Review of Dr. Chryssides' new book on Jehovah's Witnesses

by Old Goat 41 Replies latest watchtower beliefs

  • ScenicViewer
    ScenicViewer

    You can follow their research on their history blog. Link was posted earlier.

    It's good to hear they are continuing with this book. Does it have a name at this point? Or if not, how would you search for it at the above link?

  • Old Goat
    Old Goat

    It will be Separate Identity vol. 2. You can't search for their book there. What they do is post bits, occasionally whole chapters of the new work. Most of the longer posts are temporary. They put them up for comments, removing them or truncating them later. I check the blog at least once a day, and I contribute research as I can. Several do that. You can see it in the comment trail.

    Sometimes they just post a query, a "can you help with this?" question. Or they ask about a reference they can't find. In time a section of new research pops up. They ask that you don't repost it elsewhere. The early day's Watch Tower you thought you knew is false. They write good stuff. And they don't much care if they offend someone in the process. Their goal is to produce an accurate, well-told tale.

  • AndersonsInfo
    AndersonsInfo

    The following information is mostly a negative review of Dr. Chryssides' new book on Jehovah's Witnesses, by Rud Persson of Sweden:

    There are three major books published on Jehovah´s Witnesses in English
    in recent years, "Judgment Day Must Wait" by Poul Bregninge (2013) , the
    third edition of "Apocalypse Delayed" by M.J. Penton (2015) and
    "Jehovah´s Witnesses Continuity and Change" by George D. Chryssides
    (2016). Of these three Penton´s work is by far the best in my view.

    When I learned about Chryssides´ book I at once ordered it but did not
    expect an excellent work. The reason is that I have a book called
    "Sacred Schisms" from 2009 in which Chryssides authored a chapter called
    "Finishing the Mystery: the Watch Tower and `the 1917 schism´" (pp.
    109-127). The book was very expensive, but since I am writing
    extensively on this particular subject I felt I had to check it. I am
    sad to say that this chapter by Chryssides is one of the worst and least
    scholarly presentations of the subject I have ever come across. It is so
    full of error as to be practically worthless. Chryssides had not done
    his homework properly and had not studied the rich contemporary source
    material.

    His fresh book does not show as many mistakes about the 1917-1918
    events, but there are still so many errors that one can recommend the
    book only with strong reservations . He indicates on pp. 78 and 79 that
    Rutherford expressed disquiet about the way in which the Society´s
    affairs were organized and that as four of the acting directors had not
    been properly elected he appointed four new ones. In actual fact
    Rutherford voiced agreement with the existing system already in The
    Watch Tower, December 15, 1916. He did not think of making changes until
    the four he later replaced indicated that the Society should be run by
    the Board of Directors, in harmony with the Charter, and not by
    Rutherford alone. He felt he had to act against them as he was not
    prepared to step down from his position. He stated in print in the fall
    of 1917 that if they had not wanted to limit his authority he would
    never had called the legality of their directorships in question. The
    board of directors controversy was one of the biggest crisis ever in the
    Society, but in his new book Chryssides does not even mention that there
    was such a controversy!

    On p. 79 he claims that at the election in 1918 Macmillan was elected
    vice president while Pierson was elected to the Board. In reality it was
    C.H. Anderson who was elected vice president and Pierson did not even
    make the board. This mistake is inexcusable as the facts are so easy to
    ascertain. Chryssides did better in his description of Paul S.L.
    Johnson´s activities in Britain. But there he had at his disposal Albert
    Hudson´s excellent book on Bible Students in Britain. Still he made the
    wrong statement that Johnson left England on "4 April 1917." Johnson
    himself repeatedly stated that he left on April 1, 1917. No early source
    says he left on April 4.

    On pp. 84 and 86 he says that Johnson was "was one of the vociferous
    objectors to the Finished Mystery" and that on July 17, 1917 "when a
    copy was left at each person´s place at the breakfast table" Johnson
    "started a protest and heated argument continued for some five hours."
    There is not much truth in these statements. The Finished Mystery was
    surely announced on July 17, 1917, but not at "the breakfast table" but
    at the dinner table. The book was not left beforehand at each person´s
    place. It was stored on a table in the dining room. Not until Rutherford
    had announced that he had replaced four directors did he announce that
    the book was there for everyone to get. Not one word about The Finsihed
    Mystery was said on this occasion, the dramatic announcement about the
    board being a much hotter subject. The entire five-hour commotion was
    about the board matter. And while Johnson participated he did not
    "start" the protests. Johnson and the directors did later speak out
    about the book, but it took quite some time before they did.

