A handy CHRONOLOGY of the life and times of Charles and Maria Russell

by Terry 35 Replies latest watchtower beliefs

  • Terry
    Terry

    1852 Charles Taze Russell was born in(February 16) in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. He was raised in a strict Presbyterian home.

    1868 (Age 16) In an encounter with a non-believer he became disillusioned over the subject of whether God as a heavenly father would burn his children in hell

    Side note: 1869 (Joseph Franklin Rutherford was born and raised a Baptist)

    .

    1870 At the age of 18 the deeply troubled Russell attended a meeting where Adventism was preached by Millerite Jones Wendall. He heard for the first time the idea that there was no burning hell.

    Late 1870's: A now changed Russell starts his own Bible study group which elected him as "Pastor". In the course of these studies Russell discovered that Christ had returned invisibly in 1875. (Russel would have been 23 years old)

    Charles Russell decides it is incumbent upon him to publicize this arrival of Jesus by publishing Zion's Watch Tower and Herald of Christ's Presence" in magazine form. He sent out 6,000 issues each month.

    1880 (Age 28) Russell declares that his system of theology had been "revealed" to him directly from God. Russel had taken up with a highly intelligent original thinker whom he eventually married,

    (1879) Maria Francis Ackley who explained to Russell that he was the "faithful and wise servant" of Matthew 24:45.

    Maria Russell conceives of the two of them by the quaint old-fashioned term: "Twain" as this mouthpiece of God. The doctrine of FDS is born!

    1881 Zion's Watchtower tract society is formed ( The Henry Ward Beecher mansion, at 124 Columbia Heights, Brooklyn, came into the possession of the Society, and Pastor Russell continued to use the home of Brooklyn's world famed pulpit orator as his study and residence until his death.)

    1882 Russell officially denies the doctrine of the Trinity

    1884 Russell turns the Watchtower into a Corporation

    Side Note: 1893 Frederick Franz is born

    1894 Rutherford becomes a missionary for the movement

    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------During the early days of their marriage both Maria and Charles Russell influence each other's thinking. Russell sees that Maria wants full equality of credit for the development of the theology he is putting into print. When Studies in the Scriptures is finished Russell starts urging people not to read his earlier work (influenced by Maria.)

    By this time Russell is convinced Jehovah reveals his Truth to him alone.

    The Russell's arguments grow more and more heated and bitterness ensues.

    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

    1896 (Russell is 44) Maria Russell repudiates her stance on her husband being the "Faithful" and wise servant. She now identifies him as the "Evil Slave" of Matthew24:45-47

    1898 an orphan child is adopted."Miss Ball came to them in 1889, a child of ten...She was an orphan." J.F.Rutherford

    Marital relations become strained to the point of outright war. Scandal ensues.

    1903 (Russell is age 51) Maria Russell filed for legal separation. (Maria claimed she was tortured by Russell who denied her sex. She accused Russell of kissing and fondling his "special friend" who afoster child and later, a stenographer.)

    Charles Russell had been moving his/their assets into the corporation for the previous 19 years to avoid alimony. His wealth was estimated at around 9 or 10 million dollars.

    1906 Maria Russell writes her views on headship and marital obligations in THE TWAIN revealing an incisive mind with a clear grasp of women's issues. (see below)

    March 1,1917 One year after Charles Russell's death "The Watchtower unhesitatingly proclaims brother Russell as 'that Faithful and Wise Servant'

    Awake! May 8,1951 "who is preaching the teaching of Pastor Russell? Certainly not Jehovah's Witnesses! They can not be accused of following him, for they neither quote him as an authority nor publish or distribute his writing"

    Thus, Russell was both proclaimed and denied by his wife and the society which he founded.

    _________________________________________________________________________________

    A critic examines the writings of Maria Russell

    Pittsburgh Lender

    Sunday Morning October 14th, 1906-Special Magazine Section

    MRS. RUSSELL’S SPICY BOOK IS CRITICIZED

    "The Twain One" Reviewed by a Local Minister, Who Finds Fault With the Premises and Conclusions

    ———-

    MRS. RUSSLL’S SPICY GEMS

    ———-

    "True happiness, in any human relationship, is incompatible with ignoble ideas both of tyranny and of servility."

