Aside from all of the attacks going back and forth, has anyone ever called or written the Society to ask if the Williams' sisters are truly baptized witnesses? Wouldn't that solve the mystery once and for all?
C'mon folks. There are four pages on this one topic alone which hasn't gone ANYWHERE. All it has done is brought LDH and Teejay into a semantics match. This thread would have taken an entirely different path if we knew for sure if the two of them were baptized witnesses. Instead, we get four pages of people attacking each other about two people they do not know.
Can I give one example that may be compared with the Williams' sisters? We know for a fact that the two of them say they are indeed Jehovah's Witnesses. The media interviews confirm that. We must also establish that the Society cannot do anything judicially against the sisters if they are not baptized.
OK, now let me use the example of my brother-in-law. He is 15 years old and is an unbaptized publisher. In school he does not salute the flag or participate in extracurricular school activities. He makes his stand known at school that he is a Jehovah's Witness. His parents are proud of him because he is known in school as being a good JW by his classmates and teachers. He has also been into motorcross since he was very young. He has entered several races and has won a few of them for his age class. He really is good and can kick my butt on the track anyday. Someday he would like to turn pro and get paid from the manufacturers to race. His parents are totally behind him which is surprising since they were pretty strict with my wife when she was growing up. If he does turn pro one day but never gets baptized, what can the congregation do to him? What if he continues to go to the meetings and in his heart he feels that he is still that good little witness that he was raised to be? What if he gets interviewed after turning pro and says that he is a JW?
That is exactly how I view the Williams' sisters. They were brought up as good little JW's and were encouraged to play tennis. If they were never baptized, but yet turned into pro-tennis players, they may still feel attached to their parents religion. Many adults today profess to be affiliated with their parents religion in which they were raised. But that does not mean they are practicing members of that religion and agree to all its tenets.
Without written confimation from the Society saying that they are/are not baptized witnesses, we may never know their true status. That is what would settle this years' long overdue debate once and for all.