictions, most of which have failed, while many others are still waiting for fulfillment - or failure.

Numerous pamphlets and articles have been published recently attacking the Watch Tower Society for their many failed dates, such as 1878, 1881, 1910, 1914, 1918, 1920, 1925, 1941, and 1975. The purpose here is not to present another variation on this theme.1 On the contrary, the intention is to discuss some of the few predictions that actually - at least in some respects— have come true. The most striking examples of these are those related to the formation and obvious failure of the two international peace organizations of our century, the League of Nations and the United Nations. The questions that will be answered are: How specific were these predictions? Did they clearly originate in the Watch Tower movement? Do they substantiate the prophetic claims of this movement?

As an indication of their prophetic ability, the Watch Tower writers, in the article “Making Known God’s Prophetic Truths,” published in The Watchtower of August 1, 1971, pp. 467ff., give the impression that,  prior to the outbreak of the World War in 1914, well-nigh all except for the Witnesses took an optimistic view on the future, sensing that peace, not war lay ahead:

    The political, religious and commercial elements of this world widely accepted that view. However, Jehovah’s witnesses held a view that was just the opposite! In the July 1879 issue of their official publication, The Watchtower (at that time known as Zion’s Watch Tower) its readers were told: “God teaches in many Scriptures that a great time of trouble will come upon the nations.

IIt is certainly true that strong optimistic trends prevailed during the last century in the fields of science, politics, economy and religion. Yet the statement indicates gross ignorance of the views held by millions of Biblebelieving Christians of that time. “The International Bible Students” was just one small group among many other, much larger groups of Christians who in the latter part of the last century predicted that the world was rapidly approaching the great “time of trouble” and Christ’s second coming. These groups formed parts of a broad current, known as the “millenarian movement” (so called because of a common belief in a future millennial kingdom on earth to be ruled by Christ). This movement had its roots back in the early decades of the last century and the widespread interest in the Bible prophecies prompted by the French Revolution and the Napoleonic Wars. In the days of Pastor Russell, the millenarian movement had deeply influenced many of the great denominations, such as the Episcopal, Presbyterian and Baptist churches. Even at that time, the millenarian movement included millions of people. Common to them all was the fact that they did not share the general optimism with respect to the future of the world. The outbreak of World War 1, therefore, came as no surprise to these people, as Dwight Wilson points out in his book, Armageddon Now, (Grand Rapids, 1977 pp. 36, 37:

    World War I stimulated the premillennialists to a tiptoe expectancy and also provided tantalizing fulfillment of some of their longings. The war itself came as no shock to these opponents of postmillennial optimism; they had not only looked toward the culmination of the age in Armageddon, but anticipated “wars and rumors of wars” as signs of the approaching end.

Wilson then quotes one of the millenarian expositors, R.A. Torrey, who in his book The Return of the Lord wrote the following in 1913, one year before the outbreak of the war:

    We talk of disarmament, but we all know it is not coming. All our present peace plans will end in the most awful wars and conflicts this old world ever saw!

Similar predictions had been made for several decades by different millenarian writers, and Wilson gives several examples in his book. The view of the future held by the Bible Students, then, was in no way unique. It was a view held by practically all fundamentalist Christians of those days. Predictions of what would take place in the near future were countless, even if the millenarians generally did not fix dates (there were exceptions!) for the coming events, as did the Bible Students. They were therefore spared from the bitter disappointments that the Bible Students had to experience when the expectations failed and the predicted events refused to appear on the “right” dates.

The Bible Students, as well as several millenarian expositors, had explained that the World War was the prelude to Armageddon.2 C.l. Scofield, the famous translator of The Scofield Reference Bible, thought in 1916 “that the war would be the death struggle of the present world system which would be succeeded by the Kingdom of God.”3  When the war suddenly ended in 1918, this came as a nasty surprise to these experts on Bible prophecy. They explained that the period of peace would be very short and that Armageddon would surely come very soon. When, in 1919, the League of Nations appeared, they immediately predicted that this organization would fail and that it could just create a temporary interruption before Armageddon.

