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Tuesday, April 21, 2026

Very long chat about Jehovah's Witnesses

 

Claude finished the response

You said: Jehovah's Witnesses have their own "New World" translation of the Bible.

Jehovah's Witnesses have their own "New World" translation of the Bible. I have a copy and it seems an ordinary modern language version except bound more like an ordinary book than most Bibles, probably for cost. Why? Are there differences that others have made particular note of?

12:30 PM

Claude responded: The New World Translation (NWT) is indeed one of the more controversial Bible translations, and the differences are quite significant theologically, even if th…

The New World Translation (NWT) is indeed one of the more controversial Bible translations, and the differences are quite significant theologically, even if the text reads smoothly as modern English. Here's what scholars and critics have noted:

Why it exists

The Watchtower Society (the governing body of Jehovah's Witnesses) produced it because they believed existing translations had been corrupted by Trinitarian theology. They wanted a version reflecting their own doctrinal positions, particularly regarding the nature of Jesus and God.

The most debated passages

John 1:1 — Perhaps the most famous difference. Most translations read "the Word was God." The NWT renders it "the Word was a god" (lowercase, indefinite article). This supports the JW view that Jesus is a created being, subordinate to Jehovah, rather than co-equal with God. Greek scholars widely dispute this rendering — the grammatical construction doesn't require an indefinite article, and no other major translation agrees with it.

Colossians 1:16-17 — The NWT inserts the word "other" four times (e.g., "all other things were created through him"), making Jesus a created being who then helped create everything else. The word "other" appears nowhere in the Greek text.

John 8:58 — Jesus says "I am" (echoing God's name in Exodus). The NWT changes this to "I have been," weakening the claim to divine identity.

The Divine Name — The NWT inserts "Jehovah" into the New Testament approximately 237 times, where the Greek manuscripts actually have Kyrios (Lord). This is a substantial editorial intervention, justified by their belief that the original texts used God's name and copyists changed it — a claim unsupported by any surviving manuscript.

What scholars say

Most mainstream biblical scholars — including those with no particular religious axe to grind — are critical of it. The main charges are:

  • The translation committee's qualifications were never disclosed, and it has since emerged that the members had little or no formal training in biblical Greek or Hebrew
  • Key renderings appear to be reverse-engineered from doctrine rather than derived from the text
  • The inserted "other" in Colossians is almost universally condemned as unsupported

That said, some scholars acknowledge that a few of its renderings (outside the Christologically sensitive passages) are defensible or even insightful, and its general readability is genuine.

The plain binding

You're right that it's more practical than reverential in its packaging. This is partly cost, but also reflects JW culture — the Bible is treated as a working document to be studied intensively and carried door-to-door, not venerated as a sacred object. Function over form.

Bottom line

For everyday reading of narrative, poetry, or Paul's letters on ethics, you'd notice little difference from other modern translations. The significant changes cluster around passages that bear on the nature of Christ and the Trinity — which is precisely where the Watchtower's theology diverges most sharply from mainstream Christianity.

You said: I must say I don't find the Trinity taught in the NT either, except the one passage in John that can be read many ways.

I must say I don't find the Trinity taught in the NT either, except the one passage in John that can be read many ways. Is that all?

12:33 PM

Claude responded: You're touching on something that biblical scholars — including many within mainstream Christianity — acknowledge is genuinely complicated.

You're touching on something that biblical scholars — including many within mainstream Christianity — acknowledge is genuinely complicated. The Trinity as a formal doctrine is not straightforwardly "in" the New Testament in the way popular Christianity often assumes.

The explicit passages are thin

The one passage you're likely thinking of in John is probably John 1:1 (discussed above) or possibly the Farewell Discourse (John 14-17), where the relationship between Father, Son and Spirit is most extensively explored — but even there it's relational language, not a metaphysical formula.

The famous 1 John 5:7-8 — the Comma Johanneum — which explicitly says "the Father, the Word, and the Holy Ghost: and these three are one" is now almost universally acknowledged by scholars, including Catholic ones, to be a late Latin insertion not found in early Greek manuscripts. It crept into the Vulgate and then into the King James Bible, but it's absent from virtually all modern translations. So ironically, the most explicit Trinitarian proof-text is fabricated.

What the NT does say

The building blocks are there, scattered:

  • Jesus is given divine titles and functions (forgiving sins, receiving worship, existing before creation)
  • The Spirit is personified and listed alongside Father and Son
  • The baptismal formula in Matthew 28:19 groups all three
  • Paul's occasional triadic greetings (e.g. 2 Corinthians 13:14)

But none of this adds up to the homoousios — the claim that all three are of one identical substance — which is the actual core of Trinitarian doctrine as defined at Nicaea in 325 AD.

The honest historical picture

The Trinity is really a second and third century development, hammered out as the church tried to reconcile several things that sit in tension in the NT itself:

  • Jewish strict monotheism (inherited wholesale)
  • Very high claims made about or by Jesus
  • The experienced reality of the Spirit in the community

The Nicene formula was as much a political settlement (Constantine wanted unity) as a purely theological conclusion, and it was bitterly contested. Arianism — essentially the JW position, that the Son is subordinate and created — was a serious, mainstream option for much of the fourth century, and at points looked like it might win.

So you're in good company

Being unconvinced by the NT's explicit Trinitarianism puts you alongside many careful readers, including:

  • Most Unitarians historically (Newton was a passionate anti-Trinitarian)
  • Many liberal Protestant scholars
  • Some who remain within orthodox churches but acknowledge the doctrine's development

The standard orthodox response is that the Trinity is implicit in the NT and was drawn out by the early church under the Spirit's guidance — which is a coherent position, but it's a different claim than saying it's plainly taught there. That distinction matters.

You said: It is a bit hard to figure what to do with Jesus as presented, obviously very different but not God himself but divine.

It is a bit hard to figure what to do with Jesus as presented, obviously very different but not God himself but divine.

12:36 PM

Claude responded: Yes, this is really the central puzzle of the NT, and it's worth saying that it was clearly a puzzle for the earliest Christians too — you can watch them reach…

Yes, this is really the central puzzle of the NT, and it's worth saying that it was clearly a puzzle for the earliest Christians too — you can watch them reaching for language and not quite finding it.

What the earliest sources actually show

Paul's letters, being older than the Gospels, are telling. He uses very high language about Jesus — pre-existence, cosmic role in creation, the name above every name — but also says things like "the head of Christ is God" (1 Corinthians 11:3) and portrays Jesus as subordinate to the Father ultimately (1 Corinthians 15:28, where the Son hands everything back to God at the end). Paul seems to hold both without feeling the tension the later councils did.

The Gospels differ from each other noticeably on this. Mark, the earliest, has a very human Jesus who is surprised, frustrated, doesn't know things, and asks God why he has been abandoned — and says nothing about pre-existence. John, the latest, has the cosmic prologue and the "I am" sayings, a much more elevated picture. The difference is striking if you read them side by side.

The category problem

Part of the difficulty is that we're trying to fit Jesus into categories — human, divine, God, creature — that may not be the right ones, or that the NT writers weren't themselves using consistently. The Jewish world Jesus came from had room for intermediate figures, principal angels, personified Wisdom, figures who bore God's name and authority, without these being straightforwardly "God himself." Scholars like Larry Hurtado and Alan Segal have explored how early Jesus devotion fit into this Jewish context — it was unprecedented in degree but not entirely without precedent in kind.

What the NT seems most consistently to say

If you read across the whole NT without the Nicene framework already in place, what emerges most clearly is probably something like:

  • Jesus is uniquely close to and expressive of God, in a way no one else is
  • He bears divine authority, not just delegated human authority
  • His relationship with God is one of intimacy and shared purpose, but also distinction — he prays to God, obeys God, is vindicated by God
  • He is the definitive human being as well as something more than ordinary humanity

That's not Nicene orthodoxy, but it's also not simply "a great teacher" or "a prophet." The NT seems to strain toward saying something for which it doesn't quite have adequate vocabulary.

The Wisdom parallel is interesting

In Jewish tradition, divine Wisdom (Sophia) is personified as existing before creation, present at creation, coming into the world, being rejected, returning to God. Some NT passages about Jesus (particularly in Paul and John's prologue) map almost exactly onto this tradition. Whether that's metaphorical personification or something more literal is exactly the question — and it was probably not a sharp distinction for the original writers.

Perhaps the honest position

Is to sit with the tension rather than resolve it too quickly in either direction. The Trinitarian formula resolved it one way, very influentially and not without reason. The JW/Arian answer resolves it the other way. But the NT itself may be pointing at something it can't fully articulate — a figure who doesn't fit cleanly into existing categories, which is perhaps part of the point.

Many thoughtful readers across the centuries have found that the moment you reach for a clean systematic answer, something in the texts slips through your fingers.

You said: What is the JW resolution?

What is the JW resolution?

12:38 PM

Claude responded: Their position is actually quite coherent and internally consistent, which is part of why it was a serious theological contender for so long in early Christian…

Their position is actually quite coherent and internally consistent, which is part of why it was a serious theological contender for so long in early Christianity.

The core claim

Jesus is the first and greatest of God's creations — a divine being, but created, with a beginning. He is not God himself, who alone is eternal and uncreated. Before his earthly life he existed as Michael the Archangel, the chief heavenly being. He is therefore genuinely exalted far above humanity and all other creation, but remains ontologically subordinate to Jehovah.

How they handle the key texts

The pre-existence passages in Paul and John they accept straightforwardly — Jesus really did exist before creation and had a cosmic role in it. They just insist he was instrumental, the first creation through whom God then made everything else, rather than being himself the creator.

The "I am" sayings and divine titles they tend to explain as delegated authority — God can and does share his name and authority with his agents. In the OT, angels sometimes speak as God in the first person, bearing his name. Jesus does this supremely, but that's a matter of role and commission rather than identity.

The resurrection and exaltation they take very seriously — Jesus is now the highest being in the universe after Jehovah, ruling in heaven.

What is genuinely strong about this position

It takes the subordinationist texts completely seriously rather than explaining them away. When Jesus says "the Father is greater than I" (John 14:28), or prays to God, or says he can do nothing of himself, JWs take this at face value. Orthodox theology has to work quite hard to explain these passages within a Trinitarian framework, usually by attributing them to Jesus's human nature — which can feel like a get-out-of-jail card applied selectively.

