So today’s entry
is about what I want to accomplish by writing about cult-like groups, and why I
think it is important. In brief, I have
no set religious beliefs, at least none I feel compelled to convince others to
believe with me. My wife and I agree
that we cannot define one belief superior to another, and that most of them
look like schemes to rake in money.
If you look in
the “cult” section of a Christian bookstore you will find many volumes
analyzing the doctrinal mistakes of a host of religions, among them Jehovah’s
Witness, Mormons, Scientologists and many others. For example, I have on my shelf “Encyclopedia
of Cults and New Religions” by John Ankerberg and John Weldon. This work lists fifty-seven groups the
authors consider cults, or cult-like. This
book, like many similar volumes, focuses on issues of doctrine.
To put it
bluntly, I don’t care what people believe.
If you want to think the Great Pumpkin will rise out of the most sincere
pumpkin patch in the world, that is your choice and I see no need to argue with
you. I care a lot if you are blindly
following a course that will damage you, or your loved ones. I consider it my moral duty to provide information
and sound a warning. I think, far too
many people have lived damaged lives or incomplete lives because they
surrendered their critical thinking to some group.
My wife and I
recalled old friends, people who no longer speak to us because we left the
religion. Forty years ago, we expected
the world to end. Today, these friends
still expect the end of the world “soon.”
They have never lived up to their full potential because they lived
their lives on hold. Everything good would happen in the New System.
I do not think this
problem lies solely with Jehovah’s Witnesses or even religion generally. Political movements of all stripes display
some of the negative traits of high control groups. The same holds true for many multilevel marketing
programs. These organizations compel the
individual to give up freedom of action and conscience for group-think. I believe that this reduces the individuals
need and right to enjoy life to the fullest.
When we give up self-fulfillment to group-think we lose a piece of
ourselves.
So my purpose is
educational, to provoke thought not provide answers. I do not seek to gather followers, in fact
the exact opposite. (This summer’s
Watchtower conventions apparently contain a long talk on people like me trying
to recruit followers, I’ll comment on that in another post.) The idea of attracting “followers” is the
exact antithesis of my beliefs. Nor do I
want to “bring down the Watchtower.”
I want people to
think for themselves. I hope to help
them do so.
This is all very well said. It's how I feel as well, even though it is a sometimes unpopular view among "apostates."
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