Watch Tower writers have often tried to give the impression that they, because of their prophetic insight, foresaw the failure of the League of Nations:

    When the League of Nations was established, some of the clergy of Christendom even hailed it as the “political expression of God’s kingdom on earth.” However, what were Jehovah’s witnesses saying? Again, just the opposite! The March 1, 1919, issue of The Watch Tower declared: “Lasting relief to suffering humanity will come neither through human uplift nor through any league of nations, however desirable such an arrangement might be, but only through the power of Christ, . . .”4

What Watch Tower writers fail to mention, however, is that this attitude towards the peace organization was the one generally held among the millenarians. As early as 1918, the above-quoted R.A. Torrey had the following to say at a prophetic conference held by the millenarians in New York City that year (Nov. 25-28, 1918): “Now that the armistice has come, the minds of people on both sides of the water are filled with all kinds of fantastic hopes and anticipations that are doomed to disappointments.5

Then Torrey went on to tell his audience that “the League of Nations can never achieve more than a temporary cessation in hostilities.” 6 Dwight Wilson, too, points out that “at the close of the war, there was little optimism reflected concerning the peace treaties or the League of Nations. Our Hope (la millenarian periodical edited by Arno C. Gaebelein) had no hope that the League would prevent war.” 7

Even more detailed predictions concerning the League of Nations were made by the two Bible commentators, C.F. Hogg and W.E. Vine, in their book, Touching the Coming of the Lord, published in London in 1919, shortly before the League was formed. They explained that the failure of the League of Nations was predicted in the Bible, at Revelation 17:12, 13:

    Such a League of Nations, for instance, as is proposed to-day as a panacea for national wrongs, not only has been foretold in Scripture as the last resource of international politics, but its failure has likewise been predicted. 8

Vine who wrote these lines, then quotes Daniel 7:23, 24 and continues:

    A corresponding vision was given to the Apostle John. He also saw a beast with ten horns, and the symbolism is again explained, but in greater detail: “The ten horns that thou sawest are ten kings, which have received no kingdom as yet; but they receive authority as kings, with the beast, for one hour (i.e. for a brief time). These have one mind, and they give their power and authority unto the beast,” Rev. xvii.12,13. Obviously these ten kingdoms are contemporaneous. The potentates ruling over them agree to a certain policy in handing over their authority to a superior ruler. No such league has existed in human history as yet. 

    It is manifest, too, from this Scripture that the existence of the League will provide the opportunity for a man sufficiently strong to dominate the situation. 9

Further on in the book, Vine explains:

    Clearly, therefore, a league of nations is in view, and this is apparently to be the new form of the old empire…. We are not justified, however, in concluding that the territories of the League of Nations, indicated by the passages related to the ten horns of the beast, will necessarily be confined to the area which has just been under consideration [i.e. the areas of the earlier world empires]. Whatever the arrangement may be, the fact of the League will prepare the way for the government of the final and all-controlling despot. 10

It is very interesting to note that the Bible interpretations which the Watch Tower Society many years later began to attach to the League of Nations are practically identical to those published by Vine in 1919. It seems rather obvious that President Rutherford and some of his co-workers were well aware of the interpretations different millenarians tied to the League of Nations at an early stage. Vine and Hogg were both well known commentators on Bible prophecy. Besides, Vine’s Expository Dictionary of New Testament Words is often quoted in the Watch Tower publications. Watch Tower leaders picked up his application of Revelation 17:11-13 early in the 1930s, without mentioning the source or sources of it. A later generation of Witnesses is now given the impression that the leaders of the Watch Tower Society, under the influence of God’s holy spirit, originated these predictions and interpretations, and this in turn is used as evidence of their claim to be Jehovah’s modern-day prophet!

