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Author Archives: Luke Johns

Divine Revelations on the Otago University Research Archive (OUR Archive): Paradise Landing by Joshua Davis

14 Tuesday Feb 2012

Posted by Luke Johns in Academics, Religion

≈ 5 Comments

Tags

Divine Revelation, Higher Evolution, I Am The Keys!!!, Jeffery Jonathan Davis, Joshua, Joshua Ben Joseph, Otago University Research Archive, OUR Archive, Paradise Landing, the desert of Australia, Universal Mind

As noted in our summary of Jeffery Jonathan (“Joshua”) Davis’s Master’s thesis a couple of days ago, Joshua references a “Divine Revelation” which he received “in the desert of Australia” in his thesis. This unique contribution to neuroscience is available to the public on the Otago University Research Archive (“OUR Archive”).

The Divine Revelation, entitled Paradise Landing, includes important insights for neuroscience, including this one:

From Jeffery Jonathan ("Joshua") Davis - Paradise Landing (a Divine Revelation)

From Jeffery Jonathan ("Joshua") Davis - Paradise Landing (a Divine Revelation)

And this one:

Also from Jeffery Jonathan ("Joshua") Davis - Paradise Landing (a Divine Revelation)

Also from Jeffery Jonathan ("Joshua") Davis - Paradise Landing (a Divine Revelation)

And this one, too:

More Revelation from Jeffery Jonathan ("Joshua") Davis - Paradise Landing (a Divine Revelation)

More Revelation from Jeffery Jonathan ("Joshua") Davis - Paradise Landing (a Divine Revelation)

Read the entire Divine Revelation on the University of Otago’s academic research website, OUR Archive.

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Two Free Seminars on the Brain of Melchizedek: This Week at the University of Otago!

13 Monday Feb 2012

Posted by Luke Johns in Academics, Conferences & Seminars

≈ 3 Comments

Tags

Brain of Melchizedek, Cognitive neuroscience approach to the Embodiment of Universal Spiritual Values, Embodiment of Universal Spiritual Values Seminars, Grant Gillett, Jeffery Jonathan Davis, Joshua, Melchidynamics, University of Otago

Embodiment of Universal Spiritual Values Seminars

Joshua Davis is a recent Otago University Masters graduate in Bioethics. He will be presenting seminars  supported by Professor Grant Gillett in Dunedin this week, at The Otago  Room,  Downstairs,  OUSA  Clubs and  Societies  Centre,  Albany  St Dunedin  (opposite the University Library): 

  • Thursday 16th  February  2012  4pm-5pm
  • Friday  17th  February  2012   4pm-5pm
Some  background  information 

The Brain of  Melchizedek  and the  Cognitive  neuroscience  approach  to the  Embodiment  of  Universal  Spiritual  Values

For millennia the stories of many cultures and people have been written, sometimes in the form of books, sometimes on the rocks, sometimes on wood, and they are the records of our ancestors, of our families. Many of these records have been, through the centuries, the object of religious beliefs, religious worship and politics, and as a consequence we have lost the pure wisdom that they intend to keep for us. On the other hand when we look at the same processes of human behaviour from a neurogenetic spiritual perspective we can derive very valuable information from ancient wisdom and personal revelation, and if we combine these with modern scientific research we are left with a synthesis and a synergy which I have called the Paradigm of Melchizedek.

This Scientific-Spiritual paradigm gives us the possibility to understand the difference between Spiritual Universal Values and Behavioural Values and to study the inner transformations that a human being needs to undergo in order to find lasting Peace.

As a consequence, this also allows us to understand the transgenerational peace propagation process which can be mathematically modelled and explained with the aid of systems theory and systems simulation like a neurogenetic spiritual peace propagation process. This process I have called “Melchidynamics” considering that ancient scriptures talk about a people of peace outside of worldly powers and nation states that will facilitate peace on earth as universal, and considering that these people, according to the scriptures and their own accounts, have gone from human consciousness to God Consciousness, and also considering that many people in the world are undergoing such transformations with dreams, visions and aspirations like the one of Auroville (India) or Freedom Farms (New Zealand), we derive a unique opportunity to facilitate this process of peace propagation by consciously understanding the nature of the system and the nature of the unique needs of each people.

