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DISKUS Vol.1 No.2 (1993) pp.1-12
THE PERSISTENCE OF SECTS
Bryan R. Wilson
All Souls College, Oxford
In recent decades, western society has experienced widespread secularization.
The evidence is apparent in diminishing numbers of people who practice,
diminishing numbers of vocations, decline in church finances, and the loss
of political influence. The process has affected the major Protestant and
Catholic churches throughout most of Europe. Yet, despite this general
religious decline, sects survive, even in some cases they flourish and grow.
The persistence of sects in a context of secularization is a subject worthy
of attention. Traditionally, sociologists have tended to see sects as
an alternative mode of religious organization to the church - indeed, Troeltsch
set up an ideal-typical juxtaposition of Sect and Church, which placed these
two phenomena in an artificial dichotomous relationship. Yet, it is clear
from the contemporary empirical evidence that the sect is not a mere alternative
to the church. It may not even be competing for the same public. It has
an autonomous existence and it responds to social circumstances in its own
way. And some sects show a capacity for growth and endurance, even when
major religious organizations are suffering decline if not decay.
There were other dubious assumptions built into the general stereotype
of the sect that was derived from Troeltsch. One of these was the rather
static model of the sect as necessarily a small collectivity - a local community
of love. Another was the idea that sects arose only among the lower classes.
To these doubtful generalizations, H Richard Niebuhr added another - the
contention that a sect remained valid for only generation, and that thereafter
it was destined to become transmogrified as a denomination - the denomination
being the distinctive American contribution to the patterns of Christian
religious organization. Whilst Troeltsch had projected a rather static
contradistinction of church and sect, Niebuhr, observing the normality of
change in the dynamic American context, mistakenly supposed that what happened
to some sects in America was a paradigm for the development of all sects
everywhere. But at least he saw that sects did not necessarily arise in
opposition to the Church, and that in the American context, with no established
or privileged Church, all so-called churches were reduced in status, becoming
merely denominations, while sects had at least the possibility of gravitating
towards greater social acceptability by evolving into denominations. And
this development was accelerated as sectarians experienced social mobility
and rose in the social scale.
However, all such considerations notwithstanding, the empirical
evidence is that by no means all sects become denominations. Some intensify
their ethic even consciously to maintain their sectarian orientation.
Elsewhere and long ago, I sought to refute the Niebuhr thesis, showing that
he had too hastily generalized from the particular circumstances of late
nineteenth and early twentieth century America to universal social processes.
What I then sought to suggest was that the experience of a sect in its
evolution depends on its ideology and on the circumstances of its origin
- an origin which is not, as is sometimes supposed, invariably the result
of schism. Nor is the process of denominationalization an inevitable result
of the sect's acquisition of a formal organizational structure. Certainly,
where the sect takes on a more elaborate and formal system of organization,
it relinquishes in the process the character of being, in the Troeltschean
sense, a small, subjective, fellowship of love. But the acquisition of
organization is not per se the determinant of denominationalization. It
is to this proposition which, with illustrations, I wish to devote my attention.
I shall review briefly the character and history of five Christian
sects which in considerable measure have maintained the common characteristics
of the model sect, as exemplified in four particulars: first, that each
of them exists in a state of tension with the wider society; second, that
each imposes tests of merit on would-be members; third, that each exercises
stern discipline, regulating the declared beliefs and the life habits of
members and prescribing and operating sanctions for those who deviate, including
the possibility of expulsion; and fourth, that each demands sustained and
total commitment from its members, and the subordination, and perhaps even
the exclusion of all other interests. All five of these movements are international
bodies, but they differ considerably in doctrine and even more, and more
to my present point, in organizational structure. My purpose is to show
that, despite espousing widely divergent organizational forms, sects may
survive as such, without succumbing to a process of denominational evolution.
All five movements are, in respect of orientation, either adventist or
introversionist sects. None of them began as a schism from the Church.
All of them had founders of strong personality, but only one of these leaders
might be said to have been charismatic, and even then only to a limited
degree and in the muted sense of charismatic utterance being subject to
biblical confirmation. Three of these movements espouse a minimalist position
with respect to organization, whilst two, and it is to these that I turn
first, have evolved strong structures of international control. What can
be remarked is that it is these movements which have grown most conspicuously,
to an extent far exceeding in size any of the three movements espousing
a minimalist organizational position.
