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

Jul 2, 2025

CultNEWS101 Articles: 7/2/2025


Religion, Meditation, Ayurveda, FLDS

"Meditation programs, often led by yoga instructors or trained facilitators. These initiatives are commonly labeled as nonreligious tools to reduce stress, improve focus, and enhance emotional regulation.

Programs like Mindful Schools, Calm Schools, and Quiet Time, the latter promoted by the New Age David Lynch Foundation, have made their way into classrooms across the United States. But what appears to be a neutral wellness intervention is often deeply rooted in Eastern religious traditions, raising concerns about religious freedom, consent, and the psychological safety of children.

One striking example occurred in Chicago, where a Christian student, Mariyah Green, won a $150,000 legal settlement after she said she was coerced into participating in the Quiet Time meditation program. The program involved chanting Sanskrit prayers during a ceremony known as a Puja, an act of worship in Hinduism that includes offerings to deities. Green alleged she wasn't informed of the religious significance and believed participation affected her academic standing and athletic eligibility. Both the Chicago Public Schools and the David Lynch Foundation settled the case, though they denied liability.

In addition to the Mariyah Green lawsuit, other legal battles have highlighted the spiritual nature of school-based mindfulness meditation programs. In Encinitas, California, a group of parents filed a lawsuit in 2013 against the school district for promoting yoga as part of the school day. The parents argued that the program, funded by a $500,000 grant from the K. P. Jois Foundation, a group that teaches Ashtanga Yoga, rooted in Hindu traditions, was inherently religious. Although the court ultimately ruled in favor of the school, the case revealed just how deeply spiritual ideologies can become embedded in the name of wellness. Children were reportedly taught poses named after Hindu deities and encouraged to chant "Om," a sacred syllable in Eastern religions. What the school called physical education, the plaintiffs recognized as indoctrination.

Such programs are spreading across the country. In addition to Mindful Schools, Calm Schools, and Quiet Time programs, many other programs are marketed as secular, science-based tools for improving focus and emotional regulation in schools. Yet a closer look reveals that many of these initiatives often include breathing rituals, body scans, and visualizations, practices directly tied to Hinduism, Buddhism, or New Age belief systems. By avoiding overt spiritual language, they slip past constitutional scrutiny while reshaping the spiritual landscape of the classroom."
"Elissa Wall hasn't seen a cent of the more than $10 million dollars she's owed from a lawsuit against self-described prophet and polygamous cult leader Warren Jeffs.

He doesn't have a bank account, she testified Wednesday afternoon.

Wall is trying to collect money from a land sale conducted, on paper, by his brother Seth Jeffs and his Montana-based Emerald Industries LLC. She's convinced that Seth Jeffs used Warren Jeffs' money to buy 40 acres here in 2018, property that he sold in 2023 for $130,000.

"I'm here to recover the money given to Seth Jeffs," she told the Cook County jury.

According to court documents, Seth Jeffs claims he used his own money to buy the land. He's expected to testify on Thursday.

Warren Jeffs is also named in the lawsuit, but he's currently in a Texas prison where he is serving a life sentence for child sexual assault. He's still in the leadership role he inherited with the Fundamentalist Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints, according to Wall.

The fundamentalist sect broke away from Mormonism after the latter moved away from polygamy."


The selection of articles for CultNEWS101 does not imply that Patrick Ryan or Joseph Kelly endorse the content. We provide information from multiple perspectives to foster dialogue.


Feb 12, 2024

5 'Religious' Super Bowl Ads That Made Headlines

Clemente Lisi 
Religion Unplugged
February 8, 2024

NEW YORK — The Super Bowl attracts millions upon millions of television viewers. While the game decides which is the NFL’s best team, the Super Bowl is also a boon for advertisers looking to attract eyeballs to their products.

The average cost of a 30-second spot during the Super Bowl this year is $7 million, up slightly from $6.5 million just two years ago. Even as audiences become more fragmented, the Super Bowl continues to be the place for companies to buy ad time if they want to reach the masses.

Super Bowl commercials offer a rare opportunity for brands to reach a massive audience and generate lots of buzz around their products or services. As a result, Madison Avenue has given us many memorable Super Bowl commercials over the decades. Companies such as Coca-Cola and Apple have put out some famous ones.

But ads are not all secular. Religious organizations have often used the Super Bowl as a platform to spread their message. On other occasions, religious themes have been used in a funny way to sell products.

In 2018, for example, Toyota put marketing dollars behind an ad featuring nuns, a priest, a rabbi, an imam and a Buddhist monk. A California church was tasked with creating a Doritos commercial that aired in 2010 after winning an ad contest sponsored by the chip brand.

Here’s a look at five “religious” Super Bowl ads — two of which will run during this Sunday’s game between the Kansas City Chief and San Francisco 49ers — that have made headlines over the years:

“Hallow” (2024)

Featuring actors Jonathan Roumie and Mark Wahlberg, the prayer app Hallow hopes to get some big-time visibility during this year’s Super Bowl for the first time.

The actors will help lead Hallow’s “Pray40” prayer challenge in time for the start of Lent with Ash Wednesday on Feb. 14.

