Showing posts with label Definitions. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Definitions. Show all posts

Aug 27, 2016

What is a Cult ?

Huffington Post

08/26/2016

J. H. McKenna, Ph.D. Senior Lecturer, History of Religious Ideas, University of CA Irvine

 

 

The word ‘cult’ is never benign in religious terminology as it is in the world of art, where Johnny Stonenoggin filmster extraordinaire may cult-ivate a cult following for his eccentricity in artistry. Eccentricity in religion, if recent enough, is rarely welcomed with approving nods. And when eccentricity is welcomed by followers of a novel religion, those followers never designate the new religion as a cult. Such is the denigrating power of the word cult for religion.

Oddness in an ancient religion is no longer perceived as eccentric. No matter how implausible and bizarre a religious idea might be, if its pedigree is old, if generations are raised with that weird idea from youth, then that bizarre idea will become as believable, as commonplace, as immune to critical thought as a simple statement of fact about the color of summer grass.

If the idea had been taught for a thousand years that we may inhale the actual aroma of our God through the ritual of setting clover alight, we would accept that idea and practice it without scruple.

New Religions

In the late twentieth century some scholars of religion offered the phrase ‘new religions’ as a benign substitute for ‘cults.’ These scholars had grown weary of encountering a bias found in every stratum of society from nickel-plated broom pushers to copper-plated Ivy League Ph.Ds. It is a bias that may be put into bumper-sticker brevity:

Old Good, New Bad
Familiarity Good, Strangeness Bad
Old-Time Religion Good, New-Fangled Religion Bad

Or, as old-moneyed religionists say, ‘I have a religion, you have a sect, she has a cult.’

Prejudice against idea innovation, although the common coin of all conservative religiosity, should not be found in the higher arts of intellection, said these scholars who offered the fresh and unharmful term ‘new religions.’

After some decades, ‘new religions’ caught on in higher education and doctorates were granted in the study of such things, and academic journals were established and entitled with that name. As the new term gained acceptance, there was an attending decrease in bias against novel religions among academics. However, the term ‘cult’ got mislaid in the shakeup, as all new religions were deemed as worthy as any other religion.

Hold your ponies! Aren’t some new religions harmful, hateful, distasteful, and downright wacky? Yes. And therefore ‘cult’ is yet a needful term.

There are cults out there, and they do not deserve benign inclusion in the ‘new religions’ taxonomy. If a new religion resorts to coercion, if it invites adoration of human personalities, if it welcomes sexual favors for its leaders, if it suggests isolation from family and friends, if it embraces money-making schemes, call a pickaxe a pickaxe: the new religion is a cult.

Trouble is, a few of the older religions sometimes meet the cult criteria. But not many people would dare to call these pickaxes pickaxes.

http://www.huffingtonpost.com/j-h-mckenna-phd/what-is-a-cult_b_11729868.html

 

Aug 26, 2016

What is a Cult ?

August 26, 2016
J. H. McKenna, Ph.D. Senior Lecturer, History of Religious Ideas, University of CA Irvine
Huffington Post

The word ‘cult’ is never benign in religious terminology as it is in the world of art, where Johnny Stonenoggin filmster extraordinaire may cult-ivate a cult following for his eccentricity in artistry. Eccentricity in religion, if recent enough, is rarely welcomed with approving nods. And when eccentricity is welcomed by followers of a novel religion, those followers never designate the new religion as a cult.  Such is the denigrating power of the word cult for religion.

Oddness in an ancient religion is no longer perceived as eccentric. No matter how implausible and bizarre a religious idea might be, if its pedigree is old, if generations are raised with that weird idea from youth, then that bizarre idea will become as believable, as commonplace, as immune to critical thought as a simple statement of fact about the color of summer grass.

If the idea had been taught for a thousand years that we may inhale the actual aroma of our God through the ritual of setting clover alight, we would accept that idea and practice it without scruple.

In the late twentieth century some scholars of religion offered the phrase ‘new religions’ as a benign substitute for ‘cults.’ These scholars had grown weary of encountering a bias found in every stratum of society from nickel-plated broom pushers to copper-plated Ivy League Ph.Ds. It is a bias that may be put into bumper-sticker brevity:

Or, as old-moneyed religionists say, ‘I have a religion, you have a sect, she has a cult.’

Prejudice against idea innovation, although the common coin of all conservative religiosity, should not be found in the higher arts of intellection, said these scholars who offered the fresh and unharmful term ‘new religions.’

After some decades, ‘new religions’ caught on in higher education and doctorates were granted in the study of such things, and academic journals were established and entitled with that name. As the new term gained acceptance, there was an attending decrease in bias against novel religions among academics. However, the term ‘cult’ got mislaid in the shakeup, as all new religions were deemed as worthy as any other religion.

Hold your ponies! Aren’t some new religions harmful, hateful, distasteful, and downright wacky?  Yes. And therefore ‘cult’ is yet a needful term.

There are cults out there, and they do not deserve benign inclusion in the ‘new religions’ taxonomy. If a new religion resorts to coercion, if it invites  adoration of human personalities, if it welcomes sexual favors for its leaders, if it suggests isolation from family and friends, if it embraces money-making schemes, call a pickaxe a pickaxe: the new religion is a cult.