This series of seminars will introduce us to:
 
  1. A cognitive neuroscience approach to spirituality and its intimate relation to ancient wisdom.
 
  1. The neurobiology, psychophysiology and quantum physics of Spiritual Universal Values.
 
  1. The coordination dynamics and metastability of the dynamical system of peace propagation process, Melchidynamics.
 
  1. The Birth of a Nation of Peace, the modern Embassy of Peace and the particular case of  the ancient prophecies about the correction, purification, reunion and restoration of the Twelve Tribes of Israel as a Nation of Peace, other prophecies of different cultures and nations and the potential overlap between these prophecies and the Embassy of Peace.
 
  1. Freedom Farms, similarities and differences with Auroville and potential synergies.

Meet a University of Otago Master of Science (with credit) graduate and the author of The Brain of Melchizedek! See you there!!

Research into the Cognitive Neuroscience of Spirituality at the University of Otago

12 Sunday Feb 2012

Posted by Luke Johns in Academics, Religion

≈ 6 Comments

Tags

Australian desert, Beauty, Brain of Melchizedek, Cognitive Neuroscience, Divine Revelation, Goodness, Grant Gillett, Harmony, Jeffery Jonathan Davis, Joshua, Master of Science, Melchizedek, Otago University Research Archive, OUR Archive, Paradise Landing, PBRF, Performance-Based Research Fund, Spiritual Values, Spirituality, truth, University of Otago

In 2009, Jeffery Jonathan (“Joshua”) Davis submitted a Masters thesis to the University of Otago which examines the cognitive neuroscience of “spirituality”. The scientific thesis is entitled, “The Brain of Melchizedek: A Cognitive Neuroscience Approach to Spirituality”. The University of Otago has recently been publishing Honours, Masters, and PhD theses online, as part of its Otago University Research Archive (“OUR Archive”). Davis’s Masters thesis, supervised by Grant Gillett, earned him a Master of Science with Credit in 2010, and is available to read online in pdf format.

But a few of its key scientific findings are worth highlighting here.

Davis explains that his broad goal is:

to understand and communicate the neuro-genetic implications of Spiritual and Behavioural Values to the attainment of Social Harmony and Peace. This is why the thesis bears the name “The Brain of Melchizedek”, in honour to the King of Righteousness, The King of Peace (as portrayed in the Torah) the bearer of a brain encoded with a map to living in harmony and peace. (p. ii)

Davis distinguishes Religious Beliefs from Spiritual Values in a manner that may be familiar from mainstream popular culture:

Religious Beliefs are associated with Behavioural Values while Holiness, Wholeness and the State of Being Peace is associated with Spiritual Values available to any human being regardless of his or her behavioural map of reality. (p. v; cf. p. 3)

Davis claims not to follow any Religious Beliefs, but to uphold what he sees as the spiritual “essence” of figures such as Jesus (“Yeshua ben Yosef”) or Melchizedek:

What is important here regardless of the reader’s belief about the existence of people like Melchizedek and Yeshua Ben Yosef is the kind of wisdom and understanding about consciousness that their words and actions carry both in joyful or adversary situations. These characters and personalities identify themselves with The Creator’s essence and attributes and are inviting their fellow human beings to embrace the possibility to tap into the spiritual nature of human existence to find peace and harmony and to develop a brain capable of a higher cognitive map attuned to God’s Consciousness and the universe at large, its environment. (p. 5)

Despite his purported rejection of specific religious traditions, Davis sees fit to warn “theists, agnostics or Buddhists who are unacquainted with a personal relationship with The Creator” of the “extremely high cost” of rejecting the existence of a Creator, even if the probability of such is shown – by material, non-spiritual, empirical methods – to be very low (pp. 5-6). This allusion to Pascal’s Wager, together with his adherence to Jesus perhaps indicate the particular colour of his allegedly “universal” Spiritual Values. Davis also issues

an invitation for the reader to find the ‘Voice of God’ within their own garden of consciousness where the seeds of the Tree of Life have been planted to allow those ones who will embrace this exploration in the manner of a Tzadik/Scientist or Prophet/Scientist to taste of the fruits of this tree. Spiritual Values like Love, Grace, Truth, Certainty to name a few might eventually lead to one of those ‘aha’ moments in which a person can discern for him or herself what kind of behaviours and lifestyles are more akin to the expression of those universal and transcendental experiences suited to his or her own Personality, Character, Identity, and cultural and social context, the expression of his or her I AM Identity in the world. (p. 9)

Although his thesis is partly grounded in a scattering of quotes from scholars, ranging from neuroscientists to quantum physicists, Davis bases his thesis centrally on “spiritual wisdom … derived from my personal relationship with the Creator (revelation and insights)” (p. v):

As you read this work you will realize that most of the words of Torah and the stories of Israel are treated as my own instead of being quoted the way any other references are quoted. This is because I am one with the body, a fundamental part in the unity of this unbroken chain of divine revelation, both physically and spiritually (p. 4).

