Showing posts with label Religion-research. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Religion-research. Show all posts

Apr 28, 2024

It is popularly said that the ways of the Lord are unfathomable. But Pascal's new friends had the answer to everything

Nadine A. Brügger
NZZ
April 27, 2024
Google Translation

“ ... Switzerland, along with the USA, is the country with the most so-called sects,” says Christian Rossi, religious scientist at the University of Zurich and freelancer at Infosekta, the Swiss specialist office for sect issues. Rossi sees one reason for this in Switzerland's open and liberal tradition: "People don't judge other ways of life so quickly." Another in their wealth: “Swiss people, for example, often have enough free time to deal with religious topics and alternative models. You can afford to look for the meaning of life.”

It becomes problematic when a religious community works with different control mechanisms and instances. If dual thinking prevails - right or wrong, good or evil, us against others, salvation or hell - then there is usually something wrong, says Rossi. In such communities, answers to all the big questions in life are not a quality feature, but rather an alarm bell. New members are often consciously careful to either convert family members or friends or distance themselves from them.

A valuable person

Pascal felt that being part of a group greatly enhanced his own personality. The more a person gives to God, the new friends teach him, the more valuable he becomes. Pascal gave a lot. Read the literature of his church and spent his free time working for the community. But: “Your own appreciation went hand in hand with a devaluation of everyone else.” The relationship with his parents suffered as a result.

As a young man, Pascal saw no problem in the absorbing and highly judgmental structures of his community. “I didn’t know back then that community and friendship existed without pressure,” he says. Nevertheless, Pascal left for the first time in his mid-twenties: after completing his studies, he started an internship in another city. That was in the 1990s - the distance tore apart the connection to old friends and life took its course.

Pascal made his way in the working world, fell in love, celebrated his wedding and became a father. «But in the heart and mind this separation never took place. That's why my story with the free churches wasn't finished yet," says Pascal.

“Be brave”

On Hohlstrasse in Zurich, the worship team sings the first song on stage. However, this music has nothing to do with the ancient tunes in the heavy hymn books of the regional church. The songs are modern and catchy, and within a very short time the multi-purpose room feels like a pop concert. People dance and sing and praise God's love in parallel in English and Swiss German - each in the way that suits them. The texts are tailor-made for both languages.

The music written specifically for church services, which repeatedly makes it into the charts, especially in the USA and Australia, is an important feature of Hillsong. The Pentecostal Church was founded in Sydney in 1983 and is now celebrating global success. According to its own information, the self-proclaimed megachurch has hundreds of thousands of members internationally and earns millions from their donations. In countries like the USA, where there are no national churches but all churches are privatized, Hillsong is considered one of many churches.

In Switzerland, Hillsong is one of the free churches. Like many successful free churches, including ICF (short for International Christian Fellowship), its members are young, modern and international. This means that their appearance differs greatly from more dusty communities, such as the Brethren Association. But here too, the focus is on what once convinced Pascal: the feeling of community.

As with many successful free churches, the members of the ICF (short for International Christian Fellowship) are young, modern and international. Service in the Maag Hall in Zurich, 2016.

“Be brave,” one of the speakers on stage calls out to her audience. Anyone who feels that something stands between them and faith in Jesus should hold up their hand. The bystanders place their hands on the shoulders of the seekers. Short touches turn into long hugs. From individual people, balls and circles of many people who put their arms around each other's shoulders.

In the middle of it all is the newcomer who looked so lost at the entrance that morning. Just now alone, he now leans on a young man who hugs him. Suddenly tears stream down his cheeks. He needed this moment, this touch, this feeling of belonging. And with the touch comes a promise: You can always have this feeling of belonging - just come back. And bring something with you.

Free church or sect?

Distinguishing between free churches and groups with cult-like features is not always easy. That's why there is hardly any secured data. The Protestant information center Relinfo counts around 1,200 different communities in this country, around a quarter of which have the typical characteristics of problematic communities. How many communities existed beyond this cannot be determined.

