When I joined the Jehovah’s Witnesses in 1973 they
presented themselves as an Organization that concerned itself with determining
scriptural truth and spreading it to the world at large. Money was not a concern (or so they said). They
did not pass a collection plate at meetings, they sold their literature at low
cost. Since leaving the religion, I have
been interested in their financial arrangements, but information is
scarce. Personal background: before
retiring, I worked as an accountant in several real estate investment and
development firms. I’m basing the
following analysis on my work experience and available public records.
Over the last few years, the Watchtower Bible and
Tract Society sold its properties in Brooklyn, that served as the religion’s
international headquarters since 1908. These
sales netted hundreds of millions of dollars for the Society. At the same time, the Watchtower purchased
two hundred fifty-three acres in Warwick, New York and began construction of an
extensive new (and reportedly luxurious) headquarters.
New rules govern financial practices locally. In the past, congregations borrowed money
from the Society for the purchase, construction or remodeling of their Kingdom
Halls. The congregation repaid the loan
with funds collected from their members. Recently the Society stopped
collecting those mortgages. Instead,
congregation members pledged donations to the congregation, which then made a
pledge to the Watchtower Society. Some
internet correspondents report that at least some Witnesses believe the
Watchtower forgave their debts and they no longer owe the Society anything.
Mortgages go away when paid off, pledges last forever. Additionally, the Watchtower Society instructed
all congregations to send “excess funds” to headquarters. This includes reserves set aside by some
locals to provide for future renovation of their Kingdom Halls.
These new arrangements aroused my curiosity. What
did this say about the relationship between Society and congregations? Who controlled the assets locally? From the outside (or even from the inside)
the congregations appear to be independent entities. I looked up my old congregations on the
Washington Secretary of State’s website, all are registered as nonprofit
corporations. County records show these
corporations as owners of the Kingdom Halls.
I cannot find a public copy of the corporations’ bylaws, which would
detail control of the assets. I was
curious if these documents place control of assets with the congregations or
the Watchtower Society.
As it turns out, it doesn’t make any difference
what the bylaws say.
In 2010, two former elders of the Menlo Park,
California congregation sued the current elders. The two asserted the Watchtower illegally
removed them so it could appoint men who would do the society’s bidding with
locally held assets. The court dismissed
the suit on First Amendment grounds. The
judge stated the Jehovah’s Witness are hierarchical religion, that is one with
a top-down leadership. In the United States, the government cannot interfere in
what amounts to an internal religious dispute.
Note: this is not a new legal decision, just a clear statement that a
long-standing principle applies to the Watchtower. (Transcript available at: http://jwleaks.files.wordpress.com/2013/10/february-22-2012-court-trial-transcripts.pdf)
This means that, legally, the Watchtower Society
has final control over all the local congregations’ assets. In the event of a dispute, the courts will
leave control with the Society. The ex-JW community online has buzzed with
discussion of the Watchtower’s “seizure” of the local assets. In fact, they already belonged to the
society. What does this mean for the
Watchtower’s financial operations?
There are 13,700 Congregations in the US (http://www.jwfacts.com/statistics/reports-service-memorial/2013-watchtower-publisher-report.pdf). Some congregations share Halls, so the number
of Kingdom Halls is less than this. A
search (admittedly brief) of tax records shows that several Kingdom Halls in Seattle
and its suburbs are valued about four hundred thousand dollars, as are several
in Spokane. Rural Kingdom Halls that I
could locate have values around two hundred thousand dollars. The most expensive Hall I found was in
Spokane, it also has a house on the property pushing the value to seven hundred
thousand. The least expensive Hall I could
find is in Texas, with a value just over one hundred thousand dollars.
Taking these numbers together, we can establish a
rough value for the Watchtower’s Kingdom Halls.
At the low-end, five thousand Kingdom Halls worth an average of $200,000
equals a real estate portfolio of a billion dollars. If there are seven thousand properties and
they are worth an average of $300,000; that number goes over two billion
dollars. These calculations do not
include assembly halls. According to the Pierce County assessor, the one in
Puyallup Washington is worth just under five million dollars.
Clearly, the Watchtower Society is sitting on a
valuable portfolio of properties in the United States. My next post will discuss how this might fit
in with the overall finances of Jehovah’s Witnesses, and possible conflicts
with the Society’s leadership.