Talking With the Dead?
JWs and Necromancy
Ken Raines
JWs from the beginning of their movement have spoken out against the spiritistic
practice of communicating with the spirits of the dead. This form of spiritism
was popular in the late 1880's to the early 1900's. The name for this form of
spiritism is necromancy.
In stating their official opposition to necromancy the Society has pointed out
that the Bible in such places as Deut. 18 condemns all forms of spiritism
including necromancy. They have published much on this through the years.
In addition to the Biblical statements against the practice they have appealed
to their belief in the doctrine of "soul sleep" or "annihilationism" as proving
that a person can not communicate with the dead since the Bible, they believe,
teaches that the dead are unconscious or "asleep" and thus can not communicate
with anyone. Those who claim therefore to being in communication with the
spirits of the dead are actually talking with demons, they say.
For example, Rutherford wrote an article titled "Talking With the Dead(?)" which
appeared in the first Golden Age magazine in 1919. In it he mentions those who
were well known at the time for their belief and involvement in necromancy. He
said:
Sir Authur Conan Doyle, a positive witness that the living communicate with the
dead (?), has written much on the subject. It will be noticed that the messages
which purport to come from the dead come through a medium. [1]
Rutherford believed that Doyle and others were unBiblical in 'talking with the
dead' by appealing to his belief in soul sleep, that is, the belief that the
dead are unconscious until the resurrection. He then quotes several Scriptures (Psalms
6:5; 88:10, 11; 90: 3; 115: 17; 146:4; Ecclesiastes 9:5, 10) and then comments
that:
These Scriptures, then, prove conclusively (and there is none to contradict them)
that man has not an immortal soul; that man is not a spirit being but a human;
that man when he dies is dead and is not conscious; therefore could not possibly
communicate with any who are living.[2]
His conclusion as to who the spirits are that communicate with humans through
mediums was:
... instead of this being the work or voices of departed men, we answer that the
voices and works are those of demons who never were men,... [3]
This is the typical manner they have answered the claims of spiritists who
believe in necromancy and supposedly the Bible at the same time. However, this
stated opposition to necromancy does not mean that the Society inoculated itself
against the activity, or that they have not, in fact, engaged in their own form
of necromancy.
The Faithful and Wise Servant is Dead!
On Halloween (Oct. 31) of 1916 C. T. Russell the "faithful and wise servant," as
he was called died. This posed a problem for his followers. Since the 'new light'
or meat in due season came only through the faithful servant according to their
theology, and he was now deceased, did this mean that no new light was to be
expected? Would they now have to be content with "old light" and keep printing
this until Kingdom come (literally!)?
This came to a head for some when Rutherford, in 1917, by then the Society's
president, had the book The Finished Mystery published as the posthumous work of
Russell. This, among other Rutherford moves, led to some splits in the
organization with some leaving and forming their own sects (such as The Layman's
Home Missionary Movement).
The Society's justifications for the Finished Mystery are interesting and bring
up some fundamental problems I have with their whole theology relating to 'meat
in due season' from God through 'that servant.' For the purposes of this article
I will look at one of these justifications.
In the Finished Mystery book they promoted a form of necromancy as a solution to
the above stated dilemma. On page 256 they said:
The three days of terrible darkness over the land of Egypt may represent three
years of the great war, and indicate its close shortly after the publication of
this final witness of the church... Pastor Russell passed forever out of reach
of the antitypical Pharaoh, Satan, in the fall of 1916.... we hold that he
supervises, by the Lord's arrangement, the work yet to be done. [Emphasis mine]
Here, one year after Russell's death, the Society said The Finished Mystery is
to be the final witness before the end and that Russell is still supervising
their work even though he is dead!
How could he do this since they taught, as briefly documented above, that the
dead are unconscious and thus can not possibly communicate with the living?
First Resurrection in 1878
Russell taught that the resurrection of the "sleeping saints" started in 1878.
This was not viewed as a visible, bodily resurrection, but a spiritual
resurrection to heaven. All those of the anointed class who died beginning in
1878 were resurrected to heaven upon death. Those of this class who died prior
to this time such as the Apostles were also resurrected in 1878.
