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Organizational structure of Jehovah's Witnesses - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Organizational structure of Jehovah's Witnesses

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Part of a series on
Jehovah's Witnesses
About Jehovah's Witnesses
Demographics
History
Organizational Structure
Governing Body
Faithful and Discreet Slave
Legal Instruments
Government Interactions
Beliefs
Doctrines · Practices
Eschatology
Blood · Disfellowshipping
Persecution
Controversy
Related People
Formative Influences
William Miller · N.H. Barbour
Jonas Wendell
Presidents & Members
List of Jehovah's Witnesses
C.T. Russell · M.G. Henschel
J.F. Rutherford · F.W. Franz
D.A. Adams · N.H. Knorr
Ex-Members & Critics
R. Franz · E.C. Gruss
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The Organizational Structure of Jehovah's Witnesses is a religious hierarchy. Jehovah's Witnesses are lead by group of senior elders, called a Governing Body. Branch offices, known as Bethels, manage countries or regions and produce literature for use by local members and for evangelism. Members, or publishers, are organized into congregations and are overseen by congregational elders.

Contents

[edit] Basic structure

The organization of Jehovah's Witnesses is intended to be modeled on the early Christian church. The basic principle is that all baptized men have the opportunity to become ministerial servants or elders and lead the Christian congregation. The international organization is led by a Governing Body.[1] Each congregation is lead by congregational elders, whose appointment is recommended by traveling representatives of the Governing Body to a branch office. Ministerial servants assist the elders.

Titles are not used as a means of address.[2] Servants in a congregation do not receive any monetary pay, whereas missionaries, Bethel staff and travelling representatives are supported financially.

Chart — The Watchtower December 15, 1971 p. 749  It should be possible to replace this fair use image with a freely licensed one. If you can, please do so as soon as is practical.
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Chart — The Watchtower December 15, 1971 p. 749  It should be possible to replace this fair use image with a freely licensed one. If you can, please do so as soon as is practical.

[edit] Publishers

All who particpate in the witnessing activity, or evangelical work, arranged by the Christian congregations are known as publishers. Although Jehovah's Witnesses, as a group, publish books, magazines, and other literature, the meaning of the word "publisher" in this sense is a person who is engaged in evangelizing.[3]

[edit] Baptized Publishers

A baptized publisher is someone who has undergone a series of questions, has made a personal dedication to serve God, and demonstrated it through a public baptism. [4] These baptisms are performed at assemblies and conventions organized by the Governing Body. From that moment on, the person can correctly be identified as a member of Jehovah's Witnesses.

A regular publisher does not have a specific quota of hours each month. Typically, a publisher must report at least one hour per month to be counted as a 'regular publisher'. Elders may allow publishers to count 15 minute increments if special circumstances limit them. If a publisher fails to report for one month they are termed "irregular".[5] If a publisher fails to report for six months, they are classed as "inactive".[6] These terms, namely irregular and inactive, are used in statistical reports compiled by the organization, and published annually in a Yearbook of Jehovah's Witnesses. Those habitually irregular or inactive are usually restricted from serving in any special capacity.

There are different levels of increased service available to baptized publishers in 'good standing' within the organization:

  • Auxiliary Pioneers - make a commitment to do 50 hours of field service for a given month. This can be done on a per month basis, or on an ongoing basis.
  • Regular Pioneers - make a commitment to perform about 70 hours of field service each month, but the yearly requirement is 840 hours of field service per year. A publisher must be baptized for at least 6 months and deemed to have good morals and be an exemplary publisher, in order to be recommended by the elders of their local congregation to be a regular pioneer.
  • Special Pioneers - assigned by the Branch to take on special work, such as publishing in remote areas. This may require committing to at least 130 hours a month in the public ministry.
  • Missionaries - sent to foreign countries to preach. They use at least 130 hours a month in the preaching. Before being assigned to a location, such persons usually go through training at the Gilead school.

[edit] Unbaptized Publishers

Unbaptized publishers could include children or other persons who are on their way to becoming baptized. A person can qualify to become an unbaptized publisher when able to demonstrate basic knowledge of the Bible and is living in conformance to moral standards as set forth in the Bible. The person who is conducting the Bible study with the unbaptized person approaches the presiding overseer. He will arrange for two elders to meet with the student to interview the student. If qualified, that person can officially begin to share in the public ministry.[7]

[edit] Administrative or Branch Offices

An administrative or branch office is referred to as a Bethel by Jehovah's Witnesses. The international headquarters of Jehovah's Witnesses is such a Bethel and is located in offices at Brooklyn, New York, USA. The Governing Body of Jehovah's Witnesses convenes in and some Directors of the Watchtower Society operate from the Brooklyn offices.

There are Branch Offices [1] of Jehovah's Witnesses in about 110 countries. At these locations, volunteers help to print and ship Bible literature as well as other works. These volunteers are known as the Bethel family. Each branch is led by a Branch Committee of three or more persons, which are appointed by the Governing Body.

