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  • Bitter Opposition in North America
  • Awake!—1984
  • Subheadings
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  • 100 YEARS
  • Early Opposition in the United States
  • “Some Will Grow Angry”
  • Who Was Behind the Attack?
  • The Clergy and Mob Violence
  • A Time of Testing (1914-1918)
    Jehovah’s Witnesses—Proclaimers of God’s Kingdom
  • “Objects of Hatred by All the Nations”
    Jehovah’s Witnesses—Proclaimers of God’s Kingdom
  • Organized to Praise God
    The Watchtower Announcing Jehovah’s Kingdom—1973
  • Noteworthy Events in the Modern-day History of Jehovah’s Witnesses
    Jehovah’s Witnesses—Proclaimers of God’s Kingdom
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Awake!—1984
g84 12/8 pp. 9-11

Bitter Opposition in North America

100 YEARS

“IF THEY have persecuted me, they will persecute you also.” “People will lay their hands upon you and persecute you . . . You [will be] haled before kings and governors for the sake of my name . . . , and they will put some of you to death; and you will be objects of hatred by all people because of my name.”​—John 15:20; Luke 21:12-17.

Jesus’ words, quoted above, clearly indicate that his true followers would be persecuted. But why? He answers: “If you were part of the world, the world would be fond of what is its own. Now because you are no part of the world, but I have chosen you out of the world, on this account the world hates you.”​—John 15:19.

Has this been the case with those ministers representing the Watch Tower Bible and Tract Society, Jehovah’s Witnesses? If so, what are the reasons why they have been persecuted? Has it been for meddling in politics or for taking sides in religious wars and revolutions? What does the record of the last 100 years indicate?

Early Opposition in the United States

For 32 years (1884-1916) the president of the Watch Tower Bible and Tract Society was Charles Taze Russell. He was a fearless preacher and a prolific writer. He boldly denounced and refuted the Trinity doctrine, the immortal soul and eternal hellfire teachings. At one time Russell’s sermons were being featured every week in some 3,000 newspapers in the United States, Canada and Europe. Consequently he was under constant attack, mainly by the clergy. Many of his enemies stooped to personal attacks in an attempt to discredit him. How did he view these slanderers? He once said: “If you stop to kick at every dog that barks at you, you’ll never get very far.”

He decided not to waste a lot of time and money in the courts, which would only give more publicity to his clergy opposers. He believed in the rule that Jesus laid down: “For there is not a fine tree producing rotten fruit; again there is not a rotten tree producing fine fruit. For each tree is known by its own fruit. . . . A good man brings forth good out of the good treasure of his heart.” Russell preferred to let the good fruitage of his ministry vindicate him.​—Luke 6:43-45.

“Some Will Grow Angry”

Yet the greatest opposition arose shortly after Russell died. During his lifetime he had published a series of Bible study volumes called Studies in the Scriptures. It had been his intention to write a seventh and final volume, or, as he said, “If the Lord gives the key to someone else, he can write it.” Russell died in 1916, and the seventh volume, called The Finished Mystery, was then completed by the Brooklyn headquarters staff and released in July 1917. Within a few months it had reached a circulation of 850,000 copies.

The book was a stinging exposure of Christendom’s clergy class and of the political manipulation of patriotism to justify mass murder by both sides in the world war. The preface to the book stated: “Some will murmur and find fault with this book; some will grow angry, and some will join the persecutors.” The blow that fell on the Watch Tower Bible and Tract Society was very severe. How did it come about?

In April 1917 the United States declared war against Germany and thus became an active participant in World War I. The British Empire, including Canada, was already embroiled in that war. This combination of events along with a few paragraphs in The Finished Mystery gave the clergy their opportunity to try to smash this Bible Society.

On February 12, 1918, the Canadian government banned the Watch Tower Society! What could be the reason? A press dispatch explained: “The Secretary of State, under the press censorship regulations, has issued warrants forbidding the possession in Canada of a number of publications, amongst which is the book published by the International Bible Students Association [the Watch Tower Society’s branch name in Canada], entitled ‘STUDIES IN THE SCRIPTURES​—The Finished Mystery.’ . . . The possession of any prohibited books lays the possessor open to a fine not exceeding $5,000 and five years in prison.”​—Italics ours.