The Finished Mystery as well promoted this belief. On page 182, for example,
they said:
... in the spring of 1878 all the holy Apostles and other 'overcomers' of the
Gospel Age who slept in Jesus were raised spirit beings,...
Thus, when Russell died in 1916, he was immediately resurrected as a "god", a "divine
being." From heaven this god was "supervising" the Society's work!
On page 144 of The Finished Mystery they again stated their belief that the now
"spirit being" C. T. Russell was directing their work from beyond the grave:
... though Pastor Russell has passed beyond the veil, he is managing every
feature of the harvest work.
In the November 1, 1917 Watch Tower they also said:
This work is conducted by the WATCH TOWER BIBLE AND TRACT SOCIETY, a corporation
organized for that purpose by Pastor Russell years ago, and which, without doubt,
was organized under the Lord's direction, and which was managed and directed by
Pastor Russell until his death....
Hence our dear Pastor, now in glory, is without doubt, manifesting a keen
interest in the Harvest work, and is permitted by the Lord to exercise some
strong influence thereupon. (Revelation 14:17) It is not unreasonable to
conclude that he has been privileged to do, in connection with the Harvest work,
things which he could not do while with us. Although we recognize that the Lord
is the great Master and Director of the Harvest, yet we recognize that He would
privilege the saints beyond the veil to have a part in the work on this side;
and thus all the saints, both in Heaven and upon earth, are now given the honor
of concluding the work on this side, preparatory to the full establishment of
the Kingdom of Glory. [4]
Thus, not only was Russell directing the Society, but all the "saints" beyond
the veil! This is a somewhat unusual form of necromancy, but it is necromancy in
the sense of promoting the involvement of dead "saints" to direct the living on
earth.
How Russell directed them from beyond the grave they never explained. I
seriously doubt that the Society's leaders such as Rutherford held seances at
the Society's headquarters to contact the spirits of Russell and the Apostles to
see what they were to do next. This doctrine sounds more like the Catholic
doctrine that the living faithful can pray to the "saints" for help than the
traditional form of necromancy such as the 'witch of Endor' variety.
At least one other critic of the Society came to a similar conclusion. In a 1924
Golden Age they printed this person's objections to Society beliefs including
this subject. As recorded in the Golden Age his statements were as follows:
"In Volume VII, STUDIES IN THE SCRIPTURES, page 161, Revelation 9:13, referring
to the Adventists, in connection with other Protestant churches, the statement
is made, 'The common ground on which they stand is this, their affirmation of
spiritism in some form.' The writer is not an Adventist, nor affiliated with any
church; but he believes in fairness. It seems to him that Adventism, which
maintains that all the dead are still unconscious in the grave, leaves the field
less open to spiritist delusions than does your doctrine, which declares that,
since 1878, the righteous dead are conscious spirits; for in another place you
disclose with great particularity [in "Spiritism" and "Talking With the Dead"]
how the fallen angels have almost unlimited powers to impersonate even the
righteous dead. It occurs to this writer that this doctrine also exposes the
believer to lying telepathic communications from the living. It resembles
strikingly the Roman Catholic belief that only a few of the dead, the saints,
etc., have any communication with the living." [5]
Here the opposer to the Society's position correctly, in my view, states that
their doctrine of the "saints" being resurrected to heaven since 1878 (together
with the view that Russell was directing their work from there) opened them up
to a form of necromancy and was similar to the Catholic view of the Saints. The
Society's response was as follows:
The ground for including the Adventists in those tainted with spiritism has
reference to their acceptance some years ago of the delusions of "Mother White,"
and not to their sound theology on the question that the dead are dead. However,
the doctrine that the dead do really die does not in any way interfere with the
doctrine of the resurrection.... This is the case with all the saints who fell
asleep in death prior to 1878. Since then we understand that we are living in a
special season when the overcomers are, at death, "changed in a moment, in the
twinkling of an eye" (1 Corinthians 15:52) and do not need to remain asleep in
death. But our doctrine would forbid any intercourse with any of these; indeed,
none of the Lord's people would undertake it. [6]
They deny that this doctrine of a post&endash;1878 spiritual resurrection etc.
opens them up to spiritism and say their doctrine forbids it and none would
attempt such.
