Bill C.,
From about 1872 to 1881 Russell held parousia views similar
to the Plymouth Brethren, and he certainly knew of their doctrine. But belief in
a partially invisible parousia extends back at least to the second century, and
was not unique to Plymouth Brethren. Russell says that he came to the teaching
by reading J. A. Seiss' Last Times. It is also evident that he read Richard
Cunningham Shimeall's The Second Coming of Christ: Or the Impending
Approach of “The Restitution of all Things” which also promoted the
doctrine of a two-stage, initially invisible, parousia. Others who actively
opposed Russell held to that version of parousia doctrine.
So it is doubtful that Russell got that belief from Plymouth
Brethren, but he found it in standard works on prophecy published by those who were mainstream writers. In 1881 the Watch Tower began to teach that Christ's parousia was totally invisible. This was the result of a discussion between the principals in the movement prompted by an article by Lizzie [Elizabeth] A. Allen, a Watch Tower contributor.
Separate Identity vol 2, says:
They expected Christ to become
visible at least to some in or near 1881, but constant and considerable
discussion among Watch Tower adherents modified that belief. Barbourites were
tending to discount their shared παρουσία doctrine, drifting back to expecting
a visible presence only.
[photo here]
First
Printing of Object and Manner
The movement’s principals discussed
it among themselves, and discussion became public through an article by Lizzie
Allen appearing in the May 1880 issue. Written in response to Barbour’s claims
to have uncovered a “clean” theology, his term for his ventures into esoteric
belief systems, Allen focused on the sign of Christ’s presence, and the
difference in viewpoint between Watch Tower adherents and Barbourites. She referenced Matthew 24:3, presenting a
bastardized quotation based on the Emphatic Diaglott, a Greek-English
interlinear: “What shall be the sign of Thy parousia, and of the end of the
world?” Jesus’ answer showed, she wrote, “the need of a sign.” Jesus
warned (Verses 4-5) that many would claim to be the messiah, deceiving many.
Allen claimed that “a sign will enable those who obey ... to discern between
the false and the true.”
This point was preliminary to other,
more important thoughts. A “sign” was needed because “of the obscurity which
marks the period of his return.” Christ’s presence was not to generate,
...
physical demonstrations as shall make all aware of it. But as the days of Noah
were, so shall also the presence of the Son of man be. For as in the days that
were before the flood, they were eating and drinking, marrying and giving in
marriage, and knew not until the flood came and took them all away, so shall
also the presence of the Son of man be, (Vers. 37-39.) all things will indeed
continue as from the beginning. How then will the church be aware of His
presence, except by a sign?
The sign was given only to those who
obeyed Christ’s commands, “and these cannot show it to the unfaithful.”
Christ’s presence would be known to those outside the faith when he performed
mighty acts. Allen paraphrased Matthew 24:23-28, which reads according to the
Authorized Version:
At
that time if anyone says to you, ‘Look, here is the Messiah!’ or, ‘There he
is!’ do not believe it. For false messiahs and false prophets
will appear and perform great signs and wonders to deceive, if possible, even
the elect. See, I have told you ahead of time. ”So if anyone
tells you, ‘There he is, out in the wilderness,’ do not go out; or, ‘Here he
is, in the inner rooms,’ do not believe it. For as lightning that comes from
the east is visible even in the west, so will be the coming of the Son of Man.
Wherever there is a carcass, there the vultures will gather.
In her view the ‘lightning” was not,
and could not be, natural light, “else His presence would not be likened to the
days that were before the flood.” She saw it as spiritual light, “divine
truth.” A “great and wonderful unfolding
of truth is all that the bible gives us a right to expect during the presence
of the Son of man, and before translation,” she wrote.[1]
This was meant as a refutation of the assertion of some Barbourites that Jesus
would appear to his servants before heavenly resurrection. It was not a
rejection of a two-stage parousia, but it planted the seeds for that. If one
accepted her arguments, then one understood that Christ’s presence was totally
invisible.
Her rejection of Barbourite belief
was based on 1 John 3:2: “It doth not yet appear what we shall be, but we know
that when He shall appear we shall be like Him, for we shall see Him as He is.”