    "Paternal and filial love must respond to each other."

    "Any subserviency to fellow man is a secondary consideration û We ought to obey God rather than man and this is manifestly right so we must oppose men when they are wrong."

    "The duty of submission to those in leading positions in the church we regard not in the light of unquestioning childish or servile obedience, but simply as a matter of respectful deference."

    "The servant is not in duty bound to please his master in all things except within the limit of his contract."

    "Obedience of children to parents is expected by God, but for any tyrannical use of this parental authority to gratify a pride of power in the dominant parties will be punished by God. The command of obedience does not apply to children after they come to maturity."

    "The Scriptures do not teach domestic slavery."

    "Adam found in woman a companion capable of sharing all his joys."

    "Nothing in the Scriptures indicates that woman was in the least inferior to man."

    "God created man and woman with equal rights."

    "Woman has become the weaker vessel through sinful man."

    "He (man) often, selfishly taking advantage of the situation rules over her (woman) instead of treating her as an heir."

    Quotations from Mrs. Russell’s book, "Twain One."

    ———-

    Marie Frances Russell, the wife of the celebrated Pastor Charles T. Russell, the North Side preacher, with congregations all over the world, has written a book which is of the "woman’s rights" order. Those who have analyzed the work are of the opinion that Mrs. Russell has undertaken to sustain her position in applying for a divorce from bed and board and demanding alimony from her husband.

    "The Twain One" is the title, and the green cloth cover binds all sorts of biblical quotations to sustain the contention of the author that a woman was created equal with man, with the same rights, and instead of being servile to man, woman was expected to be an heir of the land with him and share all his joys and returns from the soil. She launches into a tirade against sinful man and takes the stand that the decline of woman in influence and wealth is absolutely due to sinful and greedy man who, taking advantage of woman, has domineered over her to such an extent that woman is generations off her sphere.

    Too frequent maternity, due of course to greedy and sinful man, has also prevented woman from associating with others in the world so that she could progress mentally as rapidly as man. Instead, she has been compelled to stay in the house, raise children and, while man is recuperating in the fields and associating with his neighbors, "gathering strength the while," poor woman is debarred from what is divinely hers and sinful man is rubbing it in on her at a great rate. The time apparently, is ripe for a change of all this and woman should step into the church, business and even at home to demand what has been given her by God and "held out," to use the parlance of the day, by greedy, sinful, domineering man.

    A review of the book by a minister follows:

    "The title of this little volume would seem to imply a treatise respecting the oneness of union and mutual adaptability of the sexes to each other so as to produce the greatest amount of harmony or union. However, the writer does not, in our judgment, seem to approach the subject from this standpoint, but rather the reverse û ‘the twain two.’ The motif appears to be to disprove any special headship of the husband and hence to establish a double headship in every family. The thought of the writer seems to be the one that is now so common amongst so-called ‘new women.’ viz., that in the divine order men and women were by nature, and by grace intended to be on an absolute equality, mentally and physically, but that women, for centuries oppressed by men, have gradually grown weaker and weaker both in mind and in body until today that writer reluctantly admits men are stronger both mentally and physically. That we may do the writer no injustice on this point we quote:

    "‘They (Adam and Eve) stood on a par in God’s estimation of his handiwork. It is manifest that God created them with equal rights when he gave the dominion of earth to them both originally’ (p. 31.). ‘Dr. H. S. Drayton tells us that while woman’s brain is smaller than man’s it is larger in proportion to the total weight of the body, and is more finely organized, so that in his opinion honors are about even.’ (p. 37.)

