Why do people join cults Janja Lalich

When Reverend Jim Jones founded
the Peoples Temple in 1955,

few could have imagined
its horrifying end.

This progressive religious movement
rose in popularity and gained support

from some of San Francisco’s
most prominent politicians.

But in 1977, amidst revelations
of brainwashing and abuse,

Jones moved with several hundred followers

to establish the commune of Jonestown
in Guyana.

Billed as a utopian paradise,
the colony was more like a prison camp,

and when a congressional delegation
arrived to investigate its conditions,

Jones executed his final plan.

On November 18, 1978, 909 men,
women, and children died

after being forced to drink
poisoned Flavor Aid.

That grizzly image has since been
immortalized as shorthand slang

for single-minded cult-like thinking,

“They drank the Kool-aid.”

Today, there are thousands of cults
around the world.

It’s important to note two things
about them.

First, not all cults are religious.

Some are political,

therapy-based,

focused on self-improvement,

or otherwise.

And on the flip side,

not all new religions are what
we’re referring to as cults.

So what exactly defines our modern
understanding of cults,

and why do people join them?

Broadly speaking, a cult is a group
or movement

with a shared commitment to a usually
extreme ideology

that’s typically embodied
in a charismatic leader.

And while few turn out as deadly
as Jonestown or Heaven’s Gate,

which ended in a mass suicide
of 39 people in 1997,

most cults share some
basic characteristics.

A typical cult requires a high level
of commitment from its members

and maintains a strict hierarchy,

separating unsuspecting supporters
and recruits

from the inner workings.

It claims to provide answers
to life’s biggest questions

through its doctrine,

along with the required recipe
for change

that shapes a new member
into a true believer.

And most importantly, it uses both
formal and informal systems

of influence and control
to keep members obedient,

with little tolerance for internal
disagreement or external scrutiny.

You might wonder whether
some of these descriptions

might also apply to established religions.

In fact, the world “cultus”
originally described

people who cultivated
the worship of certain gods

by performing rituals
and maintaining temples.

But in time, it came to mean
excessive devotion.

Many religions began as cults,

but integrated into the fabric
of the larger society as they grew.

A modern cult, by contrast, separates
its members from others.

Rather than providing guidelines
for members to live better lives,

a cult seeks to directly control them,

from personal and family relationships,

to financial assets
and living arrangements.

Cults also demand obedience
to human leaders

who tend to be highly persuasive people

with authoritarian
and narcissistic streaks

motivated by money, sex, power,
or all three.

While a cult leader uses personal charisma
to attract initial followers,

further expansion works
like a pyramid scheme,

with early members recruiting new ones.

Cults are skilled at knowing
whom to target,

often focusing on those new to an area,

or who have recently undergone some
personal or professional loss.

Loneliness and a desire for meaning

make one susceptible to friendly people
offering community.

The recruitment process can be subtle,

sometimes taking months
to establish a relationship.

In fact, more than two-thirds
of cult members are recruited by a friend,

family member,

or co-worker

whose invitations are harder to refuse.

Once in the cult, members are subjected
to multiple forms of indoctrination.

Some play on our natural inclination to
mimic social behaviors or follow orders.

Other methods may be more intense

using techniques of coercive persuasion
involving guilt, shame, and fear.

And in many cases, members may
willingly submit out of desire to belong

and to attain the promised rewards.

The cult environment discourages
critical thinking,

making it hard to voice doubts

when everyone around you is modeling
absolute faith.

The resulting internal conflict,
known as cognitive dissonance,

keeps you trapped,

as each compromise makes it more
painful to admit you’ve been deceived.

And though most cults don’t
lead members to their death,

they can still be harmful.

By denying basic freedoms of thought,
speech, and association,

cults stunt their members'
psychological and emotional growth,

a particular problem for children,

who are deprived of normal
developmental activities and milestones.

Nevertheless, many cult members
eventually find a way out,

whether through their own realizations,

the help of family and friends,

or when the cult falls apart
due to external pressure or scandals.

Many cults may be hard to identify,

and for some, their beliefs,
no matter how strange,

are protected under religious freedom.

But when their practices
involve harassment,

threats,

illegal activities,

or abuse,

the law can intervene.

Believing in something should not come
at the cost of your family and friends,

and if someone tells you to sacrifice
your relationships

or morality for the greater good,

they’re most likely exploiting you
for their own.