    Here Chryssides has swallowed the Society´s and his Watchtower friends´
    false presentation's hook, line and sinker. The rich contemporary
    documentation of both sides cuts the Society´s history presentations to
    pieces. The persons who the Society has relied on have had their
    memories weakened and changed after several decades in the organization.
    Even Mcmillan had a poor memory after so many years.

    It is difficult to escape the impression that Chryssides sometimes
    accommodates his Witness friends. He does present criticism at times,
    but this criticism seems to be imbedded in cotton so as not to hurt his
    friends. His bias is sometimes obvious. He challenges Penton´s statement
    that Rutherford made a "dramatic doctrinal switch" regarding the
    teaching about the Jews. (p. 114) But Penton was 100 per cent correct.
    The 1932 change regarding the Jews was a major one, certainly a
    "dramatic doctrinal switch." Chryssides does not seem to be aware of the
    pro-Jewish position stated in Rutherford´s earlier writings, such as
    "Comfort for the Jews" from 1925 and the book "Life" published in 1929.
    Neither of these publications is listed in Chryssides´ bibliography .
    Also, Chryssides is weak on the Society´s stance on blood. He does not
    outline how the Society in 2004 differentiated between forbidden and
    allowable blood components. (The Watchtower, June 15, 2004) Since the
    Society claims that blood leaving a body belongs to God and is not
    permitted for any use whatsoever and is not allowed even to store, the
    the fact that certain blood components nevertheless may be viewed as
    permissible has to be viewed as hypocrisy. Not surprisingly Chryssides
    does not call a spade a spade.

    It would be unfair, however, not to admit that Chryssides makes many apt
    observations. He treats the Olin Moyle and Carl Olof Jonsson cases
    fairly well and he uses the current elder book (2010) which strictly
    speaking is confidential material that he is not supposed to have access
    to. He informs his readers about the chronology which was shortened by
    about 100 years in 1943, and he offers a number of excellent pictures.
    So I will keep my copy. The book was so shockingly expensive that it is
    doomed to sell poorly.

    Rud Persson
    Sweden
    April 23, 2016

  • Lieu
    Lieu

    Biased people can't read unbiased information without complaining and focusing on minor errors. We should all know that from JWism.

    With each book of research, we glean more and more information. Looks an interesting read.

  • Crazyguy
    Crazyguy
    Old goat what's your opinion on when Jesus is said to be born? Some say the gospel of Mathew points to 6bce and Luke 6 AD. One of the big discrepancies between the two gospels is the Syrian governor ordering a census and the life of king Herod. According to records Herod was dead before the governor of Syria was governor. So there seems to be a 12 year difference between Matthew and Luke's accounts of Jesus birth?
  • Bonsai
    Bonsai
    140 dollars? Pounds? No thanks. Maybe 140 pesos and I'll consider it.
  • steve2
    steve2

    Thanks Barbara for posting the review by Rud Persson. Interesting comments indeed. I'd certainly be interested in Old Goat's response because, at first gloss, it looks like Persson has done his homework. That said, he has misidentified Chryssides as male.

  • Old Goat
    Old Goat

    Chryssides is male. de Vienne is not. Personally, I'd include Separate Identity in his list of major works. I think it is story-changing.

    De Vienne's review touched on the Jewish issue in Rutherford's day. This doesn't add any thing. Rutherford did indeed express reservations about the society's management, expressing them to Russell. This is in the original documentation His concerns were narrowly focused, relating only to the election process.

    We sometimes wish an author addressed our pet issues in more detail. Both de Vienne and Persson fall into that in their reviews, though Rachael de Vienne tells you up front that's what she's doing. Chryssides presents the blood issues in a manner appropriate to a generalist history.

    We approach books such as Chryssides from our own viewpoints. Perrson has a personal agenda that shows through in the blood comment. Is Penton's last revision the better book? In some ways, certainly. But they do not approach the matter in the same way. Penton does not address contemporary Witness social structure to the same depth. I have both books. You should too. And if you ignore Schulz and de Vienne's two books, you've made a serious mistake.