    "As proof of an acknowledge feminine inferiority of strength, mentally and physically, the author says: ‘Woman’s natural office of motherhood and home duties connected with it, the training of children, etc., which, under perfect conditions, as originally designed, could have brought only happiness and joy, instead under the conditions induced by sin, brought sorrow and the gradual physical weakening or decline The too frequent maternity often imposed upon her, regardless of proper conditions, has undermined the health of women generation after generation, while man, whose natural occupation has been more in the fields and in subduing the elements of nature, has gathered from nature more of its invigorating force and thus woman has become, by far, the weaker vessel.’ (p. 36.) ‘Thus the natural tendency of sin has been, not only to render woman a weaker vessel, but also to bring her under the power of her husband.’ (p. 41.)

    "Whatever the author may otherwise be she is evidently not a logician, as shown by the above quotations: for while she argues that the sexes are equal and should stand on a par every way she, in the different quotations, claims that women have become by far the weaker vessel û hence logically no longer on a par with males.

    "But still more illogical is the proposition above quoted that women have become ‘by far the weaker vessel’ gradually for centuries as a result of the recognition of the headship of men. Would not even a novice in logic recognize the fact that such a claim is an absurdity; because every girl babe must receive of the strength, the virility of the father as every boy babe must partake of the weaknesses of his mother. If males begat males and females begat females we would could understand how the one sex could, in centuries, oppress and degrade the other; knowing that this is not the case, but that on the contrary nature equalizes and harmonizes the strength and weakness of both parents in the children, it follows that the author has failed to grasp her subject. She may not be aware, either, that in Europe for centuries women have labored in the fields and thus have employed the very conditions which she says has made the males superior in mental and physical strength.

    "Far be it from the writer to inveigh against women or to deny women their proper rights and opportunities We are even willing to concede, that in times past, under barbaric and semi-civilized conditions, women had not by any means the liberties and opportunities they should have had; but are not the same things true of the other sex? Have not the majority of men in the past been the merest serfs or slaves? Are we not to remember that only within the past century has Europe given to the males universal suffrage? Indeed, this boon of the family was not given to the English males until within a decade, and in Russia suffrage has only been granted to the males this very year under restrictions, somewhat similar to those which prevail in Germany, which give those not property owners a decidedly less voice in politics than others? Are we not to remember that free school education in Europe is only the matter of the past decade? What we should notice in this connection is that just in proportion as the males have gotten free from serfdom and ignorance in the very same proportion have the females of the same lands risen to civilization and education. These points appear to us to be too frequently overlooked by those studying or discussing so called women’s rights.

    "It is a fact that the twain are one by divine arrangement and by their creation. The sexes are so adapted the one to the other that injury to either signifies proportionate loss to both. Hence the safe and sane of both sexes are practically agreed that the Almighty did not design the sexes to be exactly equal either mentally or physically, but better far than this did design an adaptation between them, the one for the other, represented in the expression ‘a manly man’ and ‘a womanly woman.’ We feel sure that the observance of this law of nature brings more joy than any amount of disputation, or endeavor to prove that there is no difference between the sexes. Very few women would care to marry or expect to be happy with an effeminate man, and very few men would desire to marry or expect to be happy with a masculine wife."

    "The author lays great stress upon the fact that women do not receive proper recognition in the churches—evidently believing that no sex distinction should be recognized in the ministry. Although the consensus of opinion among Christian people for centuries has been that of the special ministrations of religion should be in the hands of males, this apparently has no influence whatever with our author. She carefully culls every reference to women in the Old and New Testaments and makes the most of these to support her contention, but either innocently or intentionally omits all notice of the fact that Jesus Christ appointed no female apostles—the twelve were male and the subsequent seventy sent out were men; nor was this because there were no women interested at that time, nor, as is seemingly hinted, the women of that day were so much more illiterate than the men. On the contrary, we have the apostolic statement to the effect that they were fishermen and tax-gatherers from the humbler walks of life and that, too it was distinctly stated by the public in general that they were ignorant and unlearned men. (#Ac 4:13) If ignorant and unlearned men could be qualified and used by the Christ as His representatives, could not the ignorant and unlearned women have been equally qualified for His service had He so designed. But on the contrary, have we not the intimation that some of the believing women of the time were of the higher class, styled, "honorable women" û women of station, "wealth and probably of education also? See #Lu 8:3, #Ac 7:4-12. The same is true of the course pursued by the apostles. We have no record that they ever ordained women as elders in any of the churches they organized. Nevertheless they, both Jesus, and the apostles, were prompt to recognize, appreciate and to utilize the womanly talents and qualities of the believers of that time, as we believe, all Christian ministers are disposed to do to this day.

