Bible
Students Fragments
1917- Present
After the death of Pastor C.T. Russell on 1916
October 31, multiple divisions rent the International Bible Students Association.
At the moment of C.T. Russells death, the
surviving directors of the Watch Tower Bible and Tract Society were Alfred I. Ritchie,
Vice President; William E. VanAmburgh, Secretary- Treasurer; James D. Wright, Isaac F.
Hoskins, H. Clay Rockwell (replaced 1917 March 29 by Robert H. Hirsh), and Joseph F.
Rutherford, all having been appointed by C.T. Russell. Two days later Andrew N. Pierson
was elected by the others to fill the vacancy. The board thereupon constituted A.I.
Ritchie, W.E. VanAmburgh, and J.F. Rutherford an Executive Committee. The publication of
the Watch Tower continued under an Editorial Committee of W.E. VanAmburgh, J.F.
Rutherford, H.C. Rockwell, F.H. Robison, and R.H. Hirsh.1 A.H. MacMillan continued in
charge of the office staff. The pastoral work (organized "follow- up") continued
under the direction of Menta Sturgeon.
Election of the Societys officers took place
1917 January 6 (Saturday) during a two day convention at Pittsburgh.
J.F. Rutherford (d. 1942) was ele cted President.
A.N. Pierson was elected Vice President over A.I. Ritchie. W.E. VanAmburgh was reelected
Secretary- Treasurer unanimously. At this time the Executive Committee was dissolved.
At the 1917 January 6 elders meeting and ensuing
Watch Tower annual meeting, several by- laws had been adopted (at Rutherfords urgent
insistence, but without being read), among them: votes should be counted only for those
nominated, and whoever is elected president of the Peoples Pulpit Association
(subsidiary corporation in New York state) is elected for life.3 Chairman of the business
meeting, A.H. MacMillan, recognized only those nominating/seconding Rutherford for
president, or moving/seconding that nominations be closed. The Watch Tower wording
of January 15, "There being no further nominations ... Brother Rutherford was
declared the unanimous choice of the convention as President of the Society for the
ensuing year," hardly seems to sum up the matter.
For the 1919 annual business meeting, the rule about
counting votes only for those nominated was abolished. Pierson, who had fallen from
Rutherfords favor, was thereby voted out, possibly by Rutherford, et. al., voting
the C.T. Russell shares now held by the Watch Tower. [In later years, Watch Tower officers
used this method to do away with annual voting at the business meeting, citing the number
of shares held by the Watch Tower as greater than the sum of all shares represented by
voters and proxies.] In 1916 Nov. the Executive Committee, at Rutherfords urging,
asked Clayton J. Woodworth and George H. Fisher of Scranton to compile a volume on
Revelation and Ezekiel (and also Canticles), to be published as "The Finished
Mystery," the Seventh Volume of Studies in the Scriptures, as the posthumous work of
Pastor Russell. It was ready the following July. (Subsequent reception of the Revelation
portion among Bible Students was somewhat mixed. During the remainder of World War I many
countries on both sides banned it, on grounds that it advocated religious conscientious
objection against joining the armed forces.)
Dissension
Tensions began rising almost immediately between
Ritchie, Hoskins, Hirsh, and Wright on one side and MacMillan, Rutherford, and VanAmburgh
on the other (actually a resumption of tensions from the past few years). On 1917 July 17
Rutherford claimed that since the Society charter provided for the election of directors
annually, only the three officers of the board (having been elected officers that January)
were truly board members. He therefore appointed A.H. MacMillan, G.H. Fisher, J.A. Bohnet,
and W.E. Spill to the board positions occupied by Ritchie, Wright, Hirsh, and Hoskins.
[The board majority, joined by Francis H. McGee, assistant to the Attorney General of New
Jersey, countered that the three could not have been elected officers of the board unless
they had already been members of the board? therefore, there were either seven board
members, or else none. They later decided not to institute legal proceedings, based on 1
Corinthia ns 6:6- 7.] Hirsh, et. al., issued a protest pamphlet, "Light After
Darkness," during the summer. Rutherford answered with a special "Harvest
Siftings No. 2" in 1917 October. Within a month P.S.L. Johnson issued "Harvest
Siftings Reviewed." A straw poll of IBSA classes (ecclesias) in December showed 95%
backing for Rutherford. The annual election of Society officers and the first election of
the Board of Directors came 1918 January 5, during the Pittsburgh convention January 2- 6.
R.H. Barber nominated for director: J.F. Rutherford, W.E. VanAmburgh, A.N. Pierson, A.H.
MacMillan, W.E. Spill, J.A. Bohnet, and G.H. Fisher. F.H. McGee of Trenton, N.J., then
nominated: Menta Sturgeon, A.I. Ritchie, H.C. Rockwell, I.F. Hoskins, R.H. Hirsh, J.D.
Wright, and P.S.L. Johnson (Johnson withdrew). Elected were: Rutherford, MacMillan,
VanAmburgh, Spill, Bohnet, C.H. Anderson (not nominated), and Fisher. McGees
nominees plus W.J. Hollister (not nominated), received votes of about 13% of the total
shares voted.
Rutherford was reelected President, Anderson elected
Vice- President, and VanAmburgh reelected Secretary- Treasurer. The convention voted also
to ask R.H. Hirsh to resign from the Editorial Committee.
Among those who parted with the Society about 1918
were McGee and his nominees, R.E. Streeter, I.I. Margeson, H.A. Friese, P.L. Read, and
P.E. Thomson. A.E. Burgess wavered for a year before leaving.
Raymond G. Jolly sided with Paul S.L. Johnson.
Those avowing loyalty to the Society at this time
include: O.L. Sullivan, F.T. Horth, M.L. Herr, E.H. Thomson, E.J. Coward, W.E. Page, J.F.
Stephenson, H.H. Riemer, E.D. Sexton, W.A. Baker, R.E. Nash, C.P. Bridges, W.J. Thorn,
G.S. Kendall, J. Hutchinson, B.M. Rice, E.A. McCosh, Jesse Hemery, E.G. Wylam, J.H.
Hoeveler, F.P. Sherman, and J.R. Muzikant. Dr. L.W. Jones said he was not in opposition.
It was also about this time that Edwin Bundy, who had
dissented from the Society in 1912- 1917, returned to its fellowship.
Watch Tower Arrests
World War I, which had been occupying Europe since
1914 Summer, saw U.S. participation beginning 1917 April 6. The Watch Tower stand on
conscientious objection then occasioned the 1918 May 8 arrest and subsequent conviction of
J.F. Rutherford, W.E. VanAmburgh, A.H. MacMillan, R.J. Martin, C.J. Woodworth, G.H.
Fisher, F.H. Robison, and Giovanni Dececca. (Warrant for the arrest of R.H. Hirsh was also
issued, but he had already resigned under pressure; So the warrant likely was not
pursued.) These were imprisoned in Atlanta from 1918 June 21 until their release on bail
1919 March 21. Their convictions were reversed 1919 May 15.
During the imprisonment of these eight Watch Tower
leaders, C.H. Anderson was acting President and J.F. Stephenson was acting Secretary-
Treasurer. The Watch Tower offices were temporarily removed to Pittsburgh in 1918 ca.
Sept. 25 for barely more than a year.
The Societys annual meeting in 1919 Jan. 4 in
Pittsburgh reelected J.F. Rutherford President and W.E. VanAmburgh Secretary- Treasurer.
But the others elected to the Board of Directors, viz. C.A. Wise (Vice President), R.H.
Barber, W.E. Spill, W.F. Hudgings, and C.H. Anderson, were freer to carry out their
responsibilities. When the imprisoned leaders were released, Barber resigned in favor of
MacMillan.
Pastoral Bible Institute
(PBI)
Amid the rancor of the Watch Towers Pittsburgh
convention meetings (1918 Saturday Jan. 6), several withdrew to a hastily- convoked
miniconvention at the Fort Pitt Hotel for the balance of the weekend. A Committee of Seven
was convoked.
The first scheduled convention outside the IBSA was
held 1918 July 26-29 in Asbury Park, New Jersey. The Committee Bulletin was then
published monthly from August to October. Two or three hundred attended the Providence,
R.I., convention 1918 Nov. 8- 10. It was there resolved to form the Pastoral Bible
Institute (P.B.I.) to resume the pastoral work outside the Society; it was incorporated in
New York 1918 Nov. 23. A new journal, The Herald of Christs Kingdom,
commenced publication immediately with a December issue4 under an editorial committee
composed of I.F. Hoskins, R.E. Streeter, I.I. Margeson, H.C. Rockwell, and Dr. S.N. Wiley.
The PBI published Streeters books on Revelation (2 vols., 1923) and (posthumously)
Daniel (1928). The PBI offices were in Brooklyn until ca. 1960. The work was split between
St. Louis and Batavia, Ill., when the 177 Prospect Pl., Brooklyn, property was
disposed of. Recent circulation of The Herald was several thousand.
Among the better- known pilgrims were: Isaac Hoskins
(part time), H.A. Friese, L.F. Zink, J.J. Blackburn, Wm. McKeown, Benjamin Boulter, Paul
Thomson, Walter Sargeant (d. 1941 Nov. 18), John T. Read (noted for his singing voice),
Alec L. Muir, Fred A. Essler, and W.J. Siekman. (See further in the Appendix.)
For many decades an annual convention in late
September at Atlantic City, N.J., was closely associated with the PBI.
Stand Fasts and the Elijah
Voice Society
The IBSA classes in the Northwest backed the Seventh
Volume all the way. But Charles E. Heard of Vancouver and many others felt
Rutherfords recommendation in 1918 Spring to buy war bonds was cowardice, and
sacrilegeously perpetuating harvest work. The Stand Fast Bible Students Association was
organized 1918 Dec. 1 at Portland. It published Old Corn Gems (Joshua 5:11- 12) and
organized many conventions in the Northwest and throughout the U.S. Heard, Wm. B. Palmer,
R.O. Hadley, W.M. Wisdom (briefly), Ian C. Edwards, H.A. Livermore, Allan A. Yerex, and
Finley McKercher were all prominent.
Many (non- doctrinal) divisions followed a Seattle
convention 1919 July 25- 27.
In 1922, John A. Hardeson and C.D. McCray (later
dropped out) organized the Elijah Voice Society for an ambitious regathering and witness
work. They published the Elijah Voice Monthly. The E.V.S. became the most prominent
Seventh Volume group, though they never quite gathered "Gideons 300."
