If you have not already seen it, please look at the post "50th Wedding Anniversary" just below this one.
In the 1870s there were numerous small
Bible classes loosely affiliated with various papers, some Age to Come, some
different strands of Adventism. People obtained papers from all manner of
sources, and when ZWT started publication it was initially just one more to add
to the list. Eventually, people started to choose which direction they viewed
as “the truth,” and the Bible Student movement, with its separate identity,
came into being.
However, many attending gatherings that
became “Bible Student” meetings continued to still read widely, even if, as
time went by, it may have been politic to keep quiet about it.
In the first few decades of ZWT’s publication, alternative magazines were still being read by various Bible Students as well. This might help us understand certain subject matter in early ZWTs. On occasion CTR would be responding to the work of others which he knew his readers were receiving. The Tabernacle and its Teachings (later rewritten into Tabernacle Shadows) was originally written, at least in part, to combat the writings of Nelson Barbour.
The Herald of the Morning
In the 1890s Nelson Barbour’s paper The Herald of the Morning was obviously
still seen by a few. In the follow up to 1894’s Harvest Siftings (special issue
of ZWT for April 25, 1894) defector S D Rogers was accused of visiting ZWT
congregations with
First, Rogers knew who Barbour was and where
Barbour was, to go to him for support against CTR. Second, it was reported back
to CTR that this had actually happened. Third, Barbour was still sufficently
well-known to ZWT readers for CTR to mention the event as a warning. CTR’s
comment would only have real meaning if Barbour was still on selected Bible
Students’ radar.
This is supported by what happened when a
few Bible Students, including a Watch Tower Society director, Augustus Weimar, left
fellowship and joined the Koreshan Unity in 1895. This was a strange group that
among other things believed the earth was hollow and mankind lived inside it.
In the September 1895 issue of the Koreshan
magazine, The Flaming Sword, they
used one of Barbour’s articles from November 1891 to attack CTR’s theology. It
seems likely that the Koreshans got this from their new intake of ex-ZWT supporters.
However, this means that at least one of those supporters was still reading
Barbour’s Herald into the 1890s.
https://truthhistory.blogspot.com/2021/03/the-watch-tower-and-koreshan-unity.html
The
World’s Hope
John Paton left fellowship with CTR around 1882 and started his own paper The World’s Hope, promoting Universalist views. Looking an extant copies of this paper, a number of well-known ZWT names were also readers. It was Paton who reported on the death of the first ZWT president, W H Conley, and obviously knew and was in contact with him. The account about Conley’s death in The World’s Hope for August 1, 1897 was supplied by W I Mann, who up to April 1892 had been a ZWT director.
For the history of individuals, Paton’s magazine
is valuable because in keeping with his views on universal salvation he tried
to keep in touch with or at least report on everyone. The interest was not
generally reciprocated. From an historical sense one it is a pity that his
paper folded in August 1916. A few more
months and he would have no doubt reported on CTR’s life and death as he saw
it.
https://truthhistory.blogspot.com/2013/07/john-patons-farewell.html
The
Spirit of the Word
Another associate, Arthur P Adams,
initially supported Barbour when the split came, but then started a small
circulation paper in 1885 called The
Spirit of the Word.
Adams was a Methodist minister who met CTR
in 1877 and became associated with both him and John Paton and Nelson Barbour.
As a result of unrepentantly expounding Age to Come views he was expelled from
the Methodist ministry in 1878. CTR chose to mention Adams
in the first version of Harvest Siftings published in 1890.
It was
after this, while on a tour of the New England States, that I met Mr. A. P.
Adams, then a young Methodist minister, who became deeply interested and
accepted the message heartily during the week that I preached to his
congregation. Subsequently, I introduced him to little gatherings of interested
ones in neighboring towns, and assisted otherwise, as I could, rejoicing in
another one who, with study, would soon be a co-laborer in the harvest field.
It
wasn’t to last. Later in the reprinted Harvest Siftings (1894):
Mr. Adams espoused the views
of Mr. Barbour and likewise forsook the doctrine of the ransom. And, true to
our interpretation of the parable of the wedding garment as given at the time,
Mr. Barbour and Mr. Adams, having cast off the wedding garment of Christ's
righteousness, went out of the light into the outer darkness of the world on
the subjects once so clearly seen.
CTR obviosuly felt it necessary to mention
Adams because some ZWT readers would also know of his ministry. One example of
this was Ophelia Burroughs. Ophelia wrote letters to ZWT, organized a Dawn
Circle in the absence of suitable males to step up to the mark, and wrote hymns
and poems which the Society published throughout the 1890s and into the 1900s.
It can be confusing because she wrote under several names, including Browning
(her maiden name) and Burroughs (the name of her first husband).
But Ophelia knew Adams. Very well. In April
1905 she went as far as marrying him!
https://truthhistory.blogspot.com/2015/01/ophelia.html
1 comment:
Another interesting article, thank you Jerome.
I’d choose ZWT, but then again it always seems easy to choose with the beauty of hindsight.
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