Catholic cults

While the word “cult” has the gen­eral mean­ing of any par­tic­u­lar form of wor­ship involv­ing rit­u­als and a spe­cific the­ol­ogy, in recent times it has taken on an addi­tional and largely sin­is­ter mean­ing; i.e., of “a reli­gion or sect con­sid­ered to be false, unortho­dox, or extrem­ist, with mem­bers often liv­ing out­side of con­ven­tional soci­ety under the direc­tion of a charis­matic leader.” (Dictionary.com). Such groups can be found both as autonomous enti­ties and reli­gions or as communities/groups/organizatons within a larger estab­lished reli­gion, such as Catholicism.

In the case of cults within a larger estab­lished reli­gion, one may not nec­es­sar­ily find evi­dence of obvi­ous “het­ero­doxy”, although the group will likely overem­pha­size one or more doc­trines at the expense of oth­ers, but one will always find evi­dence of “het­ero­praxis”. This het­ero­praxis usu­ally includes an extreme value being placed on obe­di­ence and loy­alty to a leader who views him­self as hav­ing received a spe­cial voca­tion directly from God for some spe­cial mis­sion of great impor­tance. Given fallen human nature, such lead­ers tend to become increas­ingly grandiose and make increas­ingly total­i­tar­ian demands on the lives and con­sciences of their adher­ents, some­times with tragic con­se­quences, such as at Jonestown.

In The Mys­tery of Things, this phe­nom­e­non, and its poten­tial effects on indi­vid­u­als, is explored in the guise of SANA, the fic­tional “Stu­dent Apos­to­late of North Amer­ica” described by the novel’s pro­tag­o­nist, James Ire­ton, as “a more-Catholic-than-the-Pope fac­tion of devo­tees whose steel plated leader, Peter Krato, served up new daily dog­mas with the com­mu­nal break­fast sausage.”

Along non-fictional lines (although occa­sion­ally ref­er­enc­ing the novel) Debra Mur­phy has also pub­lished (on her blog and CatholicExchange.com) a series of arti­cles on the nature of Catholic cults in con­nec­tion with the recent scan­dal involv­ing the founder of the Legionar­ies of Christ and Reg­num Christi. At the time of this writ­ing, those groups are being inves­ti­gated by the Vat­i­can after it was revealed (after years of com­plaints by ex-members that had gone largely ignored) that Fr. Maciel, the founder, had father ille­git­i­mate chil­dren at the same time that he and his lead­ers were encour­ag­ing the LC/RC mem­bers to view him as a liv­ing saint.

For an in-depth dis­cus­sion of the phe­non­menon of cult-like activ­i­ties within the Church, see Debra Murphy’s series:

Part 1: Intro­duc­tion
Part 2: Forum on Catholic Exchange
Part 3: People–and Cultures–of the Lie
Part 4: Trans­parency
Part 5: Pub­lic Face vs. Pri­vate Face
Part 6: Rel­e­vant Arti­cles
Part 7: Con­science in Canon Law and the New Move­ments
Part 8: False Con­science and its Bit­ter Fruits
Part 9: More Rel­e­vant Links
Part 10: Q & A with canon lawyer Pete Vere
Part 11: False Con­science and True Obedience

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