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Prophets, gurus, and charisma

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wealth and greed / get-rich-quick schemes. political ... Charles Glock 'The Role of Deprivation in the Origin and Evolution of Religious Groups' (1964) ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Prophets, gurus, and charisma


1
Prophets, gurus, and charisma
  • continued

2
Accusations against religious leaders
  • Attacks of anti-cult movements
  • mostly against the leaders
  • Four main themes (Bromley and Shupe)
  • wealth and greed / get-rich-quick schemes
  • political ambitions (beyond the group) as real
    agenda
  • satisfaction of lust for power (over group
    members)
  • insincere / charlatans
  • Testing the claims on 6 religious leaders
  • David Berg, Prabhupada, L. Ron Hubbard, Guru
    Maharaj Ji, Jim Jones, Sun Myung Moon

3
Accusations Wealth and greed as motives
  • Difficult to generalize
  • Entirely different lifestyles
  • eg. Prabhupada vs Guru Maharaj Ji
  • Most leaders
  • selfish but not necessarily greedy
  • rich beforehand
  • the churches' immortality as their prime concern

4
Accusations Political Ambitions I
  • does not apply to most leaders
  • David Berg
  • seclusion in Europe
  • Prabhupada
  • life of ascetic retreat until death
  • L. Ron Hubbard Guru Maharaj Ji
  • no political ambitions
  • Jim Jones
  • involved with a variety of civic projects in San
    Francisco
  • against repression of blacks
  • support of international socialism and rejection
    of the US
  • actions largely defensive in nature

5
Accusations Political Ambitions II
  • Sun Myung Moon
  • greatest interest in politics
  • anti-communist, pro-Nixon
  • vision of worldwide theocracy
  • the source of all mankind's problems
  • refusal to live up to God-given responsibilities
  • close working relationship between church and
    state
  • in which the church is the ultimate authority
  • Moon
  • The time will come, without my seeking it, when
    my words will almost serve as law. If I ask for a
    certain thing, it will be done. If I don't want
    something, it will not be done.
  • "I will conquer and subjugate the world. I am
    your brain."

6
Accusations Power and domination as motives
  • dictatorial power over church members
  • brainwashing allegations
  • manipulation and abuse of members
  • Guru Maharaj Ji
  • So whatever extra you have got, give it to me.
    And the extra thing you have got is your mind.
    Give it to me. I am ready to receive it. Because
    your mind troubles you, give it to me. It won't
    trouble me! Just give it... So just try to be
    holy and try to be a good devotee, a perfect
    devotee of that Guru who is Himself perfect, who
    is really perfect!
  • Moon
  • "I am your brain"
  • Communal vs larger movements
  • The former more authoritarian

7
Accusations Lack of sincerity
  • Three tests
  • Religious background of the leader
  • L. Ron Hubbard as an exception
  • Persecution, personal sacrifices in the course of
    developing churches
  • L. Ron Hubbard, David Berg not clear
  • Jim Jones constant persecution
  • Prabhupada, Guru Maharaj Ji - renounced their
    families
  • Sun Myung Moon - imprisoned twice
  • The degree of exploiting the church for personal
    advantage
  • sexual manipulation
  • Sun Myung Moon

8
Ordinary members conversion and apostasy
  • 26.2.2004

9
Readings
  • Bromley and Shupe Joining the New Religions
    Brainwashing or Conversion? (in Bromley and Shupe
    1981)
  • Wright Leaving New Religious Movements Issues,
    Theory, and Research (in Bromley 1988)

10
Discussion topics
  • Theories of conversion
  • relative-deprivation theory
  • Lofland-Stark model of conversion
  • Traditional vs new approach to conversion
  • Generalizations about conversion
  • Social attributes of converts
  • gender
  • Brainwashing
  • arguments for and against
  • Apostasy / leaving NRMs