These two large-scale highly organized sects are the Seventh-day
Adventist Church and Watchtower Bible and Tract Society, whose adherents
have, since the 1930s, been known as Jehovah's Witnesses. I review them
each in turn.
The Adventists were organized in 1863, but the roots of the sect
go back to the excitement that was generated by the preaching of William
Miller who had prophesied the second advent of Christ as an event to occur
in 1843 or 1844. The Seventh-day Adventists never so closely approximated
the ideal-type of an adventist sect as their name implies - first because
they organized only after the failure of prophecy, and were hence concerned
as much to explain why the advent had not yet occurred as with the future
anticipation of it. Second, because they accepted new prophetic interpretation
which re-located the adventual event in space as well as, of necessity,
in time, they introduced new doctrines of ideological defence, regarding
prophesy as pertaining to events in heaven. Christ, they maintained, had
entered the heavenly sanctuary, and the present time was a period in which
he was conducting an "investigative judgement". Meanwhile, Christians
were to prepare for the second coming by fulfilling the Old Testament law
relative to the 4th Commandment. Third, they departed from the typical
adventist sect by invoking new revelation to augment scripture and to direct
moral behaviour.
The Seventh-day Adventists acquired a distinctive lifestyle. Their
emphasis on food reform, and for a time also on dress reform; their development
of sanitoria, nursing homes, and also of schools and colleges, entailed
a good deal of forward planning somewhat at odds with the apocalyptic expectations
of an adventist sect. The revelations claimed by Mrs. Ellen Harmon White,
the unofficial leader of the movement and certainly its inspiring genius,
guided its development, although she was an unordained woman in a sect which
had a male ecclesiastical hierarchy. That fact alone was perhaps enough
to retard the denominationalizing tendencies that were evident in the history
of some other American sects. The movement had, however, inherited from
other denominations ministers who had been supporters of Millerism, and
with them a measure of ritual concern greater than that of most Protestant
sects, with rites not only of baptism, but seventh-day abstinences; foot-washing;
and obedience to the dietetic laws of the Old Testament. These dispositions
might have been enough to induce a denominationalizing tendency, in particular
the impact of an ordained ministry - which promotes the division of spiritual
labour, stimulates education, and induces these leaders to take the ministry
of other, less sectarian, bodies as a reference group.
The Adventists also evolved a variety of unusual concerns - in particular
in the field of social welfare. Today they have the seventh largest medicare
agency in the United States: in the world they own 150 hospitals and sanitoria
in addition to nursing homes. In the United States, they maintain two universities,
and nearly one hundred accredited liberal arts colleges. Their private
school system in America is second only to that of the Roman Church.
They run food factories promoting their advocacy of wholesome foods, especially
cereals, since most Adventists are vegetarians. The structure of their
provision is almost that of a mini-state, duplicating the major institutions
of society, and reminiscent in some degree to the phenomenon of pillarization
familiar in Belgium.
Given the factors pushing the Seventh-day Adventist Church towards
denominational status, it is not surprising that something of the sort occurred.
A formal hierarchic structure evolved. The second and subsequent generations
have grown more liberal and less fervently committed to early expectation
of the advent. The evolution of institutional structures has led to the
employment of non-Adventists in their hospitals, affecting the ethos and
causing technical and professional criteria to prevail over adventist religious
values. The secular culture has also had an influence: the movement nowadays
invests in the stock market; the incidence of divorce has increased among
members; and a vociferous homosexual sub-culture has developed within the
movement.
Is the Seventh-day Adventist Church then no longer a sect? Is
it a denomination? Not really. This judgement can be made, because strong
and distinctive ideological constraints impede that development. The lifestyle
of the movement is still distinctive, and the devices for social insulation
- the seventh-day Sabbath and the dietary taboos (tobacco, alcohol, tea,
and coffee) mark off believers from other people. These are conspicuous
devices of boundary-maintenance, but there are also theological differences
which make Adventists unacceptable to other denominations. The concept
of Christ entering a heavenly sanctuary - an idea derived from Old Testament
priesthood - and more especially of his conducting an investigative judgement,
and acting to blot out the sins of true Christians, are concepts which radically
depart from the beliefs of the Protestant fundamentalists who would otherwise
be the natural associates of the Adventists. The sanctuary doctrine departs
from the Protestant principle of justification by faith since sanctification
and perfectionism are now added to justification as requirements for salvation.