In this regard, Davis notes that he wrote an earlier work, Paradise Landing, after receiving it as a “Divine Revelation … in the desert of Australia” (p. 1). The University of Otago has kindly also made this “Divine Revelation” available on its academic website. As Davis explains in the Introduction to his Masters thesis,

Paradise Landing contains twenty one prayers of twenty one different Spiritual Values whose source is the Source of All Life. The prayers are grouped by seven colours and the three values associated to the fifth level or colour are Energy, Mastery and Triunity, mathematically referred as 555 in the context of the revelation and also associated to colour blue as in the light spectrum of blue. (p. 1)

Davis claims to be attempting no less than a synthesis of Science and Spirituality, subjectivity and objectivity, the material and immaterial realms. Accordingly, the proper point of departure for such an endeavour, he claims, is not in any traditional academic procedure or methodology, but in a prayer to “the Triunity” of “Father-Mother-Love” – and this he sets out in full in his Introduction (p. 2). Davis ambitiously seeks to prove that “the spiritual field, the quantum field and the matter field are intrinsically and dynamically interwoven together, as are mind, body and soul, part of an underlying unity which is only dichotomized through the accidents of limited perception and linguistic limitations” (pp. 4-5).

Davis notes that the Spirit has led him, in “childlike playfulness”, to address the reader as “Dear Reader” thoughout the thesis. The same Spirit licensed him to refer to “some authors by their first name to relate to them in an intimate, personal, intersubjective way” (6). Indeed, the thesis is punctuated with almost as many “Dear Reader”s as irregular capitalisations – the latter feature which he explains in this way:

Words like Personality, Character and Identity which I am attributing to a personal gift of The Creator in a personal spiritual relationship have also been capitalized, along with all the names of the Source of all Spiritual Values like for example The Creator, the Most High God, I Am the Love, or Unity to name a few, because of the sacredness and special meaning that they uphold for my person, my immediate blood line, the family of Israel at large, both the known and the lost tribes of Israel and the majority of the people who still stand in awe and reverence to those names, essences and inner spaces in all cultures, traditions and beliefs for all times.

In four chapters, Davis pieces together a tissue of quotations from various scientists, philosophers, and theologians who defend a spiritual dimension to humankind, who “allow themselves to move beyond the materialistic view of human function” (p. 17). This has the further consquence of providing

an open door to find meaning and inspiration to explore a universe which is populated with caring, loving and constructive human beings, a paradigm which sees Goodness, Beauty, Truth and Harmony available to all creatures (and particularly scientists, philosophers and theologians) to overcome selfishness, fear, greed, and ignorance based on transitional and temporal structures for physical survival, destructive behaviour and war.

Have a read of Jeffery Jonathan (“Joshua”) Davis’s complete thesis on the University of Otago academic research website, OUR Archive.

The University of Otago received first place among all New Zealand universities in the Performance-Based Research Fund (PBRF) review in 2010. Academic performance is matched by its financial success: total revenue for the University of Otago in 2010 from student fees and other sources was $586,400,000, and the net surplus  (before unusual and non-recurring items) was $34,500,000. This is  up from $304,200,000 total revenue and $7,000,000 net surplus in 2000.

Jolyon White, University of Otago Theology Graduate, Corrects Misleading Advertising on National Party Billboards

15 Tuesday Nov 2011

Posted by Luke Johns in Dunedin School, justice, Theology

≈ 6 Comments

Tags

billboards, drill it mine it sell it, Jolyon White, National Party, Social justice enabler, the rich deserve more, Theology, University of Otago, Waihopai

Jolyon White, a graduate in Theology from the University of Otago, has been cleaning up those misleading National Party Billboards that have been littering the landscape recently.

White co-ordinated the campaign which added ”The rich deserve more” and ”Drill it, mine it, sell it” stickers to signs around the country.
– The Press

National Party Billboard with the truth added
National Party Billboard with the truth added

The Press alleges that Jolyon managed to fix up some “700 National billboards”, which is just an outstanding effort. Compare this with Jesus, who only cleansed the one Temple.