11
Relative Deprivation Theory I
  • Early studies of social movements / collective
    radical behaviour
  • originate in irrational deviant behaviour
  • By marginal segments of society
  • By groups experiencing bad times
  • Caused by pathological personality
  • Eg. Freud, 1921 Adorno et al., 1950 Blumer,
    1951 Toch, 1965
  • Social movements in the 1960s
  • student-led anti-war movement
  • Not mentally disturbed or deficient
  • turn away from irrationalist theories

12
Relative Deprivation Theory II
  • Studies of 19th century NRMs
  • Jehovahs Witnesses, Adeventists etc.
  • disproportionately from the lower socio-economic
    strata of society
  • pushes and pulls
  • Pushes
  • Economic deprivation
  • Pulls
  • promise of reward in the next life
  • more immediate psychic compensators
  • escape from the hardships and humiliations of
    life
  • NRMs of the 1960s
  • socio-economic status of sectarians is rising
  • Students not poor and abused
  • need to review economic deprivation model

13
Relative Deprivation Theory III
  • theories of "relative deprivation
  • dominant in 1960s 1980s
  • Charles Glock
  • The Role of Deprivation in the Origin and
    Evolution of Religious Groups (1964)
  • absolute vs relative deprivation
  • Perceived discrepancy between
  • social rewards entitled to and received
  • several forms of being deprived
  • economic deprivation
  • social deprivation
  • organismic deprivation
  • psychic deprivation
  • ethical deprivation
  • Shared feeling of deprivation

14
Relative Deprivation Theory IV
  • Stark and Bainbridge model of religion (1987)
  • Religious organizations
  • Primary purpose to create, maintain and exchange
    supernaturally-based compensators
  • Criticism
  • Monocausal link between psychological state and
    social behaviour
  • Reductionistic
  • Difficult to test
  • Joiners vs nonjoiners?
  • With same kind of relative deprivation
  • Non-deprived also become members of NRMs
  • 1980s - new theories
  • resource-mobilization theory
  • rational-choice theory

15
The Lofland-Stark Model of Conversion
  • more multi-factorial and processual approach
  • the study of early Unification Church in the US
  • seven-step model of the process of conversion
  • (1) experience enduring, acutely felt tensions in
    their lives
  • (2) within a religious problem-solving
    perspective
  • (3) which leads them to think of themselves as a
    religious seeker
  • (4) encounter the cult to which they convert at a
    turning point in their lives
  • (5) form an affective bond with one or more
    members of the cult
  • (6) reduce or eliminate extra-cult attachments
  • (7) be exposed to intensive interaction with
    other converts
  • Critique and praise

16
Traditional approach to conversion
  • St Paul on the road to Damascus
  • Prototypical conversion
  • Normative features of Christian conversion
    experiences
  • Traditional approach to conversion
  • Sudden, dramatic
  • Emotional, even irrational
  • Singular event
  • Creates total life changes that last a lifetime
  • Individual experience, not a collective
    phenomenon
  • Received passively through actions of external
    agency
  • convert as passive

17
New approach to conversion
  • Conversion as a process
  • struggles of conscience and identity
  • mouting tension and discontent
  • Conversion as career
  • Seekereship period
  • serial affiliation with various groups
  • Conversion as collective phenomenon
  • result of interaction between oeple
  • negotiation of rewards
  • Conversion as rational choice
  • calculation, experimentation, assessment,
    weighing
  • Conversion as role playing
  • not actual transformation of personalitites
  • learning of taking the members role

18
Generalizations about conversion
  • 1) Personalized recruitment most successful
  • Recruitment primarily through pre-existing social
    networks
  • Friends, family members, neighbours etc
  • Aggressive public proselytizing
  • Eg. Unification Church, Krishna Consciousness,
    COG
  • Relatively unsuccessful
  • Eg. Nichiren Shoshu
  • 6 per cent of converts through the impersonal
    agencies
  • 2) Importance of affective ties
  • Eg. Nichiren Shoshu in Britain
  • 1/3 - the quality of the membership' as the
    primary reason for initial attraction
  • 3) intensive interaction between recruits and
    other members of the group
  • eg. Bo and Peep UFO cult
  • elaborate schedule of daily routines
  • to promote the regular and intensive interaction