“The goal at Hallow has always been to reach out to as many folks as possible, both those who take their faith seriously and especially those who might have fallen away, and invite them deeper into a relationship with God,” Alex Jones, Hallow’s CEO and co-founder, told the website Christian Headlines.

He added: “When we learned about the timing of the big game this year, we couldn’t have been more excited to work with Mark and Jonathan to use it as an opportunity to invite millions into prayer.”

“Stand Up To Jewish Hate” (2024)

The Foundation to Combat Antisemitism, a nonprofit dedicated to ending hatred against Jews in the U.S., will air its first-ever Super Bowl commercial as the group seeks to raise awareness following the Oct. 7 Hamas attacks against Israel.

The 30-second spot will continue the estimated $25 million #StandUpToJewishHate campaign, which began in March 2023. The FCAS was founded in 2019 by Robert Kraft, CEO of the Kraft Group and owner of the New England Patriots football team.

“With the horrific rise in Jewish hate and all hate across our nation, we must stand up and take urgent action now,” Kraft said. “For the first time, FCAS will air an emotive ad during the Super Bowl, football’s ultimate championship game which brings people of all backgrounds together, to showcase examples of how people can stand up to Jewish hate and inspire more people to join the fight against all hate.”

“He Gets Us” (2023)

A group that includes wealthy Christian donors used air time last year for the first time to proclaim a simple message: “He Gets Us.”

The group, which will run the ads once again this Sunday, wants to counter the notion that belief in Jesus is used to divide people.

“It fits with our target audience really well,” campaign spokesperson Jason Vanderground told The Associated Press about the NFL and its big game. “We’re trying to get the message across to people who are spiritually open, but skeptical.”

The group will again run another series of commercials at this year’s game. They will run a 60-second ad in the first quarter, then a 15-second follow-up in the second half.

“Knowledge” (2013)

For the first time, the Church of Scientology purchased commercial time in local markets during the Super Bowl in order to feature an ad that called on “the curious, the inquisitive, the seekers of knowledge.”

“Some will doubt you,” said the narrator in the ad over soft-focus images of mostly young, ethnically diverse strivers. “Let them. Dare to think for yourself, to look for yourself, to make up your own mind.”

The church has run ads ever since, including an one called “Live Again.” That ad, the 11th straight year the Church of Scientology premiered a new commercial during the Super Bowl, was produced in-house by Scientology Media Productions, the church’s communications center based in Hollywood.

“Celebrate Family, Celebrate Life” (2010)

In 2010, the anticipated debut of a Super Bowl ad by Focus on the Family, a Christian ministry that supports traditional values, received praise from anti-abortion supporters and pushback from abortion rights advocates in the run-up to the game.

The ad featured Pam Tebow, mother of then-University of Florida football star Tim Tebow, talking about her challenging pregnancy with her son. She chose not to have an abortion despite medical concerns.

Despite calls from women’s groups to stop it from airing, CBS decided to air the ad.

“I think we ended up in the Top 10 for the most controversial ads. … That wasn’t the one I wanted, but it’s OK. I communicated a message,” Focus on the Family CEO Jim Daly said at the time.

Tebow, who would go on to have an NFL career, has said he never regretted making the public service announcement.

“I definitely didn't think it would have this much hype and definitely that much buzz,” he said, “but it’s something I believe in and I'll stand up for.”


Clemente Lisi is the executive editor of Religion Unplugged. He previously served as deputy head of news at the New York Daily News and a longtime reporter at The New York Post. Follow him on X @ClementeLisi.





https://religionunplugged.com/news/2024/2/6/super-bowl-5-religious-ads-that-reached-millions-during-the-big-game

Jan 18, 2022

CultNEWS101 Articles: 1/18/2022 (Research Participation Request, QAnon, Extremist, Mata Amritanandamayi, 3HO, Yogi Bhajan, Kundalini Yoga, Religious Fraud, Mental Illness, New Book)


Research Participation Request, QAnon, Extremist, Mata Amritanandamayi, 3HO, Yogi Bhajan, Kundalini Yoga, Religious Fraud, Mental Illness, New Book

Researcher: Ashlen Hilliard, University of Salford, Master's in the Psychology of Coercive Control Program

Did you experience a lack of reproductive choice while in a cultic group? Was your sexual health and well-being affected by the cult? Do you feel that the cultic group used your reproductive health as a means of control?

You are invited to participate in this research project on the relationship between reproductive coercion, psychologically abusive environments, and the extent of group identity in a sample of those who have left cultic groups.

You are eligible to participate if you are an individual 18 and older who self-identifies as someone who has been in a cult or destructive group which you have subsequently left. You identified as a female while you were in a cult or destructive group setting, and you experienced reproductive coercion at that time, which has been defined as: "A behavior that interferes with the autonomous decision-making of a woman with regard to reproductive health. It may take the form of birth control sabotage, pregnancy coercion, or controlling the outcome of a pregnancy" (Grace and Anderson, 2018, p. 371).

Please do not feel pressured or obligated to complete this questionnaire if you may have met me or be aware of my role with the International Cultic Studies Association (ICSA).