Trouble is, a few of the older religions sometimes meet the cult criteria. But not many people would dare to call these pickaxes pickaxes.

http://m.huffpost.com/us/entry/11729868

Dec 17, 2015

The Definitional Ambiguity of Cult

Michael D. Langone, Ph.D.
ICSA Today
Vol. 6, No. 3, 2015, 6-7

(This essay is a follow-up to “On Using the Term Cult,” also in this issue.)

A central component of ICSA’s mission is to study psychological manipulation and abuse, especially as it manifests in cultic and other groups. Different people, however, attach different and usually imprecise meanings to the term cult (see “On Using the Term Cult”). Those who have sought information from ICSA have—properly or improperly—used cult to refer to a wide variety of phenomena, including, but not limited to

Groups—religious, political, psychological, commercial—in which the leader(s) appear(s) to exert undue influence over followers, usually to the leader’s(s’) benefit.

Fanatical religious and political groups, regardless of whether or not leaders exert a high level of psychological control.

Terrorist organizations, such as Bin Laden’s group, which induce some members to commit horrific acts of violence.

Religious groups deemed heretical or socially deviant by the person attaching the cult label.

Any unorthodox religious group—benign or destructive.

Covert hypnotic inductions.

Communes that may be physically isolated and socially unorthodox.

Groups (religious, New Age, psychotherapeutic, “healing”) that advocate beliefs in a transcendent order or actions that may occur through mechanisms inconsistent with the laws of physics.

Any group embraced by a family member whose parents, spouses, or other relatives conclude—correctly or incorrectly—that the group is destructive to the involved family member.

Organizations that employ high-pressure sales and/or recruitment tactics.

Authoritarian social groups in which members exhibit a high level of conformity and compliance to the expectations and demands of leaders.

Extremist organizations that advocate violence, racial separation, bigotry, or overthrow of the government.

Familial or dyadic relationships in which one member exerts an unusually high and apparently harmful influence over the other member(s) (e.g., certain forms of dysfunctional families or battered women’s syndrome).

The majority of those persons who attach the cult label to these phenomena share a disapproval of the group or organization they label. That is why some people have dismissed the term cult as a meaningless epithet hurled at a group one doesn’t like. Although this position may appeal to one’s cynical side, it ignores the reality that many common concepts are fuzzy. Lists of diverse phenomena could also be drawn up for terms such as child abuse, neurotic, right wing, left wing, learning disabled, sexy, ugly, beautiful, and so on. We don’t banish these fuzzy terms from our vocabularies because, contrary to the cynic’s claim, most people most of the time use these fuzzy terms with enough precision to be meaningful and understood by others.

Nevertheless, fuzzy terms leave much to be desired. Hence, scientists often make up new terms (i.e., jargon) to avoid the imprecision of “natural” language. Even within the scientific disciplines that propagate jargon, however, disputes may simmer for years about how to define properly a term in common use. In the late 1970s, for example, sociologists of religion abandoned the term cult in favor of new religious movement; yet they still debate the meaning and merits of new religious movement. Thus, even within scientific disciplines, terminology is rarely as precise as scientists wish.

We have, then, three choices with regard to fuzzy terms:

We can pretend that a particular term (e.g., cult) is more precise than it actually is, thereby inviting misapplication of the concept to which the term refers.

We can so narrowly define the term that it becomes useless in a practical sense.

We can strive for a practical level of precision while acknowledging the unavoidable ambiguity in our terminology.

ICSA has chosen the latter course (see “On Using the Term Cult”). We acknowledge the term’s ambiguity, but we also recognize that, for better or for worse, cult is the term that our inquirers, particularly on Internet searches, are most predisposed to use. Although we try to focus the meaning of the term, we must, nonetheless, also try to respond constructively to the wide spectrum of phenomena that our inquirers collectively associate with cult, however misguided their linguistic usage may sometimes be.

Generally speaking (although certainly not always), the phenomena to which they attach the term cult constitute a “conceptual family.” The members of this family are distinct, and it is inappropriate to give all of them the same name (e.g., cult). Yet they do have a family resemblance that rests on the inquirer’s perception that the group exhibits one or more of these characteristics:

It treats people as objects to be manipulated for the benefit of the leader(s).

It believes that and behaves as though the group’s supposedly noble ends justify means that most people deem unethical.

It harms some persons involved with or affected by the group.

On one hand, although some individuals may associate any one of these characteristics with the concept cult, frequently other terms may be more appropriate descriptors. That is why we are interested in psychological manipulation, psychological abuse, spiritual abuse, brainwashing, mind control, thought reform, abusive churches, extremism, totalistic groups, authoritarian groups, exit counseling, recovery, and practical suggestions for families and individuals as areas for which we provide information. And that is why central components of our mission are to study psychological manipulation and abuse, especially as it manifests in cultic and other groups, to help individuals and families adversely affected by psychologically manipulative groups, and to protect society against the harmful implications of group-related manipulation and abuse.

