When I was growing up I was told that as Jesus' followers, we should return evil for evil to no one. It occurred to me today that even though that was what the JWs preached, in reality a much different lesson was taught. Often when I did something that was wrong, I got paddled. This was common among Jehovah's Witnesses. If your children were "evil" then you should respond with corporal punishment. They believed that was showing love for their child. What the Bible said about the rod of discipline, was quoted in a variety of verses. This was interpreted as literal punishment with a stick or a belt.
So basically, when your children were evil, you should show them evil in kind by beating them.
Jesus' own words about letting the little children come to him are lost in the cycle of abuse and fear of the angry parent. Jesus' words about returning evil for evil and doing unto others as you would have them do unto you fall by the wayside. JW parents believe the words of the apostle Paul and the proverb writers to be more important than what Jesus said.
The evidence is in. Modern medical studies have proven that there are far more effective means of discipline than beatings. The American Pediatric Association does not endorse physical abuse as an acceptable method of correction. But my own parents, and many other JW parents, ridiculed the theories of Dr. Spock when I was a child, saying Jehovah knows better. They continued the beatings, but it hurt them more than it did me. That's what they told me. Ironically, we talked about that in therapy today.
We also discussed that if God is as smart as he is, then did he really write that stuff about the rod in the Bible? God is a very scientific being, all powerful and all knowing. Didn't he know back then what such punishment would do to small children? There are two answers that I can see. Either there is no God, or the Bible really isn't his book at all and the verses about the rod just were reflecting popular wisdom of those ignorant times.
I'm not a Christian, but I think many of the words of Jesus are very profound for his time. The rest of the Bible seems to be myth and allegory, and maybe even the DTs in the case of John's Revelation. The Apostle Paul had serious mental problems. But the words of Jesus were pretty good. Don't judge others. Do good things for others. Think of the other person. Do what you can to help people. I'm not saying I agree with everything he said, but a lot of it was very profound.
Rather than follow these teachings, the JWs think it is more important that this cycle of violence must continue. Regardless of their pacifistic refusal to bear arms in war, they roll up their sleeves and bare their arms as they take up the belt, the stick, or the paddle. What is their legacy?
NUMEROUS CHILD SEXUAL ABUSE LAWSUITS! They are reaping what they have sown. Their tolerance for this abuse has taken them down a slippery slope to the bottom of a pit. In their religion it is acceptable to physically and verbally abuse your child. It is acceptable for a man to physically or verbally abuse his wife. If the wife tries to leave the husband, she is seen as not being submissive. Divorce is never acceptable unless adultery has been committed. So many JW women stay in an abusive marriage. The elders are allowed to abuse the sheep in their care with impunity. Any deviation from the pages of the Watchtower and the words of a dozen or so old men in Brooklyn, New York, brings the swiftest and most severe spiritual abuse.
Is it any wonder then, that children have been and continue to be molested in the JW faith? They are certainly in the right place for it. They are at the bottom of the totem pole in the JW hierarchy. Whenever a victim speaks out, they are abused again by archaic policies set up to encourage that the victimization will continue. Are these cases of child molestation and cover-up an isolated phenomenon? I don't think so. It is just another manifestation of the various kinds of abuse they have tolerated and encouraged for years.
Tammy