The term free church means a Christian religious community that does not belong to an official regional church. The term “sect,” on the other hand, has historically always been used in a derogatory way. Today, a sect means a religious group that violates one or more fundamental rights. For example, they prohibit their members from freedom of religion or belief. The transition from a free church to a sect can be fluid. “There are many religious groups with more or less sect-like features,” says religious scientist Rossi.

Rossi doesn't just know what he's talking about in theory. He was a member of Jehovah's Witnesses for ten years, from the ages of 14 to 24. He was also fascinated by the clear answers to his big questions. And the prophecies of Jehovah's Witnesses. One of the oldest states that Armageddon, the Day of Judgment, should have occurred in 1914. Instead of the apocalypse, World War I broke out. The sect's governing body reinterpreted the apocalypse, 1914 was now the beginning of Jesus' kingdom in heaven - and the year of Satan's expulsion near the earth. No wonder a world war broke out immediately. Rossi thought that a world war would come very close to the end of the world - and was impressed.

In addition to the end of the world, which has been repeatedly postponed to this day, the governing body also made less important predictions that did not come true. Some of them were secretly adapted or removed from their own writings. At some point Rossi felt manipulated and finally dropped out. His family was waiting for him “outside”. Rossi studied religious studies, psychology and biblical studies – “maybe also a little bit to treat myself,” he says.

For a handful of money and time

In the Zurich church service, Pastor Elli, young and dressed as if she had stepped out of a Zalando advertisement, reads her sermon from her smartphone. It's about a poor widow who donates two coins to Jesus while rich men arrive with hands full of gold. "But," says Jesus, "she gave more than all of you - because she has hardly anything and spared some of the little for me."

Soon, a donation cup goes around and a QR code appears on the screen behind the stage to pay digitally. Elli points out the envelopes that were on all the chairs at the beginning. If you turn the flyer over, you will no longer read “Become a part of our church”, but rather “Giving, Giving, Giving” in capital letters – “Give, give, give”, because “Hillsong's strength lies in the generosity and dedication of its members”.

A cash donation can be made using an envelope or a standing order can be set up straight away. On stage, Pastor Elli emphasizes again that it doesn't matter how much or how little you give - the only thing that matters is that you give something. Because by donating to Hillsong you are directly honoring God.

Later, the QR code for making the donation will be replaced by the next week's program. “Take a photo of this,” says someone from the worship team into the microphone, “these joint events are important for our church.” He says it emphatically and with an undertone that makes it clear that this is not just an offer. You shouldn't just give money, time is also expected.

Fear and zeal

Pascal was in his late thirties when he had his “second episode”. Once again he felt lost in the world, once again he was looking for meaning in life, and once again it was a free church from which he expected support and answers. But now he was no longer a young student, but a husband and father.

The new free church, which Pascal also does not want to name, asked its members to also recruit partners. The fact that his wife didn't want to go led to tensions in the community. It was only later that he realized that the situation had also been difficult for her and the child. “There is very little attention to the needs of those who are not in the group,” he says.

At first imperceptibly, but steadily increasing, fear became an important factor that bound Pascal to his community. “I felt very guilty because I didn’t quite live up to the strict standards that were preached. That put a lot of stress on me because it was God’s standard,” says Pascal. Was his faith and commitment enough to get him to heaven?

Although - or perhaps precisely because - his wife refused to join, Pascal became even more involved in the community. Writings had to be read, meetings had to be attended and church services had to be organized. Pascal also took on numerous “offices” and was eventually even allowed to preach and teach. This recognition again – that felt good. It also compensated Pascal for missing much of his son's childhood. His time belonged to God.

And yet the feeling remained that I wasn't quite enough for the Almighty. “I felt more and more guilty towards God. But the more energy I put into the group, the more it became clear to me that I couldn't do everything perfectly." The pressure increases, Pascal can hardly stand it anymore. Finally it doesn't work anymore. Diagnosis: depression.

For the first time, Pascal was concerned with a question to which his community had no answer: If our God is a good, loving God - why does he demand that I sacrifice myself to the point of exhaustion? Pascal found two answers. Either this God he believes in is not a good God. Or what his community preaches is not God's will at all.

