Door to door work is dead.
Long live the website.
by Deltawave 44 Replies latest watchtower beliefs
Door to door work is dead.
Long live the website.
It's only a matter of time before you see paid ads on Youtube, Mobile apps, Twitter, Facebook etc. With the school being 86'd lack of skilled witnessing it's only a matter of time before you see an all digital campaign of sorts. The cart witnessing is largely a flop. Just not a good way to reach anyone in 2015. Not to mention for it to work you need aggressive sales types for it which they don't have.
Be on the look out for only more of a digital presence in the future.
If the complete juddering halt on building becomes "Move Ahead! Move Ahead (tm) to fleece the flock." Then the busy busy pioneers can get back to being tradespeople's assistants for free.
This equals even less ministry time on the carts and D2D which means the hours per baptism will rise to the 10,000 mark.
I cannot see any "crafty act" - other than "if your kid is unbaptised at ten he's birdfood!" by the magnificent seven that will change the fact they are peddling crap and more people will go online and check it out.
With the current 'brains' running the show, the reason for the trolleys can't be parsed out.
I think it is because the door to door work is not at all effective, and the dropout rate is holding steady at 2/3, ie, 67% of children raised a witness leave the church.
So rather than wonder if their message is unappealing, or that maybe the public has learned on their own that they are NOT a group where you want to raise a family (think the sex abuse scandal, and the leadership digging in their heels), these brain surgeons at the top think, Hey, what about a LITERATURE CART?
THIS is what happens when you get to the top of a group by being a yes man, promoted by other yes men, and when leaders cannot be challenged or questioned.
From my 'Millions Now Living' book.......
Yeah, I know...even I'm fed up seeing this now; which in itself is a good metaphor.
I think they are following a strategy of introducing change to try and keep people motivated. The carts, reduced pioneer hours, special campaigns and now the changes to reporting to make pretty much anything count simply paper over the cracks but are enough of a veneer to keep people chugging along, especially in areas where growth is negligible.
For areas where there is still greater growth then all the above methods are fine as well but if people are more open to a Bible study and less willing or capable of questioning what they are learning then the added benefit is that the publishers feel motivated simply because people seem interested.