DANGEROUS RELIGIOUS GROUPS
DRG 
DANGEROUS  RELIGIOUS GROUPS
1. Idealism. DRGs are often made  up of disppointed idealists who have been burned in  traditional churches. They believe God has  raised them up to accomplish what others have failed to do. Their vision is to  recoverthe lost purpouse of the church.
2. Authority. Those who are looking for  unambiguous direction, boundaties, and security are drawn to the safety in  structure that authoritarian leadership provides.
3. Enthusiasm. People who have had a taste  of dead orthodoxy will be especially attracted to an enthusiastic spiritual  experience. Few discoveries are more appealing than finding a group excited  about what it has-even if the group is wrong.
4. Family. Within a  dangerous group there is often an intense sense of identity and family. family  members are viewed as brothers and sisters, united against the outside world.  Their unity is not found in God, however, but in their “father,” mentor, and  teacher.
5. Biblical  Emphasis. Many DRGs give much attention to Bible study. But their learing is  often carefully orchestrated by clever leaders who provide their own  interpretation of Scripture. Members are warned about reading authors who are outside of  their group.
6. Sacrifice. Former members of DRGs say that one of the things that was so appealing was that the group asked them  for a sense of commitment and belief that cost something. One member says, “It  doesn’t start out that you are the only ones who have the truth, but that you  are the only ones making sacrifices for the truth. I didn’t want anything  cheap. I wanted something that cost me for my commitment.”
7. Exclusivism.DRG members often develop  the belief that they alone have been entrusted with the truth. The opportunity  to be a part of a select group of God’s chosen servants is attractive.
8. Indoctrination. An additional mark of many  dangerous Religious Groups is their use of sophisticated methods of recruitment  and coercive persuasion. Rather than allowing converts to make decisions of  faith based on their own sense of good judgment, some groups break down  individual thinking by one or more of the following techniques:
Isolation. Rcruits are isolated from family, friends, and news media in  order to screen out opposing points of view.
Peer-group  Pressure. Potential converts  are subjected to intense persuasion by group members.
Love Bombing. Group members give prospects an overwhelming sense of  acceptance, belonging, and significance by “bombing” them with flattery,  toudhing, and hugging.
Removal of  Privacy. Recruits are  never left alone to collect and discover their own thoughts.
Sleep Deprivation  and fatigue. A person’s  resistance is broken down by long meetings and extended work hours.
Games.Complex games are  played for the purpose of creating a sense of dependence on the rule-giving  leader.
Mind Control. Members are conditioned to stop thinking and to accept  without question the revelations and doctrines of their leader.
Confession.The self-respect  of members is broken down through persuading them to share their innermost  secrets with the group.
Change of Deit. Members are provided inadequate nutrition, which breaks down  their resistance and makes them vulnerable to suggestion.
Fear.  Negative throughts or  doubts about the group or its leader are said to be soulthreatening. Anyone  leaving the group is warned about harsh consequences.
Chanting and  Singing. Members are  subjected to constant repetition, which blocks their rational thought  procecses.
Childlike  Dependence. The leader  demands absolute submission to his control.
No Questions. Followers are taught to accept without question the  revelations and interpretations of their leaders.
Dress. Conformity of  dress is encouraged to suppress individuality.
Elitism.Every religious leader outside the group is said to be  satanic or, at best, deceived by evil conspiracy.
( Adapted from: The Cult  Crisis, Citizens Freedom Foundation.)
Such  methods sound very different from those advocated by the apostle Paul, when  with regard to persuasion he said:
A servant of the  Lord must not quarrel but be gentle to all, able to teach, patient, in humility  correcting those who are in opposition, if God perhaps will grant them  repentance, so that they may know the truth, and that they may come to their  senses and escape the snare of the devil, having been taken captive by him to  do his will (2 Tim.  2:24-26).
The  result of DRG indoctrination tends to follow a pattern. While all of us need to  look for dangerous thinking in ourselves, there are certain patterns that keep  showing up in DRGs.
Dependence on gifted leaders, who by claiming to speak for God put  themselves above question.
Misguided reaction to the excesses, compromises, and hypocrisy of  traditional religion.
Withdrawal from society, in the conviction that “we alone” are  making sacrifices worthy of God.
Cutting off all outside sources of information and accountability.
View of truth changes from what is honest to what is in the  interest of the group.
Self-justification based on the belief that outsiders are under the  control of Satan.
Loss of freedom as individual thoughts, feelings, and choices are  increasingly replaced by group thoughts, feelings, and decisions.
Loss of conscience as the group and its leaders draw the individual  into behaviors (often sexual) that destroy moral courage.
Adustment of expectations from what was originally promised to what  is received.
Fear of leaving the group under the threat of loss of eternal life  and reward.
These  are some of the conditions that often develop in groups that end up betraying  the trust of their followers. We need to keep in mind, however, the seductive  way in which such conditions develop. The errors of a group often show up  slowly-through the tactic of “Bait and Switch”. It is the kind of deception  that can show up not only in others but in and among ourselves as well.

