This was the book we studied when I went to prison in 1967 at Seagovilled Federal Correctional facility near Dallas.
The Babylon book, we called it.
It is where I first encountered Fred Franz's mania for specificity. Franz was the lone ranger prophetic mouthpiece for JW's for a long time and pounded out on his typewriter an amazing array of weird books. But, the Babylon book had it all. Franz composed his own chronology, for one thing. This chronology abandoned the standard Archbishop Ussher chronology of christendom and substituted what Freddy called, "Absolute Dates" which he invented himself
Further, Freddy describe in this book how verses in Revelation specifically applied to events in Watchtower Society history.
For example, in 1922, during the Cedar Point, Ohio convention a resolution was read out loud and voted on. Franz identifies this as the actual latter-day fulfilllment of the plagues in Revelation!
We've all been to big conventions where resolutions were read and voted on, right? They were boring even to us! Newspapers and radio outlets didn't flash bulletins to the populace at large following these events! Like almost everything connected with conventions it was ignored. And yet, Fred Franz is telling us that John's vision from Christ Jesus in the last book of the Christian Greek Scriptures described a Cedar Point, Ohio resolution in mystifying apocalyptic visions!!
Years later, I read a lot of Matin Luther's writings. I saw that Fred Franz had read them too! So much of Fred Franz exposition about scripture is right out of Luther and disguised and dressed up in Watchtower-speak!
I can't believe this little maroon book seemed like such an extraordinary achievement to me at the age of 20!
It was also my first encounter with history vis a vis the bible; the melding of actual events outside of Israel with events described interior to that framework.
On the positive side of things; I'll say what I did come away with was more than a head full of memorized phony dates. I developed a real love for reading history that has come to serve me in good stead.
So, it wasn't a total loss.
The reason I bring this book up now is because a copy came in to the bookstore where I work on a buy from the public. It was placed in the "no pay" box and was to be donated in bulk. I grabbed it out and am re-reading it now.
What a feeling of nostalgia this evokes inside me!!
It is like having my life flash before my eyes.
I'm coming to appreciate how insane the theology of Jehovah's Witnesses truly was/is!