Jehovahs Witnesses and Jesus Christ Metzger PDF
Jehovahs Witnesses and Jesus Christ Metzger PDF
Jehovahs Witnesses and Jesus Christ Metzger PDF
JESUS CHRIST
THE JEHOVAH'S WITNESSES AND
JESUS CHRIST
A Biblical and Theological Appraisal
demned any attempt to find God's will outside the Bible, and depre-
cated Russell's interpretation of the Pyramid. As a result many fol-
" lowers left the movement. Another innovation was the adoption of
the name, "Jehovah's Witnesses," a designation proposed by Ruther-
ford at an international convention of members held at Columbus,
Ohio, in 1931."
After Rutherford's death on January 8, 1942, the vice president of
the organization, Nathan H. Knorr, became the chief off~cer. Under
his leadership the numbers and the vigor of active W'itnesses have
apparently increased and, in addition to the publication of still more
volumes setting forth anonymously the teachings of the group, there
has also been issued a translation of the New Testament." This last
is a more or less faithful rendering of the Westcott and Hort Greek
text into vernacular English. Furthermore, the footnotes contain a
certain amount of technical information regarding variant readings
in manuscripts and early versions. This inforxllation, however, is
mingled with totally irrelevant material from various translations of
the New Testament into Hebrew, made in the sixteenth and succeed-
ing centuries. T h e quotation of these latter translations, which
understandably use the tetragram (YHWH) in rendering certain pas-
sages, provides a kind of spurious authority for the introduction of
"Jehovah" into 237 passages of the Nelv Testament.
T h e total membership of the sect is unknown. From the begin-
ning, so far as is known to outsiders, no records of membership were
kept. Various estimates, however, both official and unoffcial, have
been made. At the time of his death, Rutherford, for example,
claimed to have 2,000,000 followers. According to statistics pub-
lished in the latest edition of the official Yea~boolt,during 1952 there
were 426,704 "ministers" who bore testimony by visiting homes and
distributing over fourteen niilliori Bibles, books, and booklets as well
6 J. F. Rutherford, T h e Theocracy (Brooklyn, 1941). pp. 32-38.
6 T h e title page reads. New World Translation of the Christiun Creek Scriptures, Rendered
from the Original Language by the New World Dil>le Tratislation Conttnittee. A.1). 1050.
T h e first edition. comprising 480,000 copies. was made avail;~bleAugttst 2, 1950. A second
edition, containing several minor additions in the margins and In the ronclutling notes, was
published May 1. 1951. One of the books referred to in the footnotes of the New H'nrltl
Translation is the Emphatic Diaglott, published in 1861 by Bfnjaniin \Vilsoti, a self-educated
newspaper editor of Geneva. Illinois, who also pul~lisheda semi-tnonthly magazilie, T h e Gos-
pc! Bannm and Millennia1 Advocate. His so-callcd 1)iaglott is a curious edition of J. J.
Gnesbach's Greek text of the New Testament (In(%) with a wooden inteilinear translation
which, in several particulars, is an ancestor of the New \Votld Translation. It is this anti-
quated edition of the Greek text to which most Jehovah's \\'ittiesserr appeal itt their ronfi~lenr
assertions that "the literal meaning of the Creck is t l ~ u sa1111so." 1)r. Isaac N. Hall termed
it a "notorious" and "astonishing" edition ( A Critical Hibliography of the Greek .Vru, Testa.
men1 as Published in America, Philadelphia. 1883. p. 31).
68 'THEOLOGY TODAY
as fifty-eight million copies of the magazines entitled Watchtower
and Azualre! in thirty-six languages throughout 127 countries of the
\i~orld.~
11. GOODAND BADIN THE SECT
Although this article is designed to point out several of the more
flagrant errors in the teaching of the Jehovah's Witnesses, it must
not be concluded that they have nothing to teach the established
churches. Obviously the self-sacrificing zeal in propagating their
beliefs is a challenge to many nominal church members. Jehovah's
Witnesses are, so LO speak, "in good and regular standing" as long
as they seek opportunity to witness. Likewise their diligence in
searching the Scriptures (albeit to seek support for a prearranged
system) puts to shame the indifferent ignorance of the Bible which
characterizes a large number of professed Christians. These and
certain other features which the Witnesses share with the early Chris-
tians of apostolic times might well be imitated by all of God's people.