In 1923 Fall, Edwards and Heard organized Stand Fasts
into the Star Construction Company in Victoria (although Heard was persuaded by his wife
to stay in Vancouver). Fearing the time of trouble, Edwards in the Fall of 1924 took the
company of more than 300 to Sooke and then to Port Renfrew and the Gordon River on the
southwest part of Vancouver Island. When the business failed in 1927, Dr. Alec McCarter
(dentist) and Oscar Kuenzi closed out the property.
From twelve hundred adherents or more in 1919 in the
Northwest and near Wisconsin, these Seventh Volume movements have dwindled to near
vanishing.
Laymens Home
Missionary Movement
Paul S.L. Johnson 5 had fallen out
with Rutherford in 1917 but continued to visit IBSA classes for a couple of years (though
not under Watch Tower auspices). He was one of
the prominent founders of the Committee of Seven, though the affiliation was brief. He
organized the Laymens Home Missionary Movement and began publishing monthly the Present
Truth and Herald of Christs Epiphany ("PT" - for believers) on 1920
Jan. 1, and bimonthly the Herald of the Epiphany (in 1952 renamed The Bible
Standard and Herald of Christs Kingdom - for witness work) on 1920 July 16.6 By 1941 Johnson
taught that Pastor Russell had been the
Parousia (Presence) messenger of the Reaping period but that he himself was a
special "Epiphany messenger" for the separation time and Time of Trouble.7 (In later years it
was taught that he was the last member of the
Church and that R.G. Jolly was the last member of the Great Company- also a heavenly
class.) He wrote voluminously on the interpretation of types and shadows before his death
in 1950 Oct. 22. Adherents now believe they constitute an earthly class of "Youthful
Worthies" or (since 1954) of "Epiphany Campers," who will reign on earth
with the Ancient Worthies. Johnson was succeeded as executive trustee by his chief
adherent, Raymond Grant Jolly (1886-1979) [then by August Gohlke (1916-1985), and then by
Bernard W. Hedman]. The headquarters was moved from Philadelphia to the Chester Springs
suburb 1967 Oct. 15. The LHMM publishes the Bible Standard and Present Truth journals
in English, Polish, French, Dano- Norwegian, and Portuguese. Perhaps 250- 300 partake of
the Memorial8 in the U.S. and Canada. There is a greater number of adherents abroad (e.g.,
of perhaps 6200 others, about half are in Nigeria, one third in Poland, and several others
in France, India, England, Scandinavia, Brazil, and the West Indies). In Poland the LHMM
separated from the other Bible Students 1927 April, under the leadership of Czeslaw
Kasprzykowski in Warsaw (who then disassociated a few years later). Wiktor Stachowiak
(1897- 1990) became the Polish representative 1936- 1990.
Others prominent in the LHMM work included John J.
Hoefle, Michael Kostyn (until ca. 1930) and C.J. Schmidt of Detroit, F.A. Hall of
Indianapolis, Wm. Eschrich of Milwaukee, Daniel Gavin of Springfield, Mass., Carl Seebald
of Muskegan, Mich., Alex Wayne (Wojnerowski) of Memphis, John Treble of Miami, and J.L.A.
Condell of Jamaica.
Principal conventions were at Philadelphia, Muskegan,
Chicago, and Hyde, Cheshire, England.
There have also been some splinter
groups: W.S. Stevens of Atlanta left in 1935 and circulated a letter claiming Johnson was
dictatorial. S.A. Cater9 of Vancouver, B.C., departed in 1948, and Thomas T. Ryde in Los
Angeles left soon afterwards. Cyril Shuttleworth, the British representative, left in
1951. John W. Krewson10 split with Jolly in 1954- 1955 over whether Krewson (not eligible
for the heavenly hope) should assume the teaching position? he published The Present
Truth of the Apocalypsis journal through his Laodicean Home Missionary Movement in Philadelphia and later in Florida. About 1956
Feb. John J. Hoefle left and began issuing a monthly newsletter through his Epiphany Bible
Students Assn. of Mount Dora, Fla. Hoefle taught that the elect of the church continued
longer than the other two groups had taught. Those who left were commonly disfellowshipped
(whether before or after leaving).
General Convention
George M. Wilson, J.T. Johnson, George S. Kendall,
and E.W. Keib left the Society in Pittsburgh in 1929 September. Joined by James C. Jordan,
they organized a reunion convention, emphasizing adherence to Pastor Russells
teachings, rather than the current Watch Tower teachings. The Pittsburgh Reunion
Convention was held at the old Bible House 1929 November 1- 3, with at least 150
attending.11 This convention was held annually in Pittsburgh thereafter. Among the more
prominent speakers at these conventions were I.I. Margeson, C.P. Bridges, P.L. Read, P.E.
Thomson, W.N. Woodworth, and G.S. Kendall; also J.G. Kuehn, H.E. Hollister, L.F. Zink,
Walter Sargeant, Oscar Magnuson, and S.C. DeGroot.
Meanwhile, on 1938 July 2- 4 the Chicago, Aurora,
Minneapolis and Stevens Point ecclesias sponsored a general convention12 at Camp Cleghorn
(Methodist, near Waupaca, Wis.). On 1939 Aug. 2- 6 the Pittsburgh and Chicago ecclesias
sponsored a Midwest General Convention at Epworth Forest on Lake Webster (near Warsaw,
Ind.). In 1940 it was moved to the Miami Valley Chautauqua (near Dayton, Ohio), where it
was held annually through 1944. Then it was canceled for 1945 (war) and 1946 (lack of
post- war housing). The General Convention resumed 1947 Aug. 6- 10 at Brooklyn. In 1948 it
returned to Chautauqua. In 1949 Aug. 7- 14 the General Convention was moved to Bowling
Green University at Bowling Green, Ohio, where it remained through 1952. In 1953 Aug. 1- 7
the convention was moved to Indiana University at Bloomington, Ind., where it was held for
18 years, with attendance around 1,000. (Later it was at Albion College [Methodist], in
Albion, Michigan, 1974- 1987, after which it moved every year or two.)
The General Convention is closely associated with the
Dawn. Members of the convention committee at various times from 1939 have been G.M.
Wilson, D.J. Morehouse, E.G. Wylam, W.N. Woodworth (since 1942), R.J. Krupa (1949- 1994),
Wilber N. Poe? L.H. Norby, G.S. Kendall, S.C. DeGroot (since 1942), A. Burns, and E.K.
("Bunk") Penrose.
Dawn Bible Students
Association
In the early 1930s there was interest in an
energetic effort to regather Bible Students outside the Society and to put forth a public
message.
The new effort was spearheaded by the New York
(Brooklyn) ecclesia, with support from around the country. W. Norman Woodworth and John E.
Dawson (who had commenced Frank & Ernest radio broadcasts on WBBR in 1927)
having left WBBR and the Society, the Brooklyn Radio Committee attempted radio broadcasts
in New York, and then Boston, beginning 1931 April 12. The broadcasts were discontinued
after three months each due to shortage of funds. Radio Echo tracts were issued
from 1931 April 29 through 1932 September. A monthly tract- sized paper, The Dawn,
was issued to answer radio requests. The Witness Bulletin was published for a few
years beginning 1931 October.
The Pastoral Bible Institute declined to sponsor the
work, 13 but many of its leaders expressed moral support. Therefore Dawn Publishers, Inc.,
was organized 1932 June 7 in New York to replace ecclesia sponsorship.
The Dawn was expanded into a monthly magazine
1932 October. The free Bible Students News was issued for four years beginning 1935
ca. June. Bible Students News was again published from ca. 1947 to 1950.
The Dawn offices were originally in Brooklyn, 251
Washington St., then 136 Fulton St., before being moved to 199 Railroad Ave., East
Rutherford, N.J., ca. 1944 Jan. 1. Thereupon, the Dawn Bible Students Association was
incorporated 1944 May 22 in New Jersey; Dawn Publishers was merged into it in 1953. Recent
circulation of The Dawn was around 15- 20,000.
In the later 1930s Bill Gleason
arranged for Russell Pollock to broadcast programs on the California Rural Network. Soon
afterwards, Frank & Ernest resumed radio broadcasting (Norman Woodworth and George
Wilson, with Don Copeland announcer).14
Many gave enthusiastic support to the new activity:
Lilia Woodworth and Norma Mitchell, Corey Mitchell, Ruth Roark, Rose (Johnson) Bertsche,
Oscar Magnuson, W.F. Hudgings, William Robertson, Jere Reimer, Arnold Greaves (a printer),
Mr. and Mrs. Rodgers, Walter Sargeant, Mr. and Mrs. J.H. Hoeveler, Mr. and Mrs. John
Hutchinson, and some from farther away, L.F. Zink, George Kendall, Christian Zahnow, among
many others.
Watchers of the Morning
In the early 1930s troubles
arose in the PBI.15 Some of its prominent
members began to believe the Church was under the Mediator and under the New Covenant
(rather than part of the Mediator of that covenant when it goes into operation in the
thousand- year kingdom of Christ), and that the Church has no part in the sin offering
(rather than joining with Jesus Christ in that offering). Some also doubted that the Lord
had returned in any sense, and that the sleeping saints had been raised from the dead.
Others protested that none should be engaged in the ministry except those in harmony with
"Present Truth." Still others, who were in harmony with "Present
Truth," defended the right of those who were not to continue in the service
without limitation.16 At the PBI annual meeting 1936 June 6 the "liberal"
directors, Dr. S.D. Bennett, J.J. Blackburn, J.C. Jordan, P.L. Read, and P.E. Thomson,
were elected, together with their nominees, Chester E. Stiles of Washington, D.C., and
Benjamin Boulter of New Jersey. The "Present Truth" directors, I.F. Hoskins and
B.A. Parkes, were not elected, nor their nominees, P.A. Gates of Memphis, C.H.S. Kuehn of
Toledo, C.W. McCoy of Spokane, S.N. McElvany of Pittsburgh, and G.C. Stroke of Buffalo.
Thereupon, Isaac Hoskins withdrew from the PBI and in
1937 April began publishing Watchers of the Morning, emphasizing "Present
Truth." Among those cooperating with Hoskins were H.H. Eddy of Providence, R.I., C.W.
McCoy of Spokane, and Charles F. Moser of Toledo. Watchers of the Morning continued
until Hoskins died (1957 Sept. in the Los Angeles area). (His sister, Edith, stayed with
the PBI.)
Other Endeavors
Among various other endeavors are those by
individuals or groups working parallel to the Dawn or the Herald, or who
feel Pastor Russells teachings are not being strictly adhered to by others, or who
believe they know the date when the Church will be complete, or who feel a great witness
work is now due the Jews, etc. There are yet others who believe the Church has no special
work or message of "harvest" at the present time. In a few cases individuals
feel they have received, or are receiving, direct revelations from the Lord. Publications
frequently accompany these beliefs.