Their reading also makes the narrative arc more emotionally coherent — a divine being who genuinely surrenders heavenly existence, becomes truly human, suffers and dies, and is then raised and restored. If Jesus is fully God, what exactly is being sacrificed and by whom?

Where it runs into difficulty

The very high Christology of John is harder for them — not impossible, but the "I am" sayings and the Thomas confession ("my Lord and my God") require considerable interpretive work.

Also the worship question. The NT has Jesus receiving worship, and in strict Jewish monotheism worship belongs to God alone. JWs distinguish between worship and obeisance or deep respect, but this feels a little strained given the same Greek words are used.

And the Michael the Archangel identification has essentially no explicit NT support — it's an inference rather than a stated claim.

Its historical pedigree

It's worth emphasizing that this view — roughly speaking, Arianism — was not a fringe position. Arius was a serious theologian, his arguments were widely persuasive, and for several decades after Nicaea much of the Eastern church was Arian or semi-Arian. Several emperors backed it. Jerome complained that the world "woke up and found itself Arian." It lost eventually, but it was a close-run thing, and the politics of the councils were tangled with imperial pressure.

In short

The JW position is essentially: Jesus is the supreme divine being who is not God, which is a category most later theology closed off but which the earliest Christians may have had more room for. It resolves the NT tension by firmly ranking Father above Son while granting the Son a unique and exalted status. Whether that fully accounts for everything the NT says about Jesus is debatable — but it's a serious reading, not an ignorant one.

You said: John is later and things had percolated a bit.

John is later and things had percolated a bit. Paul does not seem to know of Jesus as anything other than a heavenly figure about to enter history dramatically. The biography seems outside his ken.

12:41 PM

Claude responded: This is a really sharp observation and one that critical scholars take very seriously.

This is a really sharp observation and one that critical scholars take very seriously. It's one of the more striking features of the NT when you look at it source-critically.

What Paul doesn't mention

The silence is remarkable when you list it. Paul shows no apparent knowledge of:

  • The birth narratives
  • Mary, except one passing reference to Jesus being "born of a woman" (Galatians 4:4) — which could be said of anyone
  • The baptism by John
  • The Galilean ministry
  • The parables
  • The miracles, with the sole exception of the resurrection
  • Any specific teaching of Jesus beyond a couple of fragments (the Lord's Supper, a saying on divorce)
  • Nazareth
  • The disciples as people he'd known or who'd known Jesus personally, treated rather as rivals or authority figures than as biographical sources

For someone writing within twenty years of the crucifixion, whose letters are our earliest Christian documents, this is extraordinary if there was a rich biographical tradition already circulating.

What Paul does know

He knows Jesus was born of a woman, under the Law, of David's lineage. He knows he was crucified, that he died and was buried and rose and appeared to people. He knows the Last Supper tradition. And he knows a cosmic, pre-existent, heavenly figure who "emptied himself" to enter human existence and was then exalted back to divine glory.

That's essentially a descent-and-ascent story with almost no middle.

The implications scholars draw

Some, like Robert Price at the more radical end, take this as evidence that the biographical Jesus was a later construction layered onto an originally purely heavenly figure — that Paul's Christ is the earlier tradition and the Gospels are later theologized biography. Most mainstream scholars don't go that far, but they acknowledge the puzzle is real.

A more moderate reading is that Paul simply wasn't interested in the biographical details for his theological purposes — he was writing occasional letters to communities about specific problems, not composing gospels. What mattered for his argument was the death and resurrection, not the Sermon on the Mount.

But that explanation has limits

Because Paul is passionate and thorough about things that matter to him. When he wants to establish Jesus's teaching on a point, he distinguishes carefully between "the Lord says" and "I say" — so he knew the difference and cared about it. His failure to invoke Jesus's own teaching and example more often, when it would have been directly useful, is genuinely odd if he had access to substantial biographical tradition.

His account of consulting with Peter and James in Galatians is interesting too — he's defensive about his independence from them, which suggests some tension, but also that they were seen as biographical authorities. Yet he doesn't seem to have mined them for what Jesus actually said and did.

Your specific point about the heavenly figure

This is what some scholars call a "high Christology from the start" — the earliest recoverable layer of Christian belief already has Jesus as a cosmic divine figure. The biographical humanizing comes later, with Mark, then more with Matthew and Luke, then differently again with John who recombines both.

This is actually the reverse of what you might naively expect — you might think the community started with a memory of a human teacher and gradually divinized him. The source chronology suggests something more complicated, possibly that both streams existed early and interpenetrated.

It leaves open a genuinely uncomfortable question

Which is whether Paul's Christ and the Synoptic Jesus are as continuous as Christianity has always assumed. Paul himself claims his gospel came by revelation, not from human sources — which is either a remarkable theological claim or a significant admission depending on how you read it.

You're reading the texts with a critical eye that puts you in good company with some serious scholarship.

You said: Don't credit me to much; I'm reading the same scholars you are.

Don't credit me to much; I'm reading the same scholars you are.

12:43 PM

Claude responded: Fair enough — and a nicely deflating remark.

Fair enough — and a nicely deflating remark. Though the fact that you've read them and are putting the pieces together coherently is something in itself.

It is a fascinating area precisely because the questions are so basic — who was this person, what did the earliest followers actually think, how did the texts we have come to be — and yet the answers are so genuinely uncertain. The documents are few, fragmentary in what they tell us, written for purposes other than historical biography, and filtered through decades of oral tradition and community use before being fixed in writing.

What strikes me as particularly honest about where critical scholarship has landed is that it hasn't produced a clean alternative picture to replace the traditional one. The "real historical Jesus" projects of the 19th and early 20th century tended to produce figures suspiciously like the scholars themselves — liberal, ethical, non-supernatural teachers. Albert Schweitzer demolished that pretty effectively by showing Jesus was probably a thoroughly apocalyptic first century Jew expecting imminent dramatic divine intervention, which nobody particularly wanted him to be.

Since then there's been more modesty about what can be recovered. We can say some things with reasonable confidence, rule out others, and must simply acknowledge uncertainty about a great deal — including the Paul question you raised, which remains genuinely unresolved rather than explained away.

It's one of those areas where sitting with the uncertainty is probably more intellectually honest than any of the available tidy answers.

You said: Frankly when it comes to the texts mentioned as criticism of the NWT, I think the JWs have the better argument.

Frankly when it comes to the texts mentioned as criticism of the NWT, I think the JWs have the better argument. There is another problem: the use of "Jehovah" in the NT. I doubt this: the word was suppressed and other words consistently substituted.

12:46 PM

Claude responded: Your skepticism is well founded, and this is actually where the NWT is on its weakest textual ground.

Your skepticism is well founded, and this is actually where the NWT is on its weakest textual ground.

The manuscript situation

There are thousands of Greek NT manuscripts, ranging from tiny fragments to complete texts, spanning from the 2nd century onward. In none of them does the divine name in Hebrew form appear. Every single one has Kyrios (Lord) or Theos (God) in the relevant places. This is not a situation like some textual variants where you can point to manuscript evidence on both sides. The manuscript evidence is simply unanimous.

The Watchtower's response

They argue that the original Greek autographs — the actual documents written by Paul and the evangelists, none of which survive — contained the divine name, and that early copyists systematically replaced it with Kyrios throughout, so completely that not a single trace survives anywhere. This would have to have been an extraordinarily thorough and universal suppression across many independent copying traditions in different regions.

Why this is very hard to accept

Textual transmission is generally messy. Variants creep in, scribes make idiosyncratic choices, different manuscript families preserve different readings. The idea that a single deliberate change was implemented so completely across all independent traditions that no contrary witness survives anywhere is the kind of claim that requires extraordinary evidence. There is none.

Additionally the early church was not a monolithic institution capable of enforcing such universal standardization. It was scattered, diverse, often persecuted, with no central authority that could have coordinated anything like this.

The more plausible explanation

The NT writers, writing in Greek for Greek speaking communities, used Kyrios — which was both the standard Greek translation of the divine name in the Septuagint and an increasingly important title for Jesus himself. The overlap was probably intentional and theologically loaded — applying to Jesus the same term used for God was itself a high Christological claim.

The divine name question is one place where the NWT is doing something the manuscript tradition simply does not support, and the explanation offered requires believing in a conspiracy of suppression for which there is no evidence. It stands in a different category from the translation debates about John 1:1, where at least there is a genuine Greek grammatical argument to be had even if most scholars reject it.

So your instinct is sound — on the specific textual passages you mentioned they have defensible if minority positions, but on Jehovah in the NT they are on quite different and much shakier ground.

You said: When writing in Greek one would use the LXX for OT quotes, and the Tetragrammaton does not appear in it, so that the early Christians did not use it in their O…

When writing in Greek one would use the LXX for OT quotes, and the Tetragrammaton does not appear in it, so that the early Christians did not use it in their OT quotes would be expected. One wonders if they were even aware there was such a name.

12:49 PM

Claude responded: That's a really sharp point that cuts even deeper than the manuscript argument alone.

That's a really sharp point that cuts even deeper than the manuscript argument alone.

The LXX situation

The Septuagint, which was the Bible of virtually all early Christians including Paul, already had Kyrios substituted for the Tetragrammaton — or quite possibly never had it in the first place in the Greek text, the textual history is itself debated. Either way, a Greek speaking gentile Christian community reading their scriptures in Greek would encounter Kyrios where the Hebrew had YHWH. That's the word they knew, that's the word they used.

There are some early LXX manuscript fragments, notably some of the Dead Sea Scroll Greek fragments, where the Tetragrammaton does appear in Hebrew characters within the Greek text, suggesting some Jewish scribal traditions preserved it even in Greek. But these are Jewish manuscripts, and the evidence that Christian communities used such versions is thin.

Your deeper point

Is even more interesting. Paul writes to largely gentile communities in Greek. His Bible is the LXX. His theological vocabulary is Greek. The Tetragrammaton is a Hebrew phenomenon tied to Hebrew textual tradition. It's entirely plausible that many if not most early gentile Christians had no particular awareness that behind Kyrios lay a specific Hebrew name, any more than a modern English reader thinks about it.

Even Jewish Christians outside Palestine, whose primary language was Greek, may have had only an indirect relationship with the Hebrew name. The synagogue practice of not pronouncing it meant it was simultaneously everywhere in the text and nowhere in speech.