    "The author of the "Twain One" certainly displays the craftiness of an expert attorney supporting an unjust case when she attempts to so interpret the words of the apostles respecting the deference or submission of the wife as the weaker vessel to the husband as the head of the family With a n attorney’s skill she arranges three difficult texts in order, placing first, one, the phraseology of which she could construe favorably, and then proceeds to apply the misfit interpretation to the others. For instance the following:

    "‘Wives submit yourselves unto your own husbands as it is fit in the Lord." #Col 3:13 ‘Wives submit yourselves unto your own husbands as unto the Lord, for the husband is the head of the wife, even as Christ is the head of the Church; and He is the savior (preserver, caretaker) of the body. Therefore, as the Church is subject unto Christ so let the wives be to their own husbands in everything.’ #Eph 5:22-24

    "Again she quotes, ‘Likewise, ye wives, be in subjection to your own husbands.’ #1Pe 3:1

    "The veriest tyro in scriptural exegesis would surely be astonished at the cleverness of the misinterpretation of the first of these texts. The apostle says ‘as it is fit in the Lord,’ by this evidently meaning that women in the Christian church were to be submissive to their husbands as were the Jewish women, and not to consider that because they were not ‘in the Lord’ they were exempted from the proper responsibilities of wives. ‘As it is fit’ then evidently means, as it is proper, as it is right for those in the Lord to do But our authoress gives a twist to the entire matter in these words. ‘We must bear in mind this limitation of fitness.’ (P. 53). She proceeds to ring the changes of these words fit and fitness twelve times in her endeavor to nullify the force of the above quoted Scriptures by implying that the wives are to submit themselves to their own husbands not ‘as it is fit’ but rather as the wives may deem fit.

    "Surely no sound mind could understand the apostolic injunctions above quoted to signify that wives were to be so submissive to their husbands that they would murder or steal or do other unlawful things. Fortunately, the average men and women have little difficulty in comprehending the scriptural advice on this subject, vis: that love should cement the marriage tie, that in the union the twain will be one, that the head of the united pair is the husband, whose delight as well as responsibility would be to look well after the interests, mental and physical, of his wife ready, if need be, to lay down his life for her protection. Fortunately, too, the majority of women appreciate just such headship as the apostles here indicate and these are the happy couples who best represent the "Twain One," and happy are the children who have parents thus mated in harmony with natural law and scriptural injunction.

    "The advocates of ‘women’s rights’ seem assuredly to be persons in whom the milk of human kindness have soured sometimes through ambition and sometimes through fallacious reasoning! For instance they often tell us that the great colleges are for the men, that the women have no such opportunities for education. They tell us that the legislatures and courts are bound upon the grinding of woman into the dust, into the mire, and that it is necessary for women to step forth from the battles of motherhood and the home to battle for female suffrage and other rights.

    "Fortunately for the world, the majority of the sex reason more soundly than this. Through education or by observation they learn that their husbands and fathers in the legislatures have framed most equitable laws in their interest, for their protection and safeguard, and that the courts are always more lenient toward women than toward men, and that they fare far better at the hands of a male jury than they would if tried before a jury of their own sex, and that the public schools and high schools are as open to the females as to the males, and that a proportionately larger number of the females than of the males are afforded high school opportunities and normal school privileges. They learn, also, that there is abundant provision for their sex in the female seminaries and colleges and that these, almost without exception, have been established and endowed by the opposite sex. We conclude that the majority of the sensible thinkers agree respecting the solidarity of the race-and that in the family and home the husband and wife are not to be twain, but one, and that in the responsibility for the family’s care both human and divine law are right in holding the male to be the responsible head and caretaker.

