Did The Witnesses Predict the United Nations in Advance?

by TD 52 Replies latest jw friends

  • TD
    TD

    It's been reported on this forum that Bethel speakers at this summer's conventions are asserting that the establishment of the United Nations in 1945 was predicted in advance by the Witnesses. This is being presented as validation of the claim that the Witnesses are God's one true organization directed by holy spirit.

    The basis for this claim originates with a public address entitled, Peace - Can It Last given by N.H. Knorr at the New World Theocratic Assembly, on September 20 of 1942.

    In this discourse, Knorr applied Revelation 17:8 to the failed League of Nations and asked rhetorically, "Will the League remain in the pit?" His answer: "The association of worldly nations will rise again." (cf. Revelation - It's Grand Climax Now At Hand p. 248)

    This particular claim is nothing new. Knorr's statements were given the status of modern day prophecy in the July 15, 1960 issue of The Watchtower:

    "In 1942 the “faithful and discreet slave” guided by Jehovah’s unerring spirit made known that the democracies would win World War II and that there would be a United Nations organization set up." (p.444)

    The reader will note that this article grants Knorr the additional prescience of knowing in 1942 who would win the war and specifically naming the successor to the League.

    The actual beginning of the United Nations started with a private meeting between Roosevelt and Churchill in August of 1941. The result was what has been called the "Atlantic Charter" which outlined much the same goals of the United Nations today. (See for example: http://avalon.law.yale.edu/wwii/atlantic.asp)

    The title "United Nations" was coined by Roosevelt and adopted on January 1 of 1942 at the Arcadia Conference by those nations at war with the Axis powers. The Declaration by United Nations stated that all signatory parties agreed with the principles of the Atlantic Charter. The so-called "Big Four" of the United Nations today; Russia, China, the United Kingdom and the United States all agreed to and signed the declaration. Later that same month, Roosevelt announced the intent to form an international organization with that name to all of America in a radio address. The specifics were subsequently outlined at a series of conferences between representatives of the "big four" nations throughout the rest of the war.

    So the name, "United Nations"; the intent to form an organization with that name and the goals of that organization were not a secret in the latter part of 1942. Some of this information can actually be found in the 1942 booklet published by the Witnesses entitled, Peace, Can It Last? which is basically Knorr's discourse in printed form. (Those interested can read this publication here: http://www.strictlygenteel.co.uk/booklets/peace.html)

    This leaves us with the claim that Knorr predicted that the Allies would win the war. Did Knorr actually make that prediction? This idea only becomes viable if one accepts the claim made in the 1960 Watchtower that Knorr specifically named the United Nations as the successor to the League. But Knorr only mentioned that as one possibility. He also noted that the Vatican had never cancelled its concordat with Hitler's governement and was prepared to ride the scarlet colored beast in whatever form it emerged from the pit. This reduces the "prediction" to only a statment that the war would end and one side or the other would be victorious.

    It would certainly be fair to say that Knorr was an interested observer of current events, but the idea of modern day prophecy seems dubious at best. On a final note, one wonders how an organization that claims to have accurately predicted a future event under the direction of holy spirit and offers the above example as proof can possibly disavow claiming the status of prophet?


  • TJ - iAmCleared2Land
    TJ - iAmCleared2Land

    Well, if you want to know if the winner of the war was predicted in Knorr's discourse, you can go listen to it, thanks to the Internet and Open Source:

    http://www.archive.org/details/PeaceCanItLastByNathanKnorr

    Interesting that the chairman introduces the speaker as "Mr. Knorr", not "Brother Knorr". I wonder if that's because it was a Public Address broadcast on the radio? I'm fairly certain they were using the terminology Brother/Sister by then.

  • blondie
    blondie

    No, the charter was signed in January 1942 and in the news.

  • OUTLAW
    OUTLAW

    A little JW kid in Africa was named "Brother Knorr"..Lucky Kid!...........................LOL!!...OUTLAW

  • Leolaia
    Leolaia

    What is being reported at the conventions, if summarized correctly above, is a serious distortion of history.

