subject: What's the Difference Between a Cult and an Organized Religion? [print this page] What's the Difference Between a Cult and an Organized Religion?
Whenever individuals explore and analyze religion, one common, but unfortunate word people use is,cult'. Whenever people don't like religious or spiritual groups, it's not uncommon to bring up the word cult', with no real comprehension of the difference those and legitimate organized religions. The reason for this is actually very simple to see.For example, in the event you fail to follow Christian Biblical concepts strictly, the Christian Protestant Fundamentalists think you a cult. Although they perhaps originally intended that to demean only those Christian denominations that somehow "were misguided", that definition now extends clearly also includes Muslims, Hindus, Buddhists, Sikhs, In fact, because at least 2/3 of the world's population doesn't identify with any sort of Christian, almost 70% of all of us are therefore members of a cult'.But, the problem goes even deeper than that. The Protestant fundamentalists have continued to expand their cult list by including Roman Catholics along with all Easter Orthodox faiths, over a disagreement over the number of sacraments there are. By those standards, 93% of the people on the planet are involved in cults. To take it 1 step further, they also think most other Christian Protestant groups to have fallen out of compliance with biblical fidelity. So, for these men and women, virtually the only singular group of people on the planet who aren't in a cult is them! Whenever different groups examine these extraordinarily strict doctrinal interpretations, they frequently believe that anyone following them has lost all individualized thought, and must therefore be a member of a cult. To much of the rest of the planet, it's actually these biblically strict, narrow groups who are the true cults. Taken together, that includes everybody. Everyone on the planet is a member of a cult according to somebody! The Baptists are pointing fingers at the Catholics who are pointing fingers at the Protestants and everyone is pointing fingers at the Mormons.Whenever you paint anything with such a broad brush, it's pointless; as Joey on Friends' once said, "The point is Moo -- because who cares what a cow thinks?So, is there any way to redeem the word, so it can have some meaning of value? The main issue is that those who are creating the definitions are lacking neutrality. They've got an agenda. The thing we need is someone else to give us a neutral means to identify a cult someone without a personal interest in the decision. That individual can be the anthropologist of religion'.An anthropologist of religion is someone who studies the field of religion from a scientific standpoint. Sometimes they've got a particular religion to which they adhere, and other times they don't. This will make some members from the organized religions rather uncomfortable. If the anthropologist belongs to a religion any religion the other people scream "bias! bias!", and everything the anthropologist has to say must be wrong because they've got this personal bias.|If it happens that the individual belongs to a particular religion, all the others shout, Bias! Bias! -- and ignores anything stated.If, on the other hand, the anthropologist doesn't take part in any specific religion, the others scream "atheist! atheist!", and everything this anthropologist says has got to be biased on the fact that they're simply opposed to all religious beliefs. Drama and accusation aside, how do these neutral parties define cults?Usually, the majority of them define a cult by using a specific five point system'. The answers to the the following questions will make it clear whether or not the group is a cult.These are:1. Does the group have a charismatic, strong leader (or leaders)Two. Does the group squash individuality as well as independent thought?3. Is there a denial of intimacy by excluding or alienating friends or relatives?Four. Do they apply financial pressure and abuse for the welfare of the group, even at the personal expense of the adherent?Five. Does the group keep its members separated from their surrounding community?Even using this approach, the problem is that it still isn't black and white. If all 5 questions are answered "yes", then it easily qualifies as being a cult. Obviously, if every one of the answers is no, then it's absolutely NOT a cult. If it were only The hard part is when, as is the case with most groups, the answer is "yes" to a number of questions between those two extremes. you are unlikely to find any solid answers, so the best we can do is really a sort of sliding scale.It's always easy to handle to fully grasp with a real-life situation.One Case Study of a Cult -- The People's Temple. This is the title of the church founded by the Reverend James Warren "Jim" Jones over nine hundred folks that committed suicide in Jonestown, Guyana back in 1978.Ask yourself those aforementioned five questions:(a). They had Jones as a leader strong and charismatic.(b) they thought as a group and weren't allowed to have any ideas to call their own.(c) they ended encouraged strongly to exclude their friends as well as relatives from every aspect of their lives and their church activities.(d) The members more than tithed, they basically gifted all everything they owned to the church, and were in turn cared for by the church (the group was entirely communist);(e) When their isolation from the surrounding community began to break down, they relocated to a remote spot inside the jungles of South America.All five factors had been met, so they clearly were a cult.A 2nd Case Study Jehovah's Witnesses. Founded in the late 1800s by Charles Taze Russell, these are the folks that you are likely to come across when they knock on your door.Let's compare them to the same five questions:(a) They do not have a particular leader, strong or otherwise.(b) They believe that as a result of independent bible study, everybody will eventually come to the same conclusions that they have.(c) Witnesses ask people they don't know as well as relatives to teach what they think they have learned;(d) While it's frequently true that Witnesses devote a lot of their time and effort trying to convert others, there does not appear to be any monetary pressure not any more so than any other church encourages tithing.(e) It's their lack of separation from the nearby community that often has them at odds with their neighbors.They meet none of the criteria. Jehovah's Witnesses are definitely not a cult.Bottom Line: determining properly whether a group is a cult is unrelated to their biblical interpretations, and needs to instead be determined by sociological criteria unrelated to the religious position of the group. Whether cults are dangerous or not depends on which cult. Just because it's a cult, does not make it automatically dangerous, but any one or any thing that discourages independent thought, is ultimately bad for you.This is an excerpt of 1 lesson (of 30) from the Master of Religious Philosophy course offered through the Universal Life Church Seminary. We have many courses available and each one carries with it a degree at the end of the course.