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Cults that are leading Christians away from the faith

There seems to be so many new cults these days, that it is hard to keep track of them. I found the site linked below to be an interesting resource. This is a good place also for Pastors to learn about the latest move and how to identify them.

http://www.seekgod.ca
 

Chrissy

<img src=/claudia2.gif>
The problem with this idea is WHO decides what is a "Cult"? Me? You?

I was on Pal Talk, a Voice Chat program and they kept making rooms talking about "Cults", so I asked what their definition of a "Cult" is. Their answer: "Any Denomination that doesn't go along with Mainstream Christianity".

Well their is a BIG problem with that,and here's what I told them, "Martin Luther sure enough didn't go along with Mainstream Religion. If he had of, we'd all be praying the Rosary and bowing to the Pope."

Next week, someone may decide YOUR Church is a Cult. I believe just by reading and listening to conversations about this topic in various Christian groups, that "Cult" is used as an easy and convenient weapon to "label" a Church, just so that people will automatically shun that Church without bothering to ask questions. "Oh that Church is a Cult" "Well then, I'm staying away from it!"

I have been to sites that claim to "expose the Cults" and have seen many that don't have a CLUE as to what MY Church really teaches and believes, so I don't trust their ideas any further than I could throw them. So I sure am not going to use their sites as a reference to find out what any other church really teaches or believes. If I want to know what a Church teaches I will go to THEIR OWN MATERIALS to find out. Then I will go around asking people of their faith, "Am I getting the proper perspective on this?" ...and so on.

It seems to me that these sites, or at least many of these sites, who claim to "expose Cults" just set out with this sort of "get 'em" mentality and think a Church is untrue and then they pick out statements out of context to prove their points about the Churches... which in reality may have no real basis in fact.

I went to one Christian Bulletin Board for instance, and this one man started up a thread about MY Church (he makes it a practice to do that to various denominations, he doesnt even believe in denominations, in fact) and he lists these supposed "beliefs" of my Church and I was astounded at what he said. Nearly everything he said was rumor, untrue, etc. I had to laugh. I had decided not to even reply but then changed my mind and took one point at a time going through it and correcting all the false assumptions he had put there (he got them all from one of these "anti-Cult" sites), and by the time I got all done with it, everyone there was saying "wow, your Church isnt a Cult at all, like he claimed it was!"

People ought to compare what a Church teaches with THE BIBLE. And here's the thing, if there are 600 churches out there and they all teach different things, then who is to say if some church is a "Cult"? They cannot ALL be right!

Now, to me, a REAL CULT is a Church/Group that uses mind control and things like that on their Church members. Like the Moonies.


Chrissy
 

Doubting Thomas

Active Member
Chrissy said:
People ought to compare what a Church teaches with THE BIBLE. And here's the thing, if there are 600 churches out there and they all teach different things, then who is to say if some church is a "Cult"? They cannot ALL be right!
The thing is if it were just a matter of comparing a church's teaching to the Bible, then we wouldn't have so many denominations, sects, etc. The problem is in WHO is doing the comparing. Each group, when it compares its teaching to the Bible, assumes it is the one doing things correctly, as it brings its own presuppositions and traditions to process of interpreting Scripture. (It's natural that one's interpretation of Scripture validates his preconceived ideas.) However, as every other group does the same thing, who is to decide between them? You are correct--they all cannot be right! Who claims to have a "neutral" hermeneutical grid for interepreing Scripture, and how can we validate that claim? Or is something else needed?
 

Abiyah

<img src =/abiyah.gif>
I believe Chrissy is right. Just who is deciding the
definition of a cult for us? While I have called my
old church a cult, and meant it, it was more out of
disdain for it and the shameful way I was treated
than for other reasons. I get the feeling that others
do the same things. While I still do consider that
church a cult, it is because of its control issues.

How can we trust those who are naming various
entities "cults"? Certain ones of those naming
them have, themselves, come under rightful
scrutiny which has shown them to be just as
cult-like as those they name cults.

WIth regard to the site address given above, my
first question is who is behind the site? What is
criteria? I have not read the entries on the site, but
as soon as I saw Michael Rood's name there, I
thought, "Well, he certainly is cultish and a false
prophet as well." When I saw his books in my
local Christian book store, I advised them to get
them out. They did -- eventually.