Vine and Hogg were both associated with the “Open Brethren,” a branch of the Plymouth Brethren (also known as the Darbyists). But the prophetic speculations attached to the League of Nations were very common among fundamentalist Christians in a number of denominations, for instance among the Baptists and Pentecostals. Dwight Wilson writes:

    The formation of the League of Nations produced immediate speculation. The following appeared in the Prophetic News and the Evangel (Pentecostal), and was reprinted in a collection which went through at least five editions: “The World War thus originated by demon teachings has produced the result predicted in Revelation 16:14. It has gathered together all the kings of the earth and of the whole world. It has gathered them into a league of nations which will become the preparation of the nations for Armageddon. The gathering or leaguing of the nations together is the signal that the end is in sigh:. The Peace Conference at Paris had unconsciously set the stage for Antichrist and Armageddon.” 11 

How, then, about President Knorr’s prediction in 1942 - right in the middle of World War II - that the peace organization which had disappeared from the scene at the outbreak of the war in 1939 would “ascend out of the abyss,” (Rev. 17: 8) again after the end of the war?” 12 At first glance, this seems to be a remarkable prophecy. It was a prediction that clearly was fulfilled. But it was in no way unique.

As was shown above, W.E. Vine, as early as 1919, identified the League of Nations with the “beast” in Revelation, chapter 17. This interpretation was not adopted by the Watch Tower Society until eleven years later, when it was presented in volume 2 of the work Light, published in 1930. In 1919 the Society still held the beast with the woman on its back described in Revelation, chapter 17, to be the pagan Roman empire, with the apostate Church of Rome “on its back.” 13 This had been the prevalent Protestant interpretation of these figures ever since the Reformation in the sixteenth century. But in the second volume of Light the League of Nations was associated with this prophetic vision, exactly as Vine had done eleven years earlier. The “scarlet colored beast” (Rev. 17:3) was explained to be “The Hague International Peace Conference,” formed in 1899. 14 This organization “functioned until the World War. It then went into the abyss and ceased to function. After the World War it came out of the abyss or pit and began to function again in the form of the League of Nations.” 15 This understanding was prevalent until 1942 (see for instance the book Enemies 1937, pp. 283ff.), when it dawned upon the Watch Tower leaders that World War II would not develop into Armageddon either. Another interpretation of Revelation 17, therefore, became necessary.

It came also, in the booklet Peace  - Can It Last?, founded upon a speech by the same name delivered by the President of the Society, Nathan H. Knorr, in the autumn of 1942. The Hague International Peace Conference was now completely excluded from the role list. The “beast” was at first the League of Nations. It went “into the abyss” in 1939 at the outbreak of World War II. But it would not remain there. Quoting Revelation 17:8, President Knorr predicted: “The association of worldly nations will rise again.16 

As all know, this prediction was fulfilled. But it was not difficult to make at that time. As Knorr himself pointed out in the same booklet (p. 21), plans of reviving the peace organization after the war were well on the way, the Axis Powers, Japan and Hungary having signed a “new League of Nations” already on November 20, 1940. In fact, the United Nations had already been formed, several months before Knorr’s prediction, on January 1, 1942 at Washington D.C., with twenty-six nations signing a joint declaration on that date.17 

Besides, Knorr’s prediction was neither new nor unique. Other prophetic expositors had predicted the same thing - as much as two years earlier! Dwight Wilson refers, for example, to a prediction by the well known Bible expositor, Harry Rimmer: “Harry Rimmer in 1940 forecast a new League of Nations as a result of the war - and the rise of a universal dictator. The United Nations has arrived, but there is no dictator yet.” 18 

Thus, the Watch Tower Society can claim no priority on this or other predictions and prophetic applications attached to the League of Nations and the United Nations The same views were held by the millenarian fundamentalists in general at that time, who originated the predictions about the future of these peace organizations years before they were picked up by the Watch Tower Society. Fundamentalist Christians in general did not change their attitude towards the peace organization after World War II. They continued to regard it as the “beast”, of Revelation 17 and - like the Watch Tower Society at that and like the “harlot” on its back as corrupt Christendom. 19 Sociologist Louis Gasper explains:

    The Fundamentalists literally believed that “the woman arrayed in purple and scarlet” in Revelation 17 prefigures the establishment of a corrupted, though colorful world church which would include the Catholics and Protestants. 20

The attitude of the Watch Tower Society, not only towards the United Nations but also toward “the organized, corrupted Christendom,” then, is seen to be shared by fundamentalist Christians in general. Even when it comes to the habit of adopting disapproving resolutions against the United Nations, the Watch Tower Society closely follows the methods of the fundamentalist movement:

