Sects: Watch Tower Undergoes Corporate Shakeup

Jehovah’s Witnesses organization changing structure

The Watchtower Bible and Tract Society of Pennsylvania (WTBTS), the corporate body of the Jehovah’s Witnesses, has restructured itself at a time when the group’s growth rate is slowing.

With nearly a million active “publishers” (members) in the United States last year, the group baptized only 30,000 converts, down from a high of nearly 50,000 in 1988, according to statistics in the group’s January 1 Watchtower magazine. Globally, the group claims nearly 6 million publishers but added fewer than 300,000 members worldwide in 2000, a significant drop from 1997’s high of 375,000.

The controversial sect, headquartered in Brooklyn, New York, is non-Trinitarian. Evangelicals have long labeled the group, founded in Pittsburgh by Charles Taze Russell in 1870, a non-Christian cult. Failed attempts to pinpoint the return of Christ have marked the group’s history. Russell himself predicted that Christ would begin his visible reign on Earth in 1914.

WTBTS formed three new corporations last fall. One, Kingdom Support Services Inc., will focus on the everyday needs of individual congregations. Another, the Religious Order of Jehovah’s Witnesses, will interact with full-time workers, who take a vow of poverty. The third, the Christian Congregation of Jehovah’s Witnesses, will oversee religious matters.

Milton Henschel, 80, resigned as WTBTS president post on October 7 as part of the reorganization, as did six other directors. They remain members of the Governing Body, an oversight panel that will now be dedicated to religious matters in conjunction with the Christian Congregation of Jehovah’s Witnesses. Don Adams, 75, is the new president.

“Basically, there’s a lot of politics going on,” said ex-Jehovah’s Witness Randall Watters of Manhattan Beach, California. A former employee and elder at the group’s “Bethel” headquarters in Brooklyn, Watters runs FreeMinds Inc. (www.freeminds.org), which monitors the Witnesses.

“They’re trying to become less hierarchical, to keep liability at [a] lower level,” Watters said. “They think when lawsuits come, they can isolate particular committees.”

Jehovah’s Witnesses have been no strangers to litigation in part because of their highly separatist orientation. The U.S. Supreme Court in 1943 upheld their refusal to salute the American flag. In following their church’s teachings, members also decline military service and blood transfusions.

Jehovah’s Witnesses spokesman James N. Pellechia told CT that while “any group needs legal protection,” the changes will help the Witnesses plan for and manage growth, allowing senior ministers who are not members of the Governing Body to be officers and directors of corporations serving the movement. “You reach a certain point where, if you do not start delegating, you cannot continue to grow,” he said.

Raymond Franz, a former member of the Governing Body who left the movement in 1979 and wrote a book, Crisis of Conscience, criticizing the WTBTS leadership, said the move is designed to deal with the advancing age of Governing Body members.

Franz added that in Germany, the government ordered the Witnesses to provide severance pay to staff members. “Now when people apply [to join the staff], they sign a vow of poverty, which frees [the WTBTS] from having to treat the person as an employee,” he said.

Copyright © 2001 Christianity Today. Click for reprint information.

Related Elsewhere

See today’s related story, “Jehovah’s Witness Leaders Accused of Shielding Molesters | Former and current Jehovah Witnesses question a policy they say discourages leaders from reporting abuse.”

Freeminds.org bills themselves as “the Watchers of The Watch Tower World.”

The Watchman Expositor, a publication of a Christian group that researches and evangelizes cults, profiles Jehovah’s Witnesses’ beliefs and contrasts them to evangelical doctrines about scripture.

Besides not accepting Christ as fully God and fully man, one of the major doctrinal variations of Jehovah Witnesses is that Witnesses are anti-Trinitarian. (They actually believe Satan created the idea of the Trinity.) Other prominent Christians have had issues with the traditional doctrine of the Trinity in the past few years:

The Weigh Is Narrow | As former employees claim they were pressured to join Shamblin’s church, the Weigh Down Workshop leader attempts to clarify her stance on the Trinity. (Sept. 15, 2000)

My Views on the Godhead | Jakes responds to Christianity Today article, “Apologetics Journal Criticizes Jakes.” (Feb. 21, 2000)

Apologetics Journal Criticizes T.D. Jakes | Christian Research Institute publication questions preacher’s view of Trinity. (Feb. 7, 2000)

Also in this issue

Pastors & Porn: Smut doesn't come in the same package anymore—but it's just as addictive.