At the same time the system taught by the sect, while liberally but-
tressed with Scriptural quotations, teems with erroneous and hereti-
cal notions. These are of two main varieties. On the one hand,
the teaching of the Jehovah's Witnesses, although making a pretense
of being "all the Bible and nothing but the Bible," is absolutely
silent on several of the most central facets of the Christian Faith.
For example, nothing is said about what the Apostle Paul empha-
sized with untiring insistence, namely, that the Christian is "in
Christ." This phrase, or some cognate such as "in the Lord," "in
Him," and the like, occurs 164 times in Paul's Epistles, and repre-
sents what he had found to be the central and all unifying source
of his Christian life. Yet the officially approved teaching of this
sect does not and, indeed, cannot logically include this glorious
Christian truth. It cannot do so because its teaching is directly and
fundamentally anti-Trinitarian. It is only because Jesus Christ is
God that we can be in him.
7 1953 Yearbook of Jehovah's IVitnesses Containing Report for the Service Year of 1952:
Also Daily Texts and Comments (Brooklyn, 1952). p. 27. In 1950 the Witnesses held an
international conxention in the Yankee Stadium in New York, lasting eight days, which drew
an epti~nated123.000 people from 78 countries. According to Marley Cole's enthusiastic arti-
cle in the non-religious magazine Color, December. 1952. pp. 90-35. the Jehovah's Witnevles
are the "\Vorlrl's Fastect Growing Religionw-which is also the title oE Cole's article. More
objective reports of the sect are ~ i v e rby~ Stanley Iligl;: "Armageddon, Inc.." Saturday Evening
Poct, Scptc~nt~er 14. 1940, pp. 14 If.: Jerome Reatty. Petldlas of Paradise." American Maga-
zinr, Nobe~nher,1910, pp. 52 If. (contlensed in Reader's Digest, January, 1941, pp. 78-81): and
1{111 I)avitf~on,"Jehovah's Traveling Salesmen," Collier's, Novcmlxr 2. 1946 (mndensed in
Rrarlet's Digest, January, 1917, pp 77-80)
On the other hand, the second main variety of errors in the teach-
ing of the Jehovah's Witnesses arises not from a minimizing o r ex-
clusion of part of the Biblical teaching, but rather from a one-sided
emphasis upon certain Scriptural passages, interpreted in a purely
wooden fashion without taking into account the context o r the anal-
ogy of faith. By thus joining together portions of Scripture which
were never intended to go together it is possible, of course, to prove
anything from the Bible. T h e method, if it can be called a method,
is seen to be reduced to an absurdity if one should quote in succes-
sion the following three passages of Scripture: "Judas went out and
hanged himself" (Matt. 27: 5); "Go, and do thou likewise" (Luke
10: 37); "What thou doest, do quickly" (John IS: 27)! T o be spe-
cific, the bizarre eschatological teaching of the sect is due quite
largely to an arbitrary combining of certain Biblical passages mingled
with many a gratuitous assertion. According to the time-table pre-
pared by the Jehovah's Witnesses, "In 1914 Jehovah set his anointed
One upon his throne; therefore at that time Christ Jesirs took his
authority as King. Three and one-half years thereafter, to \\it, in
1918, the Lord came to his temple, which is the Temple of God." "
At this time Christ began to gather to hitnself a faithful retnnant
and commissioned them to be UTitnessesof Jehovab and his Kin:-
dom. In spite of opposition, those ~ v h ol,er.;c\.ere in this task may
hope, after death, to become imniortal spirits ruling 1cit11 Jesus
Christ. T h e number of these will be limited to 144,000; no others
will be in heaven.'
2. While Stephen, the first martyr, was being stoned, "he made
appeal " and said, 'Lord Jesus, receive my spirit' " (Acts 7: 59).
Here Stephen invoked the Lord Jesus. It is obviously both foolish
and sinful to pray to anyone except God. If therefore the opinion
of the Jehovah's Witnesses be correct, namely, that Jesus is only a
spirit creature, then Stephen was an idolater in praying to one who
was not truly God.
