How Will the Court Deal With Deceit?

by compound complex 23 Replies latest watchtower beliefs

  • compound complex
    compound complex

    Thank you for your replies, Hortensia, Uzzah, and asilentone.

    Uzzah:

    I appreciate your more clearly delineating between the somewhat loosely-connected issues to which I referred. The common thread, of course, is the deceit of the WTB&TS; though long acknowledged, their methods, vis-a-vis theocratic warfare, are now on the record. Thank you for your role in this, Uzzah.

    I only can read and surmise - you were there. You are the one who knows ...

    Gratefully,

    CC

  • compound complex
  • compound complex
    compound complex

    Wilson gives an example of how the doctrine [theocratic warfare] is used today:

    the elders asked this young man to call our daughter and fabricate a reason to get her to come over to the house. Under the guise of “theocratic warfare,” lying was acceptable if it served the needs of the organization. Consequently, the truthfulness of the reason he gave her to get her to agree to meet him at the house was insignificant. He feigned helplessness about some aspect of taking care of things at the house, asking her to meet him there at a specified time so she could help him out. Trusting that he would never betray her, she agreed (2000, p. 118). [ibid.]

  • compound complex
    compound complex

    An example of how this doctrine is in fact applied is explained by Reed as follows:

    When a Witness knocks at a door, gives a brief sales pitch, and sells a small book for a dollar, local laws may require him or her to collect sales tax. (A credit report on the Watchtower of New York, Inc., revealed $1.25 billion corporate sales figures for 1991, up from just over $1 billion in 1990.). To evade this obligation the organization instructs JWs to say they did not sell the book; rather, they placed it. They did not receive the dollar in payment; rather, the money was received coincidentally as an unrelated donation. Another illegal activity covered by cloaking expressions relates to violating child welfare laws and ignoring court orders regarding medical treatment. When taking such drastic steps to prevent blood transfusions for sick or injured children JWs commonly refer to their actions as keeping integrity or putting God first … Cloaking expressions [with] obscure words … to conceal information from outsiders unfamiliar with the sect. Witnesses resort to such devices when organizational instructions require them to violate tax laws, refuse military conscription, evade child welfare laws, and so on. Falsifications on these matters are not considered lies, but theocratic war strategy (1997, pp. 22, 28).

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