A few weeks after this realization, Pascal got out. That was six years ago now. Instead of doing his church work, Pascal now spends his time with his now 14-year-old son and his wife. And with new people whose friendship does not depend on regular prayer and unpaid commitment to the community.

Signs and wonders

Music is still playing on Hohlstrasse in Zurich. Two lists appear on the screen behind the stage: debits and credits, simple accounting. Links Things Hillsong members want in their lives, miracles they pray for. On the right, wishes that have already been fulfilled and for which they are grateful.

“Look, someone wishes you health!” The speaker on stage points to the left column. “And someone thanks you for your health!” She points to the right column. Two completely independent keywords are applauded as evidence of God's power. Afterwards the believers pray. Not quietly and alone, but as a community. Some mumble, others rock to the beat, raise their hands in the air. Something feverish is suddenly in the air. Something urgent, demanding.

Karin’s family also had a big wish. They hoped for nothing less than a miracle from God: Karin's older sister had Down syndrome. When she was born, her parents were overwhelmed. It was the 1980s and no ultrasound had prepared her for the disabled child. The doctors spoke of networking with other affected people and medical support. Nobody talked about healing.

Karin actually has a different name too. Like Pascal, she also wants to remain anonymous. Karin's story begins with her mother's despondency: she had been a believer for a long time, and she had also been desperate since the birth of her disabled daughter. That's when she heard about the Revival Fellowship, like Hillsong, a Pentecostal church founded in Australia that also has congregations in Switzerland and Germany, where Karin's family lives. This church was a place, she was told, where miracles could happen. Why not one for your daughter too?

After her departure, Karin went through an emotional phase: “Mourning for the missed golden twenties, in which I had denied myself almost everything except Bible study and friendships with women in the community.”

A new focus

Friends and neighbors had withdrawn; no one knew how to deal with the disabled child and the mother's desperation. With Revival Fellowship, on the other hand, people prayed for the child together with the parents. Although this did not cause the extra 21st chromosome to disappear, it still healed the family.

The focus shifted and the family gained a common goal. The healing of the disabled daughter was no longer important, but rather the preparation for the return of Jesus. This is what people prayed for and evangelized for. At the same time, the family remained surprisingly liberal.

Karin and her brother were allowed to continue to maintain friendships with non-members, although Revival Fellowship actually only allowed this for missionary purposes. The parents also did not implement absolute abstinence from alcohol because it is not explicitly required anywhere in the Bible. At home at the kitchen table, the Bible and community were also discussed critically. This gave the family a rebellious reputation within the church.

Karin, who was eight years old when she joined the sect, attended high school and graduated from high school. Karin says today that hers wasn't that different from a childhood outside the church. It wasn't until she was a teenager that she felt the rules more clearly. Falling in love with someone who doesn't belong to the church: not possible. Sex before marriage: forbidden.

Doesn't God even exist?

When Karin was in her mid-twenties, she changed communities and moved from Germany to Switzerland. She had hoped that this would give her more freedom and a greater say in the still young Bern community. Instead, the critical spirit and free discussion at the kitchen table at home were missing. Karin was unhappy, but she wanted to hold on.

Then everything happened in quick succession.

Her best friend died of cancer and her brother suffered from severe depression. Two years later, Karin's father died, and a year later her big sister died. But in the community the motto was still: Pray and everything will be fine. “But I saw that that wasn’t true,” says Karin. The more questions she asked, the fewer answers she got.

The Swiss community leader said: "If these people couldn't be healed, then their faith wasn't strong enough." Karin thought: “Either God doesn’t care – or he doesn’t even exist.” The community leader's wife said that what was important was life after death, that with God, not that on earth. Karin saw it differently: “I wanted to live before it was too late.” She no longer wanted to give all her time to the Revival Fellowship, missed meetings, and began to become detached.