19
Generalizations about converts to NRMs I
  • 1) disproportionately young
  • No social responsibilities
  • drop out when they reach middle age
  • eg. Unification Church in Britain
  • 50 per cent between 21 and 26 years of age
  • eg. Krishna Consciousness
  • 56 per cent of the members between 20 and 25
  • NRMs that demand less commitment
  • Eg. Scientology, Eckankar, Nichiren Shoshu,
    Eastern meditational groups
  • better spread in the age distribution
  • Heaven's Gate
  • the dead ranged from 24 to 72

20
Generalizations about converts to NRMs II
  • 2) Disproportionately highly educated
  • teachings demand
  • Literate intelligence
  • Willingness to study
  • Unfamiliar concepts and language
  • Eg. Scientologists
  • 57 percent - professional training or college or
    university degrees
  • Eg. Soka Gakkai in Britain
  • 24 percent - attended university
  • 8 percent of the total population

21
Generalizations about converts to NRMs III
  • 3) Disproportionately from middle to upper middle
    class households
  • Scientology, the Unification Church, Krishna
    Consciousness, Rajneesh etc
  • 4) Disproportionately from unchurched
    background
  • Varies from group to group
  • Eg. Converts of Protestant, Catholic, and Jewish
    background
  • Protestants underrepresented
  • Catholics proportionately the same as in total
    population
  • Jews overrepresented
  • Eg. 50 percent of the San Francisco Zen Center
    Jewish

22
Generalizations about converts to NRMs IV
  • 5) Disproportionately female
  • Complex issue
  • more so in the past
  • Christian Science in the 1920s was 75 per cent
    female
  • Now
  • no strong evidence
  • developmental shift in the sex ratios of NRMs
  • Eg. Krishna Consciousness
  • male phenomenon both sexes
  • Eg. Unification church
  • Female phenomenon both sexes
  • Eg. Protestants in the Sierra Juarez (Mexico)

23
NRMs and gender I
  • Common claims
  • the rise of NRMs coincided with feminst movement
    in the 1960s
  • NRMs increase the status of women
  • offer a refuge from patriarchal society
  • Reality
  • Angela Aidala (1985)
  • Secular vs religious communes
  • Most NRMS reinstate and reinforce traditional
    gender roles
  • Idealization of family life
  • women supportive, nurturing role
  • male leadership
  • eg. Krishna Consciousness, Unification Church

24
NRMs and gender II
  • Palmer (1994)
  • diversity of gender relations in NRMs
  • Three types of NRMs
  • Sex-polarity groups
  • sex-complementarity groups
  • sex-unity groups
  • sexpolarity groups
  • sexes spiritually distinct, or irrelevant to the
    other's salvation
  • spiritual superiority of one sex
  • highly controlled relationships between sexes
  • Eg. Krishna Consciousness, 3H0, the Rajneesh
    movement, feminist / lesbian Goddess worship

25
NRMs and gender III
  • sex-complementarity groups
  • different spiritual qualities of sexes
  • importance of marriage for uniting the two halves
  • Eg. Unification Church, the Mormons
  • sex-unity groups
  • body and gender - a superficial layer of false
    identity
  • sexless spirit
  • Distancing oneself from gender roles
  • Eg. Raelians, the Bo and Peep, and Scientology
  • surgery, theories of cloning

26
Brainwashing I
  • thought control, mind control,
    psychological kidnapping, coercive persuasion
  • hsi nao (Chinese to wash brain)
  • Russian purge trials in 1930s
  • Chinese communists in late 1940s and early 1950s
  • revolutionary colleges
  • Confucianism Maoism
  • thought reform (szu hsiang kai tsao)
  • Used on US POWs in Korean war
  • of 3500 only 50 made procommunist statements
  • Ideological conversion rare
  • Edward Hunter Brain-Washing in Red China (1953)
  • The Manchurian Candidate (1962)