3. T h e Epistle to the Galatians begins as follows: "Paul, an apos-
tle, neither from (drrh) inen nor through (8th) a man, but through (616
Jesus Christ and God the Father. . . ." Here the Apostle declares
that his apostleship was derived neither from men as a source nor
through a man as a channel. Instead of receiving his appointmei~t
as an Apostle from or through any human being, he declares emphati-
cally ahat it was "through Jesus Christ and God the Father." In
these words, Paul clearly distinguishes JesuslChrist from m e n and
ranges him with God the Father. I t is to be noted also that, al-
though he uses two prepositions when speaking of "men" and "a
man," here he uses only one preposition, "through (616) Jesus Christ
and God the Father." J. B. Lightfoot coxnments succinctly on this
verse, "The channel of his [Paul's] authority (6th) coincides with its
source (dd) ."
T h e testimony of Paul is all the more impressive when one con-
siders the following three circumstances. (a) Although it is evi-
dently no part of the Apostle's purpose in this verse to refer explicitly
1, The footnote gives, "Or, 'Lord.' "
18 It isnot permissible to divide Thomas's exclamation (as is done by certain Witnesses),
maintaining that Thomas addressed the first half of it to Jesus and the second half to Jel~ovah
Gad. Such a high-handed ex lent ove~looksthe plain introductory words, "Thomas taicl
to him that is, to Jesus]: ' M y g t e r and my God!' "
I.A e footnote giva as alternatives of "appeal." either "invocation"or "prayer." ,
18 J. B. Lightfoot, St. Paul's Epistle to the Galatians, 6th ed. (London, 1880). p. 72.
72 THEOLOGY T O D A Y
to the nature of Christ, yet so habitually did Paul think of Christ as
fully divine that it comes naturally to him to refer, even in passing,
to Jesus Christ and God in the same breath, using the same preposi-
tion for both persons of the Trinity. (b) When one considers Paul's
strict Jewish monotheistic background and thorough rabbinical train-
ing, one is all the more surprised to find Paul using language such as
this, Evidently his Jewish faith had been enlarged so as to enable
him to regard Jesus Christ in this exalted light. (c) Perhaps even
more surprising is the fact that Paul not only holds this stupendous
view of Jesus, but he assumes that everyone agrees with him about
it. He does not argue the point, nor does he seem to be under neces-
rity to defend it against attack within the Church. Even those whom
he cornbats in this Epistle to the Galatians, the Judaizers, so far as
we can see, had no quarrel with Paul's lofty view of Christ. I n this
tnatter they agreed with Paul and other early Apostles who had seen
Jesus as he had walked on the Galilean hills, subjected t o all the petty
limitations of human life. Here then is a truly amazing t h i n g the
consensus of various groups within the early Church was that Jesus
Christ must be ranged alongside God the Father.
4. Not only do Thomas, Stephen, Paul, and others regard Jesus as
God, but according to John 10: 30, Jesus himself claimed, "I and
the Father are one." (So all translations, including that of the Je-
hovah's Witnesses, render this verse. T h e marginal note of their
translation, suggesting that "are one" means "are at unity," is an
alternative interpretation which is so lacking in justification that the
translators did not dare to introduce it into the text itself.) Here
Jesus is represented as claiming much more than having one purpose
or outlook with the Father. He claims to be one with the Father in
essence; and the Jews understand him to mean this, for they took u p
stones to stone him for blasphemy (verses 31-33). Psychologically,
there was no reason for them to become angry at Jesus if all he
asserted was his being one in purpose and outlook with the Father.
\lany ~ r o p h e t sand ~salmistshad done that much. T h e anger of
16Not only in John, the latest of the Gospels, is our Lord represented as claiming to he
(,orl, lri~talso in the carliest source of hlatthew and Luke (the source which scholars have
(allecl "0") is Jes~lsalso reprcsentecl as clairning to h e more than hlrman. T h u s i n Matt.
l I : 27, a;rordiltX to the New IVorlcl Translation. h e solemnly affirms: "All things have been
,lelivcrecl unto me hy my Father, and no one fully knows the Son but the Father, and no one
Tl~llyknows the Father hut the Son. neither does any o n e fully know the Father but the Son
and any one to whom the Son is willing to reveal him" (compare the parallel in Luke 10: Z).
Itere tlie tcvt asserts (a) that he, the Son, is so great that only the Father fully knows him,
ant1 (1)) that h e alone knows God truly as Father and fer that supreme knowledge all men
nlust I~eromedehtors to him. This is Jesus' "unshared sonship."
JEHOVAH'S WITNESSES AND JESUS CHRIST 73
the Jews against Jesus is explicable only on the basis 01 their under-
standing him to claim for himself equality with God.
