Christians today have an increasingly difficult task of recognizing,
understanding, and dealing with dangerous cults in their midst given
society's ever increasing environment of Political Correctness. In
the name of Political Correctness, under the banner of "Fair
Play," Christian spiritual leaders find it difficult to speak
publically with their congregations and parishioners about cults without
employing unambiguous terms and without speaking the full truth about
cults for fear of reprisals.
Being armed with the Word of God protects Christians from spiritual
damage caused by cults which sue, libel, and defame Christians for
speaking the Christian Truth however Christian leaders need more than
the love of Jesus Christ to fight His cause here on Earth. Specifically,
Christians need to arm themselves with detailed knowledge of how Satan
uses cults for his agenda of leading the Body of Christ astray, and how
Satan abuses the Democratic Justice system for his neferious aims.
When contemplating dangerous liticious cults with a proven history of
actively and feverently working to lead Christians away from Christ,
the cult which springs immediately to most Christian's mind is the
notorious Church of
Scientology.®
While the organization persists in claiming to have eight million
followers, a most generous and accurate summation places the total
number of followers world wide to be less than 40,000. That number
continues to drop year by year, fortunately, however the remaining 40,000
followers consists of the most hard-core, dedicated, and misled
individuals who fell in to the organization which have not yet managed
to find the courage -- or the love of Christ -- to escape from the cult.
The lack of a large following, ironically enough, makes the cult
extremely dangerous both to its remaining followers and to Christians
seeking to protect the unwary from falling into the cult. The reason
is, as you may have guess it, money. Without a large following, the
Church of Scientology relies upon fraudulent and unethical methods to
sucker unwary people into their grasp. As the number of followers
declines, observers note increasing levels of dangerous behavior and
of criminal behavior in the Church of Scientology. As law enforcement
agencies around the world raid Scientology offices and hand down
indictments (such as in France, Germany, Belgium, Spain, Greece, and
even Russia over the past two years) the Scientology organization
becomes ever more desperate for both money and followers.
One of the most diabolical methods which Scientology seeks to obtain
the control of Christians is by claiming that Scientology is compatable
with Christianity. The cult claims that Christians may become
Scientologists without giving up ther Christianity. What Scientology
does not tell its prospective followers is that after one signs up with
Scientology, Christians are slowly trained to deny Christ and His
teachings and Christians are slowly led to adopt anti-Christian beliefs.
-=-
[Note 1] The Church of Scientology claims that the documents which
comprise "Operating Thetan Level 8" are forgeries. It is
therefore surprising to note that when the Church of Scientology raided
the home of Mr. Arnie Lerma for alleged copyright violations, the Church
of Scientology identified copies of the
"OT8" documents as copyrighted materials
belonging to their Church. Was that an error or does the Church of
Scientology disavow L. Ron Hubbard's ideals and policies out of both
embarrassment and the fact that his goal is to covertly lead as many
people away from Jesus and redemption as possible?
[Note 2] The Scientology cult teaches its followers that through the
magic of Scientology "technology" they will eventually learn
to be able to communicate with plants and animals and to eventually be
able to acquire the psychic power to mentally order people into following
their commands. In one of the many expensive "courses" that
the cult sells to its victims, Scientologists are told to stand on
sidewalks and to think at people, ordering them around mentally until
they feel that their target has "felt and understood" their
"communication." Followers are also instructed to visit a
local zoo and to think at animals until they're successfully
"communicated" with.
[Note 3] What the Scientology organization's leaders won't tell you is
that Scientology teaches its followers that everyone is infested with
the fragments of murdered aliens from outer space -- what they call
"Body Thetans." In fact, when asking a Scientology leader
about their actual beliefs they will invariably deny it. Who's the
Father of Lies? Satan is the Father of Lies. In actual fact
Scientologists are told to believe that an evil Galactic Ruler named
Lord Xenu solved his population problem by kidnaping trillions of
citizens, transporting them to Teegeeack (now known as Earth) chaining
them to volcanoes, and blowing them up with fusion bombs. The fragments
from these murdered space aliens attach themselves to humans and animals
and causes all of humanity's woes. Why doesn't Scientology talk
about these beliefs? Because they're anti-Christian and as such are
part of the Anti-Christ.