If you have any further questions or would like any additional information, please feel free to email researcher Ashlen Hilliard at A.J.Hilliard@edu.salford.ac.uk .

"Cult-like extremist movements appear to provide an antidote to the potent mixture of isolation, uncertainty, changing narratives, and fear we have experienced during the pandemic by offering a skewed form of safety, stability, and certainty, along with a cohort of people who are just like us, who believe us and believe in us. As the activist David Sullivan—a man who devoted his life to infiltrating cults in order to extricate loved ones from their grip—pointed out, no one ever joins a cult: They join a community of people who see them. In 2022, this appeal of cults will only grow, and those that arise next year will make QAnon seem like the good old days."
" ... Someday finally arrived when Blachly, who uses the name Peter Alexander in his musical performances, wrote about his experiences in a 308-page memoir self-published last year.

Now 72 and with many of the people who were part of his previous life no longer living, Blachly felt more freedom to write the memoir than he would have otherwise. The pandemic gave him the time to finish a writing project that began many years ago, and living in an old house with an expansive view of the river gave him the space to think and a place to ponder.

His book, called "The Inner Circle, Book One: My Seventeen Years in the Cult of the American Sikhs," which is available at Gulf of Maine Books in Brunswick, tells the story of his journey as a popular musician in a nationally touring rock band during the Vietnam War and Woodstock era to becoming a close confidant and musical liaison to Yogi Bhajan, a kundalini yoga guru and spiritual leader of the 3HO Foundation.

The organization's name stands for Healthy, Happy and Holy and remains an active nonprofit dedicated "to living a life that uplifts and inspires," according to its website. Although it claims to follow the tenets of Sikhism, a religion that originated in India in the 15th century with more than 25 million followers worldwide, it has been criticized for misrepresenting the religion and denounced by traditional practitioners. A spokesperson for 3HO declined to respond to a reporter's questions for this story. A spokesperson for the Sikh Coalition, a New York-based Sikh-American advocacy group, declined to comment on 3HO.

The organization formed in 1969 and Blachly joined in 1970 at age 20, because he was interested in yoga and a healthier lifestyle. He became deeply involved out of a genuine desire for spiritual understanding and personal peace, he said, and a love of music. As a musician, he achieved respected status in the movement, traveling among Sikh communities in the United States and India while learning to play the sitar, mastering tabla (or Indian hand drum), speaking Punjabi and performing at holy shrines across India, including the Golden Temple in Amritsar.

After Yogi Bhajan died in 2004, many of his followers accused him of rape and sexual misconduct. In his book, Blachly, who has two daughters from an arranged marriage through his association with the spiritual leader, accuses him of manipulation, control and financial malfeasance."
"Victims of abuse often feel very alone, helpless, and hopeless.

Author Paulette J. Buchanan takes the reader through her lifetime of abuse at the hands of her four older brothers. She describes their continuation of abuse into their adult years, in part carried out by their weaponization of the court system to file meritless, harassing lawsuits against her, her husband, and against others. Buchanan details the arduous fight in which she and her husband have been forced to engage in order to finally secure long overdue judgments against these brothers."


News, Education, Intervention, Recovery


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

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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.


May 27, 2021

In Defense Of Mother Teresa: Why She Is A Saint, Not A 'Cult Leader'

Clemente Lisi
Religion Unplugged
May 23, 2021

Religion Unplugged believes in a diversity of well-reasoned and well-researched opinions. This piece reflects the views of the author and does not necessarily represent those of Religion Unplugged, its staff and contributors.

(OPINION) Historical figures are going through a reckoning. They have been for some time. Some with good reason.

Christopher Columbus? Understandable given what was unleashed by his arrival from Europe.

Thomas Jefferson? A paradox that’s worth examining given his ability to pen the Declaration of Independence and also own slaves. In some cases, he fathered children with them.

Other figures haven’t been so obvious. Following the tragic murder of George Floyd last May, many statues were toppled or removed across the United States, including those of 18th century Spanish priest Junipero Serra, Abraham Lincoln and Mahatma Gandhi. These weren’t so obvious to explain. I’m not sure those who damaged them knew either.

This takes me to the latest reckoning: Mother Teresa, now known as Saint Teresa of Calcutta.

Yes, that Mother Teresa. The diminutive woman who dedicated her life to helping “the poorest of the poor” in India. And the same one who was awarded the Nobel Peace Prize in 1979 and Pope Francis canonized a saint in 2016. Turns out she was a cult leader.

Michelle Goldberg penned an opinion piece in The New York Times, which ran Saturday on its website, under the headline: “Was Mother Teresa a cult leader?”

With a headline like that, is it possible the thesis will be that she wasn’t? Here’s how she opened the piece:

During the Trump years, there was a small boom in documentaries about cults. At least two TV series and a podcast were made about Nxivm, an organization that was half multilevel marketing scheme, half sex abuse cabal. “Wild Wild Country,” a six-part series about Bhagwan Shree Rajneesh’s compound in Oregon, was released on Netflix. Heaven’s Gate was the subject of a four-part series on HBO Max and a 10-part podcast. Indeed, there have been so many recent podcasts about cults that sites like Oprah Daily have published listicles about the best ones.

