Search this Site
Home
Contact
Feedback
Mail List
Anti-Catholicism
Catholic Apologetics
Catholic Calendar
Lent
Catholic Perspectives
Catholic Social Teaching
Christology
Church Around the
World
Church Contacts
Church Documents
Church History
Church Law
Church Teaching
Demonology
Doctors of the Church
Ecumenism
Eschatology
(Death, Heaven,
Purgatory, Hell)
Essays on Science
Evangelization
Fathers of the Church
Free Catholic Pamphlets
Heresies
and Falsehoods
Let There Be Light
Q & A on the Catholic Faith
Links
Liturgy
Mariology
Marriage & the Family
Modern Martyrs
Moral Theology
New Age
Occult
Political Issues
Prayer and Devotions
Pro-Life
Rite of Christian Initiation for Adults
Sacraments
Scripture
Spirituality
The
Golden Legend
Vatican
Vocation Links
& Articles
What the Cardinals believe...
World Religions
Pope John Paul II
In Memoriam
John Paul II
Beatification
Pope Benedict XVI
In Celebration

| |
Cults,
Movements, World Religions
MARY KOCHANE
To
many of us, the modern religious landscape appears increasingly confusing, even
strange or frightening. No matter how strong in faith and regular in religious
practice our families may be, we are not insulated from contact with a
bewildering variety of religious expressions, a Babel of “prophetic” voices and
a dizzying array of competing world views.
|
 |
|
Sun Myung
Moon founder of
the Unification Church
|
Questions Abound in Confusing Religious Landscape
Insulation is not what our lay vocation is about, anyway. Instead of insulation,
what we seek is contact, the contact which makes the electric presence of
Christ-in-us available to light our world.
What, though, is the lay of the land which is our field of mission? What species
of faiths are we likely to encounter? What are we to make of the religious
variety flourishing around us?
We may be familiar, to some extent, with mainline Protestant sects. But it is
the increasing presence of cults, movements and world religions — some
alarmingly aggressive — which give rise to questions like these:
“Our daughters
both have steady boyfriends now; one is a Baptist and the other is Mormon.
Do these relationships threaten their Catholic faith? If so, are they both
the same kind of threat? How do we speak to our daughters about the
spiritual implications of these relationships?”
“I just got the strangest letter from my sister. She says that her family is
not going to celebrate Christmas this year, something about ‘pagan origins’.
This is just going to give my mother heart failure. What should I do?”
“I thought it was great when my son said he was joining a campus Bible
study. I was glad he was making Christian friends at school, even if they
were Protestant. But now he says he is going to quit college to devote
himself to fund-raising for this group’s outreach program. When I asked him
where he thought he was going to live if he did this, he said it was no
problem. Apparently this group has some kind of commune in a renovated old
house and they have invited him to live there. I am furious that he would
consider throwing away his education like this. He seems to have suddenly
abandoned all the dreams he has pursued for years. Who are these people and
what have they done to my boy?”
“There is a new woman at my job and I am going to be working with her a lot.
She says she is Muslim. She sometimes refers to “the will of God” in
conversation. I wonder: When she says ‘God’ what she is thinking? Does she
pray to the same God I pray to?”
“Last week some Jehovah’s Witnesses came to my house. They were very nice.
It was great to have someone visit me. I’m beginning to feel cut off from
everything, stuck here in the house all day alone with this baby. I hope
they come back. I could sure use some friends. They offered me a ‘free home
Bible study’; there can’t be any harm in that, can there?”
“My cousin has always been a little eccentric, but she’s a lot of fun. She
invited me to some kind of ‘New Age’ convention next week? Doesn’t that have
something to do with crystals and energy fields? Is there anything to all
that stuff?”
“My brother and I had an argument about whether it is possible to be a
Catholic and a Buddhist at the same time. He says you can, if you view Jesus
as an “Ascended Master”. I thought we were supposed to view Jesus as God
Almighty. The more I talk to my brother the more confused I feel. I don’t
want to be disloyal to the Catholic Church, but I don’t like to think my
brother could go to hell just because of his sincere convictions. Can
someone help me sort all this out?”
Making sense of all of this and answering the questions of our family members
and friends, requires that we make some distinctions between cults, movements
and world religions.
How Do We Define a Cult?
Let's begin by clearing up confusion about the word “CULT”:
Do not get good “CULT” mixed up with bad “CULT”.
“Cult” (from Latin for worship) has the simple meaning of “devotion”, as in the
Catholic usage referring to the “cult” of a particular saint or as used
secularly e.g. when a movie is said to have a “cult following.” Within the past
thirty years another meaning has evolved — the use of the word to describe a
group, usually religious, which places certain destructive demands upon its
members’ thinking and behavior.
Do not get “CULT” mixed up with “OCCULT”.
“Occult” (from Latin for covered or concealed) refers to those arts which are
supposed to reveal hidden or secret knowledge i.e. astrology and various kinds
of divination. Some cults do involve their members in overtly occult practices
but this is, by no means, true of many groups which are correctly designated
cults. Occult practices are not, in themselves, a factor in so labeling a group.
Identifying a cult requires the use of, and almost always combines, a
theological definition and a psycho/sociological definition.
Theological definitions identify a cult based upon its doctrines.