    "That the author is not ashamed of her work is evidenced by the fact that her name appears in the same six times."

    ________________________________________________________________________________________________________________

    Fascinating woman!

  • Finkelstein
    Finkelstein

    Fascinating woman !

    Yes but she got kicked to the curb by Charles for drawing too much attention and notoriety when he wanted the

    public light to shine exclusively onto himself, hurting his ego and personal stature

  • Terry
    Terry

    If we play detective (which I love to do) and read between the lines I think something shadowy bubbles up to the surface.

    The easy assumption (helped along by C.T.Russell's cries of innocence) is that Maria was riding his coat-tails.

    I don't buy it. Not a bit of it.

    Maria was an idea person and a fine writer capable of editing C.T.'s meandering verbosity.

    We need to ask an obvious question that never seems to arise: What kind of marriage did Russell think he needed to present

    the proper "image" for public consumption?

    Are the following questions UNANSWERABLE?

    1.iF RUSSELL had no intention of having sex with a woman--why marry one?

    2.If RUSSELL had perversion (by Puritan standards) in his personality would he cloak himself in a seemingly "normal" union of nuptial bliss?

    3.If RUSSELL's relationship with the adopted daughter wasn't twisted--why did Maria come apart at the seams?

    Critics of Pastor Russell pointed to shady business dealings and accused him of bad character. At the same time, a person with a legal background who had a combatative personality joined the ranks: Judge Rutherford. Maria was dusted off and sent around the world as a lovely goodwill ambassador fronting

    for Russell's good character.

    Maria was so charming and loved by all, Russell seems to have grown outraged at her personal popularity. He began accusing her of letting it "go to her head".

    4.Was the child adopted to pacify Maria and keep her occupied? Whose idea was it? Who found her?

    The Watchtower was founded strictly as a business for the purpose of promoting Russell's own singular views. He didn't need the money so

    profit skimming didn't enter the picture. Something else was going on with the "Miracle Wheat" scandal. Was it poor judgement or simply a crooked character? Was he a victim of his own naivete or was he a truly repugnant husband and father, ruthless and cunning from day one?

    The Bible Students website is filled with apologia. According to their view, the man was a saint.

    Who knows?

    Who really can say?

  • therevealer
    therevealer

    Can't find your qoute in the 51 awake. Not sure why

  • Terry
    Terry

    Can't find your qoute in the 51 awake. Not sure why

    Which quote?

    *** Awake! 1951 May 8 ***

    who is preaching the teaching of Pastor Russell? Certainly not Jehovah's Witnesses! They can not be accused of following him, for they neither quote him as an authority nor publish or distribute his writing.

    [Emphasis Added] by http://dciscorp.com/qwotes/russell.htm

  • ScenicViewer
    ScenicViewer

    Can't find your qoute in the 51 awake. Not sure why

    I just now checked and fouind it on page 26, par 3 of the issue Terry cited.

  • Terry
    Terry

    Thanks ScenicViewer.

    I'm reading a LOCKED DOWN discussion on a BIBLE STUDENTS discussion group about the WT Society and the U.N.

    http://www.harvestmessenger.com/forum/index.php?topic=970.0

    Very yummy!

  • Old Goat
    Old Goat

    Terry,

    There are a few errors of fact, but you raise good questions. Russell met Wendell in 1869. We can date this from Russell’s own words and from an article in World’s Crisis. Russell dates the formation of the Bible Study Group to 1871. He does not say he started it, only that he attended it. His father came into the group the next year. They elected him pastor in 1876.

    Schulz and de Vienne, the authors of the Nelson Barbour biography, note on their history blog that Russell did not accept Adventism, but was persuaded to associate with Abrahamic Faith believers. I cannot reproduce their work here. It’s on their private, invitation only blog and consists of chapters two and three of their forth-coming book. It is, however, a well documented bit of research drawing on many One Faith/Age-to-Come periodicals. Before I started reading their work, I had no clue these existed.