-- The argument of verses 34-36, which Jehovah's Witnesses fre-
quently distort, can be succinctly summarized as follows. "If the
fallible and sinful judges of Israel were rightly called 'gods,' much
more may I, who am one with the Father and free from sin, claim the
title of 'the Son of God.' " Furthermore, verse 38, which refers to
the Son being in the Father and the Father in the Son, illuminates
Jesus' assertion in verse 30, "I and the Father are one."
5. There are many other passages in the New Testament which
reveal how deeply the Trinitarian pattern was impressed upon the
thinking of primitive Christianity. Thus, besides the direct and
obvious statements in Matt. 28: 19 and I1 Cor. 13: 14, there are such
texts as I Cor. 6: 11, 12: 4-5; I1 Cor. 1: 21-22; Gal. 3: 11-14; I Thess.
5: 18-19; I Pet. 1: 2; and others.lT (Because the manuscript evi-
dence of I John 5: 7-8, King James Version, is insufficient, this text
should not be used. There is, however, abundant proof for the doc-
trine of the Trinity elsewhere in the New Testament.)
Some Jehovah's Witnesses make much of the fact that because the
word "Trinity" does not appear in the Bible, therefore the doctrine
of the Trinity is not taught in the Scripture. T h e fallacy of such an
argument will be brought home to them by pointing out that their
favorite term, "theocracy," likewise appears nowhere in the Bible.
In neither case, however, does the absence of the word for "Trinity"
or the word for "God's rule" (theocracy) imply that the realities ex-
pressed by these two words are absent from the Scripture.
6. Although Jehovah's Witnesses seek to differentiate sharply be-
tween Jehovah God aad Jesus his creature, it is a remarkable fact that
occasionally writers in the New Testament apply to Jesus Christ pas-
sages from the Old Testament which refer to Jehovah. (Since the
Jehovah's Witnesses, who have not yet translated the Old Testament,
prefer the American Standard Version (1901) of the Old Testament,
all of the following quotations are taken from this version.)
(a) Isaiah promises that "Jehovah will be unto thee an everlasting
light, and thy God thy glory" (60: 19). Luke applies this to Jesus,
quoting it in the form. "A light for revelation to the Gentiles, and
the glory of thy people Israel" (2: 32).
lbt of (London,
~ ' ~ it1 tlie 'I'einple (6: 1 , 8 , 10) was of Jehovah. I n
(b) l s n i ~ lvibioil
the C;ospel of John, horvevcr, it is said that Isaiah saw the glory of
,JeslrsChiist n i i t l spoke of him (12: 37-41, see especially verse 41).
(c) In Psaliii 23: 1 and Isaiah 40: 10-1 1 , Jehovah is said to be our ,
shepherd. I n John 10: 11 Jesus. with obviotis refereirce to the Oltl
Testament passages, clairns to be the good shepherd.
(d) Paul quotes [he promise in Joel, "Whosoever shall call upon
the name of Jehovah shall be delivered" (2: 32), and refers it to Jesus:
"If thou shalt confess with thy mouth Jesus as Lord, and shalt believe
in thy heart that God r;iised him from the dead, thou shalt be saved
. . . for, rvhosoever shall call upon the name of the Lord shall be
saved" (Korn. 10: 9, 13).
Such passages as these (ant1 it should be emphasized that they con-
stitute merely a sampling chosen out of many others of similar im-
port) agree with the representation throughout the Gospels that Jesus
both claimed and exercised the prerogatives of the L,ord God himself.
Thus Jesus forgives sins (Rlark 2: 10, etc.), raises the dead (Luke 7:
12-15, etc.), controls nature (hlatt. 8: 26), will judge the secret mo-
tives of men (hlatt. 7: 22-23), and willingly receives divine homage
(John 20: 28-29). T h e statement, therefore, in John 10: SO, "I and
tlie Father are one," is but the epitome of the constant claim of Jesus.
As has oftell been out, Jesus' statement is either true o r false.
If it is truc, then he is God. If it is false, he either knew it to be false
or he did not knotv it to be false. If while claiming to be God he ,
knew this claim to be false, he was a liar. If while claiming to be
God he did not know this claim to be false, he was demented. There
is no other alternative.
IV. ERRONEOUS
TRANSLATIONS
Besides refusing to take into account the evidence set forth above,
the Jehovah's Witnesses have incorporated in their translation of the
New Testament several quite erroneous renderings of the Greek.