In many ways the compelling new podcast “The Turning: The Sisters Who Left,” which debuted on Tuesday, unfolds like one of these shows. It opens with a woman, Mary Johnson, hoping to escape the religious order in which she lives. “We always went out two by two. We were never allowed just to walk out and do something,” she explains. “So I wouldn’t have been able to go, you know, more than five or six paces before somebody ran up to me and said, ‘Where are you going?’”

Johnson sees an opportunity in escorting another woman to the hospital, where there’s a room full of old clothes that patients have left behind. She makes a plan to shed her religious uniform for civilian garb and flee, though she doesn’t go through with it.

It is what she wants to flee that makes “The Turning” so fascinating. Johnson spent 20 years in Mother Teresa’s Missionaries of Charity before leaving through official channels in 1997. “The Turning” portrays the order of the sainted nun — Mother Teresa was canonized in 2016 — as a hive of psychological abuse and coercion. It raises the question of whether the difference between a strict monastic community and a cult lies simply in the social acceptability of the operative faith.

Indeed, the pandemic has led to the creation of many documentaries — both in video form and as podcasts — to fill the time for many of us stuck in our homes. In this piece, Goldberg recycles old accusations that Mother Teresa “fetishized suffering rather than sought to alleviate it.”

One of Mother Teresa’s most outspoken critics, Goldberg points out, was English journalist Christopher Hitchens, host of the 1994 documentary Hell’s Angel that aired on Britain’s Channel 4 and author of the essay “The Missionary Position: Mother Teresa in Theory and Practice” a year later. In a 2003 Slate piece, he made this observation:

This returns us to the medieval corruption of the church, which sold indulgences to the rich while preaching hellfire and continence to the poor. She was not a friend of the poor. She was a friend of poverty. She said that suffering was a gift from God. She spent her life opposing the only known cure for poverty, which is the empowerment of women and the emancipation of them from a livestock version of compulsory reproduction.

Here’s more from Goldberg’s piece regarding the new podcast:

What makes “The Turning” unique is its focus on the internal life of the Missionaries of Charity. The former sisters describe an obsession with chastity so intense that any physical human contact or friendship was prohibited; according to Johnson, Mother Teresa even told them not to touch the babies they cared for more than necessary. They were expected to flog themselves regularly — a practice called “the discipline” — and were allowed to leave to visit their families only once every 10 years.

As any religion reporter knows — and reporters in general should also — is that the word cult shouldn’t be thrown about so cavalierly. What some of the sisters describe isn’t so unusual for religious orders, especially ones in the Roman Catholic church. The importance of suffering often mimics that of Jesus. On the cross, Jesus embraced human suffering, making it redemptive. In the process, He conquered evil with good. This isn’t something you need a theologian to explain. Any Catholic who ever attended Mass on Easter Sunday can point this out. But the essay makes no effort to explain any of the theology behind Mother Teresa’s charitable works.

Religion scholar Megan Goodwin once defined the term cult, when it is used by a layperson, as often being shorthand for a “religion I don't like.” Case in point: The new PBS documentary on preacher Billy Graham, a respected religious leader and spiritual adviser to U.S. presidents of both political parties. In an opinion piece on MSNBC, Graham got similar coverage to what we now see with Mother Teresa under the headline: “How Billy Graham weaponized white evangelical Christian power in America.”

Documentaries and podcasts aren’t necessarily objective journalism. They don’t have to offer up both sides on an issue. They don’t have the same burdens newsrooms have traditionally had during the newsgathering process. It is therefore quite easy for The New York Times to run an opinion piece on these allegations rather than put the resources to report the story out, if there even is a legitimate story here. Goldberg, however, refers to both the podcast and Hitchens’ past work as journalism.

Goldberg’s essay, on the other hand, uses a few quotes to back the story that Mother Teresa was a mean, out-of-touch person, then Times editors put a controversial headline on it to get you to click on it. The piece also fails to acknowledge that Mother Theresa, who died in 1997 at the age of 87, never sought the limelight as she helped lepers, orphans and the very poor in Calcutta starting in the 1950s. She had founded the Order of the Missionaries of Charity in 1948 and continues to help the poor around the world.

Mother Teresa was made a media star not by her own doing. It was Malcolm Muggeridge’s 1971 book, Something Beautiful for God, that catapulted the nun into the international limelight after he’d interviewed her two years earlier for the BBC. In the process, the the Missionaries of Charity have done a lot of good around the world.

What this essay also leaves out is that in order to be made a saint, the church has a very strict process that can last years. At least two miracles must be attributed to the person who’s up for canonization. Two miracles have been attributed to her — one in which Mother Teresa cured a woman with a lump growing in her abdomen; the other a man who suffered from brain abscesses. No mention of that in Goldberg’s essay.

Under church rules, the first miracle attributed to a candidate for sainthood means beatification can be conferred. If a second miracle follows, canonization — and entry into sainthood — can take place. Furthermore, Catholics venerate saints and look to them as examples on how to live a good life. Many find comfort knowing that even saints once shared in their same sins and hardships.

