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Christadelphians: Their Influence on the Watchtower Society

October 27, 2015 By Sean

I would like to spend just some time today writing about the Christadelphians from the Watchtower point of view through its history.

The early days of the Watchtower as you will see saw some agreement. Additionally, in the following quote, if you substitute the term “Christadelphian” with “Jehovah’s Witness,” you will see a striking similarity when it comes to who doesn’t get destroyed.  Also, the first quote has the fledgling organization admitting overlap.  The one are where they differ greatly from the Society is the belief of Satan which they believe is an imaginary being. 

HERE and there are to be found people who hold what are known as Christadelphian views, which are in some respects much like the views advocated in ZION’S WATCH TOWER, and in other respects the very opposite. Their views, briefly stated, are (1) That the Church is chosen or elected (according to the foreknowledge of God) through the truth; and that in all it is a “little flock,” heirs of the Kingdom. (2) They hold, however, that the Kingdom will be a visible, earthly throne, on which Christ will sit with his apostles, and that somehow all Christadelphians will be “joint-heirs,” who will “sit every man under his own vine and fig tree,” plant, build, etc., and long enjoy the work of their hands. (3) As for the dead Christadelphians, they will be resurrected to share these blessings, but for all other dead people, good or bad, they see no hope, no resurrection. (4) A great catastrophy at the second coming of Christ will destroy nearly all of the living except the Christadelphians, and the few spared will merely be spared so as to be the everlasting servants of the Christadelphians–their hewers of wood and drawers of water,–their slaves.

Lest some generous soul should suppose that they use the term “Christadelphian” in a broad sense to mean all true Christians, we answer, No; the term Christadelphian is used in the narrowest sense, applicable only to those who have believed as foregoing, and who then have been immersed, and who do not change their faith afterward. Other portions of their creed, made very prominent, are, that our Lord Jesus never had an existence before he was born in Bethlehem, and that there is no devil. They also deny the ransom.

Zion’s Watch Tower and Herald of Christ’s Presence.  March 15, 1896.  Reprints page 1950

In 1902, the organization had purchased the printing rights of the Emphatic Diaglott.  This was the preferred interlinear for many years.  As a Wathtowerite, if you have the orgnanization’s official app on your device, you know it’s been replaced by the Kingdom Interlinear. 

The November 8, 1944 issue of the Consolation magazine reports that Benjamin Wilson was a Christaldelphian. 

More information is shed in reference to Benjamin Wilson with the release the organization’s first history book.

It seems that one of Barbour’s group had come into possession of Benjamin Wilson’s Diaglott translation of the “New Testament.”  He noticed, at Matthew 24:27, 37, 39, that the world rendered coming in the King James Version is translated presence in the Diaglott.  This was the clue that had led Barbour’s group to advocate, in addition to their time calculations, an invisible presence of Christ. 

Jehovah’s Witnesses in the Divine Purpose.  1959. p. 256

This had first been published by its author, Benjamin Wilson, a newspaper editor of Geneva, Illinois, in 1864, and who was never associated with the Watch Tower Bible & Tract Society.

Jehovah’s Witnesses in the Divine Purpose.  1959. p. 256

One question at this point that is worth asking is simply this-since the organization regards itself as the channel of communication, why did it have to go outside to get this information? 

The tenor of the foregoing may cause some to conclude that Christadelphianism is indeed of God. However, as we examine it more closely we find that it contains such gross shortcomings and false doctrines that it simply could not be of God but must be of men.

The Watchtower Announcing Jehovah’s Kingdom.  August 1, 1962 p. 474

In 1962, we have the organization fully not respecting the roots and connection of the influence Benjamin Wilson had.  The premier “doctrine of men” espoused by Benjamin Wilson is the use of the word “presence” and not “coming” in reference to Jesus.  Henceforth, one of the foundational doctrines of the organization is not in harmony with the Bible but a man made tradition.  If you are in this organization, take some time and look at the Bible and put down the publication’s material. 

Filed Under: WT History Tagged With: Christadelphian, The Watchtower Announcing Jehovah’s Kingdom, Jehovah's Witness, Benjamin Wilson

The Emphatic Diaglott

The Emphatic Diaglott footnote on 1 John 5:7 slipped up on its quotation from Newcome’s translation (1808), in which the footnote reads: “This text concerning the heavenly witnesses is not contained in any Greek manuscript which was written earlier than the fifteenth century. . . . It is first cited by Vigilius Tapsensis, a Latin writer of no credit, in the latter end of the fifth century, and by him it is suspected to have been forged.”

The Watchtower Announcing Jehovah’s Kingdom.  February 1, 1951 p. 95

 

According to the English Revised Version of 1884, he said: “And other sheep I have, which are not of this fold: them also I must bring, and they shall hear my voice; and they shall become one flock, one shepherd.”—The Emphatic Diaglott of 1864; Rotherham, of 1903.

The Watchtower Announcing Jehovah’s Kingdom. May 1, 1981 p. 27

 

His master text was the basis for Sharpe’s English translation in 1840 and is the Greek text printed in The Emphatic Diaglott, first published complete in 1864. Other excellent texts were produced by Konstantin von Tischendorf (1872) and Hermann von Soden (1910), the latter serving as the basis for Moffatt’s English version of 1913.

All Scripture Is Inspired of God and Beneficial.  1990.  p. 318

 

J21     The Emphatic Diaglott (Greek-English interlinear), by Benjamin Wilson, New York, 1864, reprint by Watch Tower Bible and Tract Society, Brooklyn, 1942.

New World Translation.  1984 ed.  p. 10

 

In the early 1900’s, the Watch Tower Society became the copyright owner of The Emphatic Diaglott, Benjamin Wilson’s Greek-English interlinear edition of the Christian Greek Scriptures. The Society published the Bible Students’ edition of the King James Version, which included a 500-page appendix. In 1942 it published the King James Version with marginal references. Then in 1944 the Society began to print the American Standard Version of 1901, which uses the divine name. The name of Jehovah also was a feature of The Bible in Living English, by Stephen T. Byington, published by the Society in 1972.

The Watchtower Announcing Jehovah’s Kingdom.  January 15, 2001 p. 30

 

The Emphatic Diaglott, by Benjamin Wilson (1864)

The Watchtower Announcing Jehovah’s Kingdom.  August 1, 2008 p. 21

 

The Emphatic Diaglott

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