Exploring New ReligionsBloomsbury Publishing, 1999 M12 1 - 416 pages An objective, well-researched history of contemporary new religions and cults.New religious movements - popularly known as cults - arouse strong public opinion and most books on the subject are polemical, giving hostile reaction rather than informed exploration. Exploring New Religions provides an account of a wide variety of new religions, focusing on their origins, beliefs and practices, which are set out in a dispassionate way, leaving readers to form their own value judgements. George Chryssides provides important analysis of the killer cults-the Jonestown People's Temple, Waco, the Solar Temple and Heaven's Gate-examining the factors that made their followers willing to die for their cause. Older groups like the Jehovah's Witnesses and Latter-day Saints (Mormons) are discussed, and Chryssides traces the development of a variety of strands of spirituality, ranging from New Thought, Spiritualism and Theosophy. Subsequent chapters include the Baha'i, the Family (formerly Children of God), the Hare Krishna movement (ISKCON), the Jesus Army, the Rastafarians, the Church of Scientology, Transcendental Meditation (TM) and the Unification Church ('the Moonies'). Lower profile groups are also discussed including: EST (Erhard Seminar Training), the New Kadampa Tradition, Brahma Kumaris, Sai Baba, Subud and the Western Buddhist Order. A study of the New Age phenomenon, and an account of societal responses to new religions at religious, societal and political levels is also included. |
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Page x
... leaders are pieces of modern hagiography , but discussing their claims to be historical truth would be distracting as well as irrelevant to my aims . I have tried to avoid inserting too many words like ' supposedly ' , or ' it is ...
... leaders are pieces of modern hagiography , but discussing their claims to be historical truth would be distracting as well as irrelevant to my aims . I have tried to avoid inserting too many words like ' supposedly ' , or ' it is ...
Page 3
... leadership styles , living conditions and so on are perfectly legitimate issues . Questions about orthodoxy and heresy are absolutely vital ... leader whose main interest was personal power or material wealth 3 1 : METHODOLOGICAL ISSUES.
... leadership styles , living conditions and so on are perfectly legitimate issues . Questions about orthodoxy and heresy are absolutely vital ... leader whose main interest was personal power or material wealth 3 1 : METHODOLOGICAL ISSUES.
Page 4
George D. Chryssides. leader whose main interest was personal power or material wealth , these aims would be unlikely to attract even the most gullible of followers . Those who decide to follow a religion do so because they are impressed ...
George D. Chryssides. leader whose main interest was personal power or material wealth , these aims would be unlikely to attract even the most gullible of followers . Those who decide to follow a religion do so because they are impressed ...
Page 6
... leader , the void left by the leader's death tends to be filled by a successor who has ' legal - rational authority ' set up from within the sect's institutional structures , rather than the charismatic authority that gave the movement ...
... leader , the void left by the leader's death tends to be filled by a successor who has ' legal - rational authority ' set up from within the sect's institutional structures , rather than the charismatic authority that gave the movement ...
Page 8
... leadership only has plausibility if there is a definite structure by means of which a leader's authority can be imposed . - It is really the third feature — the lack of proximity to the dominant religion - that characterizes the new ...
... leadership only has plausibility if there is a definite structure by means of which a leader's authority can be imposed . - It is really the third feature — the lack of proximity to the dominant religion - that characterizes the new ...
Contents
1 | |
33 | |
3 The old new religions | 77 |
4 The New Christian movements | 120 |
5 New religions in the Hindu tradition | 164 |
6 New forms of Buddhism | 204 |
7 Independent new religions | 244 |
8 The Human Potential Movement | 278 |
9 New Age witchcraft and Paganism | 315 |
10 The countercult movement | 342 |
Statistical data | 366 |
Compendium | 370 |
Bibliography | 377 |
Index | 392 |
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Common terms and phrases
anti-cult Applewhite avatar Baba Baba's Baha'i Baha'u'llah baptism became become believed Bible body Brahma Kumaris Britain Buddha Buddhism ceremony Christ Chryssides Church of Scientology claim counter-cult cult Dalai Lama death devotees Dianetics disciples divine doctrines Dorje Shugden Erhard evangelical example existence faith Family Findhorn followers founder-leader Glastonbury God's gohonzons groups Hindu Hinduism Holy human important ISKCON Jehovah's Witnesses Jesus Army Jesus Fellowship Church Jones Jonestown Jouret known Krishna latihan Latter-day Saints leader lifestyle living Maharishi mainstream Christianity Mambro mantra marriage means meditation membership messiah mind mission Mormon Nichiren Nichiren Shoshu NRMs offer one's organization original Osho physical powers Prabhupada practice priesthood problems prophet Rajneesh Rastafarians regarded relationship religion religious movements Revelation Sangharakshita sannyasins scripture sect seminars sexual Society Soka Gakkai Solar Temple soul spiritual Subud Subuh taught teachings Tibetan tradition truth Unification Church Wicca worship