The community responded with isolation. “I was literally told I was a bad influence.” A threat to the unity of the community. Sometimes it occurred to Karin that her community might have cult-like characteristics. But she pushed him away. Because: If that were the case, then she would have to leave. And then what? Start from scratch again. She hardly remembered life before church."

https://www.nzz.ch/feuilleton/sekten-freikirchen-in-der-schweiz-ld.1825746

Mar 10, 2023

CultNEWS101 Articles: 3/10/2023 (New Book, Recovery, Nathan Chasing Horse, Legal, Sexual Abuse, Religion in America)


New Book, Recovery, Nathan Chasing Horse, Legal, Sexual Abuse, Religion in America

"Have you been told, "you're too sensitive" or "you think too much"? Do you wonder what is wrong with me? Nothing, according to The Gentle Souls Revolution.

After a five-year cultic misadventure in a secret "school," author Esther Friedman wrote her cautionary tale. Memoir led to research on narcissistic abuse and a recovery template for empaths. With humor and compassion, Friedman describes how the cult exploited her empathy. She interviews former members from other cults and includes research from leading experts. We learn that all cults and cons market false hope by leveraging human nature to profit from the vulnerable.

This revolution teaches Gentle Souls to self-protect by accepting the existence of—and learning to identify pathological selfishness. Recovery requires valuing your proclivities and protecting them like priceless gems. When you do that, those vulnerabilities can become your greatest strengths. That is The Gentle Souls Revolution."

" ... Charges are mounting against a "Dances With Wolves" actor who is accused of sexually abusing and trafficking Indigenous women and girls in the U.S. and Canada for decades.

A grand jury in Nevada indicted Nathan Chasing Horse on [2/22/2023] on 19 counts, expanding on previous charges of sexual assault, trafficking and child abuse to include kidnapping, lewdness and drug trafficking. Chasing Horse, 46, now faces charges in four jurisdictions, with the newest case brought by prosecutors on the Fort Peck Indian Reservation in Montana.

Police in Las Vegas have described Chasing Horse as a cult leader who used his position as a self-proclaimed medicine man to gain access to Indigenous girls and women, who he physically and sexually assaulted and took as underage wives. Prosecutors also accused him of grooming young girls to replace his older wives. His followers in the cult known as The Circle believed he had healing powers and could communicate with higher beings.

Chasing Horse's public defender, Kristy Holston, told The Associated Press that she was looking forward to revealing holes in the state's case during a preliminary hearing that was canceled Wednesday morning ahead of the indictment. She declined to elaborate.

"Since the public is so interested in this case and because only select details of the accusations have been released, we think it would be most appropriate for the State to present their evidence in a public hearing where the defense can reveal the weaknesses of the State's case on the record in court," she said in an email.
Police in Las Vegas have described Chasing Horse as a cult leader who used his position as a medicine man to access to Indigenous girls, who he physically and sexually assaulted."
"A group of Native American activists plan to hold a rally this weekend in support of the alleged victims of Nathan Chasing Horse, an accused cult leader they say took advantage of their culture.

"There are people who are under the impression that he has nothing but support within our nation, from our state, from our region and from the whole Native American community across America," said Allison Renville, a political organizer and Lakota media consultant."

" ... Chasing Horse was known to travel to ceremonies on reservations throughout the western United States, according to the police report. In 2015, he was banished from the Fort Peck Indian Reservation, which is located in northwest Montana and is home to the Fort Peck Assiniboine and Sioux tribes, after he was accused of human trafficking, spiritual abuse and intimidation of tribal members.

Simona Bearcub, a member of the Fort Peck tribes who also traveled to Las Vegas for the court hearings and rally, said Chasing Horse was well known in the communities surrounding Montana and South Dakota. She said many of his followers were women not from the reservations, who were looking to reconnect with their culture."
"One of the truly unique features of the United States is it's incredibly diverse religious landscape. A county or region dominated by a single religious group is the exception, not the rule. Scholars have pointed to this religious competition as one of the reasons religion is still relatively robust in the U.S. compared with other industrialized societies, such as Western Europe.

It would behoove those of us living in the United States, then, to have a decent working knowledge of faith traditions beyond our own. But our religious diversity often comes at a cost: intolerance and infighting, often driven by mutual ignorance. As the writer Andrew Smith once wrote, "People fear what they don't understand."