On the other hand, not everybody who contacts us is troubled. Some are merely curious. Others are looking for information on a group that is not harmful. Others seek information on helping techniques. And still others want to teach young people how to recognize and resist the lure of spurious philosophies and manipulative groups. That is why we provide information on new religious movements, alternative and mainstream religions, and group dynamics, and offer practical suggestions for helping professionals, clergy, journalists, researchers, students, educators, and others interested in these topics.

Given the wide range of phenomena that we study and the wide range of individuals and organizations we try to assist, we emphasize that our having information on or researching a particular group does NOT imply that it is a cult or even that it is harmful. We do NOT maintain a list of cults or “bad groups,” and we have no intention of compiling such a list. We do, however, provide information on and conceptual tools for analyzing diverse groups that inquirers may—correctly or incorrectly—associate within the conceptual family of the term cult.

As you explore the information on our website, we hope that you will keep in mind the issues discussed in this essay. We also hope that in your own endeavors you apply the term cult judiciously and with an acute awareness of its ambiguity and limitations.

About the AuthorMichael D. Langone, PhD, a counseling psychologist, received a doctorate in Counseling Psychology from the University of California, Santa Barbara in 1979. Since 1981 he has been Executive Director of International Cultic Studies Association (ICSA). He has written and spoken widely on cult-related topics and is Editor-in-Chief of ICSA Today.

Note

This article was originally posted on the Web in the late 1990s.  The current, slightly modified version was published in ICSA Today, 6(3), 2015.

http://www.icsahome.com/articles/definitionalambiguity

Characteristics Associated with Cultic Groups

Michael D. Langone
ICSA Today
Vol. 6, No. 3, 2015, 10

Concerted efforts at influence and control lie at the core of cultic groups, programs, and relationships. Many members, former members, and supporters of cults are not fully aware of the extent to which members may have been manipulated, exploited, even abused. The following list of social-structural, social-psychological, and interpersonal behavioral patterns commonly found in cultic environments may be helpful in assessing a particular group or relationship.

Compare these patterns to the situation you were in (or in which you, a family member, or friend is currently involved). This list may help you determine whether there is cause for concern. Bear in mind that this list is not meant to be a “cult scale” or a definitive checklist to determine whether a specific group is a cult. This is not so much a diagnostic instrument as it is an analytical tool.

The group displays excessively zealous and unquestioning commitment to its leader and (whether he is alive or dead) regards his belief system, ideology, and practices as the Truth, as law.Questioning, doubt, and dissent are discouraged or even punished.Mind-altering practices (such as meditation, chanting, speaking in tongues, denunciation sessions, and debilitating work routines) are used in excess and serve to suppress doubts about the group and its leader(s).The leadership dictates, sometimes in great detail, how members should think, act, and feel (for example, members must get permission to date, change jobs, marry—or leaders prescribe what types of clothes to wear, where to live, whether or not to have children, how to discipline children, and so forth).The group is elitist, claiming a special, exalted status for itself, its leader(s), and its members (for example, the leader is considered the Messiah, a special being, an avatar—or the group and/or the leader is on a special mission to save humanity).The group has a polarized us-versus-them mentality, which may cause conflict with the wider society.The leader is not accountable to any authorities (unlike, for example, teachers, military commanders or ministers, priests, monks, and rabbis of mainstream religious denominations).The group teaches or implies that its supposedly exalted ends justify whatever means it deems necessary. This may result in members’ participating in behaviors or activities they would have considered reprehensible or unethical before they joined the group (for example, lying to family or friends, or collecting money for bogus charities).The leadership induces feelings of shame and/or guilt in order to influence and/or control members. Often, this is done through peer pressure and subtle forms of persuasion.Subservience to the leader or group requires members to cut ties with family and friends, and to radically alter the personal goals and activities they had before they joined the group.The group is preoccupied with bringing in new members.The group is preoccupied with making money.Members are expected to devote inordinate amounts of time to the group and group-related activities.Members are encouraged or required to live and/or socialize only with other group members.The most loyal members (the “true believers”) feel there can be no life outside the context of the group. They believe there is no other way to be and often fear reprisals to themselves or others if they leave (or even consider leaving) the group.
Note: This checklist has gone through many revisions since the author first presented it in the 1990s. Many people have contributed suggestions and feedback to the various revisions, in particular Carol Giambalvo, Janja Lalich, Herb Rosedale, and Patrick Ryan.

About the Author

Michael D. Langone, PhD, a counseling psychologist, received a doctorate in Counseling Psychology from the University of California, Santa Barbara in 1979. Since 1981 he has been Executive Director of International Cultic Studies Association (ICSA). He has written and spoken widely on cult-related topics and is Editor-in-Chief ofICSA Today.

Note

This article was originally posted on the Web in the late 1990s.  The current, slightly modified version was published in ICSA Today, 6(3), 2015.

http://www.icsahome.com/articles/characteristics

On Using the Term "Cult"

Herbert L. Rosedale, Esq.
Michael D. Langone, Ph.D.
ICSA Today
Vol. 6, No. 3, 2015, 4-6

Even though we each have studied cults and educated people about this subject for more than twenty years, neither of us has ever felt completely comfortable with the term cult. No other term, however, serves more effectively the linked educational and research aims of ICSA (International Cultic Studies Association, founded as American Family Foundation in 1979), the organization that we serve as President (Rosedale) and Executive Director (Langone). To help others who have asked questions about the term cult, we here offer some thoughts on the definition and use of this term. 