Guy K. Bolger began publishing The
Berean Bible Student (similar to the early Dawn and Herald) in San
Francisco in 1926 (until (1942, when he gave his subscription list to I. Hoskins). A
contemporary journal was Berean Forum. Still another is said to have been Zions
Messenger. A movement spearheaded by R.H Bricker of Pittsburgh believed the harvest
work was essentially finished. Carl Olson (and Mr. Ofstad) of Minneapolis published
thoughts on Revelation and chronology of the Gospel Age harvest. About 1925 Prof. Fred. H.
Robison, pursued universalism and was followed by Walter H. Bundy, Menta Sturgeon, O.L.
Sullivan, W.T. Hooper, and C.B. Shull (along with J.O. Mellinder, Axel Sjo, and a majority
of others, in Sweden). A series of seven studies were issued in 1928 from the St. Joseph,
Mo., ecclesia.17 The major New Covenant movement publications were Kingdom
Scribe (by New Covenant Believers, later
called Christian Believers) and The New Creation (1940- ). Of similar nature, pre-
harvest theologies were offered by 145 issues of Back to the Bible [Way] [Roy D.
and Maud Goodrich (1952- 1973)] in Fort Lauderdale, Stream of Time [M.J. Adams] in
Houston, and by Bible Student Inquirer/The Bible Student Examiner [Olin R. Moyle
and Henry Wallis] in Baltimore. Jews in the News [C. Lanowick, himself of Jewish
descent] in 1946 began several years of publication from Redwood City, Calif. Strict in
doctrine are such publications as Timely Excerpts from the Harvest Message [Roy
Schnee] and Bible Teachers Manual [Herbert Brisette] (and since 1969 Harvest
Message [K.W. Bordes]). There are yet many other publications of assorted persuasions.
(Publication does not necessarily indicate support from local ecclesias.)
An outgrowth of efforts of several associated
primarily with the PBI to encourage their younger generation has been several new
ecclesias in America. These ecclesias generally believe that ransom and restitution are
important, but that doctrines of "Present Truth" (as described above) are not
vital and ought not to be emphasized; their members also commonly do not accept these
doctrines. Such classes commonly title themselves Berean Bible Students and Free Bible
Students. "New Covenant" Bible Students (survivors of A.E. Williamson, M.L.
McPhail, et. al., since 1909) are often with them. Adherents are found in Cicero (Chicago
suburb), St. Louis, Buffalo, and New England, among many other places. Since 1950 this
movement has sponsored the annual Berean Christian Conference, now at Grove City, Pa. Now
that its members have grown older, they are sponsoring since ca. 1954 their own youth
movement, various "Youth for Truth" conferences around the U.S. Various
Ecclesias
Noted here are some of the Bible
Student ecclesias operating apart from the Watch Tower Bible and Tract Society, and which
were cooperating with the PBI and/or the Dawn. The largest ecclesias in 1920 numbered
typically one hundred, which rose around 1930 to perhaps two hundred.18
The Brooklyn ecclesia had already been functioning
since 1918 (with about 130 members). Among its early members were Isaac F. Hoskins, J.L.
Cooke, William J. Hollister, John G. Kuehn, Percy L. Read, and H. Clay Rockwell. The
present New York ecclesia is closely associated with the Dawn.
The Pittsburgh ecclesia formed 1929
October 6 at the old Bible House.19 Among its founders were G.M. Wilson, J.C. Jordan, G.S.
Kendall, E.W. Keib, and J.T. Johnson (IBSA 1896) and E. Forrest Williams of Duquesne. (A
much smaller ecclesia had been meeting for many years earlier, among them J.C. Jordan.)
The Los Angeles ecclesia formed 1930
Jan. 5, including Ernest D. Sexton,20 Elza P. Taliaferro, Russell G. Osborn, Joseph B. Brown, Nicholas
Molenaar, James L. Seery, and E. Jasper Wood, and soon thereafter A.W. Abrahamsen and George P. Ripper. Also, Frank T. Horth ,
Robert Nash, and G. Russell Pollock. A few weeks later the Society withdrew from the
Hawthorne, Calif., ecclesia, which had been meeting on the Earl Fowler property. That
Spring, Morton Edgar from Glasgow boosted the L.A. efforts on a pilgrim trip. There were
75 in the L.A. ecclesia? when Isaac Hoskins came to speak 1930 Sept. 21, there were 210
present.
The Chicago ecclesia numbered about 64 at its first
meeting 1933, the first Sunday in August. Among the early elders were Louis C. Friese,
Benjamin F. Hollister, John T. Read (1877- 1978), Daniel J. Morehouse, Irving C. Foss,
Joseph H. Hoeveler (who shortly went to the Dawn), Charles E. Schiller, Ernest G. Wylam,
and Robert C. Jolly. In 1934 128 celebrated the Memorial and 136 in 1935. In the Norwegian
ecclesia, Oscar Magnuson21 was a spearhead for Norwegian, English, and Polish activity.
The Phoenix ecclesia also organized in the early
1930s. Among others were C. Russell Siglin, E. Harry and Laura Herrscher, and Frank
Brackett.
Other ecclesias organized by the 1930s include
Providence, R.I., Boston, Springfield, and New Bedford, Mass.; Buffalo; Dayton and
Cincinnati, O.; Detroit; Minneapolis; St. Louis, Washington, D.C., Baltimore; St.
Petersburg; Vancouver; Seattle; (Philadelphia?, San Francisco?); and several in northeast
New Jersey. Additionally, there was non- Society Bible Student activity in England,
Germany, Denmark, Sweden, India, and Australia. There was activity among the Polish
especially in Detroit and Chicago, and also in Poland and France. There was also Italian
and Greek activity. In the 1960s the largest ecclesias worldwide numbered 150 to
200.
Various Individuals
Noted here are some of the other Bible Students who
had left the Society by the 1930s. Most of them were cooperating with the PBI and/or
the Dawn.
Harvey A. Friese of Springfield, Mass., had begun his
association with the IBSA in 1878, probably on Pastor Russells trip to New England
then. Others include James H. Cole, Oscar Magnuson, and L.F. Zink of Brantford, Ont., all
well- known former colporteurs and pilgrims; John G. Kuehn, Allen M. Saphore, T.H.
Thornton, William A. Baker, W.M. Batterson, John A. Meggison, S.J. Arnold, and G. Russell
Pollock, all former pilgrims; John Hutchinson, former colporteur and Bethel worker; and
William Franklyn Hudgings, formerly editor of the Bible Students Monthly and in
1919 a Watch Tower director.
Still others include Ingram I. Margeson, Thomas E.
Barker (b. ca. 1860 England, d. 1942 Nov.8), J. Henry Sonntag, and W.J. Davis of Boston,
also H.S. Cox, 22 C.P. Bridges of Lynn (IBSA 1899), R.E. Streeter (d. 1924) and his son
Arthur B. Streeter (d. 1932) of Providence, and Andrew Horwood of St. Johns, Nfld.; W.
Norman Woodworth of Brooklyn (erstwhile of Nova Scotia), J.T.D. Pyles (d. 1943) of
Washington, D.C., Robert Lee Smith of the "Agape" class in Richmond, who
published The Good Samaritan, Peter Kolliman and Myrza Kolliman of Wilmington,
Dela., J.H.L. Trautfelter of Baltimore, J.J. Blackburn and Don Copeland of Toronto, John
E. Dawson, and Walter Sargeant of Nova Scotia; Conrad H.S. Kuehn and Charles F. Moser of
Toledo, Julian T. Gray (author of "Which is the True Chronology?") and Wilber N.
Poe of Cincinnati, Albert P. Johnson of Columbus, Mr. Deming (IBSA 1885) of Greenfield,
Ohio, (Mr.) Shirley C. DeGroot of Grand Rapids, W.J. Siekman of Aurora, Ill., G.G. Nybeck,
Harvey M. Nosby (d. 1963), and Leon Norby of Minneapolis, Christian W. Zahnow of Saginaw
(in the late 1930s), and two well-known photographers, William D. Soper of Cle
veland and Harold N. Nelson of Detroit; John Karutsky and Ignac Stocki in Eastern
Saskatchewan, John Y. MacAulay of Calgary, W.L. Dimock and G.K. Bolger of San Francisco,
L. Paul Davis of Los Angeles and San Luis Obispo, Henry Burdette and John H. Moore of
Vancouver, F.W. Shultz of Seattle, C.W. McCoy of Spokane, and F.M. Robinson (xIBSA 1929)
of Denver; G.F. Wilson of Oklahoma City, J.B. Bernoudy of St. Louis, and Joseph Wyndelts
of Dallas; Alec L. Muir and a Mr. McIlvaine of Florida; John Hoskins; and Morton Edgar
visiting from Glasgow, Scotland. Also Joseph Russell Land of Atascadero, California and
Mae F. (Thelma) Land Kendall of Florida (Ada Land White followed P.S.L. Johnson; thus,
none of C.T. Russells relatives went with Rutherford). Yet another was Dr. Leslie W.
Jones of Chicago, who from 1905 to 1916 published the Souvenir Convention Reports, and who
published the first Pittsburgh Reunion Convention souvenir reports (1929 and 1930). Wm. I.
Mann attended the small ecclesia at Rochester, N.Y., for a few months before he died in
1930.
In the late 1960s the total number of Bible
Students outside the Society who professed consecration and partake of the Memorial was
perhaps 15,000, of whom perhaps nearly one- fourth each were in America, Poland, and
Romania (though the latter were unknown to others). There were perhaps somewhat more than
one hundred immersions per year of those who profess full consecration to do the
LORDs will and the hope of the high calling.
Annual Conventions
Many ecclesias take the opportunity of a holiday time
to hold annual conventions of three days or longer. Among these conventions are:
New Years (Jan. 1) Independence Day (July 4) Chicago
(1939- ) Detroit (1935- ) Phoenix (1943- ) Los Angeles (1936- ) New Brunswick, N.J. (1957-
) Queens Birthday (ca. May 21) Labor Day (ca. Sept. 4) Vancouver, B.C. (1946- )
Springfield, Mass. (1923- 1930) New York/Brooklyn (1931- ) Seattle (1930- ) Memorial Day
(ca. May 30) Saginaw (1932- , at Jackson since 1967) Springfield, Mass. (1920-1922)
Minneapolis (1932- 1969) Cincinnati (ca. 1937- 1955) San Diego (1948- 1985) Chicago (1939-
) San Francisco (1950- , at Asilomar since 1957) Thanksgiving (ca. Nov. 27) Allentown, Pa.