There is also a gap between Americans' confidence in their grasp of the nuances of other religious traditions and their actual religious literacy, according to data from the Pew Research Center posted by the Association of Religion Data Archives.

Pew asked individuals to assess their level of knowledge about a variety of faith traditions, from different types of Christians (evangelical and mainline Protestants, Catholics and Mormons) to faith groups that make up a smaller portion of the population, such as Jews, Muslims and Buddhists."
"A team of lawyers lodged a complaint with Japan's health ministry in Tokyo on Monday [2/26/23] against the teachings of the Jehovah's Witnesses religious group. The complaint said the group's practices such as declining blood transfusions for their children could amount to child abuse.

The lawyers provide legal assistance to former followers of the group as well as to the children of group members.

About 100 people said in interviews with the team that they had been instructed by senior members of the religious group to refuse blood transfusions for their children.

Others said they were whipped by their Jehovah's Witness parents while growing up.

The lawyers say such practices may constitute child abuse.

Monday's action comes as the health ministry in December issued guidelines to municipalities stating that denying children necessary medical treatment, including blood transfusions, is neglect, a form of abuse.

The guidelines also state that resorting to such punishments as whipping a child constitutes physical abuse."


News, Education, Intervention, Recovery


CultEducationEvents.com

CultMediation.com   

Intervention101.com to help families and friends understand and effectively respond to the complexity of a loved one's cult involvement.

CultRecovery101.com assists group members and their families make the sometimes difficult transition from coercion to renewed individual choice.

CultNEWS101.com news, links, resources.

Facebook

Flipboard

Twitter

Instagram

Cults101.org resources about cults, cultic groups, abusive relationships, movements, religions, political organizations and related topics.


Selection of articles for CultNEWS101 does not mean that Patrick Ryan or Joseph Kelly agree with the content. We provide information from many points of view in order to promote dialogue.


Please forward articles that you think we should add to cultintervention@gmail.com.


Feb 27, 2023

How much do Americans know about the faiths around them?

And what helps us most to understand our neighbors’ faiths?


Ryan Burge
Religion News Service
February 15, 2023

(RNS) — One of the truly unique features of the United States is its incredibly diverse religious landscape. A county or region dominated by a single religious group is the exception, not the rule. Scholars have pointed to this religious competition as one of the reasons religion is still relatively robust in the U.S. compared with other industrialized societies, such as Western Europe.

It would behoove those of us living in the United States, then, to have a decent working knowledge of faith traditions beyond our own. But our religious diversity often comes at a cost: intolerance and infighting, often driven by mutual ignorance. As the writer Andrew Smith once wrote, “People fear what they don’t understand.”

There is also a gap between Americans’ confidence in their grasp of the nuances of other religious traditions and their actual religious literacy, according to data from the Pew Research Center posted by the Association of Religion Data Archives.

Pew asked individuals to assess their level of knowledge about a variety of faith traditions, from different types of Christians (evangelical and mainline Protestants, Catholics and Mormons) to faith groups that make up a smaller portion of the population, such as Jews, Muslims and Buddhists.

 

Americans, it turns out, feel they have a good idea of their neighbors’ faiths.

“How much do you personally know about each of the following?” Graphic by Ryan Burge

Given the ubiquitousness of Catholicism in the United States, it should come as no surprise that 82% of respondents said that they knew “some” or “a lot” about the Catholic Church. Respondents also expressed familiarity with Protestantism. It’s notable that 68% expressed a strong familiarity with atheism, given that atheists make up less than 10% of the United States.

The faith groups that were less understood are, unsurprisingly, ones that comprise the smallest parts of American religion today. More than half of respondents said that they knew “nothing” or “not much” about the practices or beliefs of Muslims, Buddhists and Hindus, and fewer than 1 in 10 said they knew a lot about those faith traditions.

Familiarity, then, seems to be related to exposure to the faith in question.

But perception of knowledge and actual knowledge are two different concepts, entirely. The Pew American Trends Panel also included a religious literacy battery that consisted of eight questions about different faith traditions found in the United States. These questions were offered in multiple-choice format — with three potential answers listed. But they also allowed respondents to say they were unsure of the correct answer.