One of Mother Teresa’s biggest champions, and another large Catholic figure from the 1980s, was Saint Pope John Paul II. Made a saint by Francis in 2014, JPII’s legacy was tarnished when the mainstream press’ biggest takeaway from the McCarrick Report was that the former pontiff (as well as his successor Benedict XVI) had enabled the now-disgraced former cardinal by not believing reports that he’d sexually abused seminarians and other young men.

This revived opposition to Mother Teresa and John Paul II (whom Hitchens called “a fundamentalist”) could very well be because both promoted Catholic moral teachings on abortion and contraception — something secularists dislike about the church. The abortion fight, as we all know, rages on in the United States and remains a key talking point across the political spectrum.

In 1988, this is what Mother Teresa had to say regarding abortion:

Abortion has become the greatest destroyer of peace, because it destroys two lives, the life of the child and the conscience of the mother. … Let us thank our parents for wanting us, for loving us, for giving us the joy of living. … You are priceless to God himself.”

Could this have something to do with the eagerness of some to revisit and question Mother Teresa’s work? It’s definitely a question that journalists should ask. Instead, Goldberg cherry-picks a few quotes attributed to Mother Teresa and comes up with this conclusion:

Viewed through a contemporary, secular lens, a community built around a charismatic founder and dedicated to the lionization of suffering and the annihilation of female selfhood doesn’t seem blessed and ethereal. It seems sinister.

It should also be noted that also true that these figures ran large organizations — Mother Teresa an international order and charity and John Paul II the entire church. There will always be some mistakes made. They made decisions not everyone agreed with. They were, after all, human. It seems convenient now, years after their deaths, to go after Mother Teresa and John Paul II when they can’t defend their records.

But the church has found them to be more than human. They have been made saints. Catholics pray to God seeking their intercession. They are not immune to criticism, I’m not arguing that, but they do deserve to be judged by the whole of their work — and that’s something worth defending.

Clemente Lisi is a senior editor and regular contributor to Religion Unplugged. He is the former deputy head of news at the New York Daily News and teaches journalism at The King’s College in New York City. Follow him on Twitter @ClementeLisi.

https://religionunplugged.com/news/2021/5/22/mother-teresa-in-defense-of-a-saint

Mar 11, 2021

Yoga in pandemic times: fitness or religion?

Religion Watch
Baylor University Institute for the Study of Religion
Volume 36 No. 4

A legal case in Switzerland is once again raising the question of the religious nature of yoga and similar practices, especially during a public health crisis. A yoga studio in the Swiss canton of Aarau has refused to shut its doors despite federal sanitary regulations temporarily banning sport and fitness activities, including yoga and dance studios. Yoga teacher David Scherwey considers his work a spiritual activity to which the country's rules allowing religious meetings with adequate distance and an upper limit of 50 participants should apply, according to reports in the Swiss media. While yoga and similar practices have been a matter of dispute in a variety of countries and contexts (e.g., in regard to the permissibility of teaching yoga at public schools), the case also touches on wider issues of the boundaries of religion in a time of individualized spiritual practices, writes Simon Hehli in the Neue Zürcher Zeitung (February 5). On the welcome page of his yoga studio's website, Scherwey stresses that his teaching has nothing to do with "sports yoga" and asserts the spiritual dimension of yoga to be central.

Moreover, he states that the physical presence of yoga students is necessary to create a sacred space in which individuals can experience themselves as transcendental beings, something that a livestream class cannot replace. Because of this spiritual dimension, Scherwey claims that his yoga studio should enjoy the same measure of freedom granted to religious meetings despite the pandemic. In a legal brief made available on Scherwey's website, lawyer Patrick Villoz agrees that a 2013 decision of the Swiss Federal Court had considered some yoga exercises to be permissible at a kindergarten only to the extent that they were purely physical and not associated with any religious or sacred symbols.

Scherwey has insisted precisely that such practices be explicitly and openly spiritual, however. But such an argument has not convinced the local authorities, who argue that the simple claim that a practice is religious does not constitute sufficient grounds for making it a religion. The police have intervened to close the doors of the studio, but Scherwey has announced that he will not give up, and it looks likely that some judges will once again have to deal with the definition of religion and the nature of yoga.

(Website of Yoga Atelier (in German): http://www.yogaatelier.ch/)

http://www.religionwatch.com/yoga-in-pandemic-times-fitness-or-religion/

Dec 10, 2020

CultNEWS101 Articles: 12/10/2020

Cult Deprogramming, Hillsong Church, LGBTQ, Religion, Yoga

Boss Hunting: Inside The Cowboy Industry Of 'Cult Deprogramming'
"In the 1970s, America quite literally lost its mind. Doomsday cults, satanic sects, and saffron-robed gurus were exerting undue influence upon thousands of Americans with fatal consequences. Desperate families paid a pretty penny for rogue operators to infiltrate cults and rescue their brainwashed loved ones by any means necessary. It spawned the entirely new, highly lucrative, and dubiously ethical industry of 'cult deprogramming.'

Vigilante 'deprogrammers' continue to operate today via covert means and legal loopholes. And their services are in high demand. Cult expert and former cult member himself, Steven Hassan, estimates that over 5,000 cults operate today in the United States alone."

