Many have argued that articles in Awake! in recent years show that Watchtower was letting itself be told what do by the purple beast, namely, promote the United Nations in its writings. I can understand how many might quickly find support for this claim, for there are, indeed, many articles in Awake! that refer to work done by the United Nations or its affiliated organizations. However, if readers look carefully, they will see that while the Watchtower never directly condemns the United Nations in any of these articles, the consistent theme throughout virtually all of them is that the world is in terrible shape, and its getting worse, even though good people (like Eleanor Roosevelt, for example) are doing their sincere best to help.
The articles generally make it clear that the United Nations and other world-wide governmental organizations are just not getting the job done, and that sincere and thoughtful readers who want to help bring world peace should turn to the Watchtower instead of relying on the United Nations. At the end of most of these articles, or not far from the end, is the invitation to the reader write to the Watchtower to learn how to really make a difference. The intent seems clear: to let the doorknockers point out to the householders articles which show the UN's failures to try to convince them that there's no hope without Jehovah.
Rather than disseminating UN propaganda with "favorable articles," as Randall Watters and others have claimed, the Watchtower seems merely to be highlighting the United Nations' failures while it points to the need to embrace Jehovah and the Watchtower, which teaches that the only truly effective world-wide government, the only one which will truly bring world peace, is Jehovah's Kingdom worldwide government.
Those who are quick to claim that the articles are propaganda for the UN fail to see the truth, in my view; these articles are not propaganda for the UN; they're propaganda for the Watchtower. Since these articles make the UN look bad and the Watchtower good, they would have been written even if the Watchtower had not applied for affiliation with the DPI. Thus, the two events--being affiliated with the DPI, and writing the articles about the UN, are not necessarily connected.
I conclude from this that the Watchtower was only doing what it should be doing: pointing out the failures of the United Nations. Rather than be condemned for this activity, Jehovah's Witnesses everywhere should applaud it, shouldn't they?
A discussion and analysis of the content of some of these articles is found in my article, "Watchtower Propaganda," which describes why some of the allegedly pro-United Nations articles are really anti-United Nations and pro-Watchtower. The link to this article is provided below:
* http://sol.sci.uop.edu/~jfalward/Watchtower_Propaganda.htm
I would welcome any constructive comments.
Joseph F. Alward
"Skeptical Views of Christianity and the Bible"