Thus, Adventists appear not to regard Christ's death on the cross as sufficient
for salvation. They rely on the imparted righteousness of Christ through
his spirit rather than on righteousness imputed through his sacrifice.
The implication, with its adjunctive demands for obedience to Old Testament
law, is that only true and faithful Adventist really have a prospect of
salvation. All of this amounts to an ideological preservative - organizational
characteristics notwithstanding - of Adventist sectarianism. So six million
Adventists constitute a sect that would be, yet cannot be, a denomination.
There is no such ambivalence about the position of Jehovah's Witnesses,
whose whole history exemplifies a process of enhanced distinctiveness and
apartness in which one theme - preparation for acceptance into God's kingdom,
and the need to spread that message widely and urgently - has ensured that
the Witnesses remain a sect. Emerging in the 1870s, the Witnesses began
with commitment to dates for the second coming, crystallizing around the
expectation of the end in 1914. Today that date is still significant as
the alleged time of the establishment of the Kingdom, which, however, was
to become manifest at a later time. Witnesses began as a loose network
of seekers who subscribed to the writings of a layman, Chas. T. Russell,
but under his successors that loose association was gradually transformed
into a mass following, which acquired an increasingly distinctive and separate
identity. Under Judge Rutherford, in the 1920s and 30s, the Society became
more than a mere publishing house, presenting its transformed self as a
so-called "theocratic organization". Order was imposed from
the top downwards. Locally elected elders were replaced by centrally chosen
nominees, later called service-directors. Rutherford was the mouthpiece
of the theocratic organization, virtually, the voice of Jehovah God.
The whole concern became to canvass the good news - members were
designated "publishers" - now, sanctification (part of Russell's
programme) was out and evangelism was in. By 1931, when the name Jehovah's
Witnesses was taken, the movement had become a tightly-organized sect vigorously
opposed to all other churches, with a motto, "Religion is a racket".
In the 1950s, the 'Watchtower' became a service book, with articles devised
for question and answer catechizing at one of the several weekly meetings
that all members were expected to attend. As membership grew, so two classes
of adherent were recognized - 144,000 of the Book of Revelation - a servant
class ("the good and faithful servant" of scripture) who were
destined, in the millennium, to rule with Christ in heaven, and the "great
crowd" or "other sheep" to whom the servant class ministered,
and whose destiny was to live on a re-made paradisial earth, where they
would still be subject to tests of obedience, and the temptations of Satan.
They have entertained strong expectations of the Kingdom's appearing at
different times, the most recent being 1975, and failure of prophecy, whilst
it may have caused some to defect, has not prevented the movement from showing
an overall rate of growth, which in some countries is very impressive.
The Witnesses have not been induced by failure to retreat into introversionism.
Rather they have seen the need to re-double their efforts in vigorous canvassing
as the test of faithfulness to Jehovah. Thus, they have extensive contact
with the wider public, [in Britain in 1989, 108,000 publishers undertook
23 million hours of house-calls]. Yet, they remain little affected by
that exposure - they confine their contacts to their single-minded purpose
and avoid all other occasions for association. They undertake virtually
no social work, and unlike the Adventists have no provision for health care,
education, or welfare. When they need to do so, they readily make use of
the state's social services, and their approach is entirely pragmatic towards
state provision, which they see as an interim facility till the Kingdom
is manifest.
They have intensified their sectarian stance from time to time.
Thus, citing the biblical prohibition against eating blood, they have persisted
in their refusal to accept blood transfusions. They have also led the way
in claiming the right of conscience respecting compulsory military service,
and in campaigns for more liberal laws respecting civil rights generally,
particularly in the United States and Canada. The Witnesses tend to restrict
the education of their young people to the minimum (albeit not uniformly),
and they not infrequently abandon successful careers to take up part time
work so that they can devote more time to undertaking their publishing work
of the "good news of the kingdom". And on this issue, too, they
have encountered public disapproval. But all of these instances, which
could be multiplied, indicate the enhanced sectarian posture which the movement
has adopted.
Although in theory disavowing all human organization, in practice
the Witnesses are centrally and hierarchically organized in circuits and
districts under the direction of a special class of so-called 'pioneers'
who work full-time for very small stipends, and who maintain oversight of
the local congregations. Whereas Adventists are led by a professional ministry
and are dependent on trained specialists in various fields, conspicuously
in medicine and higher education, Witnesses are regulated by their amateur
pioneers. Whereas Adventists require their members to pay tithes (one tenth
of their incomes) to the movement, Witnesses pride themselves on making
no explicit demands for financial support from their members, not even taking
up a collection in their meetings. The tribute their movement demands is
in the man-hours which members spend in canvassing from door to door.