" ... Over the decades, U.S. judges routinely granted parents and cowboy deprogrammers the authorization to (re)kidnap their children without a hearing.

Ted "Black Lightning" Patrick, was dubbed "The Father of Deprogramming." His skin was in the game after saving his own son from a cult known as The Children Of God. He deprogrammed over two thousand clients via abduction (daylight kidnappings with the assistance of his henchman), snapping (inflicting mental, emotional, and physical abuse to undo the cult's brainwashing), and releasing (a process of freeing an individual from their trancelike state).

US courts backed Patrick's argument that, by "artful and deceiving" means, cults were robbing people of their First Amendment Rights to think and choose.

Cult deprogrammers (used to) make serious bank

Although it didn't crack the highest-earning jobs list – not to mention Patrick had US$60 million in lawsuits pending against him by 1979 – cult deprogramming is highly lucrative. Can families put a price on the freedom of their loved ones?

In the Colombrito vs. Kelly case of 1978, one deprogrammer received a US$25,000 fee (inflating to US$100,000 today and approximately AU$140,000.) It is a niche market, with just a handful of operators carrying out thousands of conversions to date. However, the industry had to go underground following the monumental court case in 1995, Scott vs. Ross.

Deprogrammer Rick Ross was duped by Jason Scott, who faked his deprogramming and pressed charges. Scott's case was picked up by a powerful backer.

The Church of Scientology, growing frustrated with the anti-cult movement, funded Scott's civil suit in 1995. It bankrupted Ross and the Cult Awareness Network (CAN). Scientology bought the CAN assets and logo and runs it as a front for their own organisation. The case ended the lawful use of involuntary cult deprogramming.

How cult deprogramming works today

"Exit counselling" has since replaced coercive cult deprogramming, yet consists of many of the same players. Ross compares his counselling sessions to an intervention. It spans three to four days, in eight-hour lengthy sessions, alongside families and loved ones. However, by law, it must be voluntary.

The subject can leave at any time, and the cults have clocked on to it. Cults and questionable self-help groups train their members to sense it coming. Many parents enlist psychologists in covert operations to assist them in gaining conservatorship powers. Through conservatorship, they can explore more coercive measures."
A disgraced former Hillsong church pastor claims he is 'stronger and happier' than ever after launching a new church.

Pat 'Pasquale' Mesiti created Reborn Ministries for churchgoers who have lost their way amid the coronavirus pandemic.

The church on Queensland's Sunshine Coast and features online Sunday sermons hosted by the 60-year-old, whose life fell apart in 2016. 

The self-confessed sex addict was caught sleeping with prostitutes in Darlinghurst and was stripped of his authority to preach in the Hillsong church.

He also pleaded guilty to assaulting his ex-wife Andrea, which he said left him considering taking his own life.

'In 2016 I lost everything — my marriage, my business, important relationships, my home, my family, my life, my reputation,' Mr Mesitis said in a video on the Reborn Ministries website.

'I thought suicide was the only option. I thought I had nothing to look forward to. God doesn't break us, he builds us.

'I've come back. I'm stronger, I'm in a happier place.'

This is considerably lower than the general U.S. population, where more than two-thirds say they are religious.

"Almost half of LGBTQ adults in the United States are religious, according to a recent report from the UCLA School of Law's Williams Institute.

Of nearly 16,000 respondents polled in the Gallup Daily Tracking Survey, 47 percent were either moderately or highly religious. Those who were older, Black or lived in the South were the most likely to be religious, researchers found.

To determine religiosity, respondents were asked about service attendance and the importance of religion in their daily lives.

Respondents who said religion was not an important part of their daily life and they never or seldom attended services were categorized as "not religious." Those who indicated religion was important — even if they attended services less than once a month — were classified as "moderately religious," as were those who attended services weekly, even if they said religion was not important in their lives.

Respondents who said religion was an important facet of their daily life and they attended regular services were categorized as "highly religious."

By that metric, 27 percent were classified as moderately religious, 20 percent as highly religious and just over half (53 percent) as not religious."

"Do famous people become famous for staying in their lane? Do some find fame by carving out a lane that never existed before? What is the disruptive promise of charisma in this wellness space, which draws consumers burdened by a double disillusionment? They arrive, disillusioned by conventional medicine and conventional religion. What can the charismatic influencer offer them, and how do they do it?

In this last free bonus episode, Matthew explores the charismatic logic of wellness, in which yoga teachers can become famous by playing at being doctors,  and doctors can become famous by playing at being priests. Starting with the strange tale of BKS Iyengar (and how he stretched his way into all three roles through sheer will), this journey will lay out how the basic schtick of the 20th-century the wellness personality has primed the ground for our current explosion in conspirituality.