A short time later, funny thing happened with
regard to his prophecy about Messiah's return. He
was seen by a friend at the Western Wall,
surrounded by a crowd to whom he was preaching
on the day he had prophesied Messiah would
return, but the day after, he was nowhere to be
found in Jerusalem. Hm-m-m-m.
 
D

dianetavegia

Guest
CULT:
Christians generally have a doctrinal component to their use of the word. Cult in this sense, is a counterfeit or serious deviation from the doctrines of classical Christianity. In most cases the group claims to be Christian, but because of their aberrant beliefs on central doctrines of the faith (God, Jesus, and salvation), the organization is not considered to be part of orthodox, biblical Christianity.
 

Doubting Thomas

Active Member
Originally posted by dianetavegia:
CULT:
Christians generally have a doctrinal component to their use of the word. Cult in this sense, is a counterfeit or serious deviation from the doctrines of classical Christianity. In most cases the group claims to be Christian, but because of their aberrant beliefs on central doctrines of the faith (God, Jesus, and salvation), the organization is not considered to be part of orthodox, biblical Christianity.
But what are these central doctrines of "classical Christianity"? Who decides what they are, and how are they determined? :confused:
 

Abiyah

<img src =/abiyah.gif>
Diane --

You know I love you as much as one can from a
distance, never having met you, merely reading
what you write on a public board, so please read
the following knowing that! :)

When I call an entity a "cult," it is a very unloving
thing toward the organization I am calling a cult
for me to do, and I know it, even while I am saying
it. For example, while I have never publicly named
my old church, I have publicly called it a cult, and it
was not because I love that church's practices. (I
do, however, love the people in it.)

Yes, that church has either rejected or over-
emphasized or inflated or added to those
doctrines considered central to the historical and
traditional church. The fact is that I, personally,
also reject, do not accept, and will not follow many
of the things I believe are accepted and taught by
the traditional and historical church. Therefore, I
must also be accepted as part of a cult and the
representative of a cult.
</font>
  • * Are Calvinism or Arminianism cult
    practices? Both cannot possibly be
    considered "traditional Christianity."</font>
  • Is having a weekly or a quarterly
    Communion a cult practice? What if
    the entity only does a Passover once a
    year? All cannot possibly be consi-
    dered "traditional Christianity."</font>
  • Is Sunday as the main worship day or
    Sabbath as the main worship day
    considered "traditional Christianity,"
    therefore making one right and one
    wrong?</font>
  • What if a particular practice in
    "traditional Christianity" was started
    after the Bible was canonized. Would
    that not make this practice within the
    church a cult pactice?</font>
  • What if the church regularly neglected
    a practice or teaching that is in theBible:
    would that act of neglect not be cultish,
    when it is clearly taught in the Bible?</font>
 
D

dianetavegia

Guest
Abiyah, note the wording: central doctrines of the faith: God, Jesus, and salvation! I see this definition to call churches a cult that veer from those Biblical truths and try to sway others away from those Biblical truths. Otherwise, it's a difference of opinion or comfort zones.

Quarterlies, days of the week to worship, clothing, etc. are NOT central to the doctrine of grace and I would NOT use that as cult criteria. I thought it was a short, sweet and very clear definition and ruled out what we perceive to be Christian churches!

Diane
 
D

dianetavegia

Guest
In fact, I felt it really LIMITED the use of the term 'cult'. :D

Diane
 

Abiyah

<img src =/abiyah.gif>
Ah, Diane! :) ONLY God, Jesus, and salvation.
This makes it much clearer, but (please pardon
me!) I am personally still unsure.

God and Jesus: These are fairly easy to define
in human terms, and I think I can see where these
would take us.

But salvation: This leaves us open to defining
salvation as gift-based or works-based.
Calvinism holds to a totally gift-based salvation,
if I understand it correctly, while Arminianism
holds to a gift-plus-based salvation and some
to a completely works-based salvation. Would
the definition not still call some entities cults
based upon these?
 
D

dianetavegia

Guest
I guess I just took it very simply, Abiyah! I saw it as Jesus is the only way to God, etc... and I really REALLY think we're too quick to label churches cults because of things that don't matter. I guess I would say, if the belief doesn't affect whether or not you'll go to heaven, it shouldn't be included! Does that make sense?