Review of Definitions 

According to the Compact Edition of the Oxford English Dictionary (1971), the term cult originally referred to 

worship; reverential homage rendered to a divine being or beings ... a particular form or system of religious worship; especially in reference to its external rites and ceremonies ... devotion or homage to a particular person or thing.

More recently, the term has taken on additional connotations: 

3 : A religion regarded as unorthodox or spurious...

4 : A system for the cure of disease based on dogma set forth by its promulgator...

5 a. great devotion to a person, idea, object, movement, or work... b. a usually small group of people characterized by such devotion (Merriam-Webster's Collegiate Dictionary, Tenth Edition, 1994)

Robbins’s (1988) review of recent sociological contributions to the study of cults identifies four definitional perspectives: 

cults as dangerous, authoritarian groups;cults as culturally innovative or transcultural groups;cults as loosely structured protoreligions;Stark and Bainbridge’s (1985) subtypology that distinguishes among audience cults (members seek to receive information—e.g., through a lecture or tape series), client cults (members seek some specific benefit—e.g., psychotherapy, spiritual guidance), and cult movements (organizations that demand a high level of commitment from members). The Stark and Bainbridge typology relates to their finding that cult membership increases as church membership decreases.

Rutgers University professor Benjamin Zablocki (1997) says that sociologists often distinguish cult from church, sect, and denomination. Cults are innovative, fervent groups. If they become accepted into the mainstream, cults, in his view, lose their fervor and become more organized and integrated into the community; they become churches. When people within churches become dissatisfied and break off into fervent splinter groups, the new groups are called sects. As sects become more stolid and integrated into the community, they become denominations. Zablocki defines a cult as “an ideological organization held together by charismatic relationships and demanding total commitment.” According to Zablocki, cults are at high risk of becoming abusive to members, in part because members’ adulation of charismatic leaders contributes to those leaders becoming corrupted by the power they seek and are accorded. 

Definitions proposed at various times by associates of ICSA tend to presume the manifestation of what is potential in Zablocki’s definition. These definitions tend to emphasize elements of authoritarian structure, deception, and manipulation, and the fact that groups may be psychotherapeutic, political, or commercial, as well as religious. One of the more commonly quoted definitions of cult was articulated at an ICSA/UCLA Wingspread Conference on Cultism in 1985: 

Cult (totalist type): A group or movement exhibiting a great or excessive devotion or dedication to some person, idea, or thing and employing unethically manipulative techniques of persuasion and control (e.g., isolation from former friends and family, debilitation, use of special methods to heighten suggestibility and subservience, powerful group pressures, information management, suspension of individuality or critical judgment, promotion of total dependency on the group and fear of leaving it…), designed to advance the goals of the group’s leaders, to the actual or possible detriment of members, their families, or the community. (West & Langone, 1986, pp. 119–120)

Because this and related definitions imply high levels of psychological manipulation, many students of the field have associated cults with the concept of thought reform (Lifton, 1961; Ofshe & Singer, 1986; Singer & Ofshe, 1990). Although there are many similarities between these concepts, a cult does not necessarily have to be characterized by thought reform, nor does a thought-reform program necessarily have to be a cult. Nevertheless, the two seem to go together often enough that many people mistakenly see them as necessarily linked. 

Definitions advanced by ICSA associates imply that the term cult refers to a continuum, in which a large gray area separates cult from noncult; or they add qualifiers, such as destructive, to the term cult. These definitions suggest that there may be some debate about the appropriateness of the term as applied to a specific group, especially when available evidence indicates that the group is in or near the gray area of the continuum. This debate can become more acute when the group in question is one that varies among its geographic locations, has different levels of membership with correspondingly different levels of commitment, has changed over time in the direction of greater or less “cultishness,” or is skilled at public relations. 

Because they tend to focus on certain practices and behaviors, the definitions advanced by ICSA associates are implicitly interactionist. Like all psychologically based models, they presume that different people will respond differently to the same group environment, much as identical twins can respond differently to the same family environment. Cults are not all alike. Nor are all cult members affected in the same way, even within the same group. Nevertheless, a huge body of clinical evidence leads ICSA associates to contend that some groups harm some members sometimes, and that some groups may be more likely to harm members than other groups. 

Using the Term: Considerations 

The concept cult, as with other concepts (e.g., right wing, left wing), is a theoretical type against which actual groups are compared as best as one can with the information at one’s disposal. The theoretical type should serve as a benchmark, not as an organizing structure that selects only those observations that confirm a stereotype. It is vital that each case be evaluated individually with regard to the group environment and the person(s) interacting within and with that environment. 