Matthew will look at how MDs like Tom Cowan, Kelly Brogan, Christiane Northrup, and Zach Bush all run the "Iyengar Arc" in reverse. Where the yoga master was unschooled in medicine, these doctors are unschooled in spirituality. But that doesn't stop them from pretending to be experts in a weird cocktail that fails both. In their aspirations to spiritual leadership, they each screw the pooch. Cowan ends up shilling for Rudolf Steiner, who knew nothing about viruses, and even less about how not to be a racist. Brogan thinks that Kundalini Yoga is "thousands of years old" even though it was invented by a sociopath in the 1970s. Northrup seems to think that angel channelers are qualified to tell people how to live. And Zach Bush recounts a mystical experience to a group of retreatants in Italy, in which he became a sardine, and realized he wasn't afraid to die—partly why he uses Reiki instead of pain medication when he's on the hospice shift.

Ultimately, the "charismatic collapse" between doctor and priest distorts medicine and makes spirituality banal." Perhaps if we see this clearly, we'll look for better leaders."

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Apr 16, 2020

Will Religion Deliver Us From or Doom Us to the Pandemic?

Christian faithfuls wearing masks to prevent contracting the coronavirus sit during a service at a church in Seoul, South Korea, March 1, 2020. Photo: Yonhap via Reuters
How do leaders of deeply religious societies, who have for centuries encouraged mass gatherings, abruptly tell believers that it is precisely these congregations they should avoid?



Siddharth Kapila
The Wire
April 15, 2020

With more than 950 confirmed coronavirus cases across the country, as of April 3, linked to the gathering of the Islamic sect Tablighi Jamaat in Delhi at Markaz, Nizamuddin, the ‘cluster’ has been imprinted in our minds as an unrivalled hub of infection in the epidemic in India so far.

During these times, it is perhaps easy to forget that just over a month ago another country was similarly captivated by its own religious hotbed of contagion. South Korea, on February 17, appeared to have its number of coronavirus infections under control at 30. But the very next day, in came Patient Number 31, a 61-year-old woman who was a member of the Shincheonji Church of Jesus, which mainstream churches considered a cult.

Within days the number of infections soared into the hundreds at both the church and neighbouring areas of Daegu, a city of 2.5 million. It is believed Patient 31 was able to transmit her infection so efficiently thanks to some of the church’s practices which included praying in close proximity in an enclosed space and prohibiting the wearing of glasses and face masks. As per the Korea Centre for Disease Control and Prevention, as of March 7, 63.5% of all confirmed cases in the country were ‘related to Shincheonji.’

The Shincheonji case, it’s worth noting, is analogous to the Nizamuddin one in another respect too. Given that they were religious minorities, both groups bore the brunt of majoritarian prejudices. Just as the Presbyterian Church of Korea claimed that the founder of the Shincheonji church held “heretical” and “anti-Christian” views, WhatsApp forwards in India accused the Tablighi Jamaat – the orthodox Muslim group who organised the ‘super-spreading’ meeting at Nizamuddin – of waging a “Corona Jihad”.

But did members of the above religious groups behave in a fundamentally riskier manner than people of other faiths? Were theirs the only instances of callousness? Mass congregations, as we know, are hardly a unique feature to any one religion – all faiths subscribe to them in different ways. What’s more, an unfolding of the pandemic also reveals that distinct coronavirus clusters had originated at other religious gatherings both before and after the abovementioned events.

Why, in Korea itself, on 17 March, around 79 devotees of a separate church became infected with the disease after, it is claimed, salt-water was sprayed into their mouths under the belief that this would protect them from the virus. In Punjab, a preacher Baldev Singh, ignored advice to self-quarantine after returning from Europe. He later went on to attend a large gathering to celebrate the Sikh festival of Hola Mohalla, an annual six-day event attended by lakhs from across the country and the world, which effectively led to the quarantining of 40,000 people.

It was clear – from New York, where a synagogue was at the centre of an early outbreak, to Malaysia, where incidentally the Tablighi Jamaat held another meeting which would become the source of hundreds of coronavirus cases across South East Asia—that it wasn’t a particular religion but religious congregations generally that were potent pathways in the spread of coronavirus.

This should not be surprising. It is precisely during prayers, sermons and festivals that one’s personal space all but evaporates. We lose our sense of self and become one with our community, whether out of camaraderie or faith.

But in these unprecedented times one has to additionally ask: Is it reasonable to expect believers to change their ways of collecting at temples, mosques and churches, of touching deities and embracing one another, overnight? How do you suddenly believe what was once your strength has now become your Achilles’ heel? To think in such a way would be to go against your instincts.

No wonder there was news of a sermon posted on a “Delhi Markaj” YouTube channel, in which the speaker said that there is no need to follow social distancing. That it was a “conspiracy to keep Muslims away from fellow Muslims”.

“Where will you run from death? Death is in front of you… This is an occasion to seek penance from God. Not an occasion where one comes under the influence of doctors and stops Namaaz, meeting each other… Yes, there is a virus. But 70,000 angels are with me and if they can’t save me, who will? This is the time for more such gatherings, not the time to avoid each other… Who says if we meet then disease will spread? The disease will pass, but eating from the same plate, it will benefit us… This is a plan to end amity between Muslims, to alienate them from each other,” the speaker says.

After all, the idea of physical distancing is brand new; religious habits, on the other hand, go back centuries and more. In these frightening times of social distancing and self-isolation the faithful everywhere are having to make strange decisions. They are wondering: how are we to properly retain our devotion without compromising on our customs?

