[ Home ] [ Syllabus ] [ Research Project ] [ Lectures ] [ Reviews ]
The second problem in using the term cult is that scholars do not always agree on whether a group should be classified as a cult or a sect. In other words, the classification of a movement as either a cult or a sect is very subjective. For example, notice that The Sacred Quest suggests that at the time of their origin, the Mormons could be classified as a cult. In contrast, the writers at the Religious Tolerance web site classify the original Mormons as a sect! Moreover, both sources describe how the original movement evolved from a cult or sect into a denomination! Obviously, there is no widespread agreement on how or even whether the terms cult and sect should be used. Consequently, many scholars of religion have abandoned or restricted the use of these terms and prefer to speak of "new religious movements."
Sociologist Bryan Wilson has proposed a new means of classifying new religious movements. Wilson abandons the term cult altogether, but uses the term sect to refer to any religious movement of "separated believers." Thus, for Wilson, cults fall under the category of sects. According to Wilson, new religious movements can be understood in terms of how they respond to "the world" or society. Basically, there are four types of responses.
[画像:David Koresh preaching to Branch Davidians]
David Koresh preaching to Branch Davidians
[画像:Shaker Worship service]
Shaker Worship Service
4. The utopia group seeks not to overthrow the
existing world, but to reconstruct it according to a divinely given
plan. The utopia group always relies upon a communal model for this
reconstruction of the present order. Many such groups arose in American
in the decades before the Civil War. Each sought to create a new,
ideal society purged of evil. One such movement was known as the Shakers. Read the entry about the Shakers
at the UVA Web site. More recently, The People's Temple exemplified a
utopian movement.