You just get a feeling? What if more than 144,000 people get the feeling?
You seem to know a lot about this, so maybe you could clear up something about the 144,000: I had heard that they had all been picked in 1914, and the End would come before they all died. Is this right? If so, what was the justification for changing it, and what is the official teaching now? I can see they might have a crisis of belief if the last of the 144,000 died and nothing happened, if they had all been picked in 1914. That was a hundred years ago!
You hit the nail on the head, because this is the dilemma we are talking about here that the Governing Body of the Jehovah’s Witnesses is having to make sense of through a public display of cognitive dissonance.
Originally, the Witnesses believed that the 144,000 had been chosen by 1914 and that they would leave their bodies behind as they went to heaven to be with the Lord in October of that year. (The end of the world was supposed to begin then too.)
Of course that didn’t happen, but they wouldn’t be shaken from their belief that they were the only ones in the correct religion (even if they weren’t preaching anything that was correct). And their numbers, strangely enough, began to grow. It’s a very appealing thing to the ego to “know” you are in the “only God-approved” religion–or at least be in a group that supports your conviction about this.
So what did they do? They adjusted their beliefs. Since they didn’t go to heaven in October of 1914 and World War I broke out, they believed they were witnessing the “great tribulation.” They were on the threshold of the world’s end, and the fact they were still on earth must mean that God had not filled the number of 144,000.
While they expected the World War to end in Armageddon, they had to adjust their beliefs again when peace came to the earth. “This must mean God wants us to find the remaining 144,000 members,” they told themselves. So off they went to preach. “Once the number is filled,” they believed, “the great tribulation will start again.” They called the time of peace the “eye of the storm” before Armageddon.
But in the late 1920s they had gathered far more than 100,000 members. Not all could be going to heaven. So they claimed to have been enlightened with a “new belief,” one that was actually taken from Catholicism (see the Catechism of the Catholic Church, section 1042). They claimed that God was gathering people who would survive into a 'new earth" with the popular sermon (and book of the same name): “Millions Now Living Will Never Die.” When they finalized their doctrine about “two classes” being saved–one to go to heaven and another “new” group to live on a paradise earth–it was 1935. So they claimed that God had closed the door to the heaven hope in 1935. The remaining ones were now the “teaching class” that God chose to bring the gospel to those who would inherit the New Earth. Only the members of the “teaching class” could partake of the bread and wine at their yearly communion, however.
But the end did not come, even with the outbreak of World War II (which at first they believed was the return of the great tribulation). And when peace came their numbers continued to grow, out of which arose relatively new ones claiming they were of the 144,000 too.
These relatively new ones faced great opposition from their own ranks and have had to endure decades of bullying from their own members, even though the official doctrine was that some of these “might” be replacements for members who failed to remain faithful until death. As long as the number of remaining ones of the 144,000 showed a steadily decrease of yearly partakers at the annual Memorial of Christ’s Death all was well, because the decrease was a “proof” that they were approaching the end…as most or all the 144,000 were expected to be in heaven by the time Armageddon came.
The number of remaining ones got as low as around 8.000, around the time I left the JWs. Afterwards the numbers increased to about 13,400 or more (a report from the number announced at the Memorial sermon from this year was that there were 13,600 partakers last year).
The increase moved the Governing Body to do two things:
- Declare that their belief that 1935 was the cut-off date for God “calling people to heaven” was no longer official doctrine.
- Claim that the 144,000 had no special status among them as the “teaching class”; members of the Governing Body were the only ones who could rightly claim to be of that special teaching group.
As mentioned before, the “special feeling” was popular especially among new ones in African countries. Even though other denominations have not stopped offering communion despite the rise of disease, the Governing Body has allegedly found a “solution” to this problem in some African countries by removing all the bread and wine from this annual communion commemoration of theirs.