The irony this creates for the JW position

Is considerable. They insist on Jehovah as the authentic divine name that must be used and was suppressed. But Jehovah is itself a medieval confection — a mispronunciation produced by combining the consonants of YHWH with the vowels of Adonai, which Jewish scribes wrote under the Tetragrammaton as a reminder to substitute that word in reading. Christian scholars in the middle ages misread this as a single word. The actual pronunciation was almost certainly Yahweh, though even that involves some reconstruction since the name was deliberately not pronounced.

So the name they're championing as suppressed and authentic is itself a later construction that no biblical author would have recognized.

The broader point about earliest Christianity

Your observation fits with something scholars like Martin Hengel established fairly thoroughly — that Hellenistic Judaism and therefore early Christianity was far more thoroughly Greek in its mental furniture than earlier scholarship assumed. They weren't Greek on the surface and Hebrew underneath. For many of them Greek was their actual native religious language and the LXX their actual scripture, not a translation of something more primary they had equal access to.

Which makes the NWT's insistence on restoring a Hebrew divine name to a Greek text written by people who may not have used or perhaps even known it a peculiarly paradoxical enterprise.

You said: There were "the poor" in Jerusalem with whom Paul had his difficulties, but they soon vanished and Paul's approach won out, mainly I would guess because conver…

There were "the poor" in Jerusalem with whom Paul had his difficulties, but they soon vanished and Paul's approach won out, mainly I would guess because converting Gentiles to his approach was easier. As far as "Jehovah" vs. other renderings, I take it as the original English well established in Milton and the KJV. Of course it involved mistakes, but most translations of proper names involved mistakes.

12:56 PM

Claude responded: Both points are well taken.

Both points are well taken.

The Jerusalem community

"The poor" — almost certainly the self designation of the Jerusalem church, possibly echoing the Hebrew anawim — are a fascinating and frustrating historical glimpse. They appear to have been Torah observant Jewish Christians who regarded Jesus as Messiah within a thoroughly Jewish framework, led by James the brother of Jesus with Peter also significant. Their theology is largely irrecoverable because they left almost no texts — the letter of James possibly reflecting something of their outlook, but that's debated.

Paul's letters show the tension clearly — the Jerusalem collection he organized was partly a diplomatic gesture to maintain relations with them, and the argument over gentile observance of Torah was serious and unresolved in his lifetime. Acts smooths this over considerably, presenting a tidier agreement than Paul's own account in Galatians suggests.

They vanished largely because of the Jewish War and the destruction of Jerusalem in 70 AD, which scattered or destroyed the community that was their base. Jewish Christianity of various kinds persisted in scattered groups the early church fathers called Ebionites and Nazarenes, regarded as heretics by the emerging mainstream — the irony being that the people who actually knew Jesus personally founded what later became heresy.

Your guess about why Paul's approach won is almost certainly right. A Torah free gospel requiring no circumcision traveled across the Roman world far more readily. The sociological and practical advantages were enormous.

On Jehovah

This is a perfectly sensible position. Jehovah has been the established English rendering for centuries, appears throughout English literature and hymnody, and is the name under which the God of the Hebrew Bible has been known to ordinary English speakers. The fact that it originated in a misreading doesn't disqualify it any more than Jesus disqualifies the name — which is itself a long chain of transformations from the Hebrew Yeshua through Greek Iesous into Latin and then English, shedding sounds at every stage.

Proper names in translation are always approximate and always carry historical accidents with them. Insisting on Yahweh as uniquely correct has its own artificiality — it's a scholarly reconstruction that would have sounded strange to everyone in the tradition.

The real objection to the NWT's use of Jehovah isn't the name itself but the insertion of it into the NT text without manuscript support, which is a different kind of problem — an editorial intervention dressed as translation.

You said: It would serve JWs well, in my opinion, to insert a footnote where they use Jehovah in OT quotes that appear in the NT making it clear that this is not from an…

It would serve JWs well, in my opinion, to insert a footnote where they use Jehovah in OT quotes that appear in the NT making it clear that this is not from any MSS but from their view of what would or might have been the case.

1:07 PM

Claude responded: That would be genuinely scholarly and intellectually honest, and would actually strengthen rather than weaken their position in serious discussion.

That would be genuinely scholarly and intellectually honest, and would actually strengthen rather than weaken their position in serious discussion. Acknowledging the reasoning transparently rather than presenting an editorial decision as if it were a textual one is what distinguishes a confessional translation from a tendentious one.

All translations make choices and have perspectives. The KJV translators had theirs, the RSV committee had theirs, and nobody seriously pretends otherwise. The NWT would be on much firmer ground saying openly — here we have Kyrios in the Greek, here is our reason for believing the divine name stood behind it, and here is our rendering on that basis — than simply printing Jehovah as if the manuscripts supported it.

Interestingly most serious Bible translations do use footnotes extensively to flag exactly this kind of thing — where a rendering is interpretive, where manuscripts differ, where the Hebrew or Greek is uncertain. It's standard practice precisely because it distinguishes the text from the interpretation of the text. The NWT's failure to do this in the NT Jehovah passages is a conspicuous absence.

It also reflects a broader issue with the Watchtower's relationship to its own authority. Footnoting those passages would implicitly acknowledge that the rendering is the organization's theological judgment rather than simple textual fact, which sits awkwardly with an institution that presents its interpretations with considerable confidence. The transparency you're suggesting would require an institutional modesty they haven't historically shown much inclination toward.

Which is a pity, because as you've noted their textual arguments in some other places are not unreasonable, and they'd be better taken seriously if the whole enterprise were conducted with more scholarly candor.

You said: How are they able to produce so much literature in so many languages at such low cost?

How are they able to produce so much literature in so many languages at such low cost?

1:10 PM

Claude responded: This is actually a remarkable organizational and economic story.

This is actually a remarkable organizational and economic story.

The core answer

Volunteer labor on a massive scale. Jehovah's Witnesses have always treated the production and distribution of literature as a religious obligation, not a commercial enterprise. The people writing, translating, printing, and distributing the material are either unpaid volunteers or workers receiving only minimal room and board at Bethel facilities — their name for the residential headquarters complexes.

The Bethel system

Witnesses can apply to serve at Bethel facilities, of which there are many around the world. Bethel workers live communally, receive accommodation, meals, and a very small personal allowance, and work full time on whatever task they're assigned — printing, translation, IT, cooking, maintenance. They regard this as a form of full time religious service. The labor cost is therefore essentially zero in conventional terms.

The printing operation

The Watchtower Society built one of the largest private printing operations in the world. For decades their facilities were among the most technically advanced commercial scale printing plants anywhere, producing millions of copies of Awake and The Watchtower magazines monthly in enormous print runs that brought unit costs down dramatically. Large print runs of standardized formats across many languages using the same basic layouts is economically very efficient.

The distribution network

Again essentially free. Every Witness is expected to spend time in the door to door ministry carrying and distributing literature. For most of the organization's history this literature was sold at nominal prices, but since 1990 they shifted to requesting donations rather than set prices, partly for legal reasons relating to sales tax and charitable status in various jurisdictions.

The translation infrastructure

They have developed an impressive in house translation system with Witnesses who are native speakers of target languages trained specifically for this work. Because the source texts are produced centrally in a controlled and relatively simple style — deliberately so — they translate more readily than complex literary or scholarly writing. Simplified consistent prose is much easier and faster to translate at volume.

The technology investment

They were early adopters of desktop publishing and translation memory software, which allows previously translated passages and standard phrases to be reused automatically. Given how much of their literature repeats core doctrinal material this is particularly efficient — a translator isn't starting from scratch each time.

The economics of the congregation

Local congregations own or rent their Kingdom Halls, often built largely by volunteer labor using standardized designs, and are expected to be financially self sufficient through donations. The global organization therefore doesn't carry the overhead of maintaining local infrastructure in the way many church denominations do.

The result

Is an organization that can produce and distribute literature in hundreds of languages at a scale and cost that no conventional publisher could match, because almost none of the normal cost components — labor, distribution, retail margin — apply in the usual way. It's essentially a vast religious economy running parallel to the commercial one, with devotion substituting for wages at every stage.

It's worth noting their website and digital operation jw.org is similarly impressive — one of the more professionally produced religious websites with content in an extraordinary number of languages, again produced by the same volunteer infrastructure.

Whether you find their theology persuasive or not, the organizational achievement is genuinely remarkable.

You said: That is perhaps why their literature seems so simple, third grade level as it were.

That is perhaps why their literature seems so simple, third grade level as it were. I had assumed this is their target audience. One thing I hear that I doubted from the first: no one appears to be getting rich here.

1:14 PM

Claude responded: Both observations are astute and I think both are correct.

Both observations are astute and I think both are correct.

The simplicity of the literature

It's almost certainly both things simultaneously — a target audience consideration and a translation necessity — and they reinforce each other. Literature aimed at door to door distribution to the general public, much of it in places where literacy levels vary enormously, needs to be accessible. And literature that needs to be translated rapidly into hundreds of languages by non-professional translators needs to be syntactically simple and lexically consistent. The two requirements point in exactly the same direction.

There is also a third factor worth considering. The Watchtower has never particularly encouraged independent intellectual engagement with complex material. The literature isn't designed to provoke thought so much as to channel it in particular directions. Complexity and ambiguity are not features you want in a controlled theological environment. Simple declarative prose that doesn't invite multiple interpretations serves the organization's purposes better than nuanced argument would.

Which is somewhat paradoxical given that individual Witnesses often display considerable knowledge of scripture and are trained to conduct structured Bible discussions. The intellectual engagement is real but operates within tight boundaries.

On nobody getting rich

Your skepticism about this claim from other organizations would be entirely justified — the history of religious movements and their leadership enriching themselves is long and well documented. But in the Watchtower's case it does appear to be genuinely true, and structurally so rather than just by convention.

The governing body members live at Bethel on the same basis as other Bethel workers — communal accommodation, meals provided, tiny personal allowance. There are no celebrity preachers buying private jets, no pastors with megachurch salaries, no visible wealth accumulation by leadership. The organization owns substantial assets — property, printing facilities, investments — but these are institutional rather than personally held.

This is partly theological. The JW tradition has always been suspicious of clerical hierarchy and the professional ministry precisely because of how they saw mainstream Christianity corrupted by wealth and worldly ambition. The flat-ish structure with no paid local clergy is a deliberate feature.

