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Did the Watchtower Predict 2000 for Armageddon?
By James K. Walker
The Jehovah's Witnesses entered the
year 2000 with a different kind of Y2K problem. Exactly eleven years earlier
the Watchtower leaders told Jehovah's Witnesses that the Christian missionary
work begun by Paul in the Bible would be completed by the end of the 20th
Century - or did they? It would all depend on which version of The Watchtower
you read.
The January 1, 1989 Watchtower clearly pointed to the year 2000
as the farthest limit of Christian missionary work and thus the beginning
of the thousand-year reign of Christ. It stated, "The apostle Paul was
spearheading the Christian missionary activity. He was also laying a foundation
for a work that would be completed in our 20th century."1
If that missionary work was to "be completed in our 20th Century" then
the door-to-door missionary activities should have ceased no later than
December 31, 1999. When the missionary work has ceased, Jehovah's Witnesses
know that Armageddon begins followed immediately by the 1,000-year reign
of Christ on earth. Those who more accurately measure the 20th Century
can give the Society twelve more months - to December 31, 2000. Either
way, in 1989 the Society was clearly limiting the remaining time before
the end of missionary activity to eleven or twelve years at most.
About a year later, however, the Watchtower Society altered the article
in the bound volume version of the publication removing the time limitation.
The bound volume of the same article states "The apostle Paul was spearheading
the Christian missionary activity. He was also laying a foundation for
a work that would be completed in our day."2
Notice that unlike "in our 20th Century," the phrase "in our day" is
sufficiently vague as to avoid being tested according to Deuteronomy 18:
20-28.3 It also may be significant to
note that the unbound version is the one studied by the Jehovah's Witnesses
in their weekly meetings and distributed door-to-door. The bound volumes
did not become available until over a year later and are often used as
permanent references.
This may have had the effect of maximizing the motivating effect of
a date setting while minimizing the negative effects of the subsequent
false prediction. When Jehovah's Witnesses first read the article, they
may be justifiably motivated to work harder and plan for a future in this
"old system" that can last no longer than ten or twelve years at the most.
When the 20th Century ends and the disappointed Witnesses review their
permanent bound volume, it seems that was not what the article said at
all - they must have been mistaken.
Even before the bound volumes for 1989 were released, the Society was
already backpedaling from the "20th Century" statement. In what appears
to be a direct contradiction of the January 1 article, the October 1, 1989
Watchtower
stated: "We have ample reasons to expect that this preaching will be completed
in our time. Does that mean before the turn of a new month, a new year,
a new decade, a new century? No human knows.."4
Notice that the Society never referred to the January 1 article directly.
If the Watchtower's Governing Body honestly believed that the "20th Century"
statement was in error, the honorable and responsible action would be to
have clearly said so. They should have warned that the article contained
the mistake before their readers logically made important, critical decisions
for the future based on the misinformation.5
Instead the Society published contradictory statements ten months later
and then quietly changed the article itself (without annotation) in the
more permanent bound volumes. Thus the Watchtower can have its cake and
eat it too - make clear statements about the future while maintaining some
measure of deniability. Unfortunately this seems to have become a bad habit
for the Watchtower Bible and Tract Society. The year 2000 is one of the
latest in a long list of dates for "the end" which the Watchtower Society
has either strongly implied or explicitly stated. For example some of the
dates the Society has given for Armageddon or related apocalyptic events
include 1914, 1918, 1925, and 1975.6
In fact 1989, the date of the Watchtower's "20th Century" prediction,
was itself a year that was hinted at strongly in earlier Watchtower literature.
In a 1988 Awake! article titled "The Last Days - What's Next?" under
the heading "How Long Can A Generation Last?" the Society seemed to suggest
that the 1914 generation would end in 1989 - the very next year. After
reminding Jehovah's Witnesses that 1914 began the "last generation," the
Watchtower announced that Hebrews counted seventy-five years as one generation.7
The society left the readers to do their own math (note: 1914 + 75 = 1989).
Rather than bringing "the end," however, 1989 brought with it another extension
stretching the culmination to the end of the century.
More recently, in 1995, the Society greatly modified their expectations
concerning the "1914 Generation" abandoning all attempts to measure the
generation by the human life spans. Until 1995, the organization was teaching
that it was the "Creator's promise" that some the people who were alive
in 1914 would survive to see "a peaceful and secure new world."8
Countless Jehovah's Witnesses planned their education, career, and retirements
based on the "promise" that the 1914 generation was getting so old the
end must be just a few years away. In 1995, however, the Society reversed
itself saying that the term "generation" had nothing to do with the life
span of those alive in 1914.9
Like the "20th Century" statement, the Watchtower's pattern has long
been to make strong or clear predictions about specific dates, followed
by backpedaling and/or altering later editions of the publications. The
20th Century will almost certainly not see the end of the Christian missionary
work begun by Paul. The 20th Century will close with few Jehovah's Witnesses
remembering the 1989 statement or caring much about it. Certainly when
compared to the Watchtower's earlier date setting, this one was admittedly
far less blatant and significant.
