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.:SECTION ONE: QUESTION FIVE B:
HOW HONEST
IS THE WATCHTOWER ABOUT ITS HISTORY?—PART 11
(CONTINUED FROM PREVIOUS DIALOGUE)
View Book Table of Contents
KAREN: Cindy, I’ve
been thinking about the lesson we studied last week
in the Watchtower brochure What Does God Require
of Us? In that lesson on “Practices That
God Hates,” we had studied that not only does
God hate lying, but he wants us to avoid “spiritism.”
Since “the power behind all these practices is
Satan,”1. wouldn’t you agree that Christians should also
stay away from any objects that have been inspired through
spiritism?
CINDY: Oh, yes, Karen.
In the Watchtower book Knowledge That Leads to Everlasting
Life, the Society warns us that “Even if
you have not practiced spiritism, get rid of anything
having spiritistic uses or overtones. This includes
books, magazines, videos, posters, musical recordings,
and objects used for spiritistic purposes.” 2.
KAREN: Cindy, have you heard of the book called
Angels and Women?
CINDY: No, Karen, I can’t say that I have.
Why should I be familiar with it?
KAREN: I would think you would want to be familiar
with this book because the Watchtower Society gave a “Review
of the Book” in one of their articles and encouraged Jehovah’s
Witnesses to purchase the book. On page 702 of the July 30, 1924
issue of The Golden Age, the Society wrote: “ ‘Angels
and Women’ is the title of a book just off the press.…The
book is revised and published by a personal friend of Pastor Russell,
and one who was close to him in his work.…The publishers
advise that the regular price of this book is $2.00; but to all
subscribers of The Golden Age, it will be furnished at $1.00 per
volume, when ordered in lots of ten or more.”
CINDY: So the Society encouraged Jehovah’s
Witnesses to purchase several copies of this book as they could
get it at a discount, but why are you concerned about it?
KAREN: Cindy, why don’t you read this
section of the foreword found on page 5 of Angels and Women, and
you’ll see why.
CINDY: “The reviser of this book is of
the opinion that the original manuscript was dictated to the woman
who wrote it by one of the fallen angels who desired to return
to divine favor.” 3.
KAREN: Cindy, is this book, Angels and Women,
admitting that it was dictated by a demon?
CINDY: It sure looks that way, but did the Society
know that this book was dictated by a demon when they encouraged
Jehovah’s Witnesses to purchase it?
KAREN: How could they not have known, Cindy,
when the book had been read by Charles Russell who was the founder
of the Watchtower organization and had been revised and re-published
by one of his personal friends? After all, even the foreword in
the book admits that it had been dictated by a demon. 4.
CINDY: That’s a good point, Karen. I must
admit, this information does concern me. How can an organization
that is so concerned about helping people become “servants
of God” by loving what is good, justify the promotion of
such a book that came from spiritism? Certainly, the Society doesn’t
do this kind of thing anymore, does it?
KAREN: Cindy, I wouldn’t be so quick to
make that assumption. Under the “Questions from the Readers”
section in the April 1, 1983 issue of The Watchtower, the question
was asked: “Why, in recent years, has The Watchtower not
made use of the translation by the former Catholic priest, Johannes
Greber?” In response, the Society said, “This translation
was used occasionally in support of renderings…given in
the New World Translation and other authoritative Bible versions.
But as indicated in a foreword to the 1980 edition of The New
Testament by Johannes Greber, this translator relied on “God’s
Spirit world” to clarify for him how he should translate
difficult passages.…The Watchtower has deemed it improper
to make use of a translation that has such a close rapport with
spiritism.”5. Cindy, is the Society saying that in the past, they used this
translation which had been made through the use of spirit-mediums?
CINDY: Yes, Karen, but just as they noted in
this article, when the 1980 edition of his translation came out
with the information that he had relied on the spirit-world to
help him, they stopped using it. So, you can see, the Society
is very careful to avoid spiritism.
KAREN: Really, Cindy? Is the Society indicating
that that they didn’t know about Greber’s connection
with the spirit-world until the 1980 edition of his translation?
CINDY: Well, I don’t know, Karen, but
it appears that way from this article.
KAREN: Cindy, would you read these statements
the Society made regarding Johannes Greber found in the February
15, 1956 Watchtower article called “Triumphing Over Wicked
Spirit Forces”?
CINDY: “Says Johannes Greber in the introduction
of his translation of The New Testament, copyrighted in 1937:
‘I myself was a Catholic priest, and until I was forty eight
years old had never as much as believed in the possibility of
communicating with the world of God’s spirits. The day came,
however, when I involuntarily took my first step toward such communication,
and experienced things that shook me to the depths of my soul.…My
experiences are related in a book that has appeared in both German
and English and bears the title, Communication with the Spirit
World: Its Laws and Its Purpose.’…Very plainly the
spirits in which ex-priest Greber believes helped him in his translation.”6. Oh, dear…
KAREN: What’s wrong, Cindy?
CINDY: Well, the Society indicated in their
1983 Watchtower that it was the 1980 edition of his translation
that contained the information on spiritism, but here we see that
as far back as 1956, the Society knew that Greber used the spirit-world
to help him.
KAREN: That’s right, Cindy. I have a copy
of the 1937 edition of Greber’s translation, and on page
15 of his Introduction, he even said: “In the rare instances
in which a text pronounced correct by the divine spirits can be
found in none of the manuscripts available to-day, I have used
the text as it was given to me by those spirits.” So you
can see, the Society knew of Greber’s use of the spirit-world
in his translation long before the 1980 edition, and yet they
quoted him for over twenty years!7. How could they do this and be God’s organization? Would
Jehovah really be behind an organization that throughout various
periods of its history has knowingly used material from the spirit-world?9.
COMMENTS:
Friends, at Deuteronomy 18:10-12, God warns: “There
should not be found in you anyone who employs divination…or
anyone who consults a spirit medium…or anyone
who inquires of the dead. For everybody doing these
things is something detestable to Jehovah.” 8.Instead
of putting your trust in an organization of men who
at times seek the darkness, why not put your trust in
the One who is the “Light.” Jesus said:
“I have come as light into the world, that everyone
who believes in Me may not remain in darkness.”
For more information see:
10 QUESTIONS FOR JEHOVAH’S WITNESSES ON WATCHTOWER HISTORY
NEXT DIALOGUE
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1.What
Does God Require of Us?, 1996, p. 21:5
2. Knowledge That Leads to Everlasting
Life, pp. 114-115
3. Angels and Women, A Revision of the Unique Novel
Seola, by Mrs. J.G. Smith, 1924, p. 5
4. See also The Golden Age, December 3, 1924,
pp. 150-151
5. The Watchtower, April 1, 1983, p. 31
6. The Watchtower, February 15, 1956, pp. 110-111
7. See “The Word”—Who Is He? According
To John, 1962, p. 5; The Watchtower, September
15, 1962, p 554; “Make Sure of All Things—Hold
Fast To What Is Fine”, 1965, p. 489; Aid
to Bible Understanding, 1971, pp. 1134, 1669; The
Watchtower, October 15, 1975, p. 640; The Watchtower,
April 15, 1976, p. 231
8. New World Translation
9. John 12:46, New American Standard Bible
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