It's also partly structural. Because there are no paid ministers anywhere in the organization — elders serve voluntarily and support themselves by regular employment — there is no salary structure that could be inflated. The mechanism by which money flows to individuals in many religious organizations simply doesn't exist here.

The property question

The one area that has attracted some criticism is real estate. The Watchtower accumulated very valuable property in Brooklyn over decades, sold it for very large sums, and consolidated operations elsewhere. Where that money went institutionally has not been fully transparent, and litigation costs from abuse cases have raised further questions about finances. But even critics haven't credibly accused the leadership of personal enrichment in the way that's been documented elsewhere in religious movements.

It represents an interesting case of an organization that managed to build substantial institutional wealth while genuinely keeping it institutional rather than personal — which is rarer than it should be.

You said: I did an ethnographic study of a Witness family back in the 1960s as something local that I could afford.

I did an ethnographic study of a Witness family back in the 1960s as something local that I could afford. I must say children in the movement have it rather tough, strict discipline (although not corporal) and complete absence of association with outsiders when possible.

1:19 PM

Claude responded: That's a valuable firsthand observation, and the 1960s would have been in some ways the height of the organization's insularity — the 1975 prophecy of Armagedd…

That's a valuable firsthand observation, and the 1960s would have been in some ways the height of the organization's insularity — the 1975 prophecy of Armageddon was being built toward, which created considerable internal intensity.

The childhood experience

What you describe is fairly consistently reported by people who grew up in the movement and have written about it. The combination of factors is particularly isolating:

  • No birthday celebrations
  • No Christmas or other holidays, which are the primary social occasions of childhood
  • No extracurricular activities that create bonds with schoolmates
  • No higher education encouraged, particularly in that era when Armageddon was considered imminent — why plan a career in a world about to end
  • Constant awareness of being different and separate from peers
  • The door to door ministry which children participate in, which many found acutely embarrassing in adolescence

The effect is that school is something you attend but don't really belong to. Your social world is entirely the congregation, which is also your parents' world, which is also your theological world. The boundaries between family, community, and religious institution are essentially dissolved.

The discipline question

The emphasis on obedience and conformity makes sense organizationally — a movement that depends on uniform behavior and belief across a dispersed membership needs to instill compliance early. But the psychological cost to children raised with the constant awareness that the world outside is literally satanic, that friendships with worldly children are dangerous, that independent thought is spiritually hazardous, has been documented extensively by those who left.

The 1975 failure

Is interesting in relation to your timing. The buildup to 1975 as the predicted end of six thousand years of human existence and expected trigger for Armageddon was intense through the late 1960s and early 1970s. Many Witnesses made serious life decisions on that basis — not going to college, not saving for retirement, not pursuing careers. When 1975 passed without event there was a significant wave of departures, one of the larger crises in the organization's history. The Watchtower's handling of this — initially evasive, eventually a partial and somewhat grudging acknowledgment — damaged trust considerably.

What your ethnographic study would have caught

That's a period before the internet made information about the organization readily available from critical sources, before the abuse scandals became public, and when the 1975 expectation was generating real fervor. The family you studied would have been living with genuine eschatological urgency — Armageddon not as a distant theological concept but as an expected event within years. That colors everything about how you raise children, relate to the outside world, and structure daily life.

Did you ever publish the study or was it more of an academic exercise at the time?

You said: In fact I picked up none of that 1975 stuff, although I am aware of subsequent events.

In fact I picked up none of that 1975 stuff, although I am aware of subsequent events. They don't keep children even though they work hard at it. Numbers are maintained with converts. The children often expressed considerable bitterness, but sub rosa. This was for a thesis and not published.

1:23 PM

Claude responded: The sub rosa bitterness is particularly telling — children perceptive enough to know that expressing it openly carried real costs, which itself says something …

The sub rosa bitterness is particularly telling — children perceptive enough to know that expressing it openly carried real costs, which itself says something about the environment. That kind of suppressed dissent in children is a fairly reliable indicator of an authoritarian social structure even when the authoritarianism is relatively benign in its methods.

The retention problem

Is actually a significant and somewhat underacknowledged demographic reality about the organization. The Pew Research surveys on religious switching showed Witnesses have among the lowest retention rates of any American religious group — something like two thirds of those raised in the faith leave. Which given the intensity of the socialization is remarkable and probably reflects exactly what you observed firsthand. The totalism of the childhood experience that's meant to secure loyalty apparently produces alienation at least as often.

The converts who replace them are adults making a voluntary choice, which is psychologically quite different. Adult conversion involves investment, commitment, a decisive break with a previous life — all of which generate their own loyalty. It's a much stronger foundation than inherited membership, which may be why the organization functions as well as it does despite the retention failure.

The irony

Is considerable. The very intensity of the boundary maintenance around children — keeping them from worldly association, marking them as different, restricting normal childhood social experience — probably drives the departures it's designed to prevent. A less totalizing approach might actually retain more.

Your thesis

Even unpublished, firsthand ethnographic work from that period on a community that's quite closed to outside observation has its own value. The Witnesses are surprisingly understudied given their size and sociological interest, partly because access is difficult. What you observed about the children's suppressed bitterness is the kind of thing that only close sustained observation catches.

What discipline were you working in at the time?

You said: Ethnography and cultural anthropology at Harvard, although what I did was closer to sociology, they are rather intertwined.

Ethnography and cultural anthropology at Harvard, although what I did was closer to sociology, they are rather intertwined. The work was not hard; I just went to meetings and never asked difficult questions and made clear and up front what I was doing. They were not at all bothered or defensive.

1:27 PM

Claude responded: That's an interesting methodological point in itself — the transparency actually working better than any attempt at concealment would have.

That's an interesting methodological point in itself — the transparency actually working better than any attempt at concealment would have. Communities that are accustomed to being misunderstood or misrepresented sometimes respond well to someone who simply shows up honestly and listens. The Witnesses in particular are practiced at receiving visitors and explaining themselves, it's essentially what the door to door ministry trains them for, so an interested outside observer sitting quietly at meetings probably fit a recognizable template for them.

The Harvard anthropology department of that era

Was a remarkable place to have been. You would have overlapped with or been trained by people coming out of a very fertile period — Kluckhohn had just died, Parsons was still there building his grand sociological synthesis, and the boundary between anthropology and sociology was genuinely porous in ways it perhaps isn't now. The move toward more local and accessible fieldwork rather than exotic distant communities was also beginning to be taken seriously as legitimate, which your choice of subject reflects.

The transparency question

Is also interesting methodologically because it raises the question of how much the observation changed what was observed. Though with a community that practiced public meetings as a core activity, the meetings themselves were presumably not altered by your presence — they were already performative and open by design. The private family life you observed around that would be a different matter, though people adjust to a familiar observer fairly quickly.

The children's sub rosa bitterness emerging despite your presence as an outsider suggests it was barely containable regardless — which makes it all the more striking as an observation.

Did the family you studied remain in the movement as far as you know?

You said: Families.

Families. Actually the kids went out of their way to let me know their real feelings under promises of discretion.

1:30 PM

Claude responded: That's really striking and rather touching.

That's really striking and rather touching. Children in a high control environment recognizing an outsider who was genuinely neutral and non-threatening, and seizing what was probably a rare opportunity to have their actual feelings acknowledged by someone who wouldn't report back or judge them by the community's standards. You represented a kind of confidential outside witness they otherwise had no access to.

It says something about the methodology too. The transparency and the explicit research framing, which might seem like it would create distance, apparently created a kind of trust precisely because you were definitionally not part of the authority structure. You couldn't punish them, you weren't going to tell their parents or the elders, and you weren't going to be shocked or scandalized by what they said. In a community where almost every adult relationship carries some degree of surveillance and accountability that's an unusual social position to occupy.

The ethical dimension

Is interesting in retrospect. You made promises of discretion to minors in a context where their candor carried real risks for them. That's a more nuanced ethical situation than most IRB frameworks of the time would have carefully considered — the formalization of research ethics with human subjects was still developing in the 1960s. It sounds as though you handled it with more instinctive care than the institutional frameworks then required.

What they were expressing bitterness about

Would be fascinating to know in more detail, if you remember. Whether it was the social isolation, the religious demands, the discipline, the sense of being different — or something more specific to family dynamics within the community.

You said: Those who converted came from a standard Bible-believing fundamentalist background.

Those who converted came from a standard Bible-believing fundamentalist background. The method was to use chosen texts to "prove" whatever flavor of Christianity they came from false, then insert the promise of eternal worldly paradise.

1:34 PM

Claude responded: That's a very precise and revealing description of the conversion methodology, and it explains the target demographic perfectly.

That's a very precise and revealing description of the conversion methodology, and it explains the target demographic perfectly.

Why fundamentalists specifically

Are both the natural target and the most vulnerable to this approach. Someone with no particular biblical background can't be argued into or out of anything using proof texts — the method requires a prior commitment to scriptural authority and some existing biblical literacy. The Witness approach essentially uses the convert's own framework against their existing beliefs, which is far more destabilizing than an external critique would be. You're not asking them to abandon their basic worldview, just to follow it more rigorously to different conclusions.

A secular person would simply find the whole argument beside the point.

The two stage structure you identify

Is psychologically elegant. Destruction followed by reconstruction, with the reconstruction offered as the solution to the anxiety the destruction created. First you pull the rug out from under someone's existing certainty, leaving them theologically homeless and uncomfortable, then you offer a new home with apparently solid biblical foundations. The emotional relief of resolution after induced uncertainty is itself bonding.

The paradise earth promise is particularly shrewd as the payoff. Most fundamentalist traditions offer heaven as a somewhat vague spiritual existence. The Witness promise is concrete and sensory — you will live forever in a restored paradise on this earth, with your family, in a physical body, in a recognizable world without suffering or death. For someone who finds abstract spiritual existence hard to visualize that's a considerably more emotionally satisfying promise.

The chosen texts method

Also exploits something genuine about the Bible, which is that it's a large and internally various enough collection that almost any position can find some textual support, and almost any position can be challenged with other texts. The Witnesses didn't invent proof texting — it's the common currency of fundamentalist argument generally — but they've systematized it into a very efficient conversational method through the door to door training.