    Other than Rutherford raising the issue of the legal form of elections with Russell, Perrson's comments on the 1918 schism are accurate. I still recommend Chryssides' book, though it is obscenely expensive.

    I agree with this:

    Lieu

    Lieu 2 hours ago

    Biased people can't read unbiased information without complaining and focusing on minor errors. We should all know that from JWism.

    With each book of research, we glean more and more information. Looks an interesting read.

    On the question raised about the date of Jesus birth: Most scholars disagree with the Watchtower by from two to four years. Scholars have been wrong before. I've never seen a good refutation of the Watchtower's reasoning, but I've never perused it either. Sorry, I don't have a well-founded opinion on that issue.

  • Ruby456
    Ruby456

    interesting that Russell had a brush with atheism during his late teens (known as infidelity then).

    on p. 33 of the book a separate identity while trying to convert an atheist, Russell wrote that he fell prey to the logic of infidelity as soon a he began to think for himself. but this did not last long.

  • AndersonsInfo
    AndersonsInfo

    Further comments from Rud Persson:

    "Old Goat stated: "Rutherford did indeed express reservations about
    the Society´s management, expressing them to Russell. This is in the
    original documentation."

    My response was to Chryssides´s claim that Rutherford was concerned
    about elections "for life" and that he felt that the charter contained
    illegal portions. Rutherford did not voice any concern regarding this
    until his position was challenged at least four months after his
    election. Nor does early documentation say that he expressed his
    later claim in this respect to Russell. What Rutherford did claim in
    Harvest Siftings, dated August 1, 1917, was that he had told Russell
    when the work was moved to New York that board members and officers
    had to be "chosen in the State of Pennsylvania, and nowhere else."
    (p. 15) But that was not the point Chryssides was making and to which
    I responded.

    It seems that Rutherford did not convince Russell about
    the need for choosing directors in Pennsylvania, for he
    admitted that "the Society would be maintained with all its original
    powers provided the annual elections are held in Pittsburgh." (p. 16)
    His bringing up in 1917 his earlier discussion with Russell was to
    lend support to his replacing Robert Hirsh, who was elected to the
    board and by the board in New York, at Rutherford´s own instigation on
    March 29, 1917! He could have had Hirsh, then a strong supporter of
    his, elected in Pennsylvania if he had felt this was the correct way
    and if he had so insisted,
    but clearly he saw no need to do so. All
    elections to and by the board after the move to New York were taking
    place in New York, and Russell was convinced, and rightly so, that
    such elections were legal and proper. Even Rutherford was elected in
    this way in 1910. If that had been an illegal election, Rutherford
    would not have been a legal director in January 1917 and since the
    charter clearly ruled that only directors could be elected president,
    vice president and secretary-treasurer, his election to president in
    1917 would then have been illegal even though it took place in
    Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. This was pointed out by competent lawyers
    during the conflict. J.D. Wright and I.F. Hoskins had been elected to
    the Board in Pennsylvania before the removal to New York. Rutherford
    would have to come up with something else to get rid of them. It is
    here his attack on the charter regulation about election "for life"
    became useful.

    He claimed in the summer of 1917 that this clause in the charter was
    illegal and to no effect, holding that directors had to be elected
    annually according to law. This was necessary in order to get rid of
    three of his opponents on the board. However, it is clear that Russell
    wanted the Society put on a really legal footing when he drew up the
    charter in 1884. Consequently he had it examined by competent legal
    counsel and had it approved by the authorities. It is not surprising,
    therefore, that Rutherford never even attempted to explain how such a
    carefully established charter could contain an illegal clause. The
    Judge did not care much about the law anyway. In 1917 he claimed that
    directors had to be elected annually according to the law. But just a
    few years afterwards he felt that such restraint was troublesome and
    wanted longer terms. And hey presto! it then became possible to
    disregard the rule about annual elections! So much for his concern.

    The books by Schulz and de Vienne have been mentioned here and I take
    the opportunity to express my admiration for their excellent works.
    I also find the material being presented at the site Watch Tower History
    first rate. In the sketches I am preparing on people involved in the
    1917-1918 conflict, I have accepted and used some of the research
    presented at their website, so far on Gertrude W. Seibert and William
    F. Hudgings, giving full credit. "

    Rud

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