1. In the New .\.lTorldTranslation the opening verse of the Gospel
according to John is mistranslated as follows: "Originally the Word
was, and the M'ord {\.as with Cod, and the Word was a god." A foot-
uote which is added to the first word, "Originally." reads. "Literally,
'In (At) a beginninq.' " By 11sing here thp indefinite article "a" the
translators have overlooked the .cvell-kr fact that in Greek gram-
mar nouns may be definite for varicw sons, whether or not the
I
(;leek definite article is prcscut. :\ p~cl)osi~ional llhrase, for exaro-
ple, ~vherethe dchnitc article is not cxpressetf, c a l l be quite definite
in Greek,IRas in fact it is in John 1: 1. 'The customary translatioli,
"In the beginning was tile \bror(l," is therefore to be preferred to
either alternative suggested by the New LVorld translators.
Far more perilicious in this same irerse is the rendering, ". . . and
the LVord \\.as a god," with the follo~vingfootnote: " 'A god.' In
contrast with 'ihe God.' " It must be stated quite frankly that, if the
Jehovah's Mli~~~esses take this translation seriously, they are polythe-
ists. 111 view of the additional light which is available during this
age of Grace, such a representation is even more reprehensible than
were the heathenish, polytheistic errors into which ancient Israel was
40 prone to fall.
76 THEOLOGY TODAY
must be translated "a god." None of the thirty-five instances is
panlid, however, for in every case the predicate noun stands af&r
the verb, and so, according to Colwell's rule, properly has the article.
So far, therefore, from being evidence against the usual translation
of John 1: 1, these instances add confirmation to the full enunciation
of the rule of the Greek definite article.
Furthermore, the additional references quoted in the New World
Translation from the Greek of the Septuagint translation of the Old
Testament," in order to give further support to the erroneous ren-
dering in the opening verse of John, are exactly in conformity with
Colwell's rule, and therefore are added proof of the accuracy of the
rule. The other passages adduced in the Appendix are, for one rea-
son or another, not applicable to the question at issue. One must
conclude, therefore, that no sound reason has been advanced for
altering the traditional rendering of the opening verse of John's
Gospel, ". . . and the Word was God."
2. In Col. 1: 15-17 the Jehovah's Witnesses translation falsifies
what Paul originally wrote, rendering it: "He is the image of the
invisible God, the firstborn of all creation, because by means of him
ail other things were created in the heavens and upon the earth. . . .
All other things have been created through him and for him. Also
he is before all other things and by means of him all other things
were made to exist." Here the word "other" has been unwarrant-
ably inserted four times. It is not present in the original Greek.
and was obviously used by the translators in order to make the pas-
sage refer to Jesus as being on a par with other created things. As a
matter of fact, the ancient Colossian heresy which Paul had to cam-
bat resembled the opinion of the modern Jehovah's Witnesses, for
some of the Colossians advocated the Gnostic notion that Jesus was
the first of many other created intermediaries between God and men.
For the true meaning of Paul's exalted description of the Son of God,
therefore, the above translation must be read without the fourfold
addition of the word "other."
Frequently Jehovah's Witnesses make the assertion that this pas-
sage teaches that God created the Son." Actually the verb "to cre-
ate" in reference to the relation of the Son of God to the Father ap
nzbid.
as=,fur exam le, 'The Truth Shall Make You Fred' (Brooklyn. 1- pp. IgdO; Lei
God Be TTW B&yn, !k a d What Ha Rct%ia,
1946). p. 3 for bfmha* ( B ~ P .
In)pp
. &*\.
TEHOVAH'S WITNESSES AND JESUS CHRIST 77
pears neither here nor anywhere else in the New Testament. Here
he is spoken of as "the first begotten of all creation," which is some-
thing quite different from saying that he was made or created. It
Paul had wished to express the latter idea, he had available a Greek
word to do so, the 1%-ordT ~ ~ T ~ K T L U Tmeaning
O ~ , "first created." Ac-
tually, however, Paul uses the word T ~ W T ~ T O K O Smeaning
, "first be-
gotten," which signifies something quite different, as the following
explanation by a modern lay theologian makes clear.
One of the creeds says that Christ is the Son of God "begotten, not
created"; and it adds "begotten by his Father before all worlds."