27
Brainwashing II
  • Robert Lifton
  • Thought Reform and the Psychology of Totalism
    (1961)
  • Group identification
  • Period of emotional conflict
  • Submission and rebirth
  • Schein et al
  • Coercive Persuasion (1961)
  • unfreezing
  • sensory deprivation (prison)
  • sensory overload (FBI in Waco)
  • changing
  • imposition of new identity, daily routines,
    relations etc
  • refreezing
  • consolidation through ritualized activities

28
Arguments for brainwashing in NRMs I
  • Anti-cult movements
  • Ronald Enroth
  • sociologist
  • Youth, Brainwashing, and the Extremist Cults
    (1977)
  • Steven Hassan
  • ex-moonie
  • deprogrammer
  • Combatting Cult Mind-Control (1988)
  • Margaret Singer
  • psychologist
  • Cults in Our Midst The Hidden Menace in Our
    Everyday Lives (1995)
  • mind-control as part of her definition of cult

29
Arguments for brainwashing in NRMs II
  • 1) systematic recruitment practices
  • use of social-psychological techniques
  • planned and rehearsed responses
  • recruiters trained
  • eg. Scientology, COG
  • 2) Targetting the vulnerable
  • University campuses, counselling waitrooms
  • 3) Deception
  • disguise of identity at recruitment
  • eg. Unification Church (Oakland Family)
  • using hooks and plants
  • eg. COG (flirty fishing)
  • exaggerating membership figures
  • eg. Scientology

30
Arguments for brainwashing in NRMs III
  • 4) Techinques of socialization
  • keeping recruits apart
  • constant presence of members
  • keeping recruits busy (senosry overload)
  • love-bombing
  • confessional activities (manipulable)
  • little sleep and food
  • low-key methods of hypnosis
  • giving new names to recruits

31
Arguments against brainwashing in NRMs I
  • 1) Tendency to lump all NRMs together
  • using extreme atrocity stories
  • anecdotal evidence
  • 2) Studies of intended brainwashing
  • unsuccessful
  • does not produce long-lasting changes
  • behavioural compliance not transformation of
    identity
  • 3) Sampling bias
  • most testimonies
  • by those who have undergone deprogramming / exit
    counselling
  • 4) Low rates of recruitment / High rates of
    turnover
  • 0,5 of those who visit the Unification Church
    there in 2 years

32
Arguments against brainwashing in NRMs II
  • 5) Generally positive memories of voluntary
    defectors
  • therapeutic effects of participation
  • satisfaction of needs
  • accomplishment of goals
  • 6) deprogrammed vs voluntary defectors
  • different attitudes
  • Deprogramming as brainwashing itself
  • fast change of identity

33
Apostasy I
  • Dropping out, deconversion, disaffiliation,
    disengagement, defecting, leavetaking, exiting,
    disidentification
  • Relatively understudied
  • Bromley, D. (ed.) 1988. Falling from the Faith
    Causes and Consequences of Religious Apostasy.
  • Bromley, D. (ed.) 1998. The Politics of Religious
    Apostasy The Role of Apostates in the
    Transformation of Religious Movements.
  • Wright
  • disaffiliation as role exiting
  • disaffiliation as sequential disengagement
  • disaffiliation as organization failure or change

34
Apostasy II
  • Deprogramming
  • Ted Patrick (1970s)
  • When you deprogram people, you force them to
    think.
  • I keep them off balance and this forces them to
    begin questioning, to open their minds
  • controversial methods
  • kidnapping
  • Cult Awareness Network (CAN)
  • bankruptcy due to unsuccessful deprogramming
  • Exit counseling
  • less intrusive form of intervention
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