当吉姆·琼斯牧师
于 1955 年创立人民圣殿时,

很少有人能想象到
它可怕的结局。

这种进步的宗教运动
越来越受欢迎,并得到

了旧金山一些
最杰出的政治家的支持。

但在 1977 年,在
洗脑和虐待的揭露中,

琼斯带着数百名

追随者在圭亚那建立了琼斯镇公社

被称为乌托邦天堂
的殖民地更像是一个集中营

,当一个国会代表团
抵达调查其状况时,

琼斯执行了他的最终计划。

1978 年 11 月 18 日,909 名男女老少

在被迫喝下
有毒的调味剂后死亡。

从那以后,那个灰熊的形象就成为了
不朽的简写俚语

,代表一心一意的邪教思想,

“他们喝了酷爱饮料。”

今天,全世界有成千上万的邪教

重要的是要注意
关于它们的两件事。

首先,并非所有的邪教都是宗教的。

有些是政治性的、

基于治疗的、

专注于自我提升的,

或者其他的。

另一方面,

并非所有新宗教都是
我们所说的邪教。

那么,究竟是什么定义了我们
对邪教的现代理解

,人们为什么要加入他们呢?

从广义上讲,邪教是一个团体
或运动

,共同致力于

通常体现
在魅力领袖身上的极端意识形态。

虽然很少有人
像琼斯镇或天堂之门那样致命,

后者
在 1997 年以 39 人的集体自杀告终,但

大多数邪教都有一些
基本特征。

一个典型的邪教需要
其成员的高度承诺,

并保持严格的等级制度,

将毫无戒心的支持者
和新成员

与内部运作分开。

它声称通过其教义提供
生活中最大问题的答案

以及

将新成员塑造
成真正信徒的变革所需的秘诀。

最重要的是,它使用
正式和非正式

的影响和控制系统
来保持成员的顺从,

对内部
分歧或外部审查几乎没有容忍度。

您可能想知道
其中一些描述

是否也适用于已建立的宗教。

事实上,世界上的“邪教”
最初是

指通过举行仪式和维护寺庙来培养
对某些神灵的崇拜的人

但随着时间的推移,它变成了
过度奉献的意思。

许多宗教最初是邪教,


随着它们的发展融入了更大社会的结构。

相比之下,现代邪教将
其成员与其他人区分开来。 邪教

不是
为成员提供更好的生活指导

,而是寻求直接控制他们,

从个人和家庭关系

到金融资产
和生活安排。

邪教还要求
服从人类领袖

,这些领袖往往是极具说服力的人,

具有专制
和自恋倾向,

受金钱、性、权力
或三者的驱使。

虽然邪教领袖利用个人
魅力吸引最初的追随者,但

进一步的扩张
就像传销一样

,早期成员招募新成员。

邪教善于
了解目标对象,

通常关注那些刚接触某个地区的人,

或者最近经历了一些
个人或职业损失的人。

孤独和对意义的渴望

使一个人容易受到提供社区的友好人士的影响

招聘过程可能很微妙,

有时需要几个月
才能建立关系。

事实上,超过三分之二
的邪教成员是由难以拒绝的朋友

、家人

或同事招募

的。

一旦进入邪教,成员就会
受到多种形式的灌输。

有些人利用我们
模仿社会行为或服从命令的自然倾向。

使用
涉及内疚、羞耻和恐惧的强制说服技术,其他方法可能会更加激烈。

在许多情况下,成员可能
出于归属感

和获得承诺奖励的愿望而自愿提交。

邪教环境不鼓励
批判性思维,

当你周围的每个人都在塑造绝对信仰时,你很难表达怀疑

由此产生的内部冲突,
被称为认知失调,

会让你陷入困境,

因为每次妥协都会让你更
痛苦地承认自己被欺骗了。

尽管大多数邪教不会
导致成员死亡,

但它们仍然是有害的。

通过剥夺思想、
言论和结社的基本自由,

邪教阻碍了其成员的
心理和情感成长,

这对儿童来说是一个特殊的问题,

他们被剥夺了正常的
发展活动和里程碑。

尽管如此,许多邪教成员
最终还是找到了出路,

无论是通过自己的觉悟、

家人和朋友的帮助,

还是邪教
因外部压力或丑闻而分崩离析。

许多邪教可能难以辨认

,对一些人来说,他们的信仰,
无论多么奇怪,

都受到宗教自由的保护。

但当他们的行为
涉及骚扰、

威胁、

非法活动

或虐待时

,法律可以进行干预。

相信某事不应该
以牺牲你的家人和朋友为代价

,如果有人告诉你为了更大的利益而牺牲
你的人际关系

或道德,

他们很可能是
为了他们自己而剥削你。