But before Jehovah's Witnesses dismiss the statement as an editorial
oversight or typographical error, they should consider it historically.
When carefully weighing all of the evidence this is clearly seen as more
that an isolated mistake or a justifiable lapse. Perhaps no group in the
world has been making false predictions more consistently and vocally for
the past 100 years, than this organization.10
The Watchtower is leaving the 20th Century in the same way it entered it
- with a legacy of rash predictions, date-setting, and false prophecy.
On the subject of false predictions, Jesus warned: "Ye shall know them
by their fruits. Do men gather grapes of thorns, or figs of thistles?"11
The fruit of a prophet is prophecy - one should not attempt to gather good
doctrine from an organization guilty of false prophesying.12
1 "The Hand of Jehovah Was With Them," The Watchtower,
January 1 (1989), p. 12 (emphasis added, original edition).
2 "The Hand of Jehovah Was With Them," The Watchtower,
January 1 (1989), p. 12 (emphasis added, bound volume edition). The Society's
CD-ROM, Watchtower Library 1995, which contains electronic versions
of past Watchtower publications, also contains the "in our day" version.
In both cases there is no note or other indication to explain or even acknowledge
the change.
3 Deuteronomy 18:20-22 "But the prophet, which shall
presume to speak a word in my name, which I have not commanded him to speak,
or that shall speak in the name of other gods, even that prophet shall
die. And if thou say in thine heart, How shall we know the word which the
Lord hath not spoken? When a prophet speaketh in the name of the Lord,
if the thing follow not, nor come to pass, that is the thing which the
Lord hath not spoken, but the prophet hath spoken it presumptuously: thou
shalt not be afraid of him." See endnote 8 concerning predictions made
"in the name of the Lord."
4 "Questions From Readers," The Watchtower,
October 1 (1989), p. 31 (emphasis added).
5 In a similar disregard for the future plans of its
followers, the Watchtower commended and encouraged those who sold their
homes in 1974 so they could afford to quit their jobs to sell Watchtower
literature full-time for the "short remaining time" before Armageddon.
(At that time they were teaching that the end was to be in 1975). "How
Are You Using Your Life?" Kingdom Ministry, May (1974), p. 3 "Reports
are heard of brothers selling their homes and property and planning to
finish out the rest of their days in this old system in the pioneer service.
Certainly this is a fine way to spend the short time remaining before the
wicked world's end."
6 Watchman Fellowship offers a documentation workbook
and cassette tape documenting and discussing these predictions, which includes
instructions for use in witnessing situation. Jehovah's Witnesses and
the Dating Game (see our featured resource).
7 "The Last Days - What's Next?" Awake!, 8 April
8 (1988), p. 14. "J. A. Bengel states in his New Testament Word Studies:
'The Hebrews... reckon seventy-five years as one generation'.. Likewise
today, most of the generation of 1914 has passed away. However, there are
still millions on earth who were born in that year or prior to it. And
although their numbers are dwindling, Jesus' words will come true, 'this
generation will certainly not pass away until all these things have happened.'"
8 For decades this was part of the standard masthead
of the Watchtower magazine's sister publication Awake! The
masthead ,"Why Awake! Is Published," read "Most important, this magazine
builds confidence in the Creator's promise of a peaceful and secure new
world before the generation that saw the events of 1914 passes away." Note
the promise was made in the name of the Creator (the Lord, i.e., Jehovah)
and see endnote 3 concerning predictions made "in the name of the Lord."
The last edition of Awake! to publish this promise was October 22,
1995, p. 4.
9 For a more complete discussion of the 1995 reversal,
see James K. Walker, "Watchtower Redefines '1914 Generation'" and James
K. Walker, "A Watchtower History of 1914," The Watchman Expositor,
13.6 (1996) pp. 4-7, 21. Online at http://www.watchman.org/1914hst1.htm
and http://www.watchman.org/1914hst2.htm.
10 For an index of references to Watchtower literature
containing false predictions see: David A. Reed, Ed., Index of Watchtower
Errors, (Grand Rapids, Michigan: Baker Book House, 1990), pp. 96-111.
11 Matthew 7:16.
12 The Society provides the following definition of
false prophesying: "True, there have been those in times past who predicted
an 'end to the world,' even announcing a specific date.. The 'end' did
not come. They were guilty of false prophesying.. Missing from such people
were God's truths and the evidence that he was guiding and using them."
"A Time to 'Lift Up Your Head' in Confident Hope," Awake!, October
8 (1968), p. 23.
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The Watchtower has a history of false prophecies concerning Armaggedon
and the end of the world, including 1914, 1918, 1925, and 1975. Most Jehovah's
Witnesses are unaware of the Society's claim to be a prophet or these false
predictions. Show them both with this set.
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