Blind belief vs common sense

Back in mid-March, angry crowds of Shiites stormed into the courtyards of Mashhad’s Imam Reza shrine and Qom’s Fatima Masumeh shrine in Iran. This was where people typically prayed for 24 hours a day, often touching and kissing the shrines. And so despite the virulent nature of the epidemic in that country, there appeared a video of a man on Instagram licking one of the shrines. “So the disease can go inside my body and others can visit it with no anxiety,” he said.

To this, MP Hasan Nowrozi responded with a strict warning: “Those doing such unconventional acts are publishing fake and superstitious news against the officials in the country. Such people would face two months to two years [in] jail and up to 74 lashes as punishment.”

This response presents another issue regarding the nature of faith: if believing in a higher power is the chief driver of religion, then superstition is but its inescapable by-product. In this regard, Iran was certainly not alone.

There were claims of cow urine being sold in West Bengal as an elixir providing immunity against the novel coronavirus. Furthermore, around the same time in March, Indians thronged the streets in large numbers to play Holi even after Prime Minister Modi himself announced that he would be keeping away from public gatherings.

Reversing deep-seated habits was never going to be easy. The pertinent question now is: how do leaders of deeply religious societies like ours, who have for centuries encouraged mass gatherings, abruptly tell believers that it is precisely these congregations they should avoid?

How do you backtrack on blind faith and its associated linkages?

In February, Saudi Arabia had banned foreign arrivals and halted visits to Mecca and Medina for umrah, a religious pilgrimage that Muslims can undertake at any time of year. Then on March 31, it further asked believers to temporarily defer preparations for the annual pilgrimage. But for how long can the country feasibly keep the doors to Islam’s holiest sites closed without stirring up angst?

How would social distancing rules be maintained at the Tirupati Balaji Temple, where Hindus queue up for tens of hours with their bodies pressed up against each other in order to get darshan of the Lord, when it ultimately reopens after the present lockdown?

Are we, at least in the short-to-medium term, capable of rethinking and reimagining what faith means to us? Can we change our reflexes to beat this ever-mutating virus?

Faith in this pandemic

If stories from around the world are any indication – from the Roman Catholic Church, which has begun livestreaming the Pope’s daily mass and Sunday sermon; and some parishes in the US that are offering drive-through confessions; to the renowned wellness guru, Deepak Chopra offering us ‘a moment of Zen for people in a time of uncertainty’, a meditation stream which incidentally crashed due to too much traffic – it was manifest that organised religion was in no need of saving. It had proven itself to be wholly capable of adapting to this changed world.

But even still, one question lingered: How could individuals retain their strength despite long separations from friends and loved ones and without the imminent prospect of commingling on the horizon?

For the pious, such anxieties are only compounded by the incessant news of death and sickness all around. The question at the back of everybody’s mind is: “But why? Why is God doing this?”

The Greek philosopher Epicurus encapsulated this inner disquiet perfectly:

“Is God willing to prevent evil, but not able? Then he is not omnipotent.
Is he able, but not willing? Then he is malevolent.
Is he both able and willing? Then whence cometh evil?
Is he neither able nor willing? Then why call him God?”

Perhaps none of these existential conundrums were directly addressed in Prime Minister Modi’s televised announcements. Still, soon after the Prime Minister announced the Janata Curfew from 7 am to 9 pm on Sunday, March 22, religious messengers on WhatsApp didn’t waste a moment in appropriating the national exercise to stall the community spread of the virus into one having an astrological basis.

“At that time moon is passing to a new ‘nakshatra’ called Revati. The cumulative vibration from bells and clapping will encourage blood circulation in the body. 22nd March is Amavasya, the darkest day in a month. All virus, bacteria and evil forces have maximum potential and power on such days. 5 PM- clapping, shankh nada etc by 130 crore Indians at the same time will create so much energy that the virus will lose all potency,” one message read.

Atheists might well laugh at the faith and superstition on display here and they do so with good reason. But they forget that in a time of crisis when people want to hear words of hope and comfort, for many it is only the language of faith that really delivers. Leaders of traditional cultures understand this well.

Conceivably this is why when the Prime Minister ordered the country to lock itself down for three weeks on March 24, he used the language of the Ramayana. He told us to draw a Laxman Rekha outside our homes. Doordarshan then decided to rerun the three-decade-old TV series of the epic on ‘public demand’. More recently, when the PM spoke, on April 3, of lighting diyas outside ur homes to mark the country’s fight against COVID-19, a pandit said to me that he was exhorting the faithful to find the light from within themselves as the outside was ‘all empty, totally dark’.

In these times when leaders of places like Singapore and New York are themselves laying bare before the public hard facts on the shortage of ventilators and the disastrous toll on the economy, there is something to be said about the position of faith in this pandemic.

And its power to sway – or in India’s case keep at home – hundreds of millions.

Siddharth Kapila is a lawyer-turned-writer presently working on a travel memoir on Hindu pilgrimage sites.



https://thewire.in/religion/religious-congregations-coronavirus