The United Nations Committee on the Rights of the Child (56th session) notes that while the extent of child poverty has declined in recent years, it remains concerned that about 20% of children in New Zealand are living under the poverty line…. New Zealand is ranked in the bottom third of the OECD for income inequality…. Incomes remain much more unequal than during the 1980s…. New Zealand has large and persistent income differences between ethnic and gender groups.  There are also an unacceptably large number of children experiencing hardship.  The choice to favour investment in other segments of the population over children will have adverse consequences for New Zealand in the future.  Insufficient response to this very unsatisfactory situation contributes to the overall grade of D.
– The New Zealand Institute


Jolyon White interviewed on Close Up

Jolyon White interviewed on Close Up (click to view)

Jolyon is currently the poster boy for doing Theology at the University of Otago:

Jolyon joins the ranks of other famous social justice protestors in recent years who have utilised creative vandalism, including one group that caused $1m worth of damages to the U.S. spy base at Waihopai – a military unit based in New Zealand which participates in the slaughter of Iraqi and Afghani men, women, and children. On 21 October 2010, the Centre for Theology and Public Issues invited one of the Waihopai protestors to speak at the University of Otago.

Now these are real heroes. Like this guy:

ETS, SBL, and AAR – Qualitative Analysis

11 Friday Nov 2011

Posted by Luke Johns in Academics, Biblical Studies, Sex

≈ 1 Comment

Tags

AAR, American Academy of Religion, ETS, Evangelical Theological Society, SBL, Society of Biblical Literature

Qualitative analysis indicates that, even though only 1% of participants at the Evangelical Theological Society (ETS) annual conference are women, the level of sexual promiscuity among all participants is at much the same, relatively high, level as at the SBL and AAR annual conferences.*

* Results based on initial survey results. Final results may differ. Qualitative analysis is inherently subjective; results should not be accorded the sacred status of objective scientificity (Wissenschaftlichkeit) as is quantitative analysis. Amen.

Arrest the Pope!

13 Tuesday Apr 2010

Posted by Luke Johns in Violence

≈ 5 Comments

Tags

Cardinal John Henry Newman, Christopher Hitchens, Joseph Ratzinger, little boys, Pope, Richard Dawkins

Richard Dawkins and Christopher Hitchens have finally said something with which we can all agree: the Pope (alias: Joseph Ratzinger) should be arrested and put on trial!

Dawkins and Hitchens are pursuing a legal opinion that Ratzinger should be arrested and put on trial when he visits England later this year. So, if you’re an English bobby, here’s your big chance to make amends. When he arrives: Take him down!

Prominent atheists Richard Dawkins and Christopher Hitchens … argue that Pope Benedict XVI should be arrested when he visits Britain in September and put on trial for his alleged cover-up of sexual abuse in the Catholic church. Last week a letter emerged from 1985 in which the then Cardinal Joseph Ratzinger urged that a paedophilic priest in America not be defrocked for the “good of the universal church”.

The Vatican has already suggested the pope is immune from prosecution because he is a head of state. But Dawkins and Hitchens believe that because he is not the head of a state with full United Nations membership, he does not hold immunity and could be arrested when he steps on to British soil. This is the advice they have been given by their lawyers – solicitor Mark Stephens and human rights barrister Geoffrey Robertson QC. “I’m convinced we can get over the threshold of immunity,” said Stephens. “The Vatican is not recognised as a state in international law. People assume that it has existed for time immemorial but it was a construct of Mussolini, and when the Vatican first applied to become a member of the UN, the US said no. So as a sop they were given the status of permanent observers rather than full members.” But the Holy See insists it is a state like any other. Earlier this month, Giuseppe Dalla Torre, Vatican tribunal chief, said: “The pope is certainly a head of state and he has the same legal status as all heads of state.”

Stephens said there are three lines of approach to put the pope in the dock. “One is that we apply for a warrant to the international criminal court. Alternatively, criminal proceedings could be brought here, either a public prosecution brought by the Crown Prosecution Service or a private prosecution. That would require at least one victim to come forward who is either from this jurisdiction or was abused here. The third option is for individuals to lodge civil claims,” said Stephens. He said he had recently been approached by seven wealthy individuals who donated money to the Catholic church and were dismayed their money had not only been used to fund abuse but also buy the silence of victims. These people could potentially sue the pope, Stephens suggested.