Much as people may wish that it were so, the fact is that, at least at present, no scientific “test” incontrovertibly establishes whether or not a group is indeed a cult. ICSA’s Group Psychological Abuse Scale (Chambers, Langone, Dole, & Grice, 1994) initiated a series of research studies that have increased our ability to measure psychological abuse, or cultishness (Almendros, Gamez-Gaudix, Rodriguez-Carballiera, & Carrobles, 2011). Nevertheless, much research remains before even preliminary scientific opinions could be formed about the cultishness of specific groups. Cult research is in a stage similar to that of depression research when the first objective measures of depression as a mental and emotional state were being developed. The lack of objective measures didn’t nullify the utility of definitions of depression then in use, but the development of such measures enhanced definitional understanding and classification reliability. In the years ahead, we hope to see similar progress in cultic studies. 

Because of the current ambiguity surrounding the term cult, ICSA does not produce an official list of cults, even though some people mistakenly interpret any list (e.g., a list of groups on which we have information) as a list of cults. Such a list would have little utility because there are thousands of groups about which people have expressed concern, yet scientific research has been conducted on few groups. A list could even be misleading because some people might mistakenly think that the label cult implies that the group in question has all the significant attributes of the hypothetical type cult, when in fact it has only some of those attributes. Conversely, some people may mistakenly assume that because a group is not on the list, they need not be concerned. Thus, when inquirers ask us, “Is such and such a cult?,” we tend to say, “Study our information on psychological manipulation and cultic groups, then apply this information to what you know and can find out about the group that concerns you.” Our goal is to help inquirers make more informed judgments and decisions, not to dictate those judgments and decisions. 

We try to direct inquirers’ attention to potentially harmful practices, rather than to a label. In essence, we say, “These are practices that have been associated with harmful effects in some people. To what, if any extent, are these practices found in the group in question? And how might you or your loved one be affected by these practices?” One of us (Langone) tries to focus a family’s concerns by saying, “Assume, even if only for the sake of argument, that your loved one were not in a cult. What if anything about his or her behavior would trouble you?” After the troubling behaviors are identified, then the family can try to determine how, if at all, these behaviors are related to the group environment. A label tends to be superfluous at this point in the analysis. 

Thus, we advocate a nuanced, evidence-based approach to definition and classification. We do not ignore or disparage evidence indicating that some groups may closely approach the theoretical type, cult. Nor do we deny the necessity to make expert judgments about whether or not a particular set of group processes harmed a specific person or persons, a judgment that mental-health clinicians and other professionals sometimes have to make in therapeutic or forensic contexts. We do, however, advocate that these kinds of judgments should rest on careful analyses of structure and behavior within a specific context, rather than a superficial classification decision. 

Such analyses sometimes result in the conclusion that some groups that harm some people are not necessarily cults. A new-age group that is neither manipulative nor authoritarian might harm some people because it advocates a medically dangerous diet or psychologically harmful practices. A church may harm some believers because its pastor is domineering and abusive. A psychotherapist may harm some patients because the psychotherapist doesn’t adequately understand how memory works and may, with the best of intentions, induce false memories in clients. These are all examples of individual harm related to interpersonal influence. They are all examples of situations that might understandably arouse the concern of the harmed person’s family and of ICSA. But these situations are not necessarily cult situations, even though they may have a family resemblance to the concept cult. In contrast, because appearances can deceive, especially in cults, further investigation of such cases may reveal the presence of cultic dynamics. The important point to keep in mind is that classification decisions should be based on the best available evidence and should always be subject to reevaluation. 

Even though the term cult has limited utility, it is so embedded in popular culture that those of us concerned about helping people harmed by group involvements or about preventing people from being so harmed cannot avoid using it. Whatever the term’s limitations, it points us in a meaningful direction. And no other term relevant to group psychological manipulation (e.g.,sociopsychological influence, coercive persuasion, undue influence, exploitative manipulation) has ever been able to capture and sustain public interest, which is the sine qua non of public education. If, however, we cannot realistically avoid the term, let us at least strive to use it judiciously. 

References 

Almendros, C., Gamez-Gaudix, M., Rodriguez-Carballiera, A., & Carrobles, J. (2011). Assessment of psychological abuse in manipulative groups. International Journal of Cultic Studies, 2, 61-76. 

Chambers, W., Langone, M., Dole, A., & Grice, J. (1994). The Group Psychological Abuse Scale: A measure of the varieties of cultic abuse. Cultic Studies Journal, 11(1), 88–117. 

Lifton, R. J. (1961). Thought reform and the psychology of totalism. New York, NY: Norton. 

Merriam-Webster's collegiate dictionary, tenth edition. (1994). Springfield, MA: Merriam-Webster, Incorporated. 

Ofshe, R., & Singer, M. T. (1986). Attacks on peripheral versus central elements of self and the impact of thought reforming techniques. Cultic Studies Journal, 3(1), 3–24. 

Robbins, T. (1988). Cults, converts, and charisma. London, England: Sage. 

Singer, M. T., & Ofshe, R. (1990). Thought reform programs and the production of psychiatric casualties. Psychiatric Annals, 20,188–193. 

Stark, R., & Bainbridge, W. (1985). The future of religion: Secularization, revival and cult formation. Berkeley, CA: University of California (cited in Robbins, 1988). 

The compact edition of the Oxford English dictionary. (1980). Oxford, England: Oxford University Press. 

West, L. J., & Langone, M. D. (1986). Cultism: A conference for scholars and policy makers.Cultic Studies Journal, 3, 117–134. 