(1948- 1958) San Diego (1986- )
At other times of the year were the joint Florida
convention (ca. March), several Texas conventions (throughout the year), and the
Saskatchewan conventions (since ca. 1947; later merged into a Canadian Midwest General
Convention; held in English, Ukrainian, and Polish; in July).
[As noted earlier, the main American General
Convention was usually held around the first week in August.] The attendance at these
conventions is typically from one hundred to several hundred. In addition, many ecclesias
around the country have one- or two- day annual conventions.
[The first International Bible Students Convention
was held 1982 July 10- 14 at Kufstein, Austria, with 293 attending from 13 countries.]
The PBI and the Dawn
Compared
The individual and collective efforts of the Bible
Students were somewhat reduced during the years of wartime economy. In the years 1946-
1947 efforts were made towards merging the PBI and the Dawn. They failed.
The PBI is an organization of unlimited membership of
those having contributed at least $5 to the cause and who profess harmony with the PBI
goals. It is managed by a board of seven directors and has an Editorial Committee of five.
Its annual volume of service work and its net assets since World War II remained fairly
constant, both of order $20,000. Its primary purposes are the pilgrim work, and
publication of The Herald of Christs Kingdom and related literature.
Subsequent to the Isaac Hoskins era, its stand has been that no more than a basic
baptismal confession should be enforced either for fellowship or for the teachers the
organization sponsors.
The Dawn Bible Students Association is an
organization composed of some seventy or so members banding together for common cause. It
is managed by a board of 12 trustees, to whom the office staff is responsible. Its annual
volume of service work has grown from a postwar cost of $25,000 to $250,000 in the late
1960s. Its primary purpose has been to regather Bible Students, with emphasis on
public witness. Its stand is that a basic baptismal confession is sufficient for
fellowship, but that the organization can only sponsor or approve teachers who are in
harmony with the whole Truth, including "Present Truth" (with essentially the
usage given previously).
As each group felt it was defending principle, merger
was not effected. Prime movers of the PBI at various times since World War II include Paul
Eward Thomson, Percy L. Read, Horace E. Hollister, James C. Jordan, John T. Read, Benjamin
F. Hollister, Wm. J. Siekman, Alec L. Muir, Fred A. Essler, James B. Webster, Alex
Gonczewski, the Petrans, and others. Others before the war included Isaac F. Hoskins,
Ingraham I. Margeson, J.J. Blackburn, Dr. S.D. Bennett, Edith Hoskins, John Hoskins, and
John G. Kuehn. Considerable emphasis has been placed on visiting Bible Students in
isolated places, and also in Great Britain.
Prime movers of the Dawn at various times since the
last war include W. Norman Woodworth, George M. Wilson, G. Russell Pollock, Christian
Zahnow, Raymond J. Krupa, Edward E. Fay, (Mr.) Shirley C. DeGroot, Don H. Copeland, John
Y. MacAulay, Felix S. Wassman, Stephen Roskiewicz, Irving C. Foss, William C. Bertsche,
Claude R. Weida, William J. Hollister, Gustin P. Ostrander, Robert A. Krebs, William T.
Baker, William A. Baker, John H. Moore, John A. Meggison, Leon H. Norby, Martin C.
Mitchell, Ernest K. ("Bunk") Penrose, Jens Copeland, Samuel Baker, Peter
Kolliman, J.H.L. Trautfelter, Chester A. Sundbom, Ludlow P. Loomis, Michael A. Stamulas,
Pantel Hatgis, Kenneth M. Nail, George M. Jeuck, and others. Others before the war include
John G. Kuehn, George S. Kendall, William F. Hudgings, Oscar Magnuson, and Alec L. Muir.
In the late 1960s about one- quarter of the members and one- half of the trustees of
the Dawn lived in the New York area; the rest were spread around the country plus some
members in Canada and Europe.
During the post- war era there was a strong
organizationally pro-Dawn sentiment, which was resisted by some Dawn members and by many
more outside the general pro-Dawn fellowship. In later years the exclusive pro-Dawn
sentiment gave way to wider cooperation, extending to some of the more conservative PBI
members.
Public Witness and Related
Efforts
During the 1930s public meetings sometimes drew
a few hundred, and on rare occasions more than a thousand. Since the war a few comparably
large meetings have been held. Meetings in New York and Detroit, featuring the Dawn TV
films and personalities drew 800 and 1100 respectively. All such large meetings have been
carefully prepared and heavily advertised. They are roughly comparable in size to Pastor
Russells public meetings about 1903.
G. Russell Pollock began broadcasting on the
California Rural Network in the late 1930s (aided by efforts of Wm. Gleason a radio
station owner in El Centro). The Dawn resumed "Frank and Ernest" radio
broadcasts in 1940. The broadcast increased in scope after the war, and in 1949 the ABC
network of 174 stations began broadcasting "Frank and Ernest" throughout the
U.S. and Canada. Initial rate of response was about 5,000 per month. "Frank and
Ernest" in the late 1960s was broadcasting from approximately one hundred
stations. A few stations in Europe, Africa, and Australia were also contracted for English
language broadcasts.
The rise of tape recorders in the consumer market
during the 1950s led to the recording and mailing of discourses (Bible lectures).
Beginning early in 1953 with the efforts of G. Russell Pollock and Kenneth E. Thompson in
Los Angeles, the Dawn Tape Recorded Lecture Service grew and moved to the Dawn offices in
New Jersey, where it has expanded into an international service. The exchange of tape
recordings between Bible Students is widespread; more than fifty recorders have operated
in a single convention.
In the middle 1950s the California State Fair
at Sacramento saw a Bible Students booth added to the scene. Since that time Bible
Students have obtained booths in many annual fairs in the U.S. and Canada. More recently,
booths were being taken in home shows and flower shows also.
These booths were among the most fruitful public
witness efforts. Requests for literature from several hundred people are quite typical,
and sometimes several thousand. A booth at the 1964- 1965 Worlds Fair in New York
received more than 50,000 requests for literature. The Los Angeles county fair booth
effort began in 1965 and distributes several thousand booklets each year.
A 1952 "Frank and Ernest" television
program in Grand Rapids was not especially successful; So the idea was dropped for a few
years. In 1956 or 1957 the Chicago (LaSalle St.) ecclesia began to produce 15- minute TV
programs. This effort culminated in the "King of Kings and Lord of Lords" 30-
minute film in color (presented by Edward Fay). Currently, this film is seen on many TV
stations across the country at Easter and Christmas times. With this film Chicago
abandoned its TV production in favor of the Dawn efforts. The Dawn TV library began in
1957- 1958 with several 15- minute programs. Currently it includes roughly 75 of the 30-
minute films, of which about half are in color. In addition to fifty or more TV stations,
these films are being shown in many churches, schools, clubs, and rest homes. The Dawn TV
promotion and distribution were handled from Los Angeles in its earlier years.
The success of the initial Chicago TV effort created
a heavy demand for public tracts. Therefore several members of the Chicago ecclesia banded
together to form the Chicago Bible Students Press. Its average production is about 350,000
tracts per year, of which about half are for local use. More recently, the Chicago
ecclesia is reprinting most of the works of the late Pastor Russell.
The colporteur work continued into the 1960s.
Although the number of full- time colporteurs was fewer than half a dozen, there were
several dozen part- time colporteurs. In addition, the Scripture Studies Colporteur Fund,
whose prime mover was the Wilmington, Del., ecclesia, offered colporteurs supplementary
assistance. A team of colporteurs may typically place one to ten 1st Volumes per day.
Current distribution of Volume I is several thousand per year. Since 1886 the total
circulation of the six Volumes23 is about fifteen million.
Foreign Efforts
In Great Britain, 24 Jesse Hemery was progressively
centralizing power in himself. Secession from Hemery, J.F. Rutherford and the Watch Tower
Society progressed rapidly after World War I ended. The Bible Students Committee was
constituted 1919 April 5 in London to coordinate publishing, pilgrim service, etc.,
outside the Society. Its seven initial members were Henry J. Shearn (1919- 1936), William
Crawford (1919- 1925) and Frank B. Edgell (1919- 1924) of London (west side), Fred G.
Guard, sr. (1919- 1923) and Alex Guy (1919- 1923) of Forest Gate (London east side),
William Seager (1919- 1923) of Ipswich, and George B. Tharratt (1919- 1921) of Bishops
Stortford.
Later members included Ebenezer Housden (1921- 1930),
Ben Thatcher (1924- 1936), Tom Holmes (1927- 1945), and Albert O. Hudson (1936-1945). The
Committee was dissolved in 1945. H.J. Shearn (d. 1946) began publishing the B.S.C.
Monthly (1924- 1927), Bible Students Monthly (1927- 1951), and then Bible
Study Monthly (since Aug. 1951).
There is cooperation with the PBI in the U.S.A.
William Crawford (d. 1957) commenced The Old Paths in 1925, which continued
publication through 1961. Crawford was strict in doctrine and felt the harvest was
essentially over. Frank Edgell began publishing Fellowship in 1923.
Frederick Lardent was publishing Gleanings.
Jesse Hemery, 25 departing from the Society later than the others,
established Goshen Fellowship and published
Futurist interpretations of Revelation, which have some adherents today. A monthly
publication, Pyramidology (monthly), by Dr. Adam Rutherford of Newcastle, began in
1941. The Forest Gate Church (London) Bible Monthly published 1936- 1985. An
evening devotional book, "Songs in the Night," was compiled by Phillys Stracy. A
Dawn office was established in England shortly after World War II (a British section is
included in the American Dawn). The annual Conway Hall/London convention (1931-
1970), sponsored by four classes there, was Great Britains largest. An annual
convention was held in Portrush, Northern Ireland (1950- 1980) [which corresponded roughly
to the U.S. General Convention, though proportionately much smaller]. The annual Maranatha
[Our Lord Cometh] Conference (1950-1980) corresponded approximately to the Berean (Grove
City, Pa.) Conference in the U.S.
In Australia, R.E.B. Nicholson rejected the Seventh
Volume in 1918 and thence formed the Berean Bible Institute. [Mrs. R.E.B. Nicholson
remained with the Watch Tower.] This Institute has published Peoples Paper in
Melbourne since 1918 (edited by E.E. Martin, ca. 1926- 1988), and it represents both the
PBI and the Dawn there. There are several associated Berean Bible Student ecclesias
(including Polish) in Australia and also a few in New Zealand. (The term
"Berean" here carries about the same connotation as in America before World War
II.) At the same time, the Henninges in Melbourne continued publishing New Covenant
Advocate and Kingdom Herald from 1909 April 1 to 1943 Mar 1? it was later
resumed by H.S. Winbush.