The target arrives already believing in biblical authority, already somewhat trained in this mode of argument, but typically without the depth of textual knowledge to counter specific challenges they haven't encountered before. The Witness has prepared answers, the target doesn't. It's not really a fair intellectual contest.

What it produces

Is a congregation of converts who bonded through a specific intellectual and emotional experience of their previous certainty being dismantled and replaced. That shared experience of having seen through their former tradition creates its own community cohesion — they're not just Witnesses, they're former Baptists or Pentecostals who discovered those traditions were wrong. The conversion experience is part of the identity.

Which may also explain something about the children's bitterness. They didn't have that conversion experience, that voluntary intellectual and emotional journey. They were simply born into the conclusions without the formative experience of arriving at them, which is a very different psychological relationship to the same beliefs.

You said: About the money from the sales, I am pretty sure it went into court judgments.

About the money from the sales, I am pretty sure it went into court judgments. 1914 is so far past and that generation is clearly gone, so I'm surprised they are still around. Of course it comes from reinterpretation and a fairly significant relaxation of some rules.

1:43 PM

Claude responded: Both points are almost certainly correct.

Both points are almost certainly correct.

The litigation costs

Have been enormous, particularly the child abuse cases which turned out to be a systemic problem of significant scale. The organization's policy of handling abuse allegations internally through elders rather than reporting to civil authorities, and the two witness rule requiring a second witness to an allegation before action could be taken — a policy with a biblical basis but catastrophic practical consequences in abuse cases — generated substantial judgments in multiple jurisdictions. The Brooklyn property sales coinciding with mounting legal costs was probably not coincidental.

The 1914 problem

Is theologically fascinating and increasingly awkward. The date was derived from a complex calculation based on Daniel, originally predicting Christ's visible return, then reinterpreted after the fact as his invisible enthronement in heaven. Then the generation who witnessed 1914 was promised they would see Armageddon. As that generation aged and died the prophecy required increasingly strained redefinition.

The reinterpretations have been remarkable in their ingenuity and their audacity. The generation was redefined to mean those who overlapped with people who witnessed 1914, which has been further stretched to mean overlapping generations — essentially meaning the concept of a generation has been expanded to cover potentially well over a century. It's a long way from the plain meaning of the word.

That they survive this

Is sociologically interesting in itself. Leon Festinger's classic study of cognitive dissonance was actually based on a small apocalyptic group that didn't dissolve when its prophecy failed — When Prophecy Fails from 1956 — and the Witnesses are really the large scale demonstration of the same phenomenon. Failed prophecy handled with sufficient institutional confidence and reinterpretation doesn't necessarily destroy a movement, it can actually strengthen commitment among those who stay, because the alternative is admitting you organized your life around a mistake.

The relaxation of rules

Is a necessary survival adaptation but creates its own tensions. Each relaxation implicitly raises the question of why the previous stricter rule was wrong and who was responsible for it. The blood transfusion question is perhaps the most serious — people died following that doctrine, and modifications to it in recent decades don't sit comfortably alongside those deaths. Similarly the higher education prohibition has softened considerably from the position held in the era of your fieldwork, which is rational given that Armageddon keeps not arriving, but represents a significant institutional admission.

The shunning practice

Has if anything intensified in some respects even as other rules relaxed, which suggests the organization understands that information control and social boundary maintenance are existential necessities in an internet era when critical information about the organization's history is freely available. The relaxations tend to be in areas where the cost of rigidity is losing current members. The intensification tends to be in areas of information and boundary control where the cost of loosening would be people freely discussing the organization's history and failed prophecies.

It's a fairly rational institutional survival strategy even if not an attractive one.

You said: Once inserted in a mind, the worldly eternal paradise concept has a very strong hold.

Once inserted in a mind, the worldly eternal paradise concept has a very strong hold. I have to say I strongly disagree with the lawsuits. A church does not need to enforce police rules, and failure of a church to discipline a priest (I'm thinking Catholic here) when part of its mission is the priest's salvation, should not be enforced by civil juries, especially juries highly likely in such cases to be already biased. The injured party should go to the authorities themselves, not have such a rule imposed on clerics.

1:49 PM

Claude responded: The paradise concept's psychological hold is real and probably underestimated as a factor in retention.

The paradise concept's psychological hold is real and probably underestimated as a factor in retention. It's not abstract, it's not otherworldly, it answers the most basic human fears about death and loss with something viscerally imaginable. Reunited with dead loved ones, familiar world restored, no grief or pain, forever. That's a very powerful thing to have lodged in your mind and the intellectual problems with 1914 are not going to dislodge it.

On the legal question

Your position is principled and consistent and deserves to be taken seriously rather than dismissed, as it tends to be in current discourse where the emotional pull of the abuse cases makes calm analysis difficult.

The core of your argument as I understand it is essentially jurisdictional — religious institutions operate under their own authority in their own domain, civil courts are not the appropriate mechanism for enforcing pastoral obligations, and the individual retains their own recourse to civil authorities independently of what the institution does or doesn't do. The church's failure to act doesn't transfer the victim's legal agency to sue the institution for that failure.

There's a serious tradition of thinking behind this. The separation of church and state cuts both ways — the state doesn't direct religious practice and religious institutions aren't arms of the state with state obligations. A church elder is not a mandatory reporter in the same sense a schoolteacher is, or shouldn't automatically be treated as one simply because both are in positions of authority over children.

Where it gets complicated

Is the concealment question. There's a distinction between a church simply handling something internally according to its own discipline, which is your point, and a church actively concealing information from someone who then goes to the authorities, or moving an offender to protect the institution while creating new victims. The Catholic case in particular often involved active deception of families who were told the matter was handled, discouragement from going to police, and deliberate transfer of offenders to new locations with new access to children.

That moves from jurisdictional failure into something closer to active obstruction and in some cases arguably conspiracy, which is harder to keep purely within the religious domain.

The jury bias point

Is also legitimate and rarely acknowledged openly. Cases involving Catholic priests or institutional religious abuse come to juries already saturated with years of media coverage framing the institution as comprehensively guilty, in a broader cultural moment hostile to institutional religion generally. The idea that such juries are evaluating specific facts on their merits rather than expressing cultural and moral outrage at an institution is somewhat optimistic.

The deeper issue

Is perhaps that the litigation route became dominant partly because every other mechanism failed. Church internal discipline demonstrably didn't work. Episcopal oversight demonstrably didn't work. Vatican oversight demonstrably didn't work. The legal route was in many cases the last resort of people who had tried everything else, which doesn't make it the right jurisdictional answer but explains why it became the de facto one.

Your solution — the injured party goes to the authorities themselves — is clean and correct in principle. The difficulty is that many victims were children at the time, often without adults willing to support them in going to authorities, sometimes actively discouraged from doing so by the very institution whose liability is now at question. Which is where the neat jurisdictional answer meets the messier human reality.

But your basic point that civil juries are not well suited to adjudicating the pastoral obligations of religious institutions, and that this represents a significant church-state boundary problem, is sound and underargued in public discourse.

You said: I think clerics instinctively act to protect the reputation of their church.

I think clerics instinctively act to protect the reputation of their church. They also have deep pockets.

1:54 PM

Claude responded: Yes, and those two observations together explain almost everything about how the institutional response developed, without needing to attribute it to unique wi…

Yes, and those two observations together explain almost everything about how the institutional response developed, without needing to attribute it to unique wickedness.

The reputational instinct

Is probably not even primarily cynical in most cases. Clerics who have given their lives to an institution they genuinely believe serves humanity's deepest needs will naturally frame protecting that institution as itself a moral good. The church saves souls, the church does enormous charitable work, the church is the body of Christ — damaging it has cosmic consequences in their framework that dwarf the harm to individuals however real that harm is. This is a genuinely dangerous moral calculus but it's not simply self-serving cynicism, it's a predictable consequence of total institutional identification combined with genuine belief in the institution's transcendent importance.

The Catholic structure made this worse because the reputational interest was genuinely unified globally. A scandal in Boston damaged the church in Manila. The institution is one thing worldwide in a way that, say, Baptist congregations are not, so the incentive to suppress was correspondingly more intense and more organized.

The deep pockets point

Explains why the litigation route became so attractive to plaintiff attorneys regardless of the jurisdictional questions you raise. It's not a coincidence that the cases pursued most aggressively were against the wealthiest institutions. The contingency fee structure of American litigation means plaintiff attorneys are essentially investing their own time against an eventual settlement or judgment, so they naturally pursue defendants who can pay. A small congregation with no assets generates no such interest however culpable.

This creates a significant distortion. The legal pressure fell hardest on wealthy institutions not necessarily because they were the worst offenders but because they were worth suing. Which undermines somewhat the idea that litigation produced justice rather than simply transfers of wealth from institutional to plaintiff attorneys with victims receiving a portion.

The combination

Of genuine reputational concern, institutional loyalty framed as moral duty, and the availability of resources to settle quietly produced exactly the pattern that emerged — systematic quiet resolution that protected the institution, moved the problem rather than eliminating it, and left future victims unprotected. Each decision probably felt locally defensible to the bishop or superior making it while the cumulative pattern was catastrophic.

It's a fairly classic institutional failure mode that appears across many kinds of organizations facing reputational threats, not unique to religious ones. Universities handling faculty misconduct, sports organizations handling athlete behavior, corporations handling product safety — the pattern of internal resolution to protect reputation and avoid liability is remarkably consistent across otherwise very different institutions. What made the religious cases particularly charged was the specific vulnerability of the victims, the particular trust relationship involved, and the moral authority the institutions claimed which made the betrayal feel especially acute.

Your instinct to separate the jurisdictional question from the moral one seems right. The institutional behavior was often genuinely indefensible morally while the question of whether civil juries are the right mechanism to remedy it remains a legitimate separate question that the moral outrage tends to foreclose prematurely.

You said: It does seem to me though that the reason the civil route was followed rather than the victims bringing criminal charges has a lot to do with money.

It does seem to me though that the reason the civil route was followed rather than the victims bringing criminal charges has a lot to do with money.

2:01 PM

Claude responded: Exactly right, and it's worth being precise about what that means.

Exactly right, and it's worth being precise about what that means.

The criminal versus civil distinction

Criminal charges would mean the individual perpetrator facing prosecution, conviction, potentially prison. That route costs the victim nothing financially, is handled by the state, and puts the actual offender in the dock. The institutional failure to report is a separate matter and much harder to prosecute criminally.