In fact both of these sects have elaborate organization, with patterns acquired
from the secular society, with corporate legal structure, property ownership,
financial investments, and rational bureaucratic control of personnel.
Both are remote from the Troeltschean assumptions of the small fellowship
of love, and neither has trodden the Niebuhrian path of denominationalism.
Each of the two movements remains a sect, and each utilizes organizational
faculties to maintain its sectarian status.
In contrast, there are sects that have preserved their minimalist
organization despite the need to function within an increasingly organized
wider society. Three sects which approximate the ideal "fellowship
of love" and each of which sees itself not as a corporate body, but
as a gathering of votaries are the Exclusive Brethren, the Christadelphians,
and the Testimony. Even if some concessions have to be made to the modern
state - property has to be rented or purchased; governments have to be
obeyed; and there is need from time to time to have recourse to law - none
the less, these sects seek to avoid every species of formal organization.
One consequence is that each of these sects denies that it has any sort
of human leadership. But in actuality, although formal designations are
eschewed, in practice, informal leaders do emerge in defiance of minimalist
theory. Where such informal patterns of authority arise that is an increased
propensity for schism to occur. Schism has been a commonplace in the
history of two of these groups (the Christadelphians and the Brethren) and
dispute and splintering has occurred in the Testimony. Each of these sects
takes the extended family as its model, and all relationships with those
who are not in the kinship system are avoided. Although not communitarian,
nor, indeed, socially and vicinally segregated, each of these movements,
and especially the Christadelphians and even more particularly, the Brethren,
seeks to lead life apart from the wider society in every respect that is
possible.
The Exclusive Brethren arose in Dublin as a group of seekers , concerned
to admit to fellowship only true believers and - although some of the founders
were ordained clergymen in the Church of England - under the conviction
that there was no scriptural warrant for ordination, and that the clergy
must relinquish the claims to sacramental power that had been claimed for
them. The cardinal principle which developed strongly as the movement
experienced recurrent schism was the obligation to separate from evil, leading
the originally adventist, and at one time evangelistic, movement into an
increasingly introversionist position. The movement came to see itself
as having recovered the truth from which the Christian churches had apostacized.
All males participate in exhortation, but in practice there are strong
informal leaders at both local and national level, and it is they who expound
doctrine which, they maintain, is progressively opened up by the Holy Spirit,
whose presence is claimed for every assembly of the movement. Competent
expositors of the Word acquire prestige first in their own assemblies and
then more widely, through invitations and exchange visits between assemblies.
Yet the informal status of these leaders is always precarious, and there
is recurrent anxiety as they seek recurrent re-endorsement.
The Brethren see their own assemblies as places set aside from the
world: they regard them as heavenly locations. Although they do not openly
avow that salvation can be attained only there, this is in fact their informal
assumption. The Spirit will lead all true Christians to associate with
them, and to separate themselves from the world. There is today, little
evangelism and certainly no demand that others "come and join us".
The emphasis has shifted from public preaching of the word to preserving
the sanctity of the community. They maintain strong boundaries proscribing
involvement in trades unions, universities, politics, and jury service,
refusing to eat with outsiders, to share a building, to operate computers,
to watch television or listen to radio, among other prohibitions. Over
time, they have intensified their sectarian ethos. They persist as a small
but flourishing fellowship, despite the schisms that have periodically afflicted
them.
No less a persisting sect than the Brethren, and almost as long
enduring, are the Christadelphians, founded by an English emigrant to the
United States in the 1830s. The movement is avowedly adventist, strongly
concerned to read the signs of the times and to interpret world history
in the light of Biblical prophecy. But today, despite the persistence of
these adventual themes, the Christadelphians have, in the light of disappointment
concerning the advent, become increasingly introversionist, a common shift
of stance for long-enduring adventist sects. The founder, John Thomas,
translated the politics of his day into the allegorical figures of the books
of Daniel and Revelation: Russia, Britain, the Papacy, the Ottoman empire
were all pre-figured in the Bible's prophetic discourse. One central theme
was God's covenant with the Jews, and the expected return of the Jews to
Palestine in fulfilment of prophecy. The Christadelphians regarded themselves
as adoptive Jews - joint-heirs in God's covenant, since only they, the Jews,
and some early Christians had real hope of resurrection. The Kingdom
rather than the Cross was the central theme of their message, since this
was Jesus's own message: his sacrifice on the cross was a subsequent and
less important Christian item.
