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Chosen no: R-5189
, z 1913 Year.
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"As Deceivers And Yet True"
MY SUIT against The Eagle for slanderous
defamation of reputation has been decided in its favor. A Jury of twelve men
have decided that The Eagle was justified in making its vicious
onslaughts upon me, notwithstanding the Judge's Charge that, according to the
law, the cartoon, at least, was a slanderous, vicious libel in fact. I am urged
by my attorneys and petitioned by friends to take the case to the Court of
Appeals.
I quite agree with Justice Kelby, who said,
"The case was presented fairly and squarely to the Jury." The rulings
of His Honor seem to me equitable. I very highly appreciate the ability and
energy of my attorneys, Mr. Sparks and Mr. Rutherford. I have no complaint, nor
murmuring against the Divine providences which permitted what I consider to be
a very unjust verdict. In appealing our Case to the Court we have followed the
example of the Master, who inquired why He was smitten contrary to Law. (John 18:23.) Likewise St. Paul appealed for such justice as the Law
provided. (Acts 25:10.) So I have done; and I,
like them, have been refused the Law's protection. I murmur not. I am in good
company.
I remember, on the other hand, that it has been
a part of the Divine will throughout this Gospel Age to allow His faithful
servants to suffer reproaches and losses. This was so in the Master's case:
"Being reviled, He reviled not again." When it pleased the Father to
bruise Him and put Him to shame, He declared, "The cup which My Father
hath poured for Me, shall I not drink it?"-- "Not My will, but Thine
be done."--I Peter 2:23; John
18:11; Luke 22:42.
It was so with the Apostles, who wrote, "As
He was, so are we in this world"--"As deceivers and yet true; as
poor, yet making many rich"; "I bear about in my body the marks of
the Lord Jesus"--evidences that I am His servant and His follower. As St. Paul said, so we see
fulfilled all through the Age, "Whosoever will live godly in Christ Jesus
shall suffer persecution." The Master said, "Marvel not if the world
hate you. Ye know that it hated Me before it hated you; if ye were of the
world, the world would love its own."--I John
4:17; 2 Cor. 6:8-10; Gal.
6:17; 2 Tim. 3:12; John
15:18,19.
THE CASE BRIEFLY
REVIEWED
I am interested in everything progressive and
tending to prove that we are entering the great Thousand Years of earth's
blessings under Messiah. In the columns of THE WATCH TOWER I have noted the
coming of Divine blessings in fulfilment of the prediction that "The
wilderness shall blossom as the rose," "The earth shall yield her
increase," etc. Five years ago we quoted in THE WATCH TOWER columns
reports respecting "Miracle Wheat." We gave the name and address (Mr.
Stoner) of the farmer who discovered this new wheat and his reports of its
remarkable qualities. We published also the report of Mr. Miller, the
Government expert, who thoroughly investigated it and pronounced upon its
superior qualities.
Some of our readers purchased seed from Mr.
Stoner at $1.25 per pound and approved it. In 1910 one of the friends of our
Society, who had raised some of this wheat, sold it for seed at $1.00 per
pound, and donated the proceeds to our Society. In 1911 the same friend, having
raised more seed, asked that THE WATCH TOWER give the benefit of this to its
readers at $1.00 a pound post-paid, and appropriate the net results to the
furtherance of its work. Another friend, who had some of the same seed, also
donated similarly, the total amount being twenty bushels.
For the accommodation of our readers, we allowed
this seed-wheat to be put up in pound packages and mailed from THE WATCH TOWER
Office, just as the U.S. Government [R5190 : page
62] handles such seeds at Washington. We did the business at the request of
others and in their interest, and credited them on our books with the results,
setting aside to them proportionately voting shares in our Society. We made no
claim for the wheat on our own knowledge. We merely gave the report of the
Government expert, of the originator, and of our friends who had tried the
wheat. We merely acted as intermediary.
Nevertheless, everything that was said
respecting the wheat was fully proven at this trial by expert witnesses,
interested and disinterested, and their testimony was not shaken. It was also
shown that farmer Stoner and his business partner, Mr. Knight, made no sales of
this wheat under $1.25 per pound until September, 1911; and that they had a written
contract between them that none of the wheat was to be sold at any price until
the following year--1912. Suddenly in September, 1911, they changed their
plans, considering that they had wheat enough accumulated, put the price down
to $5.00 per bushel, about the time that THE WATCH TOWER wheat was all sold at
a dollar a pound. This The Eagle's attorney claimed was proof of fraud
on the part of THE WATCH TOWER--sufficient [R5190
: page 63] excuse for the slanderous assaults of The Eagle upon me.
It was in vain that my attorney sought to show
the Jury The Eagle's malice--that it really was attacking me along
religious grounds; that it had set itself as the champion of certain clerical
enemies of mine, and was seeking to destroy my influence and, if possible, to
drive me from Brooklyn. In the court-room sat about twenty-five of my friends,
who had come long distances at their own expense to have an opportunity to
speak a word in my behalf. Through some intricacies of the Law respecting
evidence, these were unable to be heard in my behalf.
Instead, the Law gave The Eagle's attorney the privilege of saying all manner of evil against me falsely--for the
sake of the Doctrines of Christ, which I hold and teach. He was allowed to
picture me, as The Eagle had done in its cartoon--as a thief and robber,
masquerading in the garb of a minister of Christ. He was allowed to ridicule
the "Miracle Wheat," although I had nothing whatever to do with it,
nor with the naming of it; and notwithstanding the fact that its superiority
was proven.