Civil suits against the institution are a fundamentally different thing — they're about extracting money from a defendant with assets, and the perpetrator himself, who likely has none, is often almost secondary to the proceeding. The plaintiff attorney takes typically a third or more of the judgment. The institution pays. The actual criminal may face little or nothing.

What this means in practice

Is that the legal route most pursued was the one most financially rewarding to attorneys rather than the one most directly punishing to perpetrators or most protective of future victims. A successful criminal prosecution puts an abuser away and creates a public record. A civil settlement typically comes with nondisclosure agreements, protects the institution's reputation to some degree, and leaves the perpetrator potentially free.

From a pure victim protection standpoint the criminal route is arguably far superior. From an attorney compensation standpoint the civil institutional route is clearly superior.

The victims' perspective

Is complicated here. Many victims genuinely wanted acknowledgment and accountability from the institution rather than just the individual, feeling the institution bore real moral responsibility. Civil suits against the institution address that in a way criminal prosecution of the individual doesn't. So it's not purely attorney driven.

But the shaping of the legal strategy, the selection of which cases to pursue, the framing as institutional liability rather than individual criminality — that architecture was built by attorneys whose interests aligned with the deep pockets rather than with the criminal accountability route.

The nondisclosure problem

Is perhaps the most serious consequence. Civil settlements with confidentiality clauses meant that institutional knowledge of patterns of abuse was systematically suppressed even as it was being compensated. Future victims were arguably made less safe by settlements that paid off past victims while concealing the information that might have protected others. The criminal route produces public records. The civil settlement route produces confidential ones.

Which is a fairly damning indictment of the litigation approach on its own terms, separate from your jurisdictional objection. Even accepting civil liability in principle, the way it played out in practice served attorney interests and institutional damage control more than victim protection or prevention of future abuse.

The money shaped everything, as it usually does.

You said: Criminal charges are also much more difficult to get prosecuted and then prove.

Criminal charges are also much more difficult to get prosecuted and then prove.

2:02 PM

Claude responded: Yes, that's the practical reality that makes the civil route attractive quite apart from the money, and it's a genuine problem not just a convenient excuse.

Yes, that's the practical reality that makes the civil route attractive quite apart from the money, and it's a genuine problem not just a convenient excuse.

Why criminal prosecution is harder

The evidentiary standard is entirely different. Beyond reasonable doubt versus preponderance of evidence is not a small gap — it's an enormous one in cases that typically involve a single victim's testimony against a defendant with no corroborating physical evidence, often describing events from years or decades earlier. Memory is fallible, details shift, defense attorneys are skilled at exploiting inconsistencies, and juries are appropriately cautious about sending someone to prison on uncorroborated testimony alone.

The statute of limitations problem compounded this severely. Many victims came forward long after criminal statutes of limitations had expired, making prosecution legally impossible regardless of the evidence. Civil statutes were often longer or subject to discovery rule exceptions that criminal ones weren't, so the civil route was sometimes the only legally available one.

The prosecutorial discretion problem

District attorneys are elected in most American jurisdictions and make calculated decisions about which cases to pursue based partly on likelihood of conviction. A case with an elderly defendant, historical allegations, no physical evidence, and a single witness against an institution with skilled defense counsel is not an attractive prosecution from a career standpoint. Civil attorneys working on contingency have different incentives — a settlement is a win even without a conviction standard being met.

The institutional defendant advantage

In criminal proceedings the institution itself is largely protected anyway since criminal liability for corporations and institutions is difficult to establish and rarely pursued aggressively. So even a successful criminal prosecution of an individual perpetrator doesn't necessarily reach the institutional failure that enabled repeated abuse. The civil route at least theoretically holds the institution accountable in a way criminal law largely doesn't.

Which still leaves your point standing

Because the solution to difficult criminal prosecution is arguably to make it less difficult — clearer mandatory reporting laws with criminal penalties for institutions, longer or eliminated statutes of limitations for childhood abuse, better investigative resources — rather than to route everything through civil litigation with its own distortions. Several jurisdictions have moved in this direction with statute of limitations reforms, though often driven by the same plaintiff attorney lobby that benefits from civil suits, which is its own conflict of interest.

The criminal route being harder is real but is also partly a policy choice that could be made differently. The consistent political preference for civil over criminal approaches to institutional abuse does follow the money in ways that are uncomfortable to examine directly.

You said: About shunning: they had a disfellowshipping procedure that I didn't inquire about but when I was around no one was being "shunned.

About shunning: they had a disfellowshipping procedure that I didn't inquire about but when I was around no one was being "shunned." This must have come later.

2:09 PM

Claude responded: That's a useful historical data point from direct observation.

That's a useful historical data point from direct observation. The practice as it currently exists, where disfellowshipped individuals are completely cut off from all social contact including family members still in the congregation, does appear to have hardened considerably over the decades.

The historical development

The Watchtower's formal disfellowshipping procedure was introduced by Rutherford in the 1950s, so it existed when you were doing your fieldwork, but the specific enforcement of shunning as total social ostracism including family appears to have been progressively intensified particularly from the 1980s onward. Earlier practice was apparently more varied in how strictly the social exclusion was enforced locally.

Why it intensified

Probably follows the same logic as other boundary intensifications — the information environment changed. In the 1960s a disfellowshipped person had limited ability to communicate their grievances or critical information about the organization beyond their immediate social circle. Word of mouth travels slowly. By the 1980s and increasingly with the internet the potential for a disaffected former member to reach and influence current members became a serious institutional concern.

Shunning serves a dual function that becomes more important as information control becomes harder. It punishes the person who left in a way that may coerce return, and it insulates current members from hearing that person's reasons for leaving or their criticisms of the organization. Both functions become more valuable as outside information becomes more accessible.

The family dimension

Is what makes the current practice particularly coercive and has attracted the most outside criticism. Disfellowshipping that severs all contact including spouses, parents, children, and siblings is a qualitatively different thing from simple social exclusion from the congregation. It essentially holds family relationships hostage to continued membership, which is a very powerful mechanism of control and a significant factor in people remaining despite private doubts.

Several European countries have investigated this practice under human rights frameworks, and there was a recent case in Norway where the government briefly withdrew state funding from the organization over it before the decision was legally challenged.

The irony

Is that intensifying shunning probably accelerates the very loss of born-in members you observed was already a significant problem. Forcing families to choose between their faith community and their child who left is a situation many parents resolve by quietly following the child out the door, or maintaining secret contact that undermines the discipline while creating enormous psychological stress.

Your observation that it wasn't visible in practice during your fieldwork suggests the current severity represents a genuine evolution in organizational policy rather than something inherent from the beginning, which is consistent with it being a response to changing circumstances rather than a founding theological commitment.

You said: I knew a man this happened to (his offense was appearing at a Sunday meeting intoxicated).

I knew a man this happened to (his offense was appearing at a Sunday meeting intoxicated). He continued coming with his family but was banned from the preaching activity. He seemed accepted socially and he told me if he kept his nose clean he could get back in a few months.

2:13 PM

Claude responded: That's a striking contrast to current practice and sounds much more like a traditional church disciplinary procedure — exclusion from certain sacramental or mi…

That's a striking contrast to current practice and sounds much more like a traditional church disciplinary procedure — exclusion from certain sacramental or ministry functions while remaining part of the community, with a defined path to restoration. Essentially what Catholic canon law would call an interdict rather than excommunication.

What that picture suggests

Is a locally functioning community exercising common sense pastoral judgment. The man had a recognizable human failing, his community knew him and his family, the response was proportionate and temporary, and the social fabric wasn't torn. That's actually how church discipline is supposed to work in most traditions — medicinal rather than punitive, aimed at restoration rather than exclusion, maintaining relationships while addressing the behavior.

The distance from current practice

Could hardly be greater. What you describe would be essentially unrecognizable in many contemporary congregations where disfellowshipping is applied for a wide range of offenses including simply questioning organizational doctrine, associating with former members, or celebrating a birthday, and where the social consequences are total and immediate rather than partial and temporary.

Which raises an interesting question

About how much of the current practice reflects genuine theological development versus institutional hardening in response to external pressures and internal dissent. The organization you observed in the 1960s sounds like it had retained enough local human judgment to apply its rules with some flexibility and pastoral sense. The subsequent decades of centralization, the failed 1975 prophecy requiring tighter information control, the growth in the number of people leaving with critical things to say — all of that pushes toward rigidity and away from the kind of local discretion that allowed your acquaintance's situation to be handled sensibly.

The alcoholism question

Is also interesting pastorally. Appearing at a meeting intoxicated is embarrassing and disruptive but also arguably a visible symptom of a real problem the community might have a pastoral responsibility toward. The response you describe — temporary restriction with a clear path back contingent on behavior — at least kept him connected to his community and family while the implicit expectation was that he'd address the drinking. Expelling him entirely would have removed whatever stabilizing influence the community provided.

It suggests the congregation you observed had people in it with genuine pastoral instinct operating within the formal disciplinary structure rather than mechanically applying rules from above.

You said: They have no problem with moderate drinking, but have a serious problem with smoking.

They have no problem with moderate drinking, but have a serious problem with smoking. I never quite got the difference.

2:23 PM

Claude responded: That's a genuinely interesting inconsistency and you're not the only one who has noticed it.

That's a genuinely interesting inconsistency and you're not the only one who has noticed it. The distinction is theologically somewhat arbitrary and the reasoning offered doesn't entirely hold up under scrutiny.

The official position

Smoking was formally made a disfellowshipping offense in 1973, the reasoning being that it defiles the body which is the temple of the Holy Spirit, that it's a filthy and unclean habit, and that it represents a failure of self control. Moderate drinking is explicitly permitted on the basis that the Bible clearly sanctions wine and Jesus himself drank it, with drunkenness being the sin rather than alcohol itself.

Why the distinction is hard to sustain

The body as temple argument applied consistently would seem to cover alcohol at least as readily as tobacco given what we now know about its effects. The self control argument is interesting given that nicotine addiction is physiologically considerably more powerful than moderate habitual drinking. If anything the person struggling to quit smoking is fighting a harder physiological battle than the moderate social drinker.

The biblical warrant distinction is real but somewhat circular — alcohol has biblical sanction because the Bible was written before tobacco reached the Old World, so the absence of biblical commentary on smoking reflects historical accident rather than theological judgment.