“Can Americans Answer Basic Religious Literacy Questions Correctly?” Graphic by Ryan Burge

The one question that the overwhelming number of respondents knew the correct answer to is “What is an atheist?” Nearly 9 in 10 respondents correctly indicated that atheists are “someone who does not believe in God.” But strong majorities were also able to associate Moses with the Exodus and knew that David killed Goliath, both stories from the Old Testament.

Religious literacy rates dropped significantly from that point. Just 62% of people knew that Mecca is the holiest city in Islam; nearly the same number could accurately describe the beliefs of agnostics. The Ten Commandments and the Sermon on Mount also seemed to stump many respondents, even though large majorities are aware of who Moses was.

When given a list of three possible commandments, a third of people incorrectly believed that “Do unto others as you would have them do unto you” was part of the Decalogue. A bare majority correctly answered the question “According to the Christian Gospels, who delivered the Sermon on the Mount?”

The question that clearly caused the most trouble concerned Rosh Hashanah and its meaning for people of the Jewish faith. Nearly half of the sample refused to answer the question.

Given these blind spots, it’s worth asking which factors increased religious literacy among the respondents. To test that, an additive scale was constructed, taking in all answers to the questions in the battery, with scores ranging from zero questions correct to all eight questions answered correctly. The survey also asked respondents about their level of educational attainment and whether they had taken a world religions class in high school or college.

“More Educated Individuals Have Higher Levels of Religious Literacy” Graphic by Ryan Burge

Those with higher levels of educational attainment answered more of the questions correctly — little surprise there. Among those with a high school diploma or less, the mean score was about four questions out of eight. Among those who had completed a four-year college degree, the mean score was about six questions correctly answered.

What’s noteworthy, however, is how much taking a world religions class helped with religious literacy. At each level of educational attainment, a person who took world religions classes scored about half a point better than those who did not take a world religions class. This is clear and measurable evidence that these courses have a long-term impact on knowledge about faith traditions.

An average score of four out of eight questions answered correctly is commendable for someone who has had few encounters with other faiths, as many Americans have not. But the country is if anything becoming more religiously diverse — and, famously, more politically polarized. Zeenat Rahman, executive director of the University of Chicago Institute of Politics, has argued that increased religious literacy could lead to a decrease in polarization. It is sure to come in handy for those of us who imagine we know and welcome our neighbors.

https://religionnews.com/2023/02/15/how-much-do-americans-know-about-the-faiths-around-them/

Feb 6, 2022

CultNEWS101 Articles: 2/5-6/2022 (Religious Research, Cult Involvement, Video, Podcast, Meth, Book Launch, Dialogue and Cultic Studies)

Religious Research, Cult Involvement, Video, Podcast, Meth, Book Launch, Dialogue and Cultic Studies

"Religiosity in Canada is at an all-time low, with recently released data from Statistics Canada showing only 68 per cent of Canadians 15 or older now report having a religious affiliation. It's the first time that number has dipped below 70 per cent since StatCan began tracking the data in 1985.

In response, Global News has spent the past two months speaking to members of religious communities across the country and looking at historical data to determine why this is happening. This is part one of that series.

It's important to note that this decline is not across the board; the number of Muslims, Sikhs, Buddhists and Hindus is increasing, and StatCan predicts the number of Canadians reporting a non-Christian religious affiliation could double by the year 2036.

Christianity, however, is in sharp decline. In 2011, 67.3 per cent (about 22.1 million people) of Canadians said they were affiliated with a Christian religion. In 2019, that number had dropped to 63.2 percent. Catholicism, Canada's largest denomination, now accounts for 32 per cent of Canadians over 15, down from 46.9 per cent in 1996."

The decline is even more precarious for Canada's United and Anglican churches.

Pat Ryan and Joe Kelly have worked helping people exit and recover from cults for many years. In this week's video, they join Jon to talk about the nature of authoritarian control, the nostalgia some 

Butterflies and Bravery: Meth And Me
"In this episode Jemima bares it all and talks about some of her previous vices, focusing on her meth addiction. She holds nothing back as she takes you down the long dark road she walked. You'll be on the edge of your seat as we delve into the world of drug addiction. Find out how Jemima got clean without attending meetings or having a religious epiphany, and how she managed to stay that way. Sometimes there's not a why, there's not a way, there's just holding on."