If ‘the saints’ do not understand Jesus’ nature until they are resurrected,
then Christ would not appear to humans in advance. She appealed to Colossians
3:4, writing:
Again,
when Christ, who is our life, shall appear, then shall we also appear with Him
in glory. (Col. 3:4). Hence, we urge on those who are “looking for that blessed
hope and the glorious appearing of our Lord and Savior Jesus Christ,” the
Savior's command, “Take heed let no man deceive you.” The light of truth made
plain by the Spirit, is the only promised guide, while here we wait. And this
to us, is far more convincing than any physical manifestation could be.
The fuller implications of this
article are apparent. It set off discussions that did not immediately make it
to The Watch Tower. Two of the movement’s principals and some of its new
clergy adherents had some familiarity with Koiné Greek [1st
Century commonly-spoken Greek]. The dust started to settle after a behind the
scenes discussion of the Greek text of Revelation 1:7 which says of Christ’s
return that “Every eye shall see him.” Russell summarized their conclusions in
the September 1880 issue of Zion’s Watch Tower. Entitled “Optomai,” a
common transliteration of the Greek verb to see, the article said:
The
Greek word Optomai rendered shall see, in Rev. 1:7. – “Every eye shall
see him,” and rendered, shall appear, in Heb. 9:28 “To them that look for Him
shall he appear a second time,” does not always mean to see with the eye. It
rather signifies attend and recognize. Illustrations of its meaning attend: The
priests and elders answered Judas; “See (Optomai – attend) thou to
that.” Matt. 27:4. Again, Pilate said, “I am innocent of the blood of this just
person; see (optomai – attend) ye to it.” Vs. 24. Also the word look in
Acts 18:15. The general signification of the word however, is recognize ...
Again,
Jesus said to Mary concerning Lazarus' resurrection, “Said I not that thou
shouldst see (optomai) the glory of God? John 11:40. Mary's eyes saw no
glory but she did see Lazarus raised, and in the power thus displayed she
recognized the glory of God.
Again
“All flesh shall see (optomai – recognize) the salvation of God.” Luke 3:6. In
the light of these illustrations of the use of the word we can realize that
there may be but little seeing of The Christ on the part of the world with the
eye. See how similar is the last illustration with the first text quoted –
“every eye” and “all flesh” shall recognize Him as the salvation of God.[2]
This was not a novel interpretation.
Others asserted this. And it is all within the word’s definition. Walter Roy
Goff [1877-1953], a post-millennialist Lutheran clergyman, used the same points
to support his views, writing:
[T]he
four main passages which are supposed by many people to mean that we shall see
with corporeal eyes the Lord's return have about them abundant reason for any careful
interpreter to say they do not contain such literal meaning. And if this is so,
then the disciples did not expect a visible return of their Lord after the
statement of the men in white apparel (Acts 1:11), as some assert ... . And
those today, who build up their argument for a visible return on these four
passages and others like them, must be wrong, especially since there are
definite passages denying a visible coming, (Luke 17:22), “Ye shall desire, *
* * * but ye shall not see,” (John 16:10), “I go to the Father, and ye
behold me no more,”[3]
This discussion became settled
doctrine with the publication of Food for Thinking Christians. If there
was indefiniteness in Allen’s article, Russell’s article was much more pointed,
and it became a clear doctrinal statement. Quoting or paraphrasing
Hebrews 12:14; 1 John 3:2; and Ephesians 1:18 but without citing them, Russell
wrote:
How will He come again? Briefly stated, we believe the
Scriptures to teach that our Lord will never again appear as a man; that at his
second coming he will be invisible to mankind; that none will ever see him
except the Church: “Without holiness no man shall see the Lord;” that
the Church will not see him until changed from natural to spiritual bodies;
that then “we shall see him as he is” [not as he was], for “we
shall be like him” [not he like us, as at the first advent]. But while none are
to see him with their natural eyes, all are to recognize his presence
and his power (“the eyes of their understanding being opened”). Hence we
read: “Every eye shall see (optomai – recognize) him”[4]
This
doctrinal transition brought argumentative comments from Barbour, but that
conflict is subject matter for volume three of Separate Identity. As
clergy outrage intensified after 1895, the Watch Tower parousia doctrine
was interminably criticized and often misrepresented. This continued through
the 20th Century and into the present century. Consider Walter
Martin’s comment:
Jehovah’s Witnesses claim scholarship for this blanket
translation of parousia, yet not one great scholar in the history of
Greek exegesis and translation has ever held this view. Since 1871, when
“Pastor” Russell produced this concept, it has been denounced by every
competent scholar upon examination.