Who Was Behind the Attack?

Later the Winnipeg, Canada, Tribune stated: “Excerpts from one of the recent issues of ‘The Bible Students Monthly’ were denounced from the pulpit a few weeks ago by Rev. Charles G. Paterson, Pastor of St. Stephen’s Church. Afterward Attorney General Johnson sent to Rev. Paterson for a copy of the publication. The censor’s order is believed to be the direct result.” (Italics ours.) Evidently some patriotic clergymen had promoted this attack.

In the United States, a district court in New York issued a warrant for the arrest of the Watch Tower Society’s new president, J. F. Rutherford, and seven of his close associates. They were accused of “the offense of unlawfully, feloniously and wilfully causing insubordination, disloyalty and refusal of duty in the military and naval forces of the United States of America . . . [by] distributing and publicly circulating throughout the United States of America a certain book called ‘Volume VII. Bible Studies. The Finished Mystery.’”

In the midst of war fever and inflamed patriotism, the eight accused were submitted to a travesty of court proceedings that ended with seven of them, including lawyer Rutherford, each being sentenced to four concurrent terms of 20 years’ imprisonment. The eighth individual accused was sentenced to 10 years. Since appeals had been lodged, bail was requested. Catholic Judge Manton refused their request.

After nine months in the Atlanta penitentiary, the Watch Tower officials were finally released on bail pending their appeal. It was later shown that the original trial contained at least 125 errors, of which only a few were needed to have the erroneous convictions reversed. Thus J. F. Rutherford and his associates were exonerated. In fact, he went on to practice law before the Supreme Court of the United States, which would have been impossible if he had been convicted of any crime.

The Clergy and Mob Violence

However, these events unleashed a wave of persecution to which the clergy eagerly added fuel. Here was their chance, with the excuse of patriotism, to crush the Watch Tower Bible and Tract Society once and for all, they thought.

A report informs us: “In a town in the State of Oregon the Mayor and two clergymen organized a mob, chased one of the lecturers of the [International Bible Students] Association out of the city and followed him to a neighboring town. The lecturer escaped, but the mob caught the friend who accompanied him and covered him with a coat of grease and tar. . . .

“At Los Angeles clergymen made their boasts that the Bible Students would be arrested and held without bond. Some of these clergymen went about to owners of apartment houses and tried to induce the owners to dispossess tenants who are members of the International Bible Students Association. . . .

“April 22, 1918, at Wynnewood, Oklahoma, Claud Watson was first jailed and then deliberately released to a mob composed of preachers, business men and a few others that knocked him down, caused a negro to whip him and, when he had partially recovered, to whip him again. They then poured tar and feathers all over him.”

Yet did this combined opposition by religious and political elements finish off the Watch Tower Bible and Tract Society? To the contrary. In September 1919, six months after J. F. Rutherford and his companions were released from prison, a general convention of the Bible Students was convened in Cedar Point, Ohio. There J. F. Rutherford announced the publication of a new magazine to be called The Golden Age. Over the years, that publication fearlessly exposed “the god of this system of things,” Satan, and his threefold instrument for enslaving mankind​—false religion, beastly politics and big business. The Golden Age (later named Consolation) pointed to God’s Kingdom by Christ as the only legitimate government for all mankind.​—2 Corinthians 4:4.

Today that same magazine is called Awake!, the very publication you are reading. It now circulates in 54 languages to the tune of nearly 9 million copies each issue. Its companion, The Watchtower, banned in many countries during the difficult years of World War II, now has an average printing of 10,200,000 copies in a total of 102 languages! That is the widest language distribution of any magazine in the world. These facts are proof that after 100 years of publishing and persecution, the Watch Tower Bible and Tract Society is stronger than ever!

[Picture on page 10]

The clergy used the book The Finished Mystery to incite persecution

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