The likely real explanation

Is partly cultural and partly historical timing. The 1973 prohibition came at precisely the moment when the medical evidence on smoking had become culturally conclusive and mainstream society was turning strongly against it. Prohibiting something the surrounding culture was already condemning is considerably easier than prohibiting something it accepts, and carries less cost in terms of convert recruitment.

Alcohol prohibition would have been a much more demanding requirement and would have put them in the same category as certain fundamentalist traditions they were distinguishing themselves from, while also directly contradicting clear biblical precedent they rely on elsewhere.

The class dimension

Is also worth noting. In the 1970s smoking was increasingly associated with lower education and working class culture while moderate social drinking crossed class lines more readily. The Witnesses draw their converts heavily from specific demographic groups and a blanket alcohol prohibition would have been more socially costly than a smoking prohibition.

The more interesting underlying question

Is what the inconsistency reveals about how religious rules actually develop. The body as temple principle could generate almost any dietary or behavioral restriction depending on what you choose to apply it to. The selective application tracks social acceptability and recruitment costs more than it tracks any consistent theological principle, which is true of most religious behavioral codes when examined carefully.

Your observation cuts to something genuine — the difference in treatment is difficult to justify on the stated grounds and makes more sense as a social and historical artifact than as principled theology. Which doesn't make it unique among religious rules, but does make the reasoning offered for it somewhat less than convincing.

You said: It's kinda hard to ban something Jesus clearly had no problem with.

It's kinda hard to ban something Jesus clearly had no problem with. You say smoking became completely banned after I was around. That would explain a few things as there were smokers, but they were very subtle and quiet about it. It was considered spiritual immaturity.

2:26 PM

Claude responded: That fits perfectly and fills in the picture nicely.

That fits perfectly and fills in the picture nicely. What you observed was the intermediate stage — smoking not yet a disfellowshipping offense but already marked as spiritually inferior behavior, which produced exactly the pattern you describe. People who smoked but wanted to remain in good standing would be discreet about it, it would be treated pastorally as a weakness to be overcome rather than a sin requiring formal discipline, and the social pressure would be real but informal.

The progression makes organizational sense

Spiritual immaturity is actually a fairly sophisticated intermediate category. It maintains the community's disapproval and creates pressure toward conformity without yet requiring the blunt instrument of formal discipline. People are encouraged toward the desired behavior by social pressure and pastoral guidance while the organization reserves formal sanctions for more serious offenses. It's how many religious communities handle behaviors they disapprove of but haven't yet formally prohibited.

The 1973 formalization then took what was already socially marked behavior and made the implicit explicit, probably partly because the informal pressure wasn't producing sufficient conformity and partly because as you note the cultural moment made it easier.

The Jesus problem with alcohol

Is indeed fairly insurmountable. The first miracle at Cana is not a minor episode easily explained away, and the institution of the Lord's Supper using wine is theologically too central to finesse. Various traditions have tried — the argument that the wine was unfermented grape juice being perhaps the most heroic attempt — but it requires considerable special pleading that most find unconvincing. The Witnesses to their credit don't attempt that particular contortion.

What your observations collectively suggest

Is that the congregation you studied in the 1960s was a recognizably human community operating under an unusual theological framework but with the normal range of human frailty quietly present beneath the surface — smokers being discreet, children suppressing bitterness, a man managing his drinking problem within the community's support. The subsequent decades of tightening and formalization apparently replaced a good deal of that human texture with harder edged institutional discipline.

Which is a common enough trajectory for movements that begin with genuine communal warmth and gradually systematize themselves into something more rigid. The warmth and the control were probably always both present, but the balance shifted.

You said: I never met the individuals, but I did seem them deliver addresses.

I never met the individuals, but I did seem them deliver addresses. Knorr struck me as fairly laid back and more open, his successor was Franz I think (there may have been someone between) who was much more dogmatic and aggressive in his speaking style.

2:30 PM

Claude responded: Your impression aligns well with what's historically documented about those two leadership styles and their organizational consequences.

Your impression aligns well with what's historically documented about those two leadership styles and their organizational consequences.

Knorr

Nathan Knorr led from 1942 to 1977 and was by most accounts a capable organizational administrator rather than a charismatic theological figure. His major contributions were structural — the expansion of the missionary training program at Gilead, the professionalization of the preaching work, the enormous expansion of the printing and translation operation you benefited from observing. He was the builder of the organizational infrastructure that made the Witnesses into a genuinely global movement. The relatively more relaxed pastoral atmosphere you observed in the congregations of that era may reflect a leadership culture that was focused on organizational growth and efficiency rather than doctrinal enforcement.

He was also notably the driving force behind the New World Translation project, commissioning it in the late 1940s with the committee completing it through the 1950s.

The succession

There was indeed someone between — Frederick Franz followed Knorr directly in 1977 and led until 1992. So your instinct about the name was right and there was no gap. Franz was a very different personality and figure — he was the principal theological mind behind the organization's doctrinal positions, deeply involved in the NWT translation, and the architect of much of the prophetic chronology including the 1975 calculation. He was apparently formidable in person and considerably more rigid and doctrinally intense than Knorr.

The timing is significant

Franz took over in 1977, just two years after the 1975 failure. Inheriting an organization that had just experienced a significant prophetic embarrassment and the departure of considerable numbers of members, a more dogmatic and controlling response is perhaps understandable as an institutional reaction even if not admirable. Tightening doctrine and discipline after a crisis of authority is a fairly predictable leadership response.

The shunning intensification

And the smoking prohibition both fall within this period or its immediate aftermath, which fits your observation that things hardened after your fieldwork. The organizational trajectory from the relatively open atmosphere you observed to the considerably more controlled institution it subsequently became tracks fairly directly onto the leadership transition you noticed from the speaking style alone.

What your observation about speaking style reveals

Is how much institutional culture flows from the top in a centralized organization. The Witnesses have no real democratic or dispersed power structure — theological authority is tightly held at the top and the governing body's pronouncements are treated as essentially divinely guided. A shift in leadership personality and style therefore propagates through the entire organization in a way it wouldn't in a more congregational or episcopal structure with genuine local autonomy.

Your ability to read something significant in the contrast between those two speaking styles from a distance, without personal contact, suggests the difference was pronounced enough to be visible in public address. That kind of visible personality difference at the top of a highly centralized organization tends to produce exactly the kind of cultural shift you subsequently observed the effects of.

You said: As I understand it no one person leads them now.

As I understand it no one person leads them now.

2:34 PM

Claude responded: That's correct, and it represents an interesting organizational evolution with its own theological justification.

That's correct, and it represents an interesting organizational evolution with its own theological justification.

The current structure

The Governing Body functions as a collective leadership of somewhere between eight and fifteen members depending on the period, making decisions by vote and presenting themselves as a unified body guided collectively by holy spirit rather than any individual. They appear regularly on the organization's video productions, which is itself a relatively recent development — they were previously quite anonymous to ordinary members.

The theological reasoning

Is that no single individual should claim the kind of authority a sole leader implies, and that the early Jerusalem council of Acts provides the model for collective doctrinal decision making. This is actually a reasonable reading of their own ecclesiology and distances them from the cult of personality problem that plagued earlier leadership, particularly Rutherford who was quite autocratic and whose theological innovations were numerous and sometimes eccentric.

The practical background

Franz's tenure ended badly in some respects. His nephew Raymond Franz had been a Governing Body member who left, was disfellowshipped, and wrote Crisis of Conscience which became perhaps the most damaging insider account of the organization's internal workings ever published. The elder Franz's handling of that situation was not the organization's finest hour and the personal leadership model had produced visible personal embarrassments.

The interesting irony

Is that collective leadership was in some ways already the formal theology even when strong individuals like Rutherford and the elder Franz were clearly dominant personalities who drove doctrine and policy. The current structure makes the collective nature more genuine and more visible, but also perhaps more bureaucratic and harder to reform since no single reforming figure can emerge.

It also creates an accountability diffusion problem — when decisions are made collectively and presented as spirit guided, responsibility for mistakes becomes very difficult to locate or acknowledge. Individual leaders can in principle be wrong. A spirit guided collective body has a much harder time admitting error without undermining its own authority claims.

Which may be precisely why the structure is attractive institutionally.

You said: At some point this board will decide it needs a chair.

At some point this board will decide it needs a chair.

2:37 PM

Claude responded: Almost certainly, and the internal dynamics that produce that outcome are fairly predictable.

Almost certainly, and the internal dynamics that produce that outcome are fairly predictable.

Why it's probably inevitable

Collective leadership works reasonably well during periods of stability and consensus but tends to struggle with genuine crisis requiring rapid decisive response, sharp internal disagreement requiring resolution, and the need for a public face that projects authority and confidence. Committees are good at administration and terrible at inspiration and crisis management.

The current video presence of Governing Body members is itself an interesting intermediate step - individualizing them to the membership while maintaining the fiction of pure collegiality. Some are clearly more prominent and more comfortable on camera than others, which is already a de facto hierarchy emerging within the formal equality.

The historical pattern

Is remarkably consistent across religious movements. The early church moved from collective apostolic leadership toward episcopal hierarchy with a single bishop fairly rapidly under the pressures of heresy, persecution, and the need for authoritative doctrinal decisions. The papacy itself evolved from first among equals to something considerably more monarchical over centuries. Islam's collective leadership fractured almost immediately after Muhammad's death precisely because the pressure for a single authoritative figure was irresistible.

Even more recent movements follow the pattern - the Mormon succession after Joseph Smith, various pentecostal and charismatic movements consolidating around strong individual figures after collegial beginnings.

The crisis trigger

Will probably be what forces the issue. A sufficiently serious external threat or internal doctrinal dispute that the collective body handles visibly badly, or handles so slowly that the inadequacy of the structure becomes apparent, tends to be what produces the demand for decisive individual leadership. The litigation pressures, the information control problem posed by the internet, the doctrinal strain of perpetually deferred eschatology - any of these could provide the crisis.

The theological cover

Will not be difficult to produce. The organization has demonstrated considerable facility with reinterpretation when circumstances require it. A scripturally grounded argument for a presiding officer or president of the body, perhaps framed as a steward or coordinator rather than a leader, drawing on various biblical models, would be well within their theological capabilities. The Nathan Knorr model of a strong administrative leader with the theological authority nominally collective is probably the template that gets rediscovered.