Like the Brethren, the Christadelphians have always disavowed any
sort of professional ministry. They prided themselves in having no committees,
no chairmen, no elders or designated preachers. Like the Quakers, they
have had a conception of an unorganized band of true believers. In the
event, minimalism must compromise if any sort of regular group life is to
continue, and there emerged among them "presiding brethren", "arranging
brethren", and "lecturing brethren" to replace the more secular
nomenclature of status and power. As with the Brethren, informal roles
have left the way open for dissention and schism, and today the Christadelphians
are divided into a number of loosely connected fellowships. When faced,
for example, with the exigencies of war and in the light of their need to
claim exemption from compulsory military service, ad hoc informal leadership
evolved, but such external action (as treating with the authorities) had
internal consequences - informal ad hoc leaders do not always relinquish
power when the circumstances which brought them into action have passed.
And so it was with the Christadelphians after the First World War. In
practice, over the longer period, authority has accumulated in the hands
of the editor of the movement's periodical magazine, who came to determine
which ecclesias were orthodox, and whose "news" should or should
not be carried in that official organ.
The Christadelphians were committed from the outset in an almost
Troeltschean way to the sovereignty of the local ecclesia, but in the modern
world the needs of a persisting movement often transcend what a local community
can achieve. The development of study groups, summer schools, fraternal
gatherings, and other movement-wide concerns, as well as publishing and
the now much reduced missionary and evangelistic work, have demanded something
more than minimal organization. But the ideal persists that the whole community
is a spontaneously gathered remnant, operating in accordance with the New
Testament pattern, more a community than an organization. Indeed, the
Christadelphians function almost as an endogamous tribe with complex linkage
of kinship networks throughout Britain and in some other English-speaking
countries.
Whilst both the Exclusive Brethren and the Christadelphians embrace
the old Quaker minimalist position with regard to religious organization,
an even stronger commitment is made, at least overtly, by the Testimony
(also known as Christian Conventions, or more colloquially as Cooneyites,
Go Preachers, Two-by-Twos, or, in Germany, as the Namenlosen). This movement
began in 1897 in Ireland, when an itinerant missioner of the evangelical
Faith Mission became distressed to see that those whom he had converted
to Christianity often returned to the orthodox denominations in which, he
believed, they would not receive the real Christian gospel. He formed
a band of unpaid preachers who took as their charter text Matthew 10, to
"provide neither gold nor silver nor brass for your purses, nor scrip
for your journey, neither two coats, shoes, nor yet staves, for the workman
is worthy of his meat".
Those who accepted this call became literally Tramp Preachers -
another name by which the movement became known. They took vows of poverty,
chastity and obedience, but they were not monks. They were, indeed, vehemently
anti-clerical. The preachers surrendered their homes and property and families
to the cause, to become idealistic preachers of the Word to anyone who would
listen. They had, and still have, no printed literature, other than a hymn
book. They have no archives, no buildings, and, notionally at least, no
officials. They are indeed a contradiction in terms - a secret evangelistic
sect.
At first, all converts were expected to take up preaching, but the
founder, Irvine, gradually accepted that there must be a separate body of
lay people who received and sustained the preachers, so a type of "third
order" of lay adherents evolved. They began to be gathered in open-air
conventions in the summer, usually on land owned by a member or close sympathizer.
Ordinary meetings among lay believers are held in houses, but periodically
the itinerants visit each district, and there they borrow a hall (often
the Church hall of an unsuspecting minister) for a preaching meeting for
the public at large.
The sect preached that the Bible was sufficient for instruction,
but they gradually came to believe that the preachers were "Living
Witnesses", and that those who failed to respond to them were destined
for Hell. Irvine did not regard the sacrifice of Jesus as man's sole source
of redemption - those who held this view he abused as "Calvary Ranters".
Rather it was those who were converted by his preachers and who modelled
themselves on Christ by sharing in his sacrifice, who would be saved. Thus
it was works rather than faith which mattered, and, like the Seventh-day
Adventists, The Testimony maintained that they had an imparted rather than
an imputed righteousness.