    Russell did not claim that his theology was revealed directly from God. He was a restorationist theologian. (I use ‘theologian’ very loosely.) He believed truths lost were restored in the last days. He tells us, if we’re alert to the clues, from whom he got his beliefs.

    The real questions here are those about M. F. Russell. I’ve read the divorce transcript. Russell does not come off well but neither does Maria. I don’t know why they agreed to a celibate marriage. Maria did not accuse him of adultery. The Watchtower claim is accurate. But there are elements of that story that give one pause. Also, Johnson in his Parousia Messenger (I believe) recounts a controversy at Bethel where one of Russell’s secretaries (a man) accused him of improperly touching female bethelites. Johnson, who was there, makes light of the accusation, but Johnson saw Russell as a second Christ.

    The transcript shows how the Russells worked as a team. Charles would outline an article, passing it to Maria. Maria would write it. Trouble arose when she deviated from his outline.

    Being celibate but married does not seem healthy. Russell as a pervert? Not proven – yet.

    My copy of the transcript is a third or fourth generation photocopy. It does not scan or copy in readable fashion. Don’t ask. It’s out there. Maybe someone here has it in better form than I do and would make a pdf file.

    The Russells did not adopt Rose Ball. She and her brother lived in their house. Their parents (at least the father) was still alive. My impression of Rose, as the story is told in the divorce transcript, is that she was a flirt but dressing as a younger girl. Russell was confused about her age; so were others. She was older than is usually presented.

    On Russell’s business ventures: What among all his complex business ventures was unethical? I’ve read the claims, some of them quite emphatic. I’ve followed this in detail, and I cannot find anything illegal, unethical or even questionable. All I can find is the claim. A claim is not proof. I can claim that you have six toes. I can repeat it ad nauseam, but the proof rests in what is in your shoes. I want to see the proof. (About Russell, not your toes.) Russell had scrap iron, oil lease and equipment interests, invested in the stock market, owned part of a home furnishings business, various clothing stores, invested in a turpentine business (it was a fraud perpetrated by A. D. Jones who turned into quite a crook.) and there are hints of other business ventures. He wasn’t the golden boy of business his worshipers make him out to be. He didn’t originate the chain-store model as some claim. Schulz and de Vienne point to pre-existing stores of that type.

    Miracle Wheat was a non-scandal. Russell was suckered by a sales brochure and the claims of an associate. There were miracle beans too. He was looking for proof that the Millennium had begun and restitution was at hand. The original Department of Agriculture reports are online, I believe.

    “The truth is out there.” It may not lead where we think. But we need to ask the questions and follow the trails. The Watch Tower society won’t, or if they do, they’ll hide what they find.

  • Terry
    Terry

    OLD GOAT SAYS: The Russells did not adopt Rose Ball. She and her brother lived in their house. Their parents (at least the father) was still alive. My impression of Rose, as the story is told in the divorce transcript, is that she was a flirt but dressing as a younger girl. Russell was confused about her age; so were others. She was older than is usually presented.

    I believe it was J.F.Rutherford who was the source of the comment: "Miss Ball came to them in 1889, a child of ten...She was an orphan."

    If her birthday was in 1869 she would be closer to 20 years old when she took up with the Russells.

    Accusing a young girl of "asking for it" is the oldest male chauvinist dodge there is. I know YOU aren't saying it--but, you are laying it out as the observation of men at the time. Interpreting "flirtation" is a subjectively touchy issue between the sexes when it comes to underage girls, wouldn't you agree?? What was the girl doing there? Who allowed it? Why would she remain after ANY incident where Russell was bouncing her on his lap and dandling her?

    Passing strange!

  • Old Goat
    Old Goat

    Rutherford was wrong. The census data is online. You can check it for yourself. There was no legal child care document. She was in her bother's care while living with the russells. There is no proof that Russell did anything with Rose Ball. There is proof that she carried tales, true or not. No one suggested that Rose "asked" for anything. You've got the story wrong. Do the research, starting with the census data.

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