Diane


But salvation: This leaves us open to defining
salvation as gift-based or works-based.
Calvinism holds to a totally gift-based salvation,
if I understand it correctly, while Arminianism
holds to a gift-plus-based salvation and some
to a completely works-based salvation. Would
the definition not still call some entities cults
based upon these?
LOL! Then we might ALL be cults in the eyes of the other guy! LOL
Diane
 

Doubting Thomas

Active Member
Originally posted by dianetavegia:
The definition clearly includes that.

Diane
Diane, you listed some words--"God", "Jesus", "salvation"--but you didn't spell out what exactly are the classic doctrines attached to those words.

What about "God"? Is He unitarian (one person only) or Trinitarian (three Persons in one Being)? How do you know? (Folks on each side use the Bible to prove their point--how do you know who's doctrine is correct?)

What about "Jesus"? Is He God Incarnate, or is he merely an exalted created being? How do you know, for as it was in the 4th century, people today on either side use the Bible to back up their position? Whose interpretation is correct and how is that determined?

What about "salvation"? How is one saved? Is regeneration and faith monergistically imposed as taught by Luther and Calvin, or is their a synergy between God's grace and man's free response as most everybody else teaches? Is it "once-saved-always-saved" that wasn't taught until about 500 years ago or was it that man can apostasize from the faith as was the consensus during the first 1500 years of Christianity? Again, how do you know who's right because both sides can find support for their "doctrine" in the Bible?

Again, what are the central doctrines of "classic" Christianity, and how do you know? :confused:
 

Abiyah

<img src =/abiyah.gif>
Thank you, Diane, and I think you are right: if
your God, if your Jesus, if your salvation is not
just like mine, then you MUST be in a cult!!

Ha-ha!
 
D

dianetavegia

Guest
LOL Abiyah! But I am NOT shaving my head and standing at the airport! No Way! LOL

Diane
 
D

dianetavegia

Guest
Romans 14: 5 One person esteems one day above another; another esteems every day alike. Let each be fully convinced in his own mind. 6 He who observes the day, observes it to the Lord; and he who does not observe the day, to the Lord he does not observe it. He who eats, eats to the Lord, for he gives God thanks; and he who does not eat, to the Lord he does not eat, and gives God thanks. 7 For none of us lives to himself, and no one dies to himself. 8 For if we live, we live to the Lord; and if we die, we die to the Lord. Therefore, whether we live or die, we are the Lord's. 9 For to this end Christ died and rose and lived again, that He might be Lord of both the dead and the living. 10 But why do you judge your brother? Or why do you show contempt for your brother? For we shall all stand before the judgment seat of Christ. 11 For it is written: "As I live, says the Lord, Every knee shall bow to Me, And every tongue shall confess to God." 12 So then each of us shall give account of himself to God. 13 Therefore let us not judge one another anymore, but rather resolve this, not to put a stumbling block or a cause to fall in our brother's way.

I LOVE these verses! They say SO much!
Diane
thumbs.gif
 

BobRyan

Well-Known Member
So "lets say" a church starts tomorrow teaching that --

1. They can "make up or change any doctrine"
2. They can pray to their ancestors
3. Their leaders are "infallible".
4. They can torture and murder those who object to their practices.
5. They can invent entire systems of afterlife (like Purgatory) and torture those that object to such teachings.
6. Declares that their religious leaders be called "Holy Father".

All this was done historically by the RCC - and represents "deviations" from what many Christians declare as "normal" Christian doctrine.

However we do not classify them as a "cult".

Given that level of "tolerance" - who "CAN" we classify as a "Cult" and what does the term really mean?

In Christ,

Bob
 

John Gilmore

New Member
Another attribute of a cult is the belief that God communicates doctrine directly via its prophetess:

One of the gifts of the Holy Spirit is prophecy. This gift is an identifying mark of the remnant church and was manifested in the ministry of Ellen. G. White . As the Lord's messenger, her writings are a continuing and authoritative source of truth which provide for the church comfort, guidance, instruction, and correction. Seventh Day Adventist Church, Fundamental Beliefs
 
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