He was allowed to inveigh against the fact as
criminal, that I hold the office of President of the Watch Tower Bible and
Tract Society, and to claim that I hold the office in some corrupt or unlawful
manner, and that I misuse the Society's income in some unexplained way to my
own advantage. Meantime, scores present in the courtroom and thousands all over
the land, would have been glad to testify that their donations have come to the
Society because they have the utmost confidence in my integrity and management
of its affairs as its Executive Officer, and that had anybody else been
President their donations would have been smaller or none at all.
Presumably because there were seven Catholics on
the Jury, The Eagle's attorney was prompted to refer to the Sisters of
Charity and their noble work as nurses in the hospitals, without referring to
the fact that those nurses are well paid, and that the hospitals in large
measure are supported by State taxation.
The Watch Tower Bible and Tract Society was held
up to scorn because it did not have any hospital work nor draw any revenue from
taxation, and because the female members of the Society do not visit the
workshops of the land weekly or monthly on pay-day, and exact donations to its
work. Our society was held up to scorn also because we do not send a wagon
around the city collecting groceries and provisions for the up-keep of our
work; because we do not take up collections even on Sunday; because we have
never solicited a penny or a dollar from anybody; and because we never have
fairs, grab-bags, "chances" or "raffles." Our Society was
held up to scorn and ridicule because it offers its literature free to the
poor, while other similar Societies charge both rich and poor for their tracts
and other publications. The Eagle was pictured by its attorney as
a dove, a bird of Paradise. For defending it the Protestants on the Jury were
led to hope for escape from eternal torment through "the pearly
gates" of heaven, welcomed with the words, "Well done!" for
giving The Eagle the verdict. Neither I nor my attorneys could offer
such inducements conscientiously.
Our home, "Bethel," where some of our Society's
workers reside, was held up to scorn--likened to a harem, etc. This surely did
cut me deeply to the heart. I am quite willing to suffer, if need be, for my
faithfulness to the Lord and His Word; but it gave me great pain that the
arrows intended for me did not all center upon myself --that the more than a
hundred saintly, earnest men, women and children, co-laborers with me in the
Lord's work, should thus be made to unjustly suffer. I can only urge them to
apply to themselves the words of the Apostle, "Cast not away, therefore,
your confidence, which hath great recompense of reward"; "For ye have
need of patience that, after ye have done the will of God, ye shall receive the
promise"; "Ye endured a great fight of afflictions; partly, whilst ye
were made a gazingstock, and partly whilst ye became companions of them that
were so used."--Heb. 10:35,36,32,33.
NO COMPLAINT
AGAINST THE LAW
I have no complaint to make against the Laws of
our land, nor against the Jury System, not against the particular twelve men
who, in my judgment, gave an unjust verdict. I esteem our Laws to be most
wonderfully just. I have often marveled that imperfect, fallen men have
succeeded in the erection of such excellent barriers against sin and injustice.
I cannot see that a more fair method than our Jury System of trying a case
could be arranged by imperfect men. Neither do I believe that the average jury
desires to pervert justice. The miscarriage of justice I attribute rather to
the imperfection of human knowledge. Suspicion and evil-surmising are weeds
which seem to grow prolifically in every mind. They spring spontaneously in the
degraded heart. There is such a disposition to judge others by one's self, and
such a realization of sinful impulses that the average man naturally enough
imputes evil, on every occasion when it is suggested to him.
St.
Paul enunciated this principle, saying,
"The natural man receiveth not the things of the Spirit of God;... neither
can he know [understand] them; for they are spiritually discerned." (I Cor. 2:14.) Our Society and its work, our
Lord's work and the work of the Apostles and the regenerate since, are so far
beyond the concept of the unregenerate as to be "Foolishness unto
them" --hypocrisies, frauds, impositions. If Jesus and the Apostles and
the faithful saints of eighteen centuries have all belonged to this class, I
will be of good courage and not be ashamed to belong to the same.
I am the more encouraged because I realize that
the great Day of Blessing, the great Thousand-Year Day of Messiah's Kingdom, is
near at hand--is dawning now. Soon Satan, the "Prince of Darkness,"
will be bound for a thousand years, to deceive the nations no more. (Revelation 20:2,3,6.) No longer will Darkness be
permitted to masquerade as Light, and the Light be slandered as Darkness. All
the blind eyes will be opened; all the deaf ears will be unstopped. That
glorious period, as the Prophet has declared, shall be "the desire of all
nations." (Haggai 2:7.) Then not only the
Church will see eye to eye, and understand God's providences at the present
time, but the whole world will see in the light of that happy time for which we
pray, "Thy Kingdom come; Thy will be done on earth as in Heaven."
Sincerely, and undismayed, I remain a servant of
God.
CHARLES T. RUSSELL.
Brooklyn,
January 29, 1913.
----------
Judge not
the Lord by feeble sense,
But trust Him for His grace;
Behind a frowning providence
He hides a smiling face.
Ye fearful
saints, fresh courage take;
The clouds ye so much dread
Are big with mercy and shall break
In blessings on your head.
His purposes
will ripen fast,
Unfolding every hour;
The bud may have a bitter taste,
But sweet will be the flower.
W.T. R-5189a : page 62 - 1913r