Angels and Women, kinda like a Playboy
I was a young man at Bethel about 30 years ago, back in the early 80's and one day I walked into the Bethel library (the regular Bethel library, not the "secret" one I never saw) and found a book on the shelf called "Angels and Women". Now this was one of the most fascinating books I had ever seen up until my young life back then. We didn't have the internet back then, so we were much more innocent about many things. This book was something beyond what I had ever heard or conceived of.
Now, in order for you to understand why this was so fascinating to me, I have done some research recently and found the foreward to this book on the internet. The foreward was long, so I will only print the first part of it here in order for you to see what I read all those years ago in that quiet Bethel library. By the way, no author is given for this "revisor" but in the forward it is said that he was a personal friend of Pastor Russell and worked with him often as a "confidant". Opinion was that this was Rutherford because the theology, phrasing and wording in the foreword could be found in Rutherford's writings and whoever wrote it was definitely related to the WTBS. Here is the first part of this foreword:
Angels and Women - The Foreword
TRITE but true is the saying, "Truth is stranger than fiction." Fiction sometimes illumines the truth.
A number of years ago Mrs. J. G. Smith published a Novel entitled Seola. She claims to have been impelled to write it after listening to beautiful music. She made no pretense of a knowledge of the Bible. Yet so many of her sayings are so thoroughly in accord with the correct understanding of certain scriptures that the novel is exceedingly interesting and sometimes thrilling.
The greatest Bible scholar of modern times read this book shortly before his death. To a close personal friend he said: "This book, if revised according to the facts we know about spiritism, would be instructive and helpful." Long prior thereto this noted Bible scholar had written and published the first clear presentation of the Bible teaching on spiritism. He advised his personal friend to revise the novel Seola and to publish it if opportunity afforded at some future time.
This book deals with the events transpiring between the date of the creation of man and the great deluge. The principal characters figuring in the novel are Satan, fallen angels and women. Angels are heavenly messengers. There was a time when all angels were good. The time came when many of them allied themselves with Satan and became evil, hence called "fallen angels.".... Evil spirit beings started good human beings on the downward road. Evil angels and bad women have made countless millions mourn.
The Bible story of fallen angels or evil spirits, is briefly told as follows: Lucifer, once a good spirit being...
I read those words and I was off to the races! I just had to read this thing.
Before Bethel, I was an avid reader of Greek Mythology. It started out as a school assignment, but I ended up reading every single Greek and Roman mythology book or collection that I could get my hands on. I loved this stuff. One of the main reasons I loved it was that some Bible commentators had postulated that all Greek Mythology was rooted in actual fact and that these were actually altered accounts of people who had witnessed the time before the flood. The "gods" of these mythology stories were actually demons (like Zeus was Satan for example) and the demi-gods, those born from the Gods and humans (like Hercules) where actually nephilim. I didn't know if this is true or not, and I still don't, but I wanted it to be true. I ate this stuff up.
When I found Angels and Women at Bethel, why there was a book that claimed to be about pre-flood days, about (fallen) angels and those women the Bible says they took "all of whom they chose", and best of all, it was a JW book! I used to ask myself all the time, what WOULD it have been like to have lived back then? How did these Angels (demons) act back then, what did they look like? How did they get the women, did they seduce them or did they just grab them and carry them off by force? Did anybody fight back? If so, who? Why didn't these demons just kill Noah and his sons, didn't they know them? Weren't they powerful enough to kill them? Or, did God protect them somehow? And so on, I used to ask myself those things all the time. This book, which claimed to be channeled by somebody who didn't even know the Bible, HAD THOSE ANSWERS! Here, I could read about how Noah survived supernatural demonic attack. Here I could read about how the gorgeous, hulking, buffed-out angels acted and seduced or otherwise "took" women. Wow! Really cool.
So I read. I could not finish the first night I found the book, so the next time I got the chance I went back to read more. (We could not check out books from this library.) When I finished reading this book I was thrilled and even shaking a little bit. It was soooo cool to read this and, best of all, it was a Society book! Yes sir, it was right in the Bethel library and so I could quote from it from now on too, right?
Wrong.
I found out how wrong I was when I brought this up to one of my elders in a car ride to the meetings one day. When I excitedly brought up this book there was silence by my elder at first. He then told me in a lowered voice that "we should not be reading that book". What? Why? "Well" he said "because that book has spiritism connections". He went on to explain that this book, if authentic at all and not made up, then can only be understood to have come from a demon itself. We should not be reading words from demons. If not authentic, then it was a sham as it claimed to have supernatural authorship, claimed to be from a demon. So, you see, either way, we should not read it, and especially not talk about this book.
Bummer. I so wanted to talk about this book with somebody! I had so many questions now. Why in the heck would brother Russell get mixed up in a spiritism related thing? Wait a minute! Didn't that mean I read a book that might have been written by a demon and enjoyed it? Yikes! Why would Bethel subject me to this?
Well, this particular elder had no patience for me on much of anything in general, so I didn't fight back much. I politely asked him why the book was there in the Bethel library in the first place. Although his answer was forgettable, I do I recall saying to him in response: "Well, to me, then, this is like putting a Playboy in the Bethel library and then telling us not to look at it."
He had no answer for that.
LivingTheDream
---
For more information on this book, I have put in a few links:
Background on "Angels and Women": http://www.seanet.com/~raines/women.html
Background on the original, "Seola" in Wikipedia: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Seola
Buy "Angles and Women" at Amazon.com: http://www.amazon.com/Angels-Women-Jim-Rizoli/dp/0595005160
Download "Angels and Women" free on the public domain: http://www.archive.org/details/AngelsAndWomen