In India, S.P. Devasahayam
("Davey"), from near Nagercoil, had begun the work in 1912, including
translation of Studies in the Scriptures, Vol. 1, into Tamil and then Malayalam. After
Pastor Russells death, contact with the Watch Tower{xe "Watch Tower Bible
& Tract Society"} was lost for many years, but contact with the PBI was
quickly established.26
Davey became physically weak ca. 1920 and became
involuntarily inactive until his death in 1936. Then, also, many associates left the
Society en masse.
Davey appointed V. Devasandosham to succeed him ca.
1920. A capable organizer, Devasandosham organized the "Associated Bible
Students" (later India Bible Students Association) and centered the work in Madras.
Tamil publications included "Babylon and her Daughters," "Is Saturday the
Sabbath of the Christians?," and "The True Bible Catechism." Later, he
suggested 2520+30 years might signify the end in 1944; after 1939 many sold all for the
sake of the Christian work, which afterwards led to serious problems.
Originally from Singapore, Bro. Pakian (of poor
health) bought a small printing press in Madras, 1920- 1924. Pakian Press printed many
Tamil tracts, and a monthly magazine (since ca. 1922) for the Associated Bible Students.
After Devasandoshams death, the press was moved to Coimbatore, in 1966 (with a press
bought by the Dawn) to Madurai, and in 1974 to Trichy (Tiruchiripali, where there were
about 300 in the ecclesia). Sr. Ryer Pillai gave a trimming machine for books ca. 1960.
As head of the India Bible Students Association,
Devasandosham (1920-1944) was succeeded by T.C. Devakannu ("TCD;" 1944- ca.
1970), by S. Rathansami (1967- 1975) of Tiruchiripali, and Sebastian (1975- ).
Studies in the Scriptures, Vol. 1, had been published
in Tamil in 1920.
The India Bible Students Association [Tamil language]
convention has been held annually since 1921. Currently it lasts about three days,
attracts roughly a hundred, and from year to year rotates among a few cities. The Bible
Students Press published a monthly magazine in the Tamil language. A few hundred Bible
Students are scattered throughout India, but primarily in the South.
Sundar Raj Gilbert (ca. 1936, c. 1937) left an
engineering career to begin his activity. His outreach beyond the Tamil state began in
1940.
Solomon Subamangalam and Bro. George by chance found
a small Dawn booklet at Madras and wrote for free literature early in 1946.27 In 1947
Subamangalam gave some of it to Sundar Raj Gilbert. Then correspondence between H.A.
Livermore of Portland, Ore., and Peter Sundar Raj Gilbert led to foreign support of the
India work beginning in 1947. The Northwest India Committee (in America? later renamed
Northwest Committee for India), consisting of one member each from the Vancouver, Seattle,
Portland, and Salem classes, receives cooperation from several ecclesias and individuals
in the U.S. and Canada. Other assistance comes directly from Germany, France, and
Australia. The South India Bible Students Committee was formed in 1965 (in conjunction
with G.R. Pollocks visit) to publish literature also in the other native languages:
including Telugu, Kanada (Canarese), Malayalam, Marathi, Gujarati, Hindi, Urdu, Bengali,
and Oriya. The Bible Students Press has a working agreement with the Dawn in America.
In Germany and Switzerland, Samuel Lauper (d. 1938)
published Heroldes des Königreiches Christi, which was the German Herald of
Christs Kingdom. Lauper also published a German translation of Streeters
Revelation volumes. Ewald Vorsteher published Wahrheitsfreund [Friend of Truth] in
the 1920s. Conrad C. Binkele began publishing Der Pilgrim ca. 1930. These efforts
all suspended around the advent of the Hitler government. (Binkele and his wife emigrated
to Los Angeles, U.S.A., ca. 1934, d. 1942 and 1949.) After the war many Bible Students
again received Watchtower literature (for the first time in a decade) and forthwith left
the Society. Mr. Hodler stressed Israel. Jos. Huber began Die Brennende Lampe [The
Burning Lamp], similar to the American Herald and Dawn (though more
Futurist). A. Freytag published Jedermannsblatt [Everybodys Paper; see
below, under the French work]. Emil Sadlac of Kirchlengern began Christliche Warte [Christian
Watchtower] in 1949, which offers a preharvest theology. The German Tagesanbruch [Daybreak,
the German Dawn], began in Berlin ca. 1950 and later moved to Freiburg. The German
general convention began in 1955 and now typically hosts 200.
There are many Bible Students in East Germany also.
They published Christliche Verantwortung [Christian Responsibility] for two years
ca. 1950 (Mrs. Dollinger was instrumental).
Polish activity outside the Society began with
the journals Straz [Watchman] in 1923, R.H. Oleszynski (1857- 1930), editor, and Brzask
Nowej Ery [Dawn of a New Era] in 1930. S.F. Tabaczynski, Jan Jezuit, W. O. Wnorowski
and Anthony E. Bogdanczik were also energetic. The American Polish general convention
alternates between Chicago and Detroit. There are many Polish classes throughout the U.S.
and central Canada. In Poland a majority of non- Society Bible student ecclesias formed
after 1934. The general convention in Poland is held every two years and may attract over
two thousand. Roughly three thousand have registered with the government as Bible
Students. Nahum Strazy [On the Watch] began publication in Warsaw in 1958. A group
breaking cooperation with the Laymens Home Missionary Movement in the U.S. in 1958
began publishing Swit [Daybreak].
The French Dawn, Aurore, began publication ca.
1951. Journal Deuteronomy Sion began near Lille, France, in 1956 and publishes
translated writings of Pastor Russell and some current articles. The Polish constitute the
largest proportion of Bible Students in France.
Along a different line, Alexander Freytag formed
the Mans Friends (or Philantropic Assembly) group in 1920. Freytag claimed special
revelations and looked for Christs Second Coming in the future. The Swiss and the
French groups are divided now and publish their own journals. They claim an earthly hope
and endeavor to do many good works.
The New York Greek ecclesia formed in 1933 and in
1934 began publishing a Greek Dawn, He Haravgi. Frouros [Watcher] is a
doctrinaire publication (by Geo. Loumbardas) in Toronto. In Greece most of the Bible
Student activity is in Athens. Activity in Greece was often hampered by anti-
proselytizing laws.
A publication in the Italian language, L
Aurora Millenniale [The Dawn of the Millennium] was attempted in Hartford, Conn.,
beginning ca. 1933. The Italian Dawn, Aurora, began publication in 1953.
Prominent among Scandinavians who left the Society
was (Count) Carl Lüttichau of Copenhagen. The Dano- Norwegian Dawn, Daggry Forlaget,
began publication ca. 1951.
Swedish efforts outside the IBSA commenced about
1920, with Mr. Mellinder of Harnosand and Axel Sjo prominent. A 1922 winter convention in
Stockholm was attended by nearly 100. (A few years later most of these turned to
universalism.) Anders Karlen stressed the divine plan in the Great Pyramid of Egypt. A
Swedish Dawn, Dagnigen, was published 1951- 1960.
Finnish efforts apart from the IBSA commenced early
in 1921. A year later a Finnish journal had 1500 subscriptions, 500 attended a convention
in Helsinki (150 Swedish speaking), and 1000 attended public meetings.
Mr. Nortamo was a full- time pilgrim, and W.
Berghäll (pronounced "Berryhill" in English) appears to have been a guiding
light. There were active ecclesias of about 50 in Tampere (Tammerfors) and Turku (Åbo).
A journal, Storasz, corresponding to the
Polish Stra(, is published from Winnipeg in the Ukrainian language. A Ukrainian
radio broadcast, Peter and Paul, is sponsored by the Ukrainian ecclesia in
Winnipeg. Spanish broadcasts of Francisco y Ernesto are heard throughout Latin
America and the southernmost U.S. The Spanish work was spearheaded by Roberto Montero in
San Diego, Calif.
Romanian activity was curtailed by World War II.
Afterwards, property was confiscated and activity suppressed during the Ceaucescu regime.
Several thousand there had no contact with Bible
Students from other countries.
Africa work began in earnest in 1972- 1973 with
visits to interested groups in Nigeria.28
Travels
Great Britain is visited almost annually by
associates of the Dawn or the PBI. America is visited from Great Britain not infrequently
also.
Continental Europe is visited every year of two by
associates of the Dawn, with some reciprocation. In particular, since 1937 Poland and
France are often visited by members of the Polish ecclesias in the U.S. and Canada. More
recently, Polish pilgrims have been visiting France and America about every two years.
Greece and Italy are occasionally visited from America. India, Australia, and New Zealand
were visited in 1965 by G.R. Pollock as a Dawn pilgrim. Mr. and Mrs. Nathaniel J. Hiam
from Auckland, N.Z., visited Great Britain, the U.S., and Canada, also in 1965. The
interested in South America were visited infrequently, and West Africa not at all, until
after 1967.
A Contemporary
The Watch Tower Bible and Tract Society
When J.F. Rutherford and
the other Watch Tower officers were released from prison after the war, the first effort
was a convention at Cedar Point, Ohio. During 1919 Sept. 1- 7, attendance exceeded 6,000,
with about 200 baptized. Rutherford went to Europe the next year to revitalize the
overseas work also. The 1922 Cedar Point convention drew 18,000 to 20,000, with 144
baptized.
The Watch Tower had continued publication
unbroken through the war. Kingdom News, which had replaced The Bible Students
Monthly in 1918 March, had been discontinued on account of the war. (Special issues of
Kingdom News were very occasionally published into the 1940s.) But now a new
journal was begun for the public. Golden Age, published and edited by C.J.
Woodworth, began publication 1919 Oct. 1. Golden Age was subsequently renamed
Consolation (1937), and Awake! (1946).
Instructions to the colporteurs (later called
pioneers) were issued beginning in 1917 as The Bulletin, later as The Director,
as the Informant (1936), and as Kingdom Ministry (1957). Rutherford began
his bookwriting in 1915 with a 64- page defense of Pastor Russell, "A Great Battle in
the Ecclesiastical Heavens." In 1920 he issued a sermon pamphlet, "Millions Now
Living Will Never Die." Then followed books: The Harp of God (1921), Deliverance
(1926), Creation (1927), Reconciliation (1928), and Government (1928).
These books soon replaced Studies in the Scriptures, which were last published ca.
1927 and last circulated ca. 1930. The Societys first annual report published
separately from the Watch Tower was the 1927 Yearbook (report for 1926).
The Society returned from Pittsburgh to the Brooklyn
Bethel 1919 October 1. The offices were moved to Myrtle Ave., Brooklyn, in 1920, and then
to 18 Concord St. ca. 1921, and finally to 117 Adams St. in 1927.