Zablocki, B. (1997). Cults: Theory and treatment issues. Paper presented to a conference in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, May 31, 1997. 

About the Authors 

Herbert L. Rosedale, Esq., a graduate of Columbia College and Columbia Law School (LLB, Phi Beta Kappa, Columbia Law Review, 1956) and of Counsel with Jenkens & Gilchrist Parker Chapin, LLP, was one of the nation’s leading authorities on cults from the late 1970s until his death in 2003. In addition to providing countless pro bono services, he represented or advised clergy, former members, families, professionals, and others involved in cult-related suits; was counsel for the New York City Jewish Community Relations Council Task Force on Cults and Missionaries and the New York Interfaith Coalition of Concern About Cults; and from 1988 until his death in 2003; served as president of the American Family Foundation (AFF—renamed International Cultic Studies Association in 2004). Herb was interviewed widely by the national and international press, spoke to hundreds of lay and professional organizations, and testified to congressional committees. In 1992 he was Executive in Residence at the School of Business, Indiana University. In 1995 he delivered a commencement address, Promises and Illusions, to the graduating class of the State University of New York’s Institute of Technology at Utica/Rome. In 2002 he was a guest lecturer on cult issues at universities and institutions in China. 

Michael D. Langone, PhD, a counseling psychologist, received a doctorate in Counseling Psychology from the University of California, Santa Barbara in 1979. Since 1981 he has been Executive Director of International Cultic Studies Association (ICSA). He has written and spoken widely on cult-related topics and is Editor-in-Chief ofICSA Today. 

Note

This article was originally posted on the Web in the late 1990s.  The current, slightly modified version was published in ICSA Today, 6(3), 2015.

http://www.icsahome.com/articles/onusingtermcult

What Is a Cult Definitional Preface

Russell Bradshaw
ICSA Today
Vol. 6, No. 3, 2015, 8-9

There are many definitions of cult, but for our purpose ICSA utilizes this one: “an ideological organization held together by charismatic relations and demanding total commitment.”1 This definition is compatible with some definitions of new religious movements (NRMs), but cult can also refer to nonreligious organizations. As defined here, cults (on the high-demand/high-control end of the social influence spectrum—see below) are at risk of abusing members, but do not necessarily do so.

Although cultic groups vary a great deal, a huge body of clinical evidence and a growing body of empirical research indicate that some groups harm some people sometimes, and that some groups may be more likely to harm people than other groups.2

HOWEVER, the research focus today of ICSA is NOT on cults per se, but rather on the degree of intensity of the psychosocial influence within groups. After many years of international research on cultic groups, ICSA finds there are often too many variables to produce accurate lists of so-called dangerous cults. In addition, history has documented that sometimes “one man’s religion is another man’s cult”—occasionally with tragic consequences.3 Nevertheless, it is possible to discern when the normal processes of social influence become extreme or harmful in a group; this shift can lead to observable psychological trauma in some individuals.4 The cause of this harm is often the above-normal level of demand and social control in the group; this intense process is sometimes called the cultic dynamic.


The Cultic Dynamic

It is well known that all groups use social-influence processes to create and maintain norms of belief and behavior.5 This strategy is necessary to maintain a group identity, to distinguishing an in-group from others (outsiders). In fact, it is a fundamental requirement for all groups and cultures.

However, it has been found that groups tend to align themselves along a social-influence continuum that runs from low control/low demand at one end to high demand/high control at the other. Those groups at the high end of the spectrum run a greater risk of being cultic in their social-influence processes. This higher risk is particularly true if there is deceptive advertising, misinformation, and censoring of information in these groups; if there are inner circles that have secret and different beliefs and behaviors from the publicly affirmed norms; if there is an extremely narcissistic leader without a functioning system of checks and balances; if outside oversight is not in place; if the group has a lack of transparency in economic matters; and so on. It should be noted, however, that even perceived “strangeness” or “dangerous beliefs” do not automatically create a cultic dynamic—even though these elements may increase the possibility of such a dynamic eventually coming into play. No matter how much we may dislike or disapprove of a particular group’s beliefs, this does not make the group a cult.
Are All Members of Cultic Groups Damaged by Those Groups?

Even in cultic groups that score at the high end of the control/demand continuum, however, not all members are abused or equally affected.6 Members who are totally invested in a particular group or movement are more likely to suffer severe negative psychological consequences than more peripheral members. Also, developmental psychologists such as Erik Erikson and Mary Ainsworth7 describe how individual differences in personality (i.e., trust-versus-mistrust or secure-versus-insecure attachment issues) influence how the core of the individual is more or less vulnerable later in life. This complex situation may create potential social-influence vulnerabilities, perhaps “setting one up” for later cultic group involvement. Differences in ego defense mechanisms also render some individuals more susceptible to unethical psychosocial demands and control practices.8 Basic personality issues may also predispose some people to be more vulnerable than others to charismatic and prophetic leaders and groups. For example, since many cultic leaders have narcissistic personality traits, followers often may have codependency character traits (as described in the ancient Greek myth of Narcissus and Echo, on which Freud based his theory).9 Nevertheless, these individual variables do not determine, in themselves, who becomes involved in cults; that circumstance might be just bad luck: an individual being in the wrong place at the wrong time. And everyone has weaknesses, so individual vulnerabilities cannot be the only cause for cultic involvement. However, once one is in a cultic group, these personality variables, in combination with the intense cultic dynamic, do impact the nature and extent of one’s suffering and trauma when one leaves.10


In Conclusion

In general, some people in the same cultic group will be hurt more than others, some may not be affected at all, and some may actually benefit. Groups change over time and from one branch or subgroup to another; leaders’ personalities change, as do the personalities of various members.11 Even persons with secure and intelligent personalities may encounter problems at times, especially during times of transition and crisis—and they may become vulnerable to unethical psychosocial influence and control.