(February 10,  2022, 5:30 - 7:30 pm GMT, Zoom)

About the book: All religions undergo continuous change, but minority religions tend to be less anchored in their ways than mainstream, traditional religions. This volume examines radical transformations undergone by a variety of minority religions, including the Children of God/ Family International; Gnosticism; Jediism; various manifestations of Paganism; LGBT Muslim groups; the Plymouth Brethren; Santa Muerte; and Satanism. As with other books in the Routledge/Inform series, the contributors approach the subject from a wide range of perspectives: professional scholars include legal experts and sociologists specializing in new religious movements, but there are also chapters from those who have experienced a personal involvement. The volume is divided into four thematic parts that focus on different impetuses for radical change: interactions with society, technology and institutions, efforts at legitimation, and new revelations. 


Respondents will include: 

    • Professor Emeritus James A. Beckford, University of Warwick 
    • Michael Langone, Executive Director, International Cultic Studies Association (ICSA), USA 
    • Professor Linda Woodhead, King's College London 
    • Register

ICSA E-Newsletter: ICSA's Openness to Dialogue: Historical Perspective
"From its founding in 1979, ICSA strove to apply professional perspectives and research to understand and respond to the problems posed by cults. This professionalism has made ICSA open and tolerant, and, consequently, credible. Though there were and continue to be different opinions about how open ICSA should be, the prevailing view has always been that we must not be like cults, which are closed-minded and censor or refuse to engage with those who advocate dissenting views.

The reasons for and importance of openness and dialogue was formally articulated in a document written by the ICSA Board of Directors: "Dialogue and Cultic Studies: Why Dialogue Benefits the Cultic Studies Field." Historical background can be found on ICSA's history page, especially "Changes in the North American Cult Awareness Movement."

ICSA's openness to dialogue can sometimes be difficult to reconcile with ICSA's mission of helping those adversely affected by cultic involvements. Former members, especially those who have been traumatized, may feel discomfort -- sometimes revulsion -- when ICSA's openness to divergent views exposes them to people with positive views of cults or even of religion in general. Openness may also challenge parents and helping professionals who are focused on ameliorating harm. Conversely, some academicians may interpret ICSA's focus on cult-related harm as an anti-religious bias.

Because ICSA is open to diverse and conflicting views, ICSA cannot please "all the people all the time." Some degree of tension and discord, therefore, is unfortunately unavoidable. This tension can be challenging, but it can also enhance learning and thinking creatively about cult-related problems.

ICSA is unique because it brings together in a coherent and substantial way international constituencies of victims, families, helping professionals, and researchers. The diversity within ICSA promotes an environment that is conducive to thinking broadly about the subject and to learning from those one might not ordinarily encounter. "Stress-testing" our opinions is a hallmark of critical thinking."

News, Education, Intervention, Recovery


CultEducationEvents.com

CultMediation.com   

Intervention101.com to help families and friends understand and effectively respond to the complexity of a loved one's cult involvement.

CultRecovery101.com assists group members and their families make the sometimes difficult transition from coercion to renewed individual choice.

CultNEWS101.com news, links, resources.

Facebook

Flipboard

Twitter

Instagram

Cults101.org resources about cults, cultic groups, abusive relationships, movements, religions, political organizations and related topics.


Selection of articles for CultNEWS101 does not mean that Patrick Ryan or Joseph Kelly agree with the content. We provide information from many points of view in order to promote dialogue.


Please forward articles that you think we should add to cultintervention@gmail.com.


Thanks,


Joe Kelly (joekelly411@gmail.com)

Patrick Ryan (pryan19147@gmail.com)


If you do not wish to be subscribed to this list, or you think you are being maliciously subscribed to the list, or have any other questions, send them to: pryan19147@gmail.com or send an email to: cultnews101+unsubscribe@googlegroups.com.