Rutherford made his first radio broadcast in 1922 ca.
April 16. The Society built radio station WBBR in 1922- 1924 and operated it from 1924 to
1957. The peak radio work came in 1933 when 408 stations were broadcasting the
Societys message. In 1937 the radio work was virtually abandoned (except for WBBR)
in favor of portable phonograph recordings carried by the pioneers.
The Watchtower work in the 1930s was
complicated by the approach of World War II. The work in Germany was stopped in 1933, when
Adolph Hitler came to power.29 Thereafter the work was slowed or stopped in many more
countries until the war was over. During this time the Society placed considerable
emphasis on winning a wide variety of legal cases.
Rutherfords first big message began in 1918 as
"The World has Ended Millions now Living will never Die." During the time of
"Millions Now Living Will Never Die" it was emphasized that the Church would
probably be complete and the Ancient Worthies raised in 1925.30 After 1925, study of time-
prophecy was discouraged, and now Armageddon figured prominently in the Societys
message. In 1931 (ca. July 26) the Society named its membership "Jehovahs
Witnesses."
Rutherfords teachings differed slightly- but
progressively- from C.T. Russells, even from the start. Beginning about 1925
Rutherford began to reinterpret many passages and to innovate notably different teachings.
In 1925 the war between Michael and the dragon (Rev.
12) was interpreted literally, and also the 1260 days. In 1926 the "abomination that
maketh desolate" was interpreted as the League of Nations. In 1929 the Societys
members were told they were subject not to earthly governments but to the Society only
(Rom. 13), which led to refusing to salute the flag (climaxing in 1935). In 1932 a
"Jonadab" class (or "other sheep") was introduced as participating in
the destruction of Babylon and as having hope of an earthly reward. In 1935 the Great
Multitude was reinterpreted from a heavenly class to an earthly class and was identified
with the Jonadabs. In 1938 it was proclaimed that only the Great Multitude would survive
Armageddon and that they (and the dead-to-be- resurrected Jehovahs Witnesses) would
generate a new race to fill the Earth during the Millennium. It was now taught that the
man Jesus Christ gave himself a ransom- not for all people - but for Jehovahs
Witnesses only (or at least that since 1914 no others would benefit from it). (This last
teaching was partially withdrawn in 1965 for the Sodomites and others.) To several,
Rutherford and the Society were going into outer darkness. But the Society claimed this
was the light shining brighter and brighter unto the perfect day.
The matter of class government was
also a heated issue. In Pastor Russells day the various Bible study classes had been
autonomous, voting on elders and deacons and other ecclesia matters, and voluntarily
cooperating with the Society. In 1919 Rutherford appointed a service Director for each
ecclesia participating in the Golden Age work. In 1920 he required weekly reports from all
class workers. In 1932, ca. October, he stopped the election of elders and replaced the
elders with a local service committee appointed by the Society. In 1938 he removed the
last vestiges of autonomy, all classes now being fully organized by the Society.
Rutherford called it "Theocratic organization." Dissenters called it a ruthless
take- over.31
There were yet other points of dissension. Many were
saying the only way to serve the Lord was to go out and "sell the books." The
concept of character development was abandoned, and then declared taboo. The Society was
declared to be Gods exclusive channel of Truth, and Gods visible
representative on Earth, whose teachings may not be questioned.
Answers from the Bible were banned in
some local Watch Tower studies.32 Many accepted these things readily. Others quietly dissented but feared to leave the Society. Still others openly felt
Rutherford was smiting his fellow- servants and that the Society had now become another
part of Babylon; these left.
Of those who left the Society, many withdrew and many
more were disfellowshipped.33 All were anathematized and generally treated with animosity
and indignation. Those who associated with various other Bible Student groups were called
by the Society "the evil servant" (or, "the wicked and sluggish
slave").
The Society grew in numbers through all this.34 The
1918 Watch Tower office staff was reduced to about ten. In 1929 there were about 180 at
Bethel, a few more than in the last years of Pastor Russell. Now the number is closer to
500. Conventions in New York in 1950 and 1953 filled Yankee Stadium. In 1958 Yankee
Stadium and the Polo Grounds together drew 1/4 million. In 1963 in Los Angeles, they drew
140,000 to the Rose Bowl the same week Billy Graham was drawing an equivalent number to
the Coliseum. In 1915 the Memorial was celebrated by over 15,000; in 1917 to 1920 it was
around 20,000; in 1925 it reached a peak of over 90,000. Today, well over 1,000,000 attend
the Memorial, but only about 10,000 partake of it. A large portion of these is overseas.
Among the recent Watchtower leaders are Nathan H.
Knorr, Society president since 1942, and a capable organizer; Fred W. Franz, the
theological leader, who spearheaded the New World Bible translation beginning in 1950 (and
who succeeded Knorr in the presidency in 1977); Hayden C. Covington, the Societys
chief lawyer for many years (but now withdrawn, apparently under pressure from N.H.
Knorr); and Milton G. Henschel, who made several post- war world tours (and who succeeded
Franz in the presidency).
The Contemporary
Denominations
Since World War I denominational Christianity has
waxed in numbers while waning in influence. The rise of modernist teachings and the
suppression of denominational differences are outstanding features of the time. There has
also been some notable scholarship in Biblical archaeology and related fields.
The three schools of thought in twentieth century
Protestantism have been liberal, neo- orthodox, and conservative: Liberal theologians de-
emphasize the Bible and its supernatural aspects, and instead emphasize confidence and
hope in human reasoning. Led by Harry Emerson Fosdick, they grew in numbers and influence
through the 1920s. During the depression the major denominations and seminaries were
almost entirely under liberal control.
Neo- orthodoxy revolts against the utopianism and
faith in man of the liberals, and emphasizes instead the chronic sinfulness of man. Its
adherents proclaim that Gods revelation was in Christ, but they do not necessarily
either accept or reject various evangelicalist doctrines. Led by Reinhold Niebuhr, and
abetted by depression and war, neo- orthodoxy replaced liberalism as the dominant
Protestant theology.
Conservative theology rejects liberalism, neo-
orthodoxy, and related modernist thinking. The fundamentalism of the 1920s and
1930s upheld five fundamental doctrines, affirming the inspiration of the Bible,
Jesus virgin birth, Christs "substitutionary atonement," His
resurrection, and His second coming. Fundamentalism sustained a series of costly setbacks
following the 1925 Scopes "monkey trial." During the depression fundamentalism
almost perished from the major denominations. Since World War II, conservative theology
has rebounded as evangelicalism. Evangelicals emphasize Christ as God and other
traditional doctrines, in addition to the fundamentalist doctrines.
The most remarkable theological
feature of the century has been Protestant abandonment of protest: In the Reformation,
Protestants agreed that the Antichrist [Dan 7, Rev 13, 17, 2Ths 2, etc.] had its
fulfillment in Rome, especially the Papal phase. A generation later the Jesuits countered
with two alternatives: that the Antichrist had been Heathen Rome and was therefore all in
the past [the Præterist view], or that the Antichrist would be one man who would rebuild
the Temple in Jerusalem and reign 31/2 years sometime in the indefinite future [the
Futurist view]. Not until the 19th century had the Futurist view begun inroads into
Protestantism. But now in the 20th century conservative Protestantism has switched to the
Futurist view, while liberal Protestantism (to the extent that Revelation is studied at
all) has accepted the Præterist view; the Reformation view has been almost totally
abandoned.35
In the past several decades denominational
Christianity has experienced growing and now very widespread- feelings of frustration and
despair about the possibility of knowing God. As a result, radical theologians
occasionally generalize their own experiences in shocking statements.
While many conservative members express repugnance,
Seventh Day Adventists, Jehovahs Witnesses, or independent conservative churches
have filled the void for others.
Several Baptist and Lutheran churches have grown
considerably in numbers. Several smaller groups have also grown rapidly, often at the
expense of the larger denominations. In addition, several science of the mind churches,
and also Latter Day Saints (Mormons), have experienced a spectacular rise. The sum total
represents a rise in church membership of perhaps 3% per year.
Yet in spite of increased numbers, overall church
influence has been waning in the lives of the people. Since the beginning of World War II
the ratio of professed Christians to non- Christians has continually decreased (except in
Africa). In an effort to stem the tide many church leaders have been progressively turning
from the spiritual realm to the socio- political world (in an effort to identify the
church with the people).
Amid the waning influence of religion, there has been
much emphasis on interdenominational cooperation and mergers. The Federal Council of
Churches, Home Missions Council, Foreign Missions Conference, and several other
bodies joined to form the National Council of Churches of Christ in the U.S.A. ca. 1951,
claiming it to represent the majority of American Protestants. More locally, many councils
of churches and ministerial associations sprang up. For the teen- agers Youth for Christ
was organized. Two global products of the Ecumenical movement were the International
Missionary Council (1921) for assistance to missions to the non- Christian, and the World
Council of Churches (1938- 1948) for international cooperation between churches. Anti-
modernist councils also formed, such as the National Association of Evangelicals and the
American Council of Christian Churches (led by Carl McIntyre), together with their
associated world organizations. Southern Baptists and certain other Bible - oriented
groups, however, remained aloof from all interdenominational organizations.
Several individuals are worthy of note. The
evangelism of the informal, and perhaps irreverent, ex- baseball- player Billy Sunday, and
more recently of the eloquent fundamentalist Billy Graham (of Baptist background), has
attracted wide attention. Charles E. Fuller began "The Old- fashioned Revival
Hour" radio programs in 1925. Frank N.D. Buchman began the global Moral Re- armament
(M.R.A.) movement in the 1920s. Overseas, John R. Mott, J.H. Oldham, and William
Temple were the prime movers in the Ecumenical movement. Among the influential thinkers
was the versatile philosopher, theologian, musician, and medical missionary to Africa,
Albert Schweitzer. Many others made equally significant contributions.
In the Roman Catholic world there has been a
considerable increase in numbers. On the other side of the ledger, however, the dilemma of
the Roman church during World War II was exceeded by the post- war threat of communism. In
recent years there has been much effort towards liberalizing church policies, and towards
cooperation with Eastern Orthodox and Protestantism (especially as most of the latter no
longer protests). Among the better known Catholic expositors have been Charles E.
Coughlin, who broadcast provocative politics and economics on radio during the depression,
and Fulton J. Sheen, who eloquently expounded the Catholic faith over both radio and
television in the 1950s.
Also noteworthy are the past half- centurys
contributions to Biblical scholarship. Some New Testament papyrus fragments are a century
and more older than the renowned fourth- century Sinaitic and Vatican- 1209 manuscripts.
