| One must be careful to
distinguish between the sociological position of what constitutes a
cult (i.e., which states that whatever is normative to a given culture
is not cultic) and the theological position (i.e., which
states that only those groups that adhere to the Bible as the basis
for all theology and practice are considered normative, and thereby,
not cultic).
From the theological viewpoint, any group or religious system,
whether it calls itself "Christian" or not, that offers other criteria
as equal to or superior to the Bible, including but not limited to
erroneous and/or exclusive interpretations of Scripture, should be
considered a cult. From the theological position, then, a cult can be
best defined as:
A system of religious beliefs and
rituals with a body of adherents deeply devoted to an extrabiblical
person, idea, or thing; it cultivates worship in a religion that,
with reference to its basis for man's salvation, is considered to be
unorthodox, spurious, or false, thereby insulating its members
against true salvation in Christ. And inasmuch as the central
doctrine of Biblical Christianity is the sacrificial death of Christ
for man's sin (Eph. 2:8,9), all cultic deviations tend to
downplay the finished work of Christ and emphasize the importance of
earning moral acceptance before God through one's own religious
works.
From the theological viewpoint, all the groups/religious systems
included in the
Cult section of the Notebook are obviously cults.
They are all centered in religious beliefs or practices calling for
devotion to a religious view centered in false doctrine -- it is
nothing less than organized heresy.
To be classified as a cult, not all of the following
characteristics have to be present, but in most cases, in one form or
another, all of them will be:
1. Extrabiblical Authority: All cults deny what God
says in His Word as true. Cults have shifted their theological point
of authority away from God's full and final written Word, the Bible,
to their own unique, self-promoting opinions about the Bible; they
generally will use parts of the Bible but will have their own unique
scripture which is considered to be superior to the Bible. While some
cult groups give token respect for the Bible and go through the
motions of accepting the authority of Scripture, in reality, they
honor the group's or leader's novel interpretation of
Scripture as normative.
2. Works Salvation/Legalism: Cults teach that eternal
life depends upon something other than the Atonement; i.e., faith in
the atoning, finished work of Christ on the cross is deemed not
to be sufficient (usually replaced with human works and human
responsibility). Rather than relying on the grace of God alone for
salvation, the salvation message of the cults always boils down to
required obedience to, or abstention from, certain obligations and
practices
(some even including obedience to the Old Testament law).
3. No Assurance of Salvation: The issue of a cult
member's salvation is never settled, but is constantly affected by the
changing circumstances of life; in this way, cult leaders are able to
produce continued obligation and spiritual bondage, rather than
spiritual freedom.
4. Guru-Type Leader/Modern Prophet: The cult leader
is looked to as the infallible interpreter of Scripture, specially
appointed by God to be a special saint, guru, or contemporary messiah,
and thereby, has divine authority that must not be violated. Cultists
almost always quote their leader rather than the Bible. The cult's
adherents often expound the virtues of the founders and seek to cover
the founder's sins and wickedness.
5. Vacillating, Ambiguous Doctrines/Spiritual Deception:
In order to gain favor with the public, and thereby aid in the
recruitment of new members, cult "doctrine" tends to be characterized
by many false or deceptive claims concerning the cult's true spiritual
beliefs (e.g.,
Mormons
are not quick to reveal their belief that God was a man, who has now
become the God of planet Earth).
6. Exclusivity from/Denunciation of Other Groups:
Each cult group, regardless of what other doctrines are taught, will
all have this one common idea -- "The Only True Church Syndrome." The
members of each specific organization have been taught that their
church, organization, or community, is the only true group and that
all other groups are false. The group's leaders will explain that it
is impossible to serve God without being a member of the specific
group. Moreover, when the cult leader announces himself as the true
"Messiah," all others are declared to be dishonest, deceitful, and
deluded, and must be put down; alternative views are denounced as
being satanic and corrupt. Persecution is welcomed, and even glorified
in, as "evidence" that they are being persecuted for righteousness
sake. Thus, if a member decides to leave the group, they have been
told that they are not simply leaving an organization, but rather they
are leaving God and His only true organization. Hence, for a member of
a cult who has been in a group for any length of time, the action of
leaving the group is much more difficult than what most Christians
understand. To leave the group is, in the minds of the cult member,
tantamount to leaving God.
7. Claims of Special Discoveries/Additional Revelation:
Acceptance of new, contemporary, continual revelations that either
deny the Bible or are allowed to explain it. The fundamental
characteristic of Christianity is that it is historical, not dependent
upon private knowledge and secret, unconfirmable relationships, while
the almost universal basis of cult religion is the claimed exclusive
revelation that one person has supposedly received. Rather than
conforming to Biblical rules of evidence (2 Cor. 13:1), cult leader
revelations almost always emanate from hallucinations, visions,
dreams, private discoveries, etc. These new revelations often become
codified as official written "scripture" of the cults (e.g., The
Book of Mormon), and are considered as valid as that of the
apostles (and even more relevant because they are given in these end
times).
8. Defective Christology: Cults always have a false
view of the nature of the Person of Jesus Christ; a cult will usually
deny the true deity of Christ, His true humanity, His true origin, or
the true union of the two natures in one Person.
9. Defective "Nature of Man": Most cults do not see
man as an immortal being; instead they see him either as an animal
without a soul or as a being which is being perfected to the point of
becoming a god. They usually do not see man as a spirit clothed in a
body of flesh awaiting the redemption of body and soul.
10. Out-Of-Context Scripture Use as Proof-Texts/Segmented
Biblical Attention: Cults tend to focus on one verse or
passage of the Bible to the exclusion of others, and without regard
for the context in which Scripture is given (e.g., 1 Cor. 15:29 used
by Mormons to justify baptism for the dead). In addition, cults have
made an art form out of using Christian terminology, all the while
pouring out their own meanings into the words.
11. Erroneous Doctrines Concerning Life After Death and
Retribution: Covering the gamut from soul sleep to
annihilationism to purgatory to universalism to the progression to
godhood, cults invariably deny the existence of a final judgment of,
and a final "resting" place for, the unrighteous.
12. Entangling Organization Structure: The less truth
a movement represents, the more highly it seems to have to organize
itself; the absence of truth seems to make necessary the application
of the bonds of fear. Cults often demand total commitment by their
converts to an organizational involvement that entangles them in a
complicated set of human restrictions, giving the impression of
passionate and often irrational devotion to a cause.
13. Financial Exploitation: The cultic practitioner
strongly implies that money contributed to the cause will earn the
contributor numerous gifts, powers, and abilities, and in many cases,
outright salvation.
14. Pseudomystical/Spiritistic/Occultic Influence:
Occult influence is many times found in either the origin of the group
and/or in its current practices.
* The information herein
was adapted from the following sources: (1) The Marks of a Cult,
Dave Breese; (2) "Roman
Catholicism: Is It A Cult?," Media Spotlight, Albert
James Dager; (3) What They Believe, Harold J. Berry; (4)
Cults and the Church of Christ, George Faull and Brooks
Alexander of the Spiritual Counterfeits Project; (5) "Patterns
in the Cults," Rick Branch (Watchman Fellowship Profile, 1994);
and (6) Examining & Exposing Cultic & Occultic Movements, Jack
Sin, April 2000, pp. 14-16; 73-78.
Source: Biblical
Discernment Ministries
- Revised 12/01 [Adapted]
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