The egos began to bloat when the comparisons to the ancient Quorum of the Twelve Apostles began. The Governing Body wasn't always an administrative body whose edicts were the law. Many apparently continue in the homey, easy style you'd expect from a neighbor or friend.
As people like this visit congregations, it doesn't help when people begin fawning over them and treating them with almost sickening deference. Many of the elders, from what I've heard, have taken their cue from the GB. If the GB doesn't interfere with them, and sustains them behind the scene, both prosper. The GB gets the power and the elders are free to tighten the grip on whomever they see fit. As it's been reported here, they interfere with the way you raise your families, how you conduct your business, what you do after high school, the types of places you visit in the neighborhood, such as home sales -- they can even determine what you can and cannot read and what you can and cannot display in your homes.
To my mind, the greatest problem among those affiliated with the Watchtower Bible and Tract Society is that it doesn't consider itself a church. Why? If one reads the New Testament, it is full of references to the Church. There are local churches that, together, make up the entire Church; and the apostles and other writers make it exceedingly clear that there is a church, and that Jesus Christ is the head of the Church. If Jesus is the archangel Michael, then Michael is the head of the church (which I don't buy for a moment). We also know the church had officers in it, amongst whom were apostles, bishops, teachers, deacons, priests, evangelists, seventy and elders. If we say that modern Governing Body members=Apostles, and Overseers=Bishops, and Elders=Elders, then what of the Priests, Deacons and Seventy? And if the WBTS isn't a church; if it isn't the Church, then where is the Church? And why has God chosen an organization headed by Jehovah and not Jesus Christ?
To see the sanctity and the relationship that existed between Christ and the Church, take a careful look at Ephesians 5. Then, if you can, explain how the Jehovah's Witnesses correlate to it as an organization. Is it the church, or is it a placeholder until the Church is restored to the earth?
Christ is the head of the Church, and the Church is subject to Christ. Christ loved the Church and gave himself for it that he might sanctify and cleanse it so that he might present it to himself "a glorious Church" without spot or blemish. How is what the Governing Body is doing will result in that type of Church, wherever it is?
Clearly the WTBTS considers its members to be witnesses of Yahweh, not the Church of Jesus Christ. And that's a huge problem. Where do they get their ministerial authority? Who told them to organize and how to organize? Jesus told his apostles, "Ye have not chosen me, but I have chosen you, and ordained you, that ye should go and bring forth fruit; and that your fruit should remain; that whatsoever ye shall ask of the Father in my name, he may give it you." (John 15:16) Does this fit the description of the mission given to the Governing Body? No, because the GB sees itself as the "faithful and wise servant" of Matthew 24 -- not bringing forth fruit, but rather, those " whom his lord hath made ruler over his household, to give them meat in due season." Just how the Lord made the GB the "ruler over his household" has never, to my knowledge, been explained. How do they know the Lord did this, and who is the Lord? Christ, or the Father?
The GB was more theologically viable as a consulting body than an administrative body. I think many active Jehovah's Witnesses know this; but for them it's a leap of faith...quite a leap at that!
.