Notable are the Oxyrhynchus papyri continually published since the turn of the century,
the Chester Beatty papyri in the 1930s, and the Bodmer papyri since 1956. C.R.
Gregory (successor to Tischendorf, died in World War I) was succeeded by E. von
Dobschütz, W. Eltester, and then Kurt Aland, as compiler of the manuscripts.
Eberhard Nestles Greek New Testament text has replaced Westcott and Horts as
the standard of comparison; its critical apparatus (summary of variant manuscript
readings) is continually updated. Aland, et. al., revised this text slightly in 1966.
The discoveries of the Dead Sea Scrolls beginning in
1947 constitute a windfall in the study of the Old Testament Hebrew text and idiom. These
numerous scrolls from the first two or three centuries B.C. generally conform to the
familiar Hebrew and Greek Old Testament texts. Work on the scrolls was under the direction
of Yigael Yadin and Frank Moore Cross, jr. The Hebrew (Masoretic text) and Greek
(Septuagint) standards of comparison are the texts of R. Kittel and A. Rahlfs
respectively.
Additionally in the last few decades, archaeologists
have excavated very many sites of Biblical fame. Leonard Wooley in 1922 announced
discovery of Ur (the city Abraham left), to the delight of Bible believers, and to
the chagrin of the school of "higher criticism." Building upon earlier
archaeological excavations and publications of Edward Robinson, Flinders Petrie (in
Egypt), J.H. Breasted, and several others, have been the enthusiastic organizer William
Foxwell Albright, G. Ernest Wright, Nelson Glueck, J.B. Pritchard, and many others.
Particularly notable for students of the Bible have been the excavations of Jericho by
John Garstang in 1930- 1936 and by Kathleen Kenyon, and of mighty Hazor by Yigael
Yadin. Similarly, to the earlier decoding of ancient languages by Jean Francois
Champollion (hieroglyphics), Sir C.C. Rawilinson (Behistun inscriptions in Persia), and
Wallis Budge (Rosetta Stone, 1913), was added Behistun Elamite (1948 and 1957) by G.G.
Cameron.
At the same time, Church history has been the forte
of Kenneth Scott Latourette.
Bible concordances by Robert Young (segregates each
English word by Geek words), James Strong (organized by English words, with lexicon), and
G.V. Wigram (Englishmans; organized by Greek words) remain the most popular.
McClintock and Strongs "Cyclopaedia of Biblical, Theological, &
Ecclesiastical Literature" remains unequalled for the scholarly.
There has been a flurry of new Bible translations.
The Bible was translated early into Greek (O.T.), Latin, Aramaic (= Syriac), Coptic
(several dialects in Egypt), Gothic, Ethiopic, Armenian and Georgian.
On the eve of the Reformation the full Bible had been
printed in only seven languages (ancient Greek, Latin, High and Low German, Italian,
Catalan, and Czech). By 1800 the number had increased to 39, by 1917 to 154, and by 1970
it had increased to 249, plus portions of scripture in more than a thousand other
languages, covering 97% of the worlds population.
The 19th century had seen many English translations
dedicated to improving accuracy: Rotherham (1872, 1897), English Revised Version (RV,
1881- 1884) and American Standard Version (ASV, 1901), and the Wilson diaglott (N.T.
Greek- English, 1864), while the turn of the century added the Twentieth Century New
Testament (N.T., 1900) and Weymouth (N.T., 1902). However, with a background of waning
faith, twentieth- century translating philosophy turned from accuracy to making versions
more understandable (commonly incorporating greater theological biases): Notable examples
include the Revised Standard Version (RSV, 1946- 1952), New English Bible (1961- ),
Jerusalem Bible (1966), and the New International Version (NIV, 1973- 1978).
Perhaps the only important contribution to accuracy
is the Marshall diaglott (N.T., 1958), while the New American Standard Bible (NASB, 1960-
) has retreated little from the ASV (particularly the NASB 1960s editions). The most
accurate expanded version is K.S. Wuest, The New Testament- An Expanded Translation (N.T.,
1956- 1961), while R.G. Bratchers Good News for Modern Man (or, Todays English
Version, TEV, 1966) is the best of the simplified translations. The Concordant Version
(universalist, 1926, 1944) also merits honorable mention.
Appendix
Additional Details
There were seven members of the PBI Board of
Directors, among whom
were:
James Dennis Wright of Bayonne, N.J. 1918- 1920,
chairman
Ingram I. Margeson of Boston (Westwood) 1918- 1935,
vice-chairman and chairman
Isaac F. Hoskins (d. 1957 Sept.) of Brooklyn 1918-
1936, secretary to 1932
P.L. Greiner of Ulster Park, N.Y. 1918- 1936 ,
treasurer to 1934
Henry Clay Rockwell (d. 1950 Feb. 24) 1918- 1926
Francis H. McGee of Freehold, N.J. 1918- ca. 1924
E.J. Pritchard of Andover, Mass. 1918- ca. 1924
Benjamin Boulter (IBSA 1908, PBI 1918, d. 1947 Oct.
10) of Plainfield, NJ ca. 1924- 1932, 1936- 1939, 1942- 1944
Bertrand A. Parkes (d. 1942 Feb.) of Philadelphia
ca. 1924- 1936
J.J. Blackburn (b. 1881 Feb. 10, d. 1946 Mar. 24)
of Toronto 1926-1946
Percy L. Read 1929- 1950, 1954- 1980, treasurer and
secretary
Paul E. Thomson ca. 1932- 1968, secretary and
treasurer
Dr. S.D. Bennett of New Jersey 1935- 1942
James C. Jordan (d. 1986) of Pittsburgh 1936- 1971,
1973- 1977, chairman
Chester E. Stiles (d. ca. 1974) 1936- 1942
William J. Siekman (1902- 1988) of Batavia, Ill.
1942- 1985
John Threlkeld Read (b. 1877 Oct.11, d. 1978 Aug.
29) of Chicago 1943- 1978
Fred A. Essler (d. 1980) of Lynn, Mass. 1942, 1951-
1980
James B. Webster of Boston 1968- 1993
Horace E. Hollister (b. 1879, d. 1955) 1947- 1955
Alec L. Muir (d. 1972) of Florida ca. 1926- 1928+,
1959- 1972
There were five members of the Editorial
Committee, among whom were:
Randolph Elwood Streeter (d. 1924 Dec. 20) of
Providence 1918- 1924
Isaac F. Hoskins (d. 1957 Sept.) 1918- 1936
Ingram I. Margeson (b. ca. 1872, c. ca. 1890, d.
1935 May 8) 1918-1935
H. Clay Rockwell (d. 1950) 1918- 1926 May
Dr. S.N. Wiley (d. ca. 1928 Aug.) of Philadelphia
(McKeesport) 1918-1928
Harvey A. Friese (b. 1863, c. & IBSA 1878, d.
1943 Feb. 15) of Springfield 1925- 1929, 1936 (director 1939- 1941)
J.J. Blackburn (d. 1946 March 24) of Toronto 1926-
1936
Silas J. Arnold (1860- 1943) of Dayton 1928- 1932
Percy Leonard Read (1887- 1980) of Indianapolis and
St. Louis 1929-1949, 1954- 1980
Paul E. Thomson (d. 1973) 1932- 1949, 1952- 1954,
1968- 1973
Dr. S.D. Bennett (1870- 1942) of Millville, New
Jersey 1935- 1941
Horace E. Hollister (b. 1879, d. 1955 Dec.) 1936-
1955
John T. Read (b. 1877, IBSA 1902, d. 1978) of
Chicago 1937- 1952
W.J. Siekman (1902- 1988) of Batavia, Ill. 1940-
1951, 1964- 1985
James B. Webster of Boston 1950- 1968, 1973- 1978
Alex Gonczewski of Springfield, Mass. (ecclesia)
1951- 1971
Loyal Petran of Racine, Wis. 1953- 1977
Wm. A. Eliason of Minneapolis? 1956- 1964
James C. Jordan (d. 1986) of Pittsburgh 1971- 1977
PBI auditors
were initially chosen one each from Boston, Springfield, and
New York: W. H. Kimball, H.E. Spear, and Wm. J. Hollister.
The first listed pilgrims and lecturers were Hugh S.
Cox, Wm. J. Hollister, Isaac F. Hoskins, E.J. Pritchard, Percy L. Read, H. Clay Rockwell,
R.E. Streeter, and S.N. Wiley.
P.L Greiner is described as wealthy, had property;
and a nice person. Benjamin Boulter an ex- Salvation Army man and flamboyant talker.
Harvey Friese had a sweet disposition.
The national flu epidemic (variously
called swine flu, chicken flu, etc., from which many died) eliminated many conventions in
1918.36 The PBI arranged several
general conventions in cooperation with local ecclesias until 1923. Most of the early
conventions in America are published in the early Heralds.
Directors and Trustees of the Dawn
There were originally nine directors of the Dawn
Publishers, Inc. (New York) on 1932 June 7, and originally nine trustees of the Dawn Bible
Students Association (New Jersey) on 1944 May 22: Dawn Publishers (N.Y.), 1932 Dawn
Bible Students Assn. (N.J.), 1944
1. W. Norman Woodworth W. Norman Woodworth
2. John E. Dawson Frederick H. Mundell
3. Frederick H. Mundell Martin C. Mitchell
4. Martin C. Mitchell George M. Wilson
5. William F. Hudgings Fred A. Bright
6. John G. Kuehn (Mr.) Shirley C. DeGroot
7. Hugo F. Kuehn Peter Kolliman
8. George M. Wilson G. Russell Pollock
9. Ingraham I. Margeson J.H.L. Trautfelter
When Dawn Publishers was merged into Dawn Bible
Students Assn. on 1953 Nov. 14, the Board of Ttrustees was enlarged to twelve, elected
annually by the membership:
D.B.S.A. Trustee (1953 Nov. 14) Successors
1. Claude R. Weida, sr. Stephen Roskiewicz (1972-
1990) Joel Panucci (1990- )
2. Frederick H. Mundell William C. Bertsche (1966-
1972) Kenneth M. Nail (1973- 1984) Emile H. Herrscher (1984- )
3. W. Norman Woodworth J. Burton Brown (1975- )
4. George M. Wilson Leo B. Post (1974- )
5. Felix S. Wassman Carlton Chandler (1993- )
6. Martin C. Mitchell Kenneth Fernets (1974- )
7. G. Russell Pollock John G. Hull (1976- 1978)
Charles M. Chupa (1978- 1979) George M. Jeuck (1979- 1995) George Passios (1995- )
8. Fred A. Bright Walter Blicharz (1968- )
9. Leon H. Norby Jens Copeland (1957- 1965) Pantel
Hatgis (1965-1987) Mike Balko (1987- )
10. E. Harry Herrscher Ernest K. ("Bunk")
Penrose (1955- 1992) Robert Gorecki (1992- )
11. J.H.L. Trautfelter Edward E. Fay (1962- 1980)
E.F. ("Al") Lankford (1980- )
12. Raymond J. Krupa Data on Dawn directors and
trustees courtesy Deanna Gorecki
General Index
1 Pastor Russells will, as published, says,
"The names of the five whom I suggest [as replacements on the Editorial
Committee]...are as follows:" (six names follow, including that of J.F. Rutherford,
who was also custodian of the will. Although Dr. John Edgar had already died (1910),
Edgars name appears last, making it unlikely Rutherfords name had been
substituted by C.T. Russell).