Will you please get it quite clear that this has nothing to do with
the fact that when Christ was born on earth as a man, that man was
the son of a virgin? We are not now thinking about the Virgin
Birth. We're thinking about something that happened before Na-
ture was created at all, before time began. "Before all worlds"
Christ is begotten, not created. What does it mean?
We don't use the words begetting or begotterz much in modern
English, but everyone still knows what they mean. T o beget is to
become the father of: to create is to make. And the difference is
just this. When you beget, you beget something of the same kind
as yourself. A man begets human babies, a beaver begets little
beavers, and a bird begets eggs which turn into little birds. But
when you make, you make something of a different kind from your-
self. A bird makes a nest, a beaver builds a dam, a man makes a
wireless set. . . . NOWthat's the first thing to get clear. What God
begets is Cod; just as what man begets is man. What God creates
is not God; just as what man makes is not man.la
T o return now to Col. 1: 15 where Paul speaks of Christ as "the
first begotten of all creation," it is important to observe that the ad-
jective "first" refers both to rank as well as time. In other words,
the Apostle alludes here not only to Christ's priority to all creation,
but also to his .sovereig~ttyover all creation.
Later in the Epistle to the Colossians (2: 9) Paul declares, "It is in
him [Jesus Christ] that all the fullness of the divine quality dwells
bodily" (using the marginal reading of the New IVorld Tfanslation).
Nothing could be clearer or more emphatic than this declaration.
I t means that everything xvitho~itexception ~vhichgoes to make u p
the godhead, or divine quality, dwells or resides in Jesus Christ bod-
ily, that is. is invested witha body in Jesus Christ. It is to be noticed
also that Paul uses the present tense of the verb. "d\\.ells." He does
not sa). t l u t tlle ~ ~ I I I I I C S 01
S L ~ (li\ine
C cluality "has dwell" or "will
tlu~ell"in Jcst~sCh~.ist,but that i t "dsvells" there. All that thecreeds
of the Church lneali by sl,cahing of Jesus Christ as .elernally the only
bcgotten Son of i l ~ eE'nther is coniained in Paul's deliberate use of
the present tense of the verb "dwells."
3. T h e exalted description of the pre-existent Christ in Phil. 2:
6 is given a characteristic twist in the translation prepared by the
Jehovah's l\'itnesses: "Christ Jesus, tvl~o,although he was existing
in God's forn:, gave no consideration to a seizure, namely, that
he should be equal to God" A footnote to the first part gives
as an alternative. "who. although he was existing in God's form,
scornetl. . . ." Another footnote supplies an alternative render-
ing of B p n a ~ p b s ."a seizure," n;unely, "a thing to be seized." Paul's
language is thus nlacle to agree with the Unitarianism of the Je-
hovah's I\Jitnesses that Jesus was no1 equal with God and, in fact,
scorned such an equality.
That this translation is a misi~ndcrstantli~~g of the Greek may be
shown by referring LO the standard Greek lexicon of the New Testa-
ment edited by J. H. Thayer. (Thi? book is selected as an authority
here both because of its intrinsic merit and because the Jehovah's
Witnesses translators themselves refer to it more than once on other
occasions.) Thayer explains the passages as follows: "[Christ Jesus],
who, although (formerly when he \\.as M y o s hcrap~os)h e bore the form
(in which he appeared to the inhabitants of heaven) of God (the sov-
ereign, opposite to p o p 4 4 ~ o i r X o v ) ,y r t d i d not think that this equality
with God was to Ile eugcrly clung to or retained" (p. 418, col. b). In
similar language, Arthur S. Way, the learned and skillful translator
of many of the Grl.ek and Latin classics, renders Phil. 2: 6, "He, even
when H e subsistecl in the form of God, did not selfishly cling to His
prerogative of equality with God. . . ." l4 T h e admirable para-
phrastic rendering recently published by J. B. Phillips agrees with
Way's translation: "For He, Who had always been God by nature,
did not cling to His prerogatives as God's Equal, but stripped Him-
self of all privilege by consenting to be a slave by nature and being
born as mortal man." '"
4. In still another crucial verse the New World Translation has
garbled the meaning of the original so as to avoid referring to Jesus
24 Arthur S. \tlay, T h e Letters of St. Paul, 5th cd. (London, 1921). p. 155.
28 J . B . Phillips. Letters to Young Churrhes (New York. 1948), p. 113.
JEIIOVAII'S WILNESSES AND JESUS CHRIST 79