The late cult leader Sun Myung Moon, who brainwashed his Unification Church followers into believing he was the Messiah, was once quoted as saying “I will continue to lead the church from the spirit world.“
Well, now the Moonies placed
an ad in U.S. newspapers stating that there had been a meeting “in the
spirit world” attended by Jesus, Muhammad, Confucius, Buddha, Martin Luther and
John Harvard.
During this meeting, according to the ad, Jesus hailed Moon as the Messiah,
proclaiming, “You are the Second Coming who inaugurated the Completed Testament
Age.”The ad said Muhammad then led everyone in three cheers of victory.
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The Association of Anti-Watchtower Activists (AAWA) describes
itself as “a new organization dedicated to respectful and well informed activism
against the Watch Tower Society.” The latter is the legal entity behind a
religious movement whose members are known as “Jehovah’s
Witnesses.”
AAWA says it isa legally incorporated organization representing an international group of campaigners against the Watch Tower Society. Most of its associates are either current or former Jehovah’s Witnesses.And that spells trouble for the Watch Tower, because the activists are taking no prisoners:
At Apologetics Index (parent site of Religion News
Blog), we consider the Watch Tower to be a cult — both theologically and
sociologically. [Note the difference between theological and sociological definitions of the
term 'cult.']
Theologically, the organization of Jehovah’s
Witnesses is a cult of Christianity — meaning that while it identifies itself
as a Christian movement, its theology and practices fall outside the boundaries
of historical, Biblical Christianity.
Sociologically, the movement is a destructive cult. For one thing,
countless of its followers (and children too young to have made their own
decisions) have died as a
result of the organizations un-biblical teachings regarding blood.
For another, the organization proscribes crude and
un-biblical forms of ‘shunning‘
which lead to a practice as destructive as Scientology’s ‘disconnection’ policy.
When Jehovah’s Witnesses excommunicate, or
”disfellowship,” a member, even the closest
human ties can be severed without question.
The movement’s official magazine describes
people who leave the church as “mentally diseased” people who “seek to
infect others.”
Last month Australian newspaper The Age quoted a local cultbuster as saying that
Jehovah’s Witnesses ‘a cruel religion with no soul,’ and that shunning is
“draconian, cruel and callous.”
The paper notes thatFormer members say shunning can involve bullying, threats, harassment and stalking to lure the ‘apostate’, or lapsed member, back. [...]
A spokesman for the church in Australia, Sydney solicitor Vincent Toole, dismissed the allegations and said shunning was a”myth.”
But shunning is a well-documented Jehovah’s Witnesses practice.
AAWA says it is a strictly religiously-neutral
organization. Legally incorporated
on March 7th 2013, AAWA works with a Board of Directors, an Advisory Board, and
volunteers.
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How
a
Spiritual
Commune
known
as
the
Source
Famly
became
a
cult
Here we go, back to the Seventies.For anyone looking to teach a master class in brainwashing techniques, “The Source Family” might be an excellent place to start. Documenting the hippy-dippy lifestyle and hedonistic principles of Hollywood’s favorite 1970s cult — led by the self-professed guru and suspected bank robber Jim Baker, a k a Father Yod — Maria Demopoulos and Jodi Wille’s disturbing film is an object lesson in psychological manipulation.