This is not completely true. Their doctrine of being directed by the spirits of
the dead from heaven [especially Russell] is a form of necromancy by definition.
It is a fact also that at least one Bible Student did take these doctrines to
heart and did communicate with a spirit that claimed to be Russell!
Russell Dead, But Speaking Again
The Society responded to this person's claim in the article Demons Entrap a
London Ex-Elder in the January 1, 1934 Golden Age. Speaking of someone who was
formerly an "elective elder" in the London congregation they said:
He imagines that he is receiving spirit messages from Charles Taze Russell,
first president of the International Bible Students Association; as a matter of
fact he is taking messages from a fallen angel that for centuries has been
getting his principal enjoyment in making fools out of humans. [7]
They claim the spirit that communicated with the man was a fallen angel (not of
the "honest" variety) because he gave him false doctrines; doctrines that
Russell himself never taught. They therefore, unlike their endorsement of Angels
and Women, these messages from a fallen angel were not "exceedingly interesting
and sometimes thrilling," but were instead "characteristic demonic expressions."
It was not "thoroughly in accord with the correct interpretation of certain
scriptures" like J. G. Smith's spirit messages.
After giving examples of such false Biblical interpretations they further
pointed out the demons were careless in their use of English:
Flirting with the witch of Endor, and other witches since, has made the demons
careless in the use of pronouns; sixteen errors in four pages of manuscript are
too many, even for an unclean and fallen spirit. [8]
I do not know who this person was that made these claims. The article doesn't
identify him. I assume that he was open to necromancy based on previous
Watchtower statements as the 'opposer' warned might happen ten years earlier. He
opened himself up to lying communications from the "dead." Whether this was done
"telepathically" or through a medium, I do not know. This person apparently did
not follow their 1924 statement that their doctrine forbids such communication.
Later in 1934, perhaps as a result of this, Rutherford wrote the following
clear-cut denunciation of trying to communicate with Russell or any other dead "saint."
He denounced the belief that the dead were directing the Society's work. This
appeared in the May 1 Watchtower and in his book Jehovah. There he said:
All at the temple will realize that their spiritual food comes to them from
their Teachers, Jehovah and Christ Jesus, and not from any man. No one will be
so foolish as to conclude that some brother (or brethren) at one time amongst
them, and who has died and gone to heaven, is now instructing the saints on
earth and directing them as to their work.[9]
Rutherford may be correct in calling such beliefs "foolish" but it was he who
had the Finished Mystery published that promoted the idea that "some brother",
who died and went to heaven, namely Russell, was directing those on earth.
His clear rejection in 1934 of this did not end the matter of the Society itself,
let alone those with the dreaded "elective elder spirit," promoting the idea
that the dead are communicating truth to those on earth. In recent years they
have seemingly "resurrected" the idea.
Necromancy Resurrected?
In the 1988 book Revelation&endash;Its Grand Climax at Hand! they say on page
125:
This suggests that the resurrected ones of the 24&endash;elders group may be
involved in the communicating of divine truths today.
Thus they currently teach that the departed spirits of the anointed class "may
be involved in the communicating of divine truths today" to those on earth.
Again, I seriously doubt that the Governing Body is today holding seances during
their meetings. However, it is still official doctrine that the dead leaders of
JWs "may be" involved with sending divine truths to the anointed on earth. As
before they do not say how they may deliver the information to those on earth.
References and Notes:
1. The Golden Age, Oct. 1, 1919 p. 23 (last ).
2. Ibid. p. 26.
3. Ibid., p. 28.
4. The Watch Tower, November 1, 1917 p. 325.
5. The Golden Age, February 13, 1924 p. 312, 73.
6. Ibid., 74.
7. The Golden Age, Jan. 31, 1934 p. 273.
8. Ibid.
9. The Watchtower, May 1, 1934 p. 131; J. F. Rutherford, Jehovah, (Brooklyn, New
York: Watchtower, Bible & Tract Society) 1934 p. 191.