Theologically we distinguish cult groups from Christian groups by those very
things in which we and our separated brethren agree, in particular the Trinity
and the Deity of Christ. Thus we identify as cults those groups which deny the
Christian doctrine of God, even though they may call themselves Christians and
may use the Bible. Other United States cults are splinter groups from Eastern
(world) religions or may represent attempts to fuse pagan beliefs with
Christianity. Note however, that European Christians use the word "sects" to
mean what Americans refer to as "cults".
Psycho/sociologically cults are identified by behavior.
Whatever its doctrines, if a group uses deception in recruiting and retaining
members, it is identified as a cult. Authority within a cult group is abusive
and is maintained by manipulative communication and coercive control. Isolation,
either physical or psychological, contributes to the siege mentality and
paranoia of cult members — while it fosters pride in the exclusivity of
membership in the group. Many cults actively recruit Christians — especially
targeting youths and the aged — although no age group or social class is immune.
How a Movement Differs from a Cult
Movements lack the tight organizational structure of cults; they do not usually
foster exclusivity and isolationism. Rather, a movement is promoted by
loosely-associated teachers through various media channels. Movements often
exhibit the nature of fads — great initial enthusiasm and interest soon fades —
or a movement may be assimilated into the common way of life. The movements
focusing on health and exercise within the past couple of decades are examples
of this and demonstrate that some movements are theologically neutral or benign.
However, other movements can be dangerous to Christians.
A movement may lead people away from the Christian faith and lead them to
believe and promote error. This can be an insidious process. No one could be,
for example, an active Mormon and an active Presbyterian at the same time or be
a member of a Catholic parish while identifying as a Jehovah’s Witness. Yet
someone can be part of a movement (i.e. the “New Age” movement) while
maintaining active membership in a local Christian congregation. Thus it is that
movements have the potential to quickly spread false teaching among Christians.
Even when doctrine is not an issue, the faddish nature of movements can be
destabilizing, distracting and wasteful — but when a movement promotes bad
doctrine, the effects can be disastrous. Some recent religious movements have
resulted in the formation of new cults.
One example of this is the formation of the International Church of Christ (not
to be confused with the fundamentalist Protestant Evangelical Church of Christ,
Disciples of Christ). This cult group, which recruits so heavily on college
campuses that some colleges have had to ban their activities, formed out of the
"shepherding" movement within Protestantism.
What Makes a Religion World Class?
When we refer to the “world religions” we are acknowledging the world class
status and global influence of several belief systems, some of which are of
great antiquity. The major world religions apart from Christianity and Judaism
are: Hinduism; Buddhism; Confucianism; Shintoism and Islam. Although authentic
representatives of these religions live in the United States, for the most part
what we find in this country are variants which have been revised for
consumption by Westerners. Many lesser known religious, ethical and
philosophical systems have promoters in this country.
More than size and antiquity are needed to qualify, however. A world religion
must contain a belief system of enough richness and complexity that it is
capable of supporting a civilization. It has to give an account of life that can
sustain people in all walks of life, deal with the real complexities of human
relationships, absorb new ideas and discoveries, and enter into conversation
with the other great human traditions. A look at the list shows that such belief
systems do not come along often in history. The last one to appear in the list
above is Islam in the 7th century.
We are seeing in America the development, over the past 100 years, of what may
be the next world religion. That is Mormonism. To the question of whether
Mormonism is substantial enough of a belief system to support a civilization, we
must admit that it already supports an entire state in the United States, an
entity already larger than many countries. It is interesting to observe that if
Mormonism does indeed become another world religion, it and Islam would both owe
their vitality to the great amount of Jewish and Christian thought they
appropriated.
Cults, Movements and World Religions —Why be Concerned?
The variety of religious contexts which have formed our neighbors have given
rise to many religious dialects and languages. As religious pluralism increases,
so do religious languages proliferate and we may discover ourselves at a loss to
find shared meaning when it comes to discussing those things which matter most
to every human being. Some knowledge of these groups can help us to build
bridges to our neighbors, bridges over which some of them may be graced to cross
into the Catholic faith. This knowledge can also protect us and our loved ones
from deception.
Such acquaintance must, of necessity, make use of labels and consider people as
members of groups. There are some advantages to this; a group identity is a kind
of shorthand. That someone identifies himself or herself as a Christian
Scientist, a Unitarian or a Seventh Day Adventist does say something about his
or her constellation of beliefs. But it would be a mistake to conclude that we
know a great deal about a particular individual once we know a religious label.
Rather, our awareness of the religious affiliation should help us find a way to
open up personal communication.
ACKNOWLEDGEMENT
Mary Kochan. "Cults, Movements, World Religions." Lay Witness.
This article is reprinted with permission from Lay Witness magazine.
Lay Witness is a publication of Catholic United for the Faith, Inc., an
international lay apostolate founded in 1968 to support, defend, and advance the
efforts of the teaching Church.
THE AUTHOR
After growing up as a third generation Jehovah's Witness, Mary Kochan worked her
way backwards through the Protestant Reformation to enter the Catholic Church on
Trinity Sunday, 1996. Mary has done extensive work and research on the problem
of religious cults, writing and speaking to live and radio audiences and
answering questions about all aspects of cultic behavior. She is married to
Daniel and is a member of St. Theresa parish in Douglasville, Georgia.
Copyright © 2003
LayWitness

| |
|