Blondie, thanks. I think I can read this.
This is what I see. In the early-80s the Witnesses began to recover from the 1975 fiasco, and experienced fairly high growth (5-6% a year) into the early 1990s, with maybe 1 Witness leaving for every 5 to 8 that came in, with some really skewed years in there. But overall, that was the case.
Then starting in 1994, it shifted, and for several years it was 1 leaving for every 3 that came in. Then in 1999 or so, it shifted again, to c. 1.5 Witnesses leaving for each 3 that came in, or about a 50% attrition rate, with growth slowing to the 1-2% range, really approaching a stagnate level.
My theory is that we will soon seen 2 Witnesses leaving for each 3 that come in, and within a decade it will pass the critical mass point and move to 3 Witnesses leaving for every 2 that come in, and we'll have hit the negative growth years.
I actually feel that the mid-1990s will be seen as the tipping point for the demise of the JWs for several reasons. It was the time when many left due to the 1914 generation change, the change in the sheep and the goats teaching and the change in the King of the North teaching. These had been veritable foundation stones of Witness theology for half a century, and in a mere few months they all disappeared. Anyone paying attention knew something was wrong.
Also, it was the advent of widespread access to the Internet, which I feel is the most powerful tool available to use against the WTS. There is nothing like the free and total access to tons of critical information, easily verifiable, against a totalitarian organization to make a huge impact.
When I want to know about anything, I go online and research it. I do this on any number of subjects many times a week. I'm in my mid-50s and not necessarily a product of the computer generation. How much more so will this be true of everyone in the years to come?
That gives you an idea of how many are leaving, and some of the reasons I feel it is happening.
S4