    First of all, the claim made in 1942 that the Allies may win WWII is an about face of what was taught as recently as December 1941. The Watchtower, edited by Joseph Rutherford, published a lengthy series of articles (entitled "Demon Rule Ending") that autumn interpreting the "King of the North" vision from Daniel as a window into what lies in the near future. In these articles, the author (whether Rutherford or Fred Franz) foretold that the neither Axis nor Allied Powers would win the war in victory but that both sides would form, with the totalitarian Axis Powers taking the dominant role, an armistice leading to a "new League of Nations" through which the cry of "peace and security!" would call forth. Through these events, all nations would become totalitarian states like the Axis Powers. This draws on the declaration made by the Axis Powers in November 1940 to establish a "new League of Nations" when the war is finished. Rutherford moreover had been teaching since 1938 (in Face the Facts) that the Axis powers would succeed in obtaining Great Britain and the USA, and for an even longer time the Golden Age published articles on how the totalitarians were in the process of destroying the American government and replacing it with totalitarianism. All of these are mistaken predictions, if not "false prophecy". And the idea that the "abomination of desolation" will be realized by a "new League of Nations" was already in place, as expressed in the 15 December 1941 Watchtower (p. 373), which also connected this coming organization with the "beast" of Revelation 17:3-7.

    Then two things happened in January 1942. One, Rutherford died and Nathan Knorr took control of the Watchtower Society. Two, the Allied Powers declared their intent via the Atlantic Charter to establish a "United Nations" for maintaining peace between nations after the war has ended. That spring, the Watchtower was full of articles emphasizing the closeness of Armageddon: "Armageddon is very near....Now we are near the FINAL END of the 'time of the end' ... Armageddon swiftly approaching ... Armageddon, now near ... The final gathering by the Lord is on ... The time is short" (1 February 1942, pp. 37-45), "Armageddon is at hand" (1 March 1942, p. 80), "Now with Armageddon immediately before us ... The world emergency with Armageddon at the door is the very time to most anxiously keep God's law and obey him" (1 May 1942, pp. 139-142), etc. I doubt statements like these from 1942 are emphasized today in the summer convention talks. Then in the 15 May 1942 issue of the Watchtower, the author wrote that the setting up of the abomination of desolation, which has been going on since 1919 (when the original League of Nations was formed), but which will be given definitive form in a totalitarian "new world order" is "a sure sign of the nearness of Armageddon" (p. 153). The same article also backpedaled on the earlier belief that the Axis Powers would hold the upper hand in ending the war. Now it is claimed that the Axis Powers may well be forced to compromise with the Allies: "[The Pope] wants to save something of advantage out of any possible failure of his scheme for world domination. He is willing to compromise with the anti-Axis forces should they gain military victory. While so doing he can try to shield his totalitarian puppets against total ruin and undoing" (Ibid.).

    The emerging view on the post-war period was expounded in September 1942, both in a 1 September 1942 Watchtower and at the Peace -- Can It Last? talk at the annual convention. The idea that the war would end in a peace pact goes back to the 1941 view, but Knorr no longer claimed that the war would end without a definitive victory for either side. It was now implied that the Allied Powers would attain victory, as it is their United Nations (as opposed to the Axis Powers' "New League of Nations") that would administer the post-war period as the "beast" that comes out of the abyss of inactivity. But in claiming that this understanding was obtained "by Jehovah's unerring spirit" (as stated in the 15 July 1960 Watchtower), the Society omits some important details about how Knorr conceptualized this post-war United Nations. First of all, Knorr conceived of the United Nations as a totalitarian organization that will run the affairs of the world. The Vatican would hold the UN together, "as a supranational power over the postwar confederacy of nations", and the Vatican would place armies all over the world that would keep the peace as a powerful international police force. This would be set up very quickly after the cessation of hostilities, for sudden destruction would follow after the declaration of "peace and destruction". And this leads to the second fact, which is that Knorr construed the post-war period as very, very short. In the 1 September 1942 Watchtower, it was published that "the 'battle of that great day of God Almighty' will break out suddenly upon the postwar builders when they think they can cry out, 'Peace and safety' " and that "man's postwar arrangement will not survive the battle of Armageddon" (p. 259). The Kingdom News of April 1943 similarly stated that "When the postwar builders cry 'Peace and safety!' then will break forth the battle and will destroy this old world" (p. 2). The 1943 booklet Fighting For Liberty on the Home Front made this prediction of the near future:

