...Okay, let me role-play as a witness here...
1. Do they know that Russell got a lot of dates from the measurements of pyramids, including 1914? I wonder if the average Witness knows where he is buried, or that he has a pyramid on his grave?
The average witness will have seen possibly a picture in the Proclaimer's book or elsewhere of a pyramid, and know that it was associated with some prior teaching that they don't teach anymore.. Most witnesses don't know and probably don't even care where Russell's buried.
2. Does the average witness know that the Society teaches that Christ is not their mediator? Most I have talked to don't but it has been printed a lot of different places at a lot of different times. I would like to know just how many are really aware of it or its implications.
The majority of JW's believe the there is only one mediator between God and man, namley Christ. I doubt the majority think of the governing body as a mediator despite it's claim as a spiritual channel between God and man...
3. Does the average "publisher" realize that the organization decided to make the publications available for "donations" to avoid taxes? That it was done AFTER having been involved in a court case as a legal "friend" to Jimmy Swaggart while he fought those taxes, or that they still charge for the publications in other places with different tax laws? Places where money is much more scarce?
Wha...? The average witness would be puzzled by this statement.
4. Could the average Witness know about all the components of blood being legal or about material made from cow's blood being approved in some cases by the Organization? I hope they know, it means thier lives and the lives of their loved ones. I tried to tell my father this and he shook his head, "Son, we don't take blood, any blood at all!" He doesn't know almost all blood parts are ok, and could die as a result. I wish he knew.
I think most of them know that they will not be disfellowshipped for taking one of the legal blood components, but I think most of them refuse all blood because nothing makes them feel more aware that they're doing the right thing than by one-uping the society.
5. Are most of the members of the congregation aware of the flip-flops of the past on everything from all Witnesses being ministers, refusing alternative service, the changed understands on what fornication was, the uproar and divorces caused over the Organization's changed views on oral sex, the change saying transplants are ok from taking transplants being cannibalism? If they do know, I wonder if they have thought about how many lives were ruined by the "old" views and of the humiliation of the people because of them?
I think the majority of JW's don't really care about any flip flops in doctrine. They don't have time to delve into any historical or theological analysis of the changes in doctrine. They're too busy keeping in mind "the more important things", namely study, mettings, and service.
6. Do you think the big change on "This Generation" impacted the regular people who make up the organization very hard? Do they know about all the changes in ages to support it before it was dropped? How the ages of the "generation" were stretched before it was dropped? Did they think about it and just how enormous that change was in relation to all the statements they had made about it? Or did they just gulp and swallow it all like castor oil and refuse to think about it?
I was still an active JW when we studied the article, every single JW I knew didn't care. I think the majority of people were slightly disappointed but prepared for the "long haul" that the great tribulation would arrive farther into the future. After all, this is the only thing that so many JW's know, how can any well-meaning JW think that a change in doctrine is a robbing of the proverbial "security blanket"".
7. Do you think most Witnesses have lost loved ones to "apostasy" seen young relatives walk away, and lost their confidence in the Watchtower Society as being the TRUTH, the only ones with the truth?
I don't know how many JW' s have seen relatives "walk away", slip into "apostasy", or lose trust in the WBTS. I'm positive it's the majority. If anything, I think any so-called trial of their faith only makes the majority feel like they're in the right. An elder once told me not to associate with JW's that didn't have any problems, and who were always happy because "Satan already had them". It's sad when misery seems to be a pre-requisite to be a JW, that the more unhappy you were, the more God liked you. If that's how God treats his faithful worshippers, then I would imagine that God would expect us to think highly of him [8>]