2 Rutherford prevented the five Trustee sisters from
voting C.T. Russells shares (previously donated to the Watch Tower); it is not clear
if he voted those shares in the name of the Watch Tower.
3 P.S.L. Johnson alleges that J.F. Rutherford
arranged to have I. Margeson of Boston, O. Ostrander of Cleveland, and R.H. Bricker of
Pittsburgh appointed to recommend these by- laws to the voting shareholders.
4 The first issue noted "a Pastoral work in
ministering to the spiritual needs of the Lords People" (p.2). "The name
chosen for this journal-The Herald of Christs Kingdom- we believe is especially
appropriate and significant... What more important message could we bear than that the
earths new King is present!... It shall ever be the aim of this journal to be a true
herald of not only the presence of the King... Is 52:7" (p.5).
"It is not our purpose to open the columns of
this journal to fanciful interpretation or wild speculation either of ourselves or of
others" (p.4) was likely intended as a response to P.S.L. Johnson, while "The
pages of this journal shall not be used to engage in any controversy with those who may
oppose us, nor to quarrel with anyone" was likely intended as an implied response to
J.F. Rutherford as well.
5 Paul Samuel Leo Johnson (b. Titusville, Pa., 1873
Oct. 4; c. 1887 Dec 25; bapt. 1889 Jy 14; d. 1950 Oct. 22) married Emma B. McCloud 1905
Jan. 3. Experienced "brain fag" 1910 May 22 [per PT 1950 Dec. 1].
6 Sr. Feenhold and Sr. Schatz of Phila., under urging
from R.G. Jolly, offered P.S.L. Johnson a home in Philadelphia.
7 Johnson thought the bulk of the elect was outside
the LHMM, scattered among the various Bible Student groups [PT 1932 Oct. 1, p.166].
Johnson had expected the truth to be entirely cleansed by 1954 [per PT 1933 Feb. 1, p27].
8 Johnson originally reckoned the Memorial date,
counting 13 days from the new moon (conjunction) reckoned by GMT (Greenwich Mean Time) but
changed to Jerusalem time in 1933 [PT 1933 Feb. 1, p.23- 25]. (Other Bible Student groups
usually follow the published Jewish calendar established in the 4th century. In earlier
times the first of each month had been reckoned according to the first visibility of the
new moon, as determined by the Sanhedrin.
9 Johnson implied Cater had gone into second death-
everlasting oblivion. [PT 1949 May 1, p.79.]
10 Krewson was suspended by R.G. Jolly 1954 Sept. 13
and disfellowshipped 1955 Aug. 21. Disfellowshipping was extended to some of his
adherents.
11 Edith Hoskins testified in 1929 that Pastor C.T.
Russell "used to say, Take your eyes off me, dear friends, and fix them on the
Lord. " The 1930 convention established a Central Committee of George M.
Wilson, J.T. Johnson, G.S. Kendall, E.W. Keib, and J.C. Jordan (out of 14 elders in the
Pittsburgh area). [Perhaps the committee was soon dissolved into the Dawn.] The 1949
convention pledged to support the Frank & Ernest radio broadcasts on the Mutual
Broadcasting System.
12 A general convention was understood to be one
sponsored by more than one ecclesia, or it might be self- sponsoring.
13 Isaac Hoskins was particularly cool towards PBI-
Dawn ccoperation, already in 1931- 1932.
14 When Frank & Ernest went on a national
network, Joel Brown and Russell Pollock were the financial guarantors.
15 A significant irritation to I.F. Hoskins came in
1932 when P.L. Read moved to displace him as secretary.
16 On the death of I. Margeson, Isaac Hoskins was
clearly the senior director. Some voted for the other side not because they supported J.
Blackburn but because they found Hoskins too difficult to work with. Hoskins had
apparently been cool towards the Dawn and its public witness work from the beginning and
remained So after leaving the PBI.
17 Primarily by the Riemer family: Series 1: The New
Creation? 2 and 3: The New Creature? 4: The Wedding Supper and Festival? 5: Abraham and
His Seed? 6: The Pearl of Great Price? 7: The Revelation of Jesus Christ. Smaller
publications appeared occasionally until 1963. This group was friendly towards the PBI and
the Dawn. [J.F. Rutherfords adherents had been in the minority; So the Watchtower
group seceeded from the St. Joseph ecclesia in 1924.]
18 There have been occasional problems with imposters
trying to "borrow" money; some have succeeded.
19 The Rutherford Watch Tower had sold the Bible
House building, which made it possible to begin meeting there.
20 Sexton wavered for ten months, according to his
letters to J.F. Rutherford 1930 Oct. 22 and to the PBI 1931 Jan. 6.
21 Magnuson is also remembered by a younger
generation for having shunned having children.
22 Cox headed a small group which separated from the
Boston ecclesia, ca. 1924, over the R.E. Streeter chronology (which added 19 years,
changing the end of the seven Gentile Times from 1914 to 1933).
23 The Dawn has republished "Studies in the
Scriptures," Vols. 1- 6. The PBI has republished Vol. 1. The Laymens Home
Missionary Movement has published Vols. 1- 6 as slightly reedited by P.S.L. Johnson. The
New Brunswick, N.J., ecclesia has reprinted Vols. 1- 6 in hardback, ostensibly with
corrections C.T. Russell had intended to implement. A tabloid edition of Vol. I, and
a 6- volumes- in- one editions are republished in Ft. Worth. The Watch Tower has
discontinued these volumes.
24 In detail, see the excellent 196- page book, A.O.
Hudson, "Bible Students in Britain?" Hounslow: Bible Fellowship
Union, 1989.
25 Hemery evidently had a lifetime contract to live
at Watch Tower headquarters, London; So he was not evicted even long after he parted
company with Rutherfords teachings.
26 A letter from S.P. Davey of S. Travencore appears
already in the Herald of 1918 Dec. 15. (See also 1919 May 15.) India was included on
R.E.B. Nicholsons pilgrim trip in 1922 July- August.
27 Herbert Poole of BC first sent Dawn literature to
Bro. Moses Vedanuthu of Gurpur, about 1935, at the request of Charles E. Wessman in Sweden
[Dawn 1937 Dec.].
28 Many in Nigeria had felt that J.A. Brown was
persecuting them. In 1950 G.M. Uhrobo in Lagos had told Shadrach Okalowe that the
Jehovahs Witnesses were not the followers of C.T. Russell, but that they were
somewhere around the world. Mr. Okalowe moved successively to several countries before
hearing the Frank & Ernest radio programs in Toronto in the 1970s.
29 Bible Students and Jehovahs witnesses were
both interned in Bergen- Belsen and other Nazi concentration camps. [Bibelforscher {cognate:
Bible- foragers} at Auschwitz were identified by a violet arm patch.]
30 A large house, named "Beth Sarim," was
built in the Kensington district of San Diego in 1929, overlooking the Mission Valley, to
be kept in perpetuity for the Ancient Worthies. It was built with all volunteer labor and
a materials cost of $75,000. A concrete- block structure about 75 feet down the northeast
slope appears to have been the wine cellar. R.J. Martin deeded the property to Rutherford
for $10 on 1929 Dec 24. Rutherford used it as his winter residence. Permission to bury him
there was denied; So his body was shipped east. After his death, the property was sold in
1947. (His wife, Mary (crippled), and son Malcolm, lived in Monrovia, east of Los
Angeles.)
31 In 1926 George Fisher urged German ecclesias to
disfellowship J.F. Rutherford, but Fisher died later that year.
32 "Brother, this is a Watch Tower study, not a
Bible study; you are out of order!" was not infrequently used to end discussion. For
some, it also ended attendance.
33 By one estimate, in 1925- 1928 the Society lost
75% of its membership. The following excerpt from an official letter is illustrative of
the conflict between organizational loyalty and individual conscience:
C. J.
Bowling Green, Ky., 42101
Sept. 10, 1978
Mrs. L. G.
We have scheduled a judicial committee hearing for
you at the Bowling Green Kingdom Hall Wednesday, Sept. 13, 1978 at 5:30 PM...
I want to re-emphasize that during the hearing if you
are unwilling to renounce any "Dawnite" or "Russellite" teachings that
are no longer accepted by the governing body of the Watchtower Society you will
certainly be disfellowshiped. On the other hand, if you are willing to accept the
governing body of Jehovahs Witnesses as the leading representative of Jehovahs
earthly organization, and if you are willing to accept our entire current understanding of
Gods Word we will gladly and happily accept you into our midst. And, of course, we
would no longer view you as a disassociated person. However, it is entirely up to you. The
choice is yours.
Sincerely
Judicial Committee
Bowling Green Cong. (West) of Jehovahs
Witnesses
34 It is probable that a majority of those professing
the heavenly calling left the Society over Rutherfords first twenty years, while a
progressively larger proportion of converts were not interested in the heavenly calling.
35 Some have observed, "Protestantism is dead,
because it no longer protests." It is remeniscent of Studies in the Scriptures, Vol.
4, p.34, "The ism is still with us, but what has become of the protest?"
36 P.S.L. Johnson motivated the Philadelphia Church
(ecclesia) on August 4 to request that the ("PBI") Committee arrange a General
Convention in Philadelphia 1918 September 8- 10, to include an investigation of the
differences between themselves and the Committee. I.F. Hoskins, acting on behalf of the
Committee, declined on August 13. P.S.L. Johnson then called that General Convention for
Sept. 8- 10. The Committee protested that no individual or single ecclesia may call a
general convention. The Philadelphia Church then severed relations with the PBI on Sept.
17. Johnson claims the chief partisans were I.F. Hoskins, I.I. Margeson and H.C. Rockwell
vs. P.S.L. Johnson, R.G. Jolly and R.H. Hirsh.
___________
Compiled by James Parkinson
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