    "Despite all declared aims and slogans of the United Nations, this curb against the free spreading of the truth will not stop with the end of the global war. God Almighty's own Word for it is that the opposition to Bible Christianity will not weaken in the postwar period, but will persist and strengthen. At the last it will bring the nations to the climax, the battle of Armageddon. For this reason, when the postwar builders get their political, commercial, religious structure erected and operating and begin to cry "Peace and Safety!" it will not mean a peace with the truth about Jehovah's Theocratic Government under his Christ. Therefore it will not mean a peace with or from Jehovah God. Suddenly complete destruction from God and by Christ will come upon the whole postwar arrangement, and organized religion will go down first. God's Word says so" (pp. 28-29).

    Then when the war seemed very close to a finish in 1944, the Watchtower continued to stress the extreme closeness of Armageddon. The 1 March 1944 Watchtower referred to "this time immediately before Armageddon's war" (p. 77), and the 1 May 1944 Watchtower stated that "the day of Armageddon is very near ... This is the time of great emergency because the battle of Armageddon is very near" (pp. 141-142). The 1944 booklet Religion Reaps the Whirlwind declares that "that terrific whirlwind of annihilation is drawing near according to all the weather signals of God's Word" (p. 59-60). The rhetoric became even more intense after V-E Day (8 May 1945). In a talk delivered on 10 June 1945, Knorr urged: "There is no longer any time to wait, for the Kingdom of God is here! ... It is a day of decision, and its precious hours of opportunity are remorselessly ticking out. The zero hour for the final war of Amageddon is undelayably coming on" (The Commander to the Peoples, pp. 21-23). He continued by pointing to the United Nations plan drawn up in the Dumbarton Oaks Conference in 1944 and the 1945 San Francisco Conference as "the final total lineup of this old world against Jehovah's universal domination ... It is the time for the battle of Armageddon" (pp. 26-28).

    So if Knorr actually predicted anything, it is this: The war would end with a peace treaty with the United Nations in charge of a global government orchestrated behind the scenes by the Vatican. The UN would be established very quickly through the placing of totalitarian armies around the world to keep the peace, and it would set to work immediately on banning Jehovah's Witnesses throughout the world. Then it would declare "Peace and safety!", the war is now over, but almost as quickly as the postwar period starts, the democratic powers discover that the Vatican is really running the show and they take action against the Pope and the Vatican, destroying the institution altogether. Then almost instantly, all the governments of the world undergo destruction themselves and billions of people are killed directly by God.

    Now, I might not have the history quite right, but does anyone recall anything like this actually happening in 1945 and 1946?

  • PrimateDave
    PrimateDave

    bookmarked for reference...

  • oompa
    oompa

    ya dave.......luv it......oomps

  • Midget-Sasquatch
    Midget-Sasquatch

    Excellent Watchtower references! Clearly shows exactly what Knorr and Rutherford thought would occur. Not even close to being prescient.

    As always, great research from several posters.

  • whereami
    whereami

    Bookmarked.

    Thanks to Leolaia, as usual great work.

  • wha happened?
    wha happened?

    Funny how all this info is just outside the grasp of a bound volume. I purchased bound volumes years ago and the oldest is 1951. Hmmmmmmmmmm?

Share this

Google+
Pinterest
Reddit