Cover Story

Tangled in the Worst of the Web

Christine J. Gardner

Weather: Churches Battle Winter's Big Chill

Jim Jones

'Six Flags Over Israel'

Mark I. Pinsky

Checks and (out of) Balance

Fraud Trial: Ponzi-Scheme Trial Begins

Chuck Fager

Giving: Protestant Giving Rates Decline

Feds Limit Low-Power Radio Licenses

Corrie Cutrer

Sex Abuse: Witness Leaders Accused of Shielding Molesters

Corrie Cutrer

Bahamas: 'Left in the Cracks'

Suzanne Lewis-Johnson in Nassau

Baptist Temple Loses Supreme Court Tax Appeal—and Building

Suzanne Lewis-Johnson

Peretti's Past Darkness

Jeremy Lott

El Salvador: Agencies Hope Quake Opens Purse Strings

Deann Alford

Salvation Army Rejected

Beverly Nickles in Moscow

Most Religious Groups Achieve Reregistration

Beverly Nickles

Briefs: The World

Great Britain: Human Embryo Cloning Legalized

Cedric Pulford in London

India: Hindu Government Moves to Change Christian Divorce

Manpreet Singh in New Delhi

Afghanistan: Taliban Threatens Converts

Barbara G. Baker

India: Quake Rocks Hindu Hotbed

Infection in the Body

Resources for the Ensnared

Small Beneath the Firmament

Walter Wangerin Jr

God at Risk

Wendy Murray Zoba

Jesus Wept

The Chosen People Puzzle

Richard J. Mouw

The Homeless VIPs

DA Fletcher

Globalized Alumni

Andy Fletcher

Pushing Bush Right

Sheryl Henderson Blunt

Letters

Changing Hearts and Laws

A Christianity Today Editorial

Ma Bell, Madam

A Christianity Today Editorial

Quotations to Stir Mind and Heart

Ivan Illich

Calling Out the Name of Jesus

Jeff M. Sellers

Readers' Forum: The Silenced Word

Donald N. Bastian

Can God Reach the Mentally Disabled?

Lewis B. Smedes

Rx for Moral Fussbudgets

View issue

Our Latest

Analysis

The Many Factors of America’s Math Problem

Ubiquitous screens, classroom chaos, a dearth of qualified teachers: The reasons our children are struggling in math class are multitude.

News

Four Years into the War, Life Goes on for Ukrainians

Even as Moscow weaponizes winter, locals attend church conferences, go sledding, and plan celebrations.

A Russian Drone Killed My Brother. Is the World Tired of Our Suffering?

Taras Dyatlik

On the fourth anniversary of Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, a Ukrainian theologian meditates on self-interested calls for a comfortable peace.

The Bulletin

The Bulletin Goes to Nashville!

Sho Baraka, Mike Cosper, Clarissa Moll, Russell Moore

In Music City, Russell, Mike, Sho, and Clarissa talk about creativity, vocation, and AI.

Review

They May Forget Your Sermons, but They’ll Remember This

Reuben Bredenhof’s new book encourages pastors to focus on small acts of faithfulness.

Excerpt

Parents of Prodigals Can Trust God is Good

Cameron Shaffer

An excerpt from Cameron Shaffer’s Keeping Kids Christian.

Worship, Bible Studies, and Restoration in South Korea’s Nonprofit Prison

Jennifer Park in Yeoju, South Korea

Somang Prison, the only private and Christian-run penitentiary in Asia, seeks to treat inmates with dignity—and it sees results.

Apple PodcastsDown ArrowDown ArrowDown Arrowarrow_left_altLeft ArrowLeft ArrowRight ArrowRight ArrowRight Arrowarrow_up_altUp ArrowUp ArrowAvailable at Amazoncaret-downCloseCloseEmailEmailExpandExpandExternalExternalFacebookfacebook-squareGiftGiftGooglegoogleGoogle KeephamburgerInstagraminstagram-squareLinkLinklinkedin-squareListenListenListenChristianity TodayCT Creative Studio Logologo_orgMegaphoneMenuMenupausePinterestPlayPlayPocketPodcastprintRSSRSSSaveSaveSaveSearchSearchsearchSpotifyStitcherTelegramTable of ContentsTable of Contentstwitter-squareWhatsAppXYouTubeYouTube