Any branch office may include a translation department, a legal department, a hospital information services department, as well as printing facilities in larger branches. Each branch office has a Service Department that corresponds with the congregations and supervises the work of Circuit and District Overseers local to the country or region coordinated by that branch.

New York headquarters of Watch Tower Bible and Tract Society
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New York headquarters of Watch Tower Bible and Tract Society

[edit] Governing Body of Jehovah's Witnesses

Main article: Governing Body of Jehovah's Witnesses

Decisions regarding the worldwide activity of Jehovah's Witnesses are made by the Governing Body of Jehovah's Witnesses, composed of elders professing spirit-anointment as convened in Brooklyn, New York. Prior to organizational restructuring in 1976, all decisions (from the years of Pastor Russell onward) regarding the activities of Jehovah's Witnesses were made by or subject to the approval of the President of the Watchtower Bible and Tract Society.[8] Until the 1970s, this group was virtually identical with the board of directors of the Watch Tower Bible and Tract Society of Pennsylvania.[9]

Since the year 2000, the Governing Body has delegated to other members the responsibility of serving as directors of the various corporations that are used by the organization. For example, the current president of the Watch Tower Society, Don A. Adams, is not a member of the Governing Body.

[edit] Administrative Units and Their Overseers

Each congregation is part of a Circuit, being cared for by a Circuit Overseer. Each circuit of congregations is part of a District, being cared for by a District Overseer. This in turn is under the supervision of a Branch Office. The Branch Office is under direct supervision of the Governing Body of Jehovah's Witnesses. All Branch Offices are part of a Zone with a Zone Overseer appointed by the Governing Body.

[edit] Zones

A zone consists of a number of Branch Offices. It is served by Zone Overseers appointed by the Governing Body. Their main work is to help Branch Committees with problems and questions in the ministry. Sometimes members of the Governing Body will serve as Zone Overseers.

[edit] Districts

A district consists of a number of circuits and is served by a District Overseer, whose responsibilities include spending a week with the Circuit Overseer visiting a congregation and attending the circuit's annual two-day assembly. Annually, usually in summer, a three-day or four-day District Convention is held. Despite its name, it may be attended by less than a whole district, or by several districts together. Such conventions are held in suitable facilities, usually seating thousands of visitors.

[edit] Circuits

The congregations come together twice a year for assemblies, and are also visited twice a year by the Circuit Overseer, an experienced elder representing the Branch Office. Such visits typically last one week, during which the Circuit Overseer delivers talks for the congregation and the general public, meets with the elders, ministerial servants and pioneers, and leads in the house-to-house teaching and preaching work.

[edit] Cities

In cities with more than one congregation, a City Overseer can be appointed. He is not a traveling man, but serves as an elder in one of the congregations. He takes care of various issues that affect the whole city. His responsibilities are limited though, since the Branch Office will act directly with the particular congregations in most cases.

[edit] Congregations

The congregations are the local units, which are in many aspects self-governed. The elders in the congregations take care of the publishers and decide the congregation's activities. Specialized territories for evangelism are made up within a congregation's boundaries and distributed to publishers. A congregation meets in a locality called a Kingdom Hall. A congregation is also divided in smaller units called Congregation Book Study groups, with usually 10-20 publishers. These groups are the smallest unit in the congregation arrangement. The group has an overseer, usually an elder, who is responsible for the group. The publisher gives his service report to the overseer, and is cared for by this person in many practical issues. The public ministry is often arranged within this small unit of publishers.

Within this larger unit, meetings are usually held twice a week, two meetings at a time, in the Kingdom Hall. These four meetings are: The Public Meeting, a Bible-based discourse, the Watchtower Study, a question and answer consideration of an article in a current Watchtower magazine, the Theocratic Ministry School, a speaking course featuring the Bible, and the Service Meeting, talks and demonstrations on use of the Bible. Each meeting is 40 minutes to an hour in length. All meetings begin and end with prayer, are free for anyone to attend and usually include the singing of Kingdom songs.

The fifth type of meeting, the Congregation Book Study, is arranged by the Congregation Book Study groups, which meet for a question and answer discussion of a Watchtower publication. Meetings are held weekly, usually in private homes.

For details on the meetings, see: Practices of Jehovah's Witnesses#Meetings

[edit] Servants

Jehovah's Witnesses believe that according to the Bible, all of Jehovah's worshipers are ministers. Overseers are appointed to take the lead in the ministry and the teaching in the local congregations, and to fulfill certain directorial roles.

[edit] Elders

Each congregation has a body of elders or "Overseers", who make decisions regarding the local congregation's activities and welfare. For example, they are expected to teach the congregation from the platform, make pastoral visits (known as shepherding calls) to congregation members, and to take the lead in the evangelizing work. They get together at elder meetings to determine various issues in the congregation. Various elders fill various positions. The elder serving as 'Presiding Overseer' leads the elder meetings, the 'Service Overseer' handles ministry issues within the congregation, and the 'Secretary' takes care of documents. These three elders make up the congregation's service committee (distinguished from the service committee of the Governing Body), which handles documents and determine the activities. In addition, an elder may be appointed as a Book Study Overseer, with the specific responsibility of conducting the weekly book study arrangement.

