Recently I was speaking to my Witness sister, and the topic of someone dying in her husband's family came up. She mentioned that her husband (a non-Witness) has a hard time with death and will not even go back to his grandparents property, 20 years after their death, as he does not do well with the memories and death itself. My sister made the statement, "I explained to him that I hoped one day I could help him come to terms with death, by learning what it really is and the hope in store." You know you have heard the same thing many times as a Witness, yet did your Witness life prove such a thing?
I remember from my years as a Witness, that several people died and left behind loved ones. I would never even attempt to try and count how many times I heard at memorials, "you will see them again soon." Yet months, years and decades passed and those people set a lone in the Kingdom Hall, without the one they were told would come back soon in the ressurection. I remember seeing them sad, one sister even crying during a meeting years later when someone mentioned an event her husband was involved in. So did this hope help to take the sting out of those people's death?
My mother in law lost both her mother and father in the same year, 25 years ago, and has several items of theirs. Some make sense; pictures, statues, etc. Others are junk; a chair that is in storage infested with spiders, boxes their VCR came in (without the VCR), mail from credit card companies addressed to them, etc. These items should have been trash ages ago, and not something kept. Yet when the family tried to throw these away, my wife's mother cried so hard that we feared she would need to go to the hospital for a nervous breakdown. A sight so terrible to watch, I wish I never saw it. From simple suggesting that the VCR box be thrown out, that small of an item. She is, and remains a strong attending Witness. Along with my wife's father and her sister. Did the Jehovah's Witness hope remove the sting of death from her?
My point in all this. Is the simple faults statement of hope used by so many Witnesses to recruit, that the hope of knowing what they feel God's word says about the future, will make death seem simple and easy to handle. That her husband, who has a hard time with emotions (like most men) will suddenly find a positive viewpoint to go to his grandparents property to fish and play, like he did as a child, by simply hearing her Jehovah's Witness hope. My time as a Witness compelled me to tell her, "that is wrong, I know and knew plenty of Witnesses who felt the same as your husband and your hope of 'wiping tears from his eyes' is not something you can fulfill." I used the examples I mentioned above, and as you might imagine though... my faults Witness revaltation, did not remove the sting of ignorance!