As a result of all these interwoven variables, it is very difficult to say that a particular group, in all branches, at all times, affects all members in a particular way. Nevertheless, trained social workers and therapists know a dangerous cultic group environment when they encounter it—and so treat former members in various degrees of suffering.12 These helping professionals know it is the intense psychosocial dynamic of these high-demand/high-control cultic groups and their charismatic (and often narcissistic) leaders that are at the core of their clients’ sense of abuse and trauma.

Notes

[1] B. Zablocki, Cults: Theory and Treatment Issues (paper presented to a conference, May 31, 1997, in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania).

[2] B. Zablocki, Cults: Theory and Treatment Issues (paper presented to a conference, May 31, 1997, in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania).

[3] In our Christian history, for example, tens of thousands were killed for belonging to “heretic” sects/cults such as the Cathars, a Gnostic branch (Albigensian Crusades, 1209–1220). And more recently (1993), there were many killings in Waco, Texas at the siege of the Branch Davidians (led by David Koresh, whose branch had broken away from the Seventh Day Adventists).

[4] There are many case studies—e.g., Robert Lifton, Destroying the World to Save It: Aum Shinrikyo (1999); Jim Guerra, From Dean’s List to Dumpster: Why I Left Harvard to Join a Cult (2000); Mark Laxer, Take Me for A Ride: Coming of Age in a Destructive Cult (1993); Margaret Singer and Janja Lalich, Cults in Our Midst (1996); Jayanti Tamm, Cartwheels in a Sari (2009); and more.

[5] See, for example, Robert Cialdini, Influence: Science and Practice (2009), for the six common social influence processes: reciprocity, consistency, social proof, authority, liking and scarcity, which use social influence and peer pressure to control and modify member behavior. These processes are often subtle and gradual, reducing followers’ ability to use conscious cognitive functions such as independent and critical thinking. Processes such as cognitive dissonance change our thinking and action to be congruent with each other at a precognitive level. See especially Leon Festinger, When Prophecy Fails (1956). There is also an emerging field of evolutionary psychology, which looks at genetic and epigenetic changes and the hundred thousands of years of primate social inheritance.

[6] Janja Lalich, Bounded Choice: True Believers and Charismatic Cults (2004). See also Steven Hassan, Freedom of Mind (2013), for an overview of these and other cultic dynamics.

[7] Erik Erikson’s stages of psycho-social development are trust vs. mistrust (infancy), autonomy vs. shame and doubt (toddler years), initiative vs. guilt (preschool), industry vs. inferiority (elementary school), identity vs. role confusion (adolescence), intimacy vs. isolation (early adulthood), generativity vs. stagnation (middle adulthood), and integrity vs. despair (late adulthood) (in The Life Cycle Completed, 1997). John Bowlby, Attachment and Loss, Vol. I (1982), and Mary Ainsworth, ”Infant-Mother Attachment,” American Psychologist, 34(10), 932–937 (1979), both find that early caregiver-child attachment problems can lead to insecure or anxious personality formation. Erikson’s trust vs. mistrust stage seems to dovetail nicely with Bowlby-Ainsworth’s attachment theory. In terms of potential cultic-group involvement, the transition from each of these life-crisis-stages to the next is a stressful time, and a time when individuals are vulnerable to the intense and seductive influence processes of cultic groups.

[8] See, for example, Daniel Goleman’s Vital Lies, Simple Truths: The Psychology of Self-Deception (2005). Individual’s ego-defense mechanisms may keep them from acknowledging deeply disturbing contradictions, deceptions, or misdeeds (pp. 117–123). Freud describes the following mechanisms: repression (forgetting and forgetting one has forgotten); denial and reversal (reaction formation: what is so is not the case: the opposite is the case); projection (what is inside is cast outside); isolation (events without feelings); rationalization (I give myself a cover story); sublimation (replacing the threatening with the safe); selective inattention (I don’t see what I don’t like); and automatism (I don’t notice what I do).

[9] For example, Len Oakes, Prophetic Charisma: The Psychology of Revolutionary Religious Personalities (1997); see also Charles Lindholm, Charisma (2002, PDF version online). There is a whole literature on the congruence between narcissism and charisma (see Oakes). The classic On Charisma and Institution Building (1968) by Max Weber describes charisma as an energizing, galvanizing force and cults as the core of every religion. Another powerful aspect of social influence is described in the classic “obedience to authority” experiments by Prof. Stanley Milgram (1961). He described how a leader (i.e., “cultic” group leader), once he is perceived as having authority, tends to be followed blindly (Max Weber described three types of authority: rational-legal authority, traditional authority, and especially for our case, charismatic authority). Once a member is involved in a group, and the leader is perceived to have authority, there are powerful psychosocial pressures that come into play, sometimes overriding an individual’s own impulses or values. The prisoner’s dilemma, also called the Faustian bargain in game theory (Merrill, Flood, and Dresher, 1950), and Philip Zimbardo’s Stanford Prison Experiment (1971) describe as well how readily people may conform, under the right conditions, to group and leader pressure and expectations.

