I'm posting the definition we're discussing again. It get's hard to recall after so many posts.
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 (i.e., deceptive and indirect) techniques of persuasion and control designed to advance the goals of the group's leaders, to the actual or possible detriment of members, their families, or the community. Unethically manipulative techniques include 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, etc.
Direct would be an open, direct statement : Questioning our agreed upon theology is forbidden. It will result in shunning. But they don't say that...it's just how it turns out when one attempts to understand from a perspective of disagreement.
You already mentioned ostricism under the 'powerful peer pressure' point. At any rate, I find it hard to fathom that people would consider parents sending their children to Sunday school as an "unethically manipulative (i.e., deceptive and indirect) techniques of persuasion and control". In general, it just doesn't fit that description.
Well, I can think of at least a few examples that are harmful. Does living with a daily sense of guilt and shame over masturbation count? What about the shame that gay kids feel?
Yes, I agree that some people are harmed by some churchesm but in terms of defining whether or not mainstream churches constitute a totalist type cult, no. I think that churches that would insist that parents cut off contact with openly gay children would be crossing that line, but that's the strict fundamentalists, not the mainstream.
Not strictly forbidden but it's strongly encouraged that they "not be unequally yoked with unbelievers".
Yes, but cults strickly forbid it and will even take steps to prevent contact over the objections of the individual. That churches only discourage such contact rather than forbidding it is an indication they are NOT a cult.
I dunno...the freeflow chanting of many Sunday and Wednesday night worship services can be pretty darn hypnotic.
If you say so. But I think when they talk about
"use of special methods to heighten suggestibility and subservience" they are referring to techniques like keeping people awake for 20 hours a day and never allowing them to be without a cult companion who constantly talks about how great the group and the group's leader is, not chanting in unison for 5 to 10 minutes once or twice a week.
Would you say the mega churches are more dogmatic or inclusive?
In my experience, here in the south, the megachurches are all extremely dogmatic, and the inclusive churches are both rare and smaller.
I don't have much experience with megachurches. I live in a modest sized city in the midwest; we have a few such churches here, but I've never attended services at any of them. Also dogmatic and inclusive are not mutually exclusive properties. Theoretically, a church could be dogmatically inclusive.
That is what kids in the youthgroups of the megachurches are taught. It's in Jr. High where those teachings start popping up. It's not some rare exception. I'm not sure how to prove this, though.
I'm sorry, but I'm not following you here. Going back through our posts, I think this is referring to the 'information management' aspects of cults. I'm not sure what 'teahcings' you're referring to here or how they relate to the 'information management' aspect of cults - usually accomplished by getting cult members away from the rest of society where the group leaders can control their access to other information.
I'm talking about the giant protestant Evangelical churches. The ones with very in depth, all consuming youth programs and discipleship programs. These are simply not rare exceptions. This is very much a big chunk of "mainstream Christianity'.
Okay, it's a big chunk of mainstream religion, but I don't think you've made a good case for their being cults.
It's nothing like goth culture or fan clubs. Nothing.
Sorry, I didn't mean to imply that goth culture or fan clubs were like churchs, just that some elements of the above definition of totalist cult is present in those groups. That doesn't make them cults either.
In a great many of the churches in America with 6,000+ membership, basically all the elements of brainwashy cults are present. It's just accepted as "normal" because it's popular.
No, I don't think all the elements are there. Yes, some of the elements are there, but not enough to convince me that evangelical churches are as cultish as the moonies.
That said, I'm still not part of the "religion is child abuse" camp. I mean, I guess it flirts with the line at times, but I find the idea of legally forbidding it even more frightening.
Thanks. I'm glad to hear that. That's my biggest concern. Such bans have occurred in other places and times and the results have never been pleasant.
And I agree with you that there are some aspects of fundamentalist churches that are harmful to some people. In particular their attitude towards homosexuality can be very damaging to gay people and their relationships with their families.