Pearl Harbor in 1942, of course. Having a parent read all those horror stories of Nazi German persecution--weeping, frightened.
In those days there was not just a Watchtower reader but also someone who stood up and asked the questions (rather than the conductor). Older brothers would pat me on the head, tell me it was too bad that I would never have this service privilege, because you had to be 10 years old--and the end would come before that. That's waaaaay over half a century ago.
Ah but Jehovah held back the cataclysm to spare recalcitrant ones. "You'll never have to register for the draft." (Had to be 18.) Had an enormous fight with my draft board, evening getting classified as 1-A, although in full-time service.
Fast forward to 1966, when Fred Franz released the "Life Everlasting" book. We had gone back to date-setting yet one more time! The crowd was electrified, I cringed, talked to older men in Writing, who shrugged it off that Freddie had gone off the deep end, wanting to see it so badly, and thinking it to be a stimulus even if it were wrong. After all, Paul had thought that way.
I knew that 1975 would be an enormous problem. Older folks, wiser, took me aside and pounced on my lack of faith. Family members gasped at my disbelief, were stumbled. Watched peers in traveling work do the countdown in months and even in DAYS from the platform. (Funny, in around 1980 I would never get any of them to own up to that. "WEH-ull! I never really believed that. I was just loyal.")
This is not the place to describe the surgeries I watched postponed, the homes sold, the lives completely disrupted ...
Wonder why I become unglued when someone who brags about being "in the truth" for 20 years (!) tells me the 1975 fiasco was all made up by apostates? About like when I'm told the Society does not discourage college.
Let me make a point: A few hardliners on the governing body are wild-eyed true believers who feel the Day is going to come any minute, and that's what drives them to make sure all the hardline stuff is shoveled out at the conventions such as at this summer. In their not feeling such certaintude, the progressives have a hard time of it. Were it simply only money!
Those of you who in their Journey have come across Eric Hoffer's "The True Believer" will understand.
Can't help but comment on something very ironic. For years the two Bible dramas at conventions were written by Ulysses V. Glass and Ed Dunlap. The Korah drama was Ed's. (Someone posted he was in the bindery when this brilliant Gilead instructor and writer was banished to a machine, saying, "Well, the doctor said exercise would be good for my health." Lord, I weep for Ed, who was as decent as he was brilliant.)
Anyway, Ed's old drama was just coarsened to an in-your-face diatribe this year, coming off much like the days of the Inquisition. "Yes, these are imperfect men, but they are INFALLIBLE when they speak as the governing body." Yessireee. Not much of a distinction when you are in a back room with the Torquemada bullies.
Can anyone confirm the figure I hear that 22,000 elders resigned during the last three years? (That's twenty-two thousand.)
"How'd he know?"
Maximus