Writing in the Washington Post on Friday, Dawkins described Ratzinger as a “leering old villain in a frock … whose first instinct when his priests are caught with their pants down is to cover up the scandal and damn the young victims to silence.” Without admitting that he had consulted lawyers he added: “This former head of the Inquisition should be arrested the moment he dares to set foot outside his tinpot fiefdom of the Vatican, and he should be tried in an appropriate civil – not ecclesiastical – court. That’s what should happen. Sadly, we all know our faith-befuddled governments will be too craven to do it.”

Pope Benedict will be in Britain from 16-19 September where he will beatify the theologian Cardinal John Henry Newman.

How to distinguish Biblical Metaphor from Literal Meaning

04 Thursday Mar 2010

Posted by Luke Johns in Jesus, New Testament

≈ 1 Comment

Tags

incarnation, Jesus, literal, Metaphor

God: I’ve already put in the scriptures that the Earth hangs upon nothing, over empty space [Job 26:7] – and let’s face it, how is that not obviously and irrefutably divinely revealed scientific knowledge about the nature of the universe?

Divine Council: Well, you also told them that the Earth sits upon pillars [1 Sam 2:8].

God: No, no. That one’s just metaphorical.

Divine Council: Oh. And the other one’s not?

God: No. The other one’s scientific fact. It’s – you know – hanging in … in space.

Divine Council: Well, how are people meant to tell the difference?

God: Well – the ones that are correct are facts and the ones that aren’t correct are just metaphors, of course!

– NonStampCollector, “What Would Jesus NOT Do?” (4:46–5:15)

Gay Teen Worried He Might Be Christian

14 Thursday Jan 2010

Posted by Luke Johns in Christianity, Fundamentalism, Queer

≈ 1 Comment

Tags

christian, Fundamentalism, gay, The Onion

LOUISVILLE, KY—At first glance, high school senior Lucas Faber, 18, seems like any ordinary gay teen. He’s a member of his school’s swing choir, enjoys shopping at the mall, and has sex with other males his age. But lately, a growing worry has begun to plague this young gay man. A gnawing feeling that, deep down, he may be a fundamentalist, right-wing Christian… [full news story on The Onion, 12 January 2010 ]

Let’s Get Christmassy: Fuck You, I Won’t Do What You Tell Me!

25 Friday Dec 2009

Posted by Luke Johns in Music, Politics

≈ 2 Comments

Tags

BBC, christmas, Christmas Number 1, fuck you, Rage Against the Machine

Tom Morello, Rage against the Machine: “We would now like to play a song for you.”
BBC: “Let’s get Christmassy.”
– BBC Radio 5

Each Christmas, the Brits attempt to feel good about themselves by sending a really stupid, warm fuzzy song to the top of their pop charts. But this year, as the result of a successful campaign organized via Facebook, the UK Christmas Number 1 got hijacked by Rage Against the Machine’s classic 1992 fuck-you song, “Killing in the Name”.

The song was given some extra publicity when BBC Radio 5 prematurely cut short a live performance of the song, but not before the band delivered four “Fuck you, I won’t do what you tell me”s over the BBC’s prissy pommy airwaves. The BBC doesn’t get upset when the Brits completely fuck over Afghanistan, Iraq, immigrants, workers, etc – but utter the word “fuck”, and that really is rather objectionable and unseemly and should be stopped immediately, please. After all, the main intent of the UK Christmas Number 1 lies in providing the anaesthesia to allow the Brits to forget about their endless military invasions and economic violence (all safely hidden and out of the way, thank you very much). Instead, this year, the anaesthesia got converted into a giant motherfucking molotov cocktail.

“Make no mistake about it, this was a political act! This was an entire nation delivering a stinging slap of rejection to the whole notion of pre-fabricated pop ruling the charts.”
– Tom Morello, Rage Against the Machine

“Whether it’s in a small manner, like who’s at the top of the charts, or bigger matters like war and peace, and economic inequality, when people band together and make their voices heard, they can completely overturn the system as it is.”
– Tom Morello, Rage Against the Machine

Finally, some Christmas music worth playing on Christmas Day.

Apologetic Trash included in the ESV

27 Friday Nov 2009

Posted by Luke Johns in Biblical Studies, Translation

≈ 45 Comments

Tags

2 Peter, apologetic trash, English Standard Version, ESV, Evangelical Standard Version

ESV: Apologetic trash

ESV: Apologetic trash

Gavin Rumney has an interesting post about the ESV’s (English Standard Version’s) introduction to the book of 2 Peter. The ESV has been jokingly referred to as the ‘Evangelical Standard Version’, reflecting its character as a conservative and reactionary translation of the Protestant Bible.