[10] For example, Daniel Shaw, Traumatic Narcissism: Relational Systems of Subjugation (2014).

[11] See, for example, Dr. Eileen Barker, “Aging in New Religions: The Variations of Later Experiences” (2013). In K. Baier & F. Winter (Eds.), Altern in den religion (pp. 227-60). Vienna, Austria: LIT Verlag. [Also available in E. Barker, “Ageing in new Religions: The Varieties of Later Experiences” (2013), Diskus, The Journal of the British Association for the Study of Religions, 12(2011), 1–23 (online access via religiousstudiesproject.com/DISKUS/index.php/DISKUS/article/view/21/20).]

[12] Dr. Eileen Barker, “Aging in New Religions: The Variations of Later Experiences” (2013). In K. Baier & F. Winter (Eds.), Altern in den religion (pp. 227-60). Vienna, Austria: LIT Verlag. [Also available in E. Barker, “Ageing in new Religions: The Varieties of Later Experiences” (2013), Diskus, The Journal of the British Association for the Study of Religions, 12(2011), 1–23 (online access via religiousstudiesproject.com/DISKUS/index.php/DISKUS/article/view/21/20).]
About the Author

Russell H. Bradshaw, EdD [AB (Wesleyan University), EdM, EdD (Harvard University), Cand. Polit. (University of Oslo)] is Associate Professor at Lehman College, City University of New York. He has taught psychological and historical foundations of education and directed the MA program in Teaching Social Studies: 7–12. Dr. Bradshaw’s master’s and doctoral dissertations described alternative-living and child-care arrangements in Sweden (Samhem and Kollektivhus). During his undergraduate studies he received a stipendium to live in Samoa and wrote his honors thesis on religion’s effect on cultural stability and change in Western Samoan villages. Dr. Bradshaw’s continuing interest in alternative living and child-care solutions led him to an intensive experience of a Hindu-based religious cult in New York City. Dr. Bradshaw has received fellowships and grants from Wesleyan, Harvard, and Uppsala (Sweden) universities and from the City University of New York. He and his wife Gunilla currently live in Norrtälje, Sweden several months a year, where they are continuing their work for ICSA’s New York Educational Outreach Committee.

http://www.icsahome.com/articles/what-is-a-cult-definitional-preface

Jan 2, 2013

Definition of CULT


cult noun, often attributive \ˈkəlt\
  1. formal religious veneration : worship
  2. a system of religious beliefs and ritual; also : its body of adherents
  3. a religion regarded as unorthodox or spurious; also : its body of adherents
  4. a system for the cure of disease based on dogma set forth by its promulgator <health cults>
  5. a: great devotion to a person, idea, object, movement, or work (as a film or book); especially : such devotion regarded as a literary or intellectual fad
b: the object of such devotion
c: a usually small group of people characterized by such devotion
  • — cul·tic  adjective
  • — cult·ish  adjective
  • — cult·ish·ly  adverb
  • — cult·ish·ness  noun
  • — cult·ism  noun
  • — cult·ist  noun
  • — cult·like  adjective

Examples of CULT

  • She has developed a cult following.
  • <long after it had gone off the air, the TV series continued to have a huge cult>

Origin of CULT

  • French & Latin; French culte, from Latin cultus care, adoration, from colere to cultivate — more at wheel
  • First Known Use: 1617

Related to CULT

Synonyms: audience, followership, following

Other Religion (Eastern and Other) Terms

Zen, antinomian, avatar, gnosticism, illuminati, ineffable, karma, koan, mantra

cult abbreviation    (Medical Dictionary)

Medical Definition of CULT
culture

cult noun    (Concise Encyclopedia)

Collective veneration or worship (e.g., the cult of the saints—meaning collective veneration of the saints—in Roman Catholicism). In the West, the term has come to be used for groups that are perceived to have deviated from normative religions in belief and practice. They typically have a charismatic leader and attract followers who are in some way disenfranchised from the mainstream of society. Cults as thus defined are often viewed as foreign or dangerous.

Oct 21, 2012

Starting Out in Mainstream America



Starting Out in Mainstream America offers information about life in the USA today. 

Adjusting to any new culture can be slow, difficult, and painful. If you are entering or preparing for re-entry into mainstream American life after a long absence, or perhaps for the first time, you may have many questions about where to find and how to do things.

This book provides practical solutions for people with needs like:

  • getting a driver’s license
  • finding a place to live
  • finding a job or job training
  • getting health care
  • finding your way around the legal system
  • Abuse and neglect
  • Communications skills
  • Relationships
  • Parenting skills
  • Aspects of mainstream culture like music, movies, and sports