    Although the fundamentalists were generally opposed to the United Nations and criticized it vehemently, they did not make any organized attempt to place pressure upon Congress to cause the withdrawal of the United States from it. Their opposition was usually expressed in the form of statements and resolutions which were adopted at frequent intervals to indicate their general disapproval of the United Nations. 21 

CONCLUSION 

The above examination has demonstrated that the views held by the Watch Tower Society about the international peace organizations are more “traditional” than most Jehovah’s Witnesses believe. They are views that, more or less, have been shared by practically all fundamentalist Christians. The same holds true of the “predictions” of the future of these peace organizations presented by the Society: They were simply taken over from the fundamentalists. If some of these predictions seem to have been fulfilled, therefore, this does not prove anything as to the Society’s ability to prophesy; it just proves that they are able to plagiarize. For this, no divine inspiration is needed. If these predictions were divinely originated, the leaders of the Watch Tower Society should be forced to conclude that God gave them to fundamentalist Christians outside the Watch Tower organization.

One question remains to be answered: Is the vision of the “beast” at Revelation 17 really applicable to the League of Nations and the United Nations of our days? Even if at first glance this application may seem likely, this author feels it has serious problems. He hopes to return to this subject in a future article.

Carl Olof Jonsson

Notes
1 For a fair, balanced and scholarly discussion of these prophetic failures and their importance for the doctrinal and organizational development of the Watch Tower movement see Dr. Joseph F. Zygmunt’s article “Prophetic Failure and Chiliastic Identity: The Case of Jehovah’s Witnesses,” published in the American Journal of Sociology, Vol. 75, July 1969-May 1970 pp. 926 948.
2 Wilson, p. 37ff. The Watch Tower Nov. 1, 1914, pp. 327, 328.
3 Wilson, p 38.
4 The Watchtower, August I, 1971, p. 469.
5 Quoted by Ernest R. Sandeen in The Roots of Fundamentalism, London 1970, p,
235.
6 Sandeen p. 235.
7 Wilson, p. 56.
8 C.F. Hogg and W.E. Vine, Touching the Coming of the Lord, London 1919, p. 95.
9 Hogg and Vine, p. 96.
10 Hogg and Vine, pp. 118,120.
11 Wilson p. 81
12 See the booklet Peace - Can It Last? published by the Watchtower Society in 1942, p. 21.
13 See for example Studies in the Scriptures. Vol. Vll, first published in 1911, pp. 259, 263. The work went through several editions in the subsequent years.
14 Light, Vol. 2, 1930, p. 86.
15 Ibid, p. 94.
16 Peace - Can It Last? 1942. p. 21. The Watch Tower Society has open referred to this prediction as evidence of the prophetic ability of the organization. The Watchtower of 1960 p. 444, paragraph 19, claimed they made it, guided by Jehovah’s spirit. Cf. also “Your Will Be Done On Earth, ” 1958, p. 282; ”Babylon The Great has Fallen!” Cod’s Kingdom Rules! 1963, p. 585; The Watchtower, Nov. 15, 1963, p. 696; The Watchtower, Feb. 15, 1967, p. 122 and the 1975 Yearbook of Jehovah’s Witnesses, p. 203.
17 The A American A Annual for 1 944, p. 701, quoted in The Watchtower, Dec. I, 197 1, p. 723.
18 Wilson, p. 157. Rimmer’s prediction is to be found on p. 83 of his book The Coming We and The Rise of Russia. Grand Rapids, 1940. That Harry Rimmer’s writings were not unknown to the Society is seen from the fact that he has often been quoted in the Watch Tower public cations on other subjects. See for example the booklet Basis for Belief a New World, published in 1953, where three of Rimmer’s works are quoted on pp. 23, 27, 37 and 44.
19 Since 1963 the Society identifies the “harlot” with On false religion. See “Babylon the Great Great pub 1963
20 Louis Gasper, 7hc Fundamentalist Movement 1930-lg55, Grand Rapids: Baker Book House. 1981 treprint of the 1963 edition), pp. 49, 50
21 Gasper, p. 52.

February 20, 2008 Posted by Admin Staff | Carl olof Jonsson, Christianity, Jehovahs Witnesses, Prophecies | | No Comments