Gavin outlines one way in which the ESV’s introduction to 2 Peter attempts to influence or control the manner in which the Bible is read – in a manner which obfuscates or misrepresents the view of the great majority of biblical scholars concerning 2 Peter. Have a read of Gavin’s post over at Otagosh, ‘Comforting Waffle from the ESV’, in which he delivers these delightful turns of phrase in describing the ESV and its unscholarly production:

“… misleading apologetic trash about 2 Peter doesn’t only appear in fringe sectarian magazines, but even inside the covers of “respectable” Bible translations – the ESV being a case in point.”

“… This is whistling in the dark, hoping the peons in the pews won’t dig beyond shallow reassurances. Ignorance is bliss.”

“The idea that our New Testament in its present form goes all the way back to the time of the apostles is wishful thinking at best, and blatantly dishonest at worst…”

“… The ESV publishers claim higher ground, but seem up to their eyeballs in the same boggy swamp.”

“… why should anyone believe – let alone promote – nonsense in order to make it into something it’s not.”

An Open Invitation to Fearful, Reactionary, Sexist, Homophobic Anglicans

06 Friday Nov 2009

Posted by Luke Johns in Christianity, Feminist Theory, Queer

≈ 7 Comments

Tags

Homophobic, Pope, Reactionist, Sexist

Auckland’s St Matthew in the City reprints Tom Scott’s cartoon about the recent invitation for Anglicans to join the Catholic Church, issued by the self-proclaimed ‘Pope’ of the universal Church:

Theologian Richard Dawkins in New Zealand for 2010 International Arts Festival

05 Thursday Nov 2009

Posted by Luke Johns in Conferences & Seminars

≈ 2 Comments

Tags

International Arts Festival, New Zealand, Richard Dawkins

Richard DawkinsOk, I was just playing with the ‘theologian’ title there. But in recent years, Richard Dawkins has certainly been a big bad kitty running amok in the theological rooster coop. So he may be more deserving of the title than the dull defenders of dogma.

The news is that Richard Dawkins will be winging his way to Wellington, New Zealand for the Writers & Readers Week (9-14 March 2010) which forms a part of the 2010 New Zealand International Arts Festival.

7.00pm to 8.30pm
Saturday 13 March 2010
Fisher & Paykel Appliances Auditorium, The University of Auckland Business School

Dawkins’ most recent book, The Greatest Show on Earth, marks a return to his own field of evolution. So his talk in Wellington could be expected to concentrate on that topic.

“Richard Dawkins will present evidence for his argument that evolution is an incontrovertible fact. In his new book The Greatest Show on Earth: The Evidence for Evolution, the renowned evolutionary biologist and outspoken atheist takes on creationists, including followers of “intelligent design” and all those who question evolution through natural selection.

Richard Dawkins will be introduced by Brian Boyd, The University of Auckland’s Distinguished Professor of English. He teaches a course in Literature and Science that includes Richard Dawkins’s The Blind Watchmaker.”

Is Destiny Church Becoming a Cult? Nope.

29 Thursday Oct 2009

Posted by Luke Johns in Christianity, Cults

≈ 35 Comments

Tags

Brian Tamaki, Catholic Church, Destiny Church, Garth George

Bishop Brian Tamaki: Member of a Cult?

Bishop Brian Tamaki: Member of a Cult?

New Zealand’s most American-styled Evangelical Christian faction, Destiny Church, held their annual conference last Labour weekend. In a “covenant oath” ceremony, 700 male members swore “a solemn oath of commitment that is binding, enduring and unbreakable… irrevocable [and] undissolvable,” and were required to pledge allegiance to Bishop Brian Tamaki. The retired editor of Challenge Weekly, Garth George, has attempted to argue that this is evidence of Destiny becoming a “cult”, which he defines not by examining any of the extensive academic studies of so-called “cults”, but by opening up his little old dictionary, which defines a “cult” – reflecting the popular usage of the word – as “a system of religious devotion directed towards a particular figure or object” and “a relatively small religious group regarded by others as strange or as imposing excessive control over members.”

But if we use Garth George’s definition then – apart from the largely irrelevant aspect of the size of the group – doesn’t this description of a “cult” apply to just about any religion?

Garth George: Member of a Cult?