The reason this Russellite rendering is so dangerous
is that it attempts to prove that parousia in regard to Christ’s second
advent really means that His return or “presence” was to be invisible, and
unknown to all but “the faithful.”[5]
This
is a polemicist’s poor research and a misrepresentation. His misstatements vary
from minor to significant. The 1871 date is wildly wrong, something he could
easily have known when he wrote. Russell did not originate the concept, but as
we’ve shown elsewhere, it has a long history. He suggests that no “great”
Greek-language scholar ever accepted a uniform translation of παρουσία as
presence. One supposes that any scholar that disagreed with Martin would not
have been ‘great’ in his eyes, including Joseph Rotherham, who noted in the
appendix to his translation: “In this edition the word parousia is
uniformly rendered ‘presence’ (‘coming,’ as a representative of this
word, being set aside). The original term occurs twenty-four times in the N. T.
[He lists all the verses which we omit from this quotation] ... The sense of
‘presence’ is so plainly shewn by the contrast with ‘absence’ (implied in 2 Co.
x. 10, and expressed in Ph. ii. 12) that the question naturally arises, – Why not always so render it?”[6]
Martin failed to cite or quote any of the “great” scholars who rejected Watch
Tower exposition of παρουσία. When one only writes polemics, it is convenient
to avoid citing sources.
Martin
misrepresented Russell and modern Watchtower belief, claiming that their view
is that only “the faithful” would be aware of it. He puts ‘the faithful’ in
quotes, but the phrase is lacking on the pages he cites as is the belief he
attributes to Watch Tower adherents. Russell, the modern Watchtower, and Bible
Student groups all believe that in time Christ’s presence will become apparent
to everyone, at least when Christ executes God’s judgment. Martin’s real objection
was that Russell and modern descendent religions present an understanding of
prophecy different from his own. The same is true for Russell’s contemporaries
who wrote similarly. Many whom wrote anti-Russell tracts simply mentioned the
teaching without refuting it, relying on shock value to accomplish their
purpose.[7]
[1] The Watchtower publication Aid to Bible Understanding
[1971, page 1069] and its revision as Insight on the Scriptures
commented on Jesus’ words: “Christ Jesus showed that his presence would not be
kept secret, even as it is impossible to conceal lightning that ‘comes out of
eastern parts and shines over to western parts.’ (Mt 24:23-27; Lu 17:20-24)” [Insight,
volume 2, page 255] This suggests only that Jesus’ parousia would become
widely known. However, The Watchtower [May 1, 1993, page 12] returned to
Allen’s exposition, saying: “As Jesus foretold, in a global way, lightnings of
Bible truth continue to flash over broad areas from eastern parts to western
parts. Truly, as modern light bearers, Jehovah’s Witnesses prove to be ‘a light
of the nations, that [Jehovah’s] salvation may come to be to the extremity of
the earth.’ – Isaiah 49:6.”
[2] C.T. Russell: Optomai, Zion’s Watch Tower, September
1880, page 8.
[3] W. R. Goff: The Handbook of Eschatology, Or, A Consistent
Biblical View of the Lord’s Return, Keystone Publishing House, Blairsville,
Pennsylvania, 1917, page 34.
[4] C. T. Russell: Food for Thinking Christians, Watch
Tower Supplement, 1881, page 63.
[5] W. Martin and R. Zacharias: The Kingdom of the Cults,
“updated edition,” 2003, page 101.
[6] J. B. Rotherham: Emphasized Bible, 1897 edition,
appendix, page 271.
[7] An example is George Whitefield Ridout’s The Deadly
Fallacy of Russellism or Millennial Dawnism. [Kansas City, Missouri, No
date.]