Elders also have a position of judicial oversight in the congregation. When one of Jehovah's Witnesses commits or is accused of committing a sin, an investigation by two elders may lead to the formation of a Judicial Committee made up of three or more elders. Judicial Committees are responsible for determining the facts of a case, weighing the evidence of wrongdoing, judging a wrongdoer's attitude and motives, and offering counsel, discipline, and possibly even congregational restrictions, according to the Scriptures. No one elder has more authority than the others in the committee; all have equal authority.

[edit] Ministerial Servants

Ministerial Servants are appointed to assist the elders with routine work, such as taking care of the Kingdom Hall, the sound and microphone system, supplies of publications, congregation accounts. They may also take part in teaching the congregation in certain circumstances. For example, the more qualified ministerial servants may accompany an elder on "shepherding calls" (visits by elders to congregation members for the purpose of spiritual encouragement). Similarly, if there are not enough elders available to oversee the congregation book studies, a qualified ministerial servant may substitute in the interim to conduct the studies until there is an available elder. When doing so, the ministerial servant does not take on general responsibilities of an elder.

[edit] Appointments of Elders and Ministerial Servants

New elders and ministerial servants are appointed by the local Branch Office of Jehovah's Witnesses, who are assigned by the Governing Body to act on their behalf in this matter, usually on the recommendation of the local body of elders, during a visit of a Circuit Overseer. Only men may be appointed as elders and ministerial servants, although women may perform most of the activities of Ministerial Servants above, if they do not involve teaching the congregation. For a women to act as a teacher in a congregation, specific requirements are set forth in the Scriptures. (This is mostly in small congregations and others which for some reason have a shortage of competent and qualified men.) (1 Corinthians 14:31-35; 1 Timothy 2:11-14)

[edit] Positions of Responsibility

Each congregation fills its positions with Elders and Ministerial Servants belonging to the congregation. In larger congregations, where there are sufficient Elders and Ministerial Servants each can take an available position; in smaller congregations, one person may handle multiple positions until another qualified candidate is available. In certain cases, when there are insufficient ministerial servants, the body of elders will use men who are not yet ministerial servants but are good examples in the congregation to fill ministerial servant duties.

In very rare cases, women who are good examples may be used to handle duties usually performed by ministerial servants. This exception arises only in very small congregations or where there are no qualified men in the congregation. Women are never appointed as ministerial servants, whether or not they fulfill the role of a ministerial servant.

Each Congregation has:

Elders

  • Presiding Overseer
  • Secretary
  • Service Overseer
  • Watchtower Study Conductor
  • Theocratic Ministry School Overseer
  • "B" School Overseer
  • "C" School Overseer (Only needed in larger congregations)
  • Auxiliary Counselor
  • Congregation Book Study Overseers
  • Kingdom Hall Operating Committee Member
  • Public Talk Coordinator (Can be a qualified ministerial servant)

Ministerial servants

  • Accounts Servant
  • Literature Servant
  • Magazine Servant
  • Territory Servant
  • Attendant Servant
  • Sound & Platform Servant
  • Congregation Book Study Servant (Only when not enough elders to overseer each book study)
  • Congregation Book Study Assistants
  • Kingdom Hall Literature Coordinator

NOTE: Public Talk Coordination is the responsibility of the Presiding Overseer but he may delegate this to another elder or a qualified ministerial servant. He also oversees the sound, platform and attendants.

Some men will also serve as sound and platform servants. These can be younger ones who are not yet ministerial servants.

The service overseer oversees the magazine, literature and territory servants.

The Secretary oversees the accounts servant.

[edit] Legal Instruments

See Legal instruments of Jehovah's Witnesses for further information.

The Watch Tower Bible and Tract Society of Pennsylvania is one of a number of legal corporations the group uses to represent its interests. Other corporations used include, for example these:

In the majority of other countries of the world, local corporations have been established to facilitate the organization's work.

In the past, the presidents of the Watchtower Society have been important persons in the history and development of the religious group.

[edit] See also

[edit] Notes, references and sources

  1. ^ Jehovah's Family Enjoys Precious Unity The Watchtower July 15, 1996, p. 13.
  2. ^ What Is the Bible's View? Is It Right to Call Men by Titles? Awake! July 22, 1977, p. 27.
  3. ^ True Worship Means Action The Watchtower September 1, 1965, p. 533.
  4. ^ Why Be Baptized? The Watchtower April 1, 2002, p. 13.
  5. ^ Our Kingdom Ministry December 1987, p. 7.
  6. ^ Our Kingdom Ministry October 1982, p. 1.
  7. ^ Helping Others to Worship God The Watchtower 1988 November 15, p. 17.
  8. ^ Franz, Raymond (2000). Crisis of Conscience. Commentary Press, Third edition, Second printing, 42-108 (chapters 3 and 4).
  9. ^ Jehovah's Witnesses—Proclaimers of God's Kingdom 1993 p. 108-109, 723
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