Garth George: Member of a Cult?

As an example, let’s think about that potential cult, the Roman Catholic Church. Is there any religious devotion directed towards a particular figure or object in the Catholic Church? Well, this is just a little too easy. If memory serves, even the most wacky and out-of-touch of the Pope’s statements are considered to be infallible (when issued as a solemn promulgation of dogma). Furthermore, the Holy Father regularly attracts thousands of faithful adherents, who strain to hear his every (infallible) verbal ejaculation. So that’s a big tick on this part of the popular definition of “cult”. But how about “regarded by others as strange”? Oooh, this is just getting easier and easier. I won’t even comment on the life-long prohibition of sex for its priests and the alternatives that they end up exploring. Because Catholics believe that  bread and wine turns into the literal flesh and blood of Jesus (transubstantiation), that a virgin gave birth to God, and that earthly sins will be purged out of them over the period of many years following their deaths in a place called Purgatory. That’s some freaky shit. And how about “imposing excessive control over members”? Talking about “members”, if a man covers his Catholic member with a prophylactic, or attempts to procure an abortion for his raped daughter, he is automatically deemed a non-Catholic, excommunicated, and thus confined to the fires of Hell. Now that’s some pretty clear “cultish” excessive control. And although the size of the Catholic Church is relatively large, does it display that all-too “cultish” trait of offering exclusive salvation? You betchya. Even if you’re a baptized, born-again, and utterly devoted Protestant Christian – if you refuse to acknowledge the authority of the Pope, then the Catholic Church’s doctrine is clear: there is no possibility of salvation for you.

From an outsider’s point of view, and employing the populist definition to be found in the Oxford Concise Dictionary, it is impossible to distinguish a “cult” from a “religion” – without special pleading. It is sometimes said that ‘a cult is an unpopular religion, and a religion is a popular cult.’ And that has it about right.

But all this makes Garth George’s use of the term “cult” highly suspect. Massimo Introvigne points out that members of long-established religions often employ the term “cult” as a “stereotype-loaded term” with the intention of polemicizing against newer religions – as opposed to any objective attempt to define the nature of such religions. (In this regard, it is no coincidence that Garth George himself is a Catholic.) But as the above analysis shows, an outsider’s superficial polarization of Catholicism could equally conclude that it displays all of the main traits polemically associated with so-called “cults”. So the use of the term “cult” is largely meaningless and rhetorically loaded.

From his track history, I’m guessing that Garth George will continue to employ the popular prejudices and vacuous rhetorical blather encapsulated in throwaway terms such as “cult”. But he should consider the following comments by Benjamin David Zablocki and Thomas Robbins in Misunderstanding cults: searching for objectivity in a controversial field (2001:5):

“Historically the word cult has been used in sociology to refer to any religion held together by devotion to a living charismatic leader who actively participates in the group’s decision-making than by adherence to a body of doctrine or prescribed set of rituals. By such a definition, many religions would be accurately described as cults during certain phases of their history, and as sects, denominations, or churches at other times. The mass media sometimes make a distinction between ‘genuine religion’ and cults, implying there is something non-genuine about the latter by definition. We do not share the implicit bias that seems to be embedded in this usage.”

It is time for the mass media, Garth George included, to reach beyond their dictionaries and raise their analysis above the superficial and populist misunderstanding of so-called “cults”. Destiny Church is a religious manifestation that should be examined alongside other religious manifestations (such as the Catholic Church), and in light of its own particularities, without forcing it into any polemical box.

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Recent Comments

  • Vridar » “Partisanship” in New Testament scholarship on Exposing Scandalous Misrepresentation of Sheffield University’s Biblical Studies Department and a Bucket Full of Blitheringly False Accusations: ‘Bewithering is Becoming Bewildering’*
  • Arthur Klassen on The Antichrist Revealed! John Key has been Prophesised in the Word of God!!
  • Anusha on Cinema as Exorcism (six): On Soft-Selling Lars von Trier’s Melancholia
  • Cary Grant on J.N. Darby’s End-Times Family Tree: Is Dispensationalism from the Bible or Evangelical Tradition?
  • Christian Discernment on The Antichrist Revealed! John Key has been Prophesised in the Word of God!!
  • fluffybabybunnyrabbit on Complementarians and Martial Sex: The Jared Wilson / Gospel Coalition Saga
  • lisawhitefern on The Antichrist Revealed! John Key has been Prophesised in the Word of God!!

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