The preachers accepted the hospitality of the laity, the so-called
"saints" wherever they went, living up to the dictum that the
movement embraced "the minister without a home and the church in the
home" The preachers were those who held the door open to God. Thus
the movement had the appearance of an evangelical body, but the emphasis
was on salvation only through the living witnesses. Their text was Romans
5:10 "We shall be saved by his life" - which implies salvation
through Jesus as a man on earth prior to his death and resurrection. Jesus
was a model for the living, and like the Seventh-day Adventists, the movement
has been committed to a kind of perfectionism. The Testimony provides a
good exemplification of Troeltsch's opinion that while the Church was derived
from Paul, the sect derived from Jesus.
The preachers led and in considerable measure still lead austere
lives, if somewhat less so than in the early days when some of them undertook
long journeys by bicycle in the searing heat of the Australian summer through
the "outback", or endured similar privations in other parts of
the world. Today the movement relies heavily on its annual conventions
- great tented gatherings in the countryside which hundreds or even thousands
may attend. There are, each year, seven such conventions in England, another
seven in Ireland, and three in Scotland, and many more in the United States
and Australia. The sites for these gatherings are unmarked, and despite
the size of these occasions they remain relatively unobserved by the public
or the media. In Britain, today, there are sixty active preachers ministering
to an unspecified number of adherents, perhaps of several thousands.
Yet, despite its commitment to minimalism, the Testimony could not
persist without some measure of organization. Overseers have emerged over
the years to assign to preachers particular territories. Money has had
to be managed, and some of the more naive among the preachers have been
disturbed to discover that the movement had any dealings with banks. Cooney,
who was not the founder but rather one of the early prominent members from
whom the body acquired its nickname, became a radical dissentient objecting
to bank accounts, the use of halls for meetings, and even the use of a name
(in particular in the United States, of the name Christian Conventions,
which a regional overseer had adopted when seeking exemption for the preachers
from compulsory military service). But even minimalist sects evolve, and
Cooney, the radical minimalist, was expelled from the body in 1928.
Minimalist sects have been prone to schism - a consequence of their
distrust of organization, their unwillingness to subordinate the total believer
to the role-performer and distrust of the de-personalizing effects of rationalization
and routinization which occurs in perhaps all religious bodies. Minimalism
protects a sect from too close an involvement with the wider society, accommodating
the community orientation of the introversionist sect. Yet minimalism is
not wholly adequate in the modern world. Covert structures develop, and
informal authority systems evolve, even though the anti-organizational commitment
remains strong and impressive. The surprising item is not the compromises
that have to be made for a religious body to persist, but the relative success
of these sects in resisting the desiccating process of routinization.
These sectarians have surrendered little of their first principles despite
what, to a Niebuhr, and in conformity with some general law of social entropy
might appear as an inevitable process of denominationalization.
The minimalist groups maintain in structure, ethos, and ideology
much that conforms to the ideal-typical model of the sect. Yet issues arise
- about property; about military service and other civic obligations from
which they seek exemption; or about health or educational obligations -
when they needs must accept that the state will demand that there be authorized
spokesmen who must have some power to negotiate for the group. Despite
such periodic imperative need in the modern world to treat with the state,
these sects have retained a great deal of their pristine spirit. It might
be maintained that sects which have adopted elaborate and modern forms of
organization have failed to do so. Yet, the two sects that we have examined
which have espoused - the one overtly, and the other more covertly - elaborate,
hierarchic and international organizational structures, have none the less
also managed to retain a sectarian ethos. They remain ideologically distinctive,
exclusivistic, separated, strongly disciplined, and in considerable degree
counter-cultural. The adoption of organized structures has not been sufficient
to turn these movements into denominations. The Seventh-day Adventists
have constructed a well-organized alternative system of institutions to
service their members and to insulate them from the wider society. By organizational
devices they have protected and preserved their distinctive ethic. The
Witnesses have organized for a very different purpose, but they have come
to use highly rational techniques to canvass a revolutionist sectarian ethic.
Although now sizeable corporations, they remain largely uninfected, and
remain, no less than the minimalist bodies, authentic expressions of the
sectarian spirit.
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Acknowledgement: This paper appeared originally in the Indian Missiological
Review and is produced here by agreement with the editor of that Journal.
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--- Social Compass XXIV, 1, "Les Tamoins de Jahovah" 1977
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