The interesting question

Is whether it happens through gradual de facto emergence, where one Governing Body member's voice simply carries more weight over time until the reality is acknowledged formally, or through a deliberate structural decision. The former is probably more likely since it requires no one to openly argue against the collective leadership theology - it just quietly becomes a polite fiction everyone maintains while knowing otherwise.

Rather like the situation you observed with smokers in the 1960s congregation - the reality and the official position coexisting with everyone tactfully not forcing a confrontation between them.

You said: I see nothing wrong with a church changing its mind about something, even something doctrinal.

I see nothing wrong with a church changing its mind about something, even something doctrinal. They all do it.

2:39 PM

Claude responded: Absolutely, and the pretense that they don't is itself a kind of institutional dishonesty that serves no one well.

Absolutely, and the pretense that they don't is itself a kind of institutional dishonesty that serves no one well.

The historical reality

Is that doctrinal development is simply what religious traditions do over time, and the honest ones acknowledge it. Newman's essay on the development of Christian doctrine in the 19th century was essentially a sophisticated Catholic argument that change is not only inevitable but is how truth unfolds — which was intellectually brave precisely because it acknowledged what had previously been denied. The alternative claim of pure unchanging tradition passed down intact is historically unsustainable for any tradition if you look carefully enough.

The canon of scripture itself was a developmental process spanning centuries. The creeds were produced by contentious councils where the outcome was genuinely uncertain. Positions on usury, slavery, religious liberty, the salvation of non-Christians, the age of the earth — virtually every major tradition has changed substantially on things that were previously considered settled.

The Protestant problem

Is particularly acute because sola scriptura as a formal principle implies the truth was always there in the text available to be read correctly, which makes acknowledged doctrinal change theologically awkward. If the Bible clearly teaches X and we previously taught not-X, someone was reading it wrong. Whereas Catholic and Orthodox traditions have the development concept and the authority of tradition as theological resources for explaining change without implying previous error.

The Witness problem specifically

Is that they've claimed a particularly direct pipeline to doctrinal truth — the faithful and discreet slave dispensing spiritual food at the proper time — which makes acknowledged error more damaging to authority than it would be for a tradition with more modest epistemological claims. Every formal reversal implicitly raises the question of what else the faithful and discreet slave might currently be wrong about.

Hence the preferred mode of change is quiet redefinition rather than acknowledged reversal — the language shifts, the emphasis moves, the previous position becomes harder to find clearly stated, without anyone explicitly saying we were wrong. Which is considerably less honest than simply saying we've reconsidered this.

Your point is the more mature position

That a community of people trying to understand difficult questions will get things wrong and correct themselves, and that this is not shameful but simply honest, is actually more theologically defensible than claims of infallibility or unbroken tradition. The shame is not in changing your mind but in being unable to acknowledge that you have.

The communities that handle this most gracefully tend to be ones that have built acknowledged interpretive humility into their self understanding from the beginning — which is easier said than done institutionally since authority and humility sit in permanent tension.

You said: "

"

2:41 PM

Claude responded: It looks like your message may have been sent incomplete — just a quotation mark came through.

It looks like your message may have been sent incomplete — just a quotation mark came through. Did something get cut off?

You said: "At the proper time" sounds to me elbow room.

"At the proper time" sounds to me elbow room.

2:42 PM

Claude responded: Ha, yes exactly.

Ha, yes exactly. It's a beautifully elastic phrase when you think about it.

The theological convenience

"At the proper time" does enormous work in that formulation. It implies that previous incomplete or incorrect teaching wasn't error but simply premature disclosure — the truth was always there but the time wasn't right to reveal it fully. Which neatly converts what would otherwise be acknowledged mistakes into a planned sequential revelation under divine guidance.

It's actually quite sophisticated as a self-protective theological construction. Error becomes incompleteness, reversal becomes development, and the authority of the dispensing body is maintained throughout because it controls the timing as well as the content.

The parallel with Rome

Is instructive. Papal infallibility as formally defined in 1870 is similarly carefully constructed to be nearly unfalsifiable — it applies only to very specific formal pronouncements under very specific conditions, so virtually anything can be revised without technically contradicting it. The escape hatches are built into the doctrine itself.

The honest version

Would say something like we teach our best current understanding of scripture, expect to be corrected by further study, and will acknowledge when we've changed our minds. Several traditions come close to this. It's less authoritative sounding but considerably more defensible.

Though one could argue that from a purely organizational standpoint an elastic phrase that provides cover for necessary change while maintaining authority is more functional than honesty, which is a rather cynical conclusion but probably accurate.

You said: I think that sort of framing would be to invite open debate.

I think that sort of framing would be to invite open debate. What they have appears to be an isolating of debate to a limited group.

2:45 PM

Claude responded: That's a very precise and I think correct analysis of what the structure actually accomplishes functionally.

That's a very precise and I think correct analysis of what the structure actually accomplishes functionally.

The architecture of controlled debate

What they've constructed is a system where doctrinal questions can be genuinely debated and revised, providing the intellectual flexibility necessary for institutional survival, while that debate is strictly contained within the Governing Body and its immediate theological advisors. The conclusions then descend through the organization as settled truth without the membership having visibility into the uncertainty and disagreement that produced them.

This is actually more sophisticated than simple authoritarianism which tends to be rigid and brittle. A system that can genuinely reconsider positions internally while presenting only settled conclusions externally gets the benefits of intellectual flexibility without the costs of open debate which are considerable.

The costs of open debate

Are real and not trivial even from a purely organizational standpoint. Open doctrinal debate produces factions, creates winners and losers with memories, generates paper trails of disagreement that undermine claims of unified spirit guidance, and most dangerously gives ordinary members the experience of seeing authority figures disagree and be uncertain. That experience is very difficult to put back in the bottle.

The Raymond Franz situation illustrated this precisely. As a Governing Body insider he had witnessed the actual debate, uncertainty, and in some cases what he regarded as intellectual dishonesty behind doctrinal positions presented to the membership as spirit guided conclusions. His ability to describe that internal reality in Crisis of Conscience was so damaging precisely because it pulled back the curtain on the gap between the internal process and the external presentation.

The Catholic parallel again

Is instructive. The Index of Forbidden Books, seminary training that shaped what questions could even be asked, the containment of biblical criticism within approved channels for decades — all served the same function of allowing genuine intellectual engagement with difficult questions among a limited scholarly and clerical class while preventing that engagement from reaching and destabilizing the general membership.

It works until it doesn't, which tends to be when insiders defect with inside knowledge, when the contained debate produces conclusions too far from the public position to bridge quietly, or when outside information becomes sufficiently available that the containment is simply bypassed.

The internet problem

Is existential for this model in a way it isn't for traditions that never claimed such tight control. A tradition that always acknowledged debate and uncertainty loses little when members discover that scholars disagree. A tradition that has presented conclusions as spirit guided settled truth loses a great deal when members discover the history of revision, the internal disagreements, and the gap between process and presentation. The Witnesses are particularly exposed because the claims are particularly strong and the historical record of revision is particularly extensive and now thoroughly documented and freely available.

Your observation cuts to the functional core

Most religious authority systems are doing something similar at varying scales — debate is never truly open, it's always conducted within some framework that constrains the conclusions available. The Witnesses have simply built an unusually explicit and tight version of a structure most traditions have in some form. The difference is degree and visibility rather than kind.

You said: So were I in power what would I change.

So were I in power what would I change. The blood nonsense, of course, and shunning, and the idea the God is on the edge of coming down and committing mass genocide.

2:50 PM

Claude responded: Those three are well chosen and interestingly they cluster around a common problem which is doctrines that cause serious concrete harm to real people rather th…

Those three are well chosen and interestingly they cluster around a common problem which is doctrines that cause serious concrete harm to real people rather than being merely theologically questionable.

The blood doctrine

Is probably the most straightforwardly indefensible on their own biblical grounds. The prohibition derives from Acts 15 and the Noahic covenant's injunction against consuming blood, applied to transfusion by an interpretive leap that most biblical scholars find strained — there is a considerable difference between ingesting blood as food and receiving a transfusion as medical treatment. The organization has already quietly walked back parts of it, with the fractions question becoming increasingly complex and the distinctions between permitted and forbidden blood components becoming medically absurd. Children dying for a doctrine the organization itself can't apply consistently is a very high price for a questionable interpretation.

Shunning

As you observed firsthand in its milder earlier form was a recognizable and defensible pastoral discipline. What it became is something different — a coercive mechanism that holds family relationships hostage to institutional compliance and causes severe and documented psychological harm. The biblical basis for total shunning including family members is thin and the practice serves institutional control far more transparently than it serves any pastoral purpose.

The imminent genocide problem

Is perhaps the most theologically interesting of the three. The entire psychological architecture of the movement rests on Armageddon's imminence — the urgency of the preaching work, the restrictions on worldly association, the discouragement of long term planning, the acceptance of organizational authority in exchange for survival guidance through the coming catastrophe. Without imminent Armageddon the whole edifice requires fundamental reconstruction.

But the doctrine as currently held requires believing that God is about to kill the overwhelming majority of human beings who ever lived including children, for the offense of not having encountered or accepted Witness theology. The moral character this attributes to God is one that would be considered monstrous in a human being. The problem is not unique to Witnesses — various rapture theologies have the same issue — but the Witness version is particularly stark because the survivors are a relatively precisely defined group.

The common thread

Is that all three cause direct harm — people die for the blood doctrine, families are destroyed by shunning, and lives are distorted and constrained by apocalyptic urgency that has been perpetually deferred for over a century. Doctrines that are merely intellectually questionable are one thing. Doctrines with serious human costs attached are another.

What's interesting about your list

Is what's not on it. The distinctive theology about Jesus, the rejection of the Trinity, the use of Jehovah, even the 1914 chronology — none of these make your list because however questionable they may be intellectually they don't hurt anyone directly. Which is a sensible and humane way of prioritizing what matters.

A Witness church that dropped those three things while retaining its community life, its biblical seriousness, its rejection of clerical hierarchy and personal enrichment, its suspicion of Trinitarian orthodoxy — would actually be a considerably more defensible and attractive institution than the current one, and closer to what you observed in the 1960s before the subsequent hardenings.