-=-
Glossary:
The Scientology cult employs standard brainwashing methodologies to
acquire and hold their victims. Among them is the redefinition of words
and the formulation of new words which cultists use that are not
otherwise spoken outside of the cult in the real world. This is known as
"cultspeak" and is a common definitive factor in determining the
existence of a cult.
Some of the "cultspeak" used in this exposure:
Overt: In cultspeak, an "overt" is a crime committed against
Scientology. If a cult follower has a negative thought about L. Ron
Hubbard, for instance, that's an "overt" -- and a "High
Crime" in the jargon of the cult. Not confessing to the
"overt" becomes what's known as a "withhold."
Withhold: A "withhold" is often used in conjunction with the
word "overt." In Scientology "withhold" means
something which was not admitted to. In Scientology, cult followers
subject themselves to what's called "auditing" which is at
its core a brainwashing process. Part of this process is the demand
that the cultist admit to "crimes" both real and imagined.
Usually such "crimes" are not in fact real crimes yet are
merely admissions of the cultist having "negative" thoughts
about the validity of Scientology. The Scientology cult uses
"auditing" to find followers who are having doubts about the
validity of Scientology and, in so doing, can "correct" the
cultist through further brainwashing or through imprisonment in what
the Scientology organization calls its "Rehabilitation Project
Force" -- an involuntary re-education work camp.
Thetan: At its base, a "thetan" is a living being, human or
alien.
Operating Thetan: This is a human that has undergone Scientology
processing and has acquire supernatural Satanic powers. Within the
cult there are at least 8 levels of "Operating Thetan" which
also happen to correspond to expensive "course materials"
which followers must purchase to advance to that level. It's at Level
3 -- what's known as "Operating Thetan Level 3," or
"OTIII" for short -- that followers find out that they're
infested with murdered space aliens called "Body Thetans."
One of the processes which cultists subject themselves to is known as
"employing Tone 40." That process involves cultists sitting
at tables and screaming at ash trays, ordering them to levitate through
the use of their supernatural powers. After screaming ineffectively at
inanimate objects, the cultist lifts the object with a hand and informs
the object, "Thank you," then sets the object down... only
to resume screaming at the object to levitate. There is no appeal to
the Power of Christ to accomplish these supernatural tasks.
Body Thetans: These are invisible fragments of murdered aliens from
outer space which Scientologists attempt to exorcise through the use
of an expensive device that the cult calls an "E-Meter" --
simply a device which measures skin conductivity; basically an OHM meter
that can be purchased in any Radio Shack for much less. In Scientology
jargon, these space aliens must be "located in time and space"
on a cultists' body and, once located, can be "blown" -- that
is, exorcised from the body. Body Thetans form "clusters" and
form the basis for all of humanity's woes, mental and physical. A person
with cancer, for instance, is told that their disease is due to this
infestation. Indeed, a person with a broken bone is told that the break
is due to a "Body Thetan" clinging to their bones.
Clear: A "clear" is someone who's divested himself of the
infestation of Body Thetans and who has become something of a demigod.
Having "cleared" his "databank" (roughly translated:
memory) of negative and otherwise bad thoughts, and having paid an
enormous amount of money to the cult, a "clear" is supposed
to have a number of amazing powers, including perfect memory recall,
the ability to out-think even the most intelligent thinkers on Earth,
and no end of amazing things. When L. Ron Hubbard rolled out his first
ever "clear" in Southern California, his Superhuman couldn't
even remember what color tie his Messiah was wearing. The power of
Satan is no match for the Power of Christ!
Preclear: Cynically -- though accurately -- a cult follower who has
not yet managed to scrape up enough money to pay to the organization to
be given the title "clear." A "preclear" is what
every cult follower is called when they fall into Satan's trap called
"Scientology."
Implant: The secondary definition of this word in contemporary
dictionaries is, "To establish securely, as in the mind or
consciousness; instill." L. Ron Hubbard and his followers use the
word in conjunction with Jesus Christ, Christianity, and religion to mean
that they are false memories specifically implanted into humans to keep
them enslaved. Indeed, Scientology tells its followers that there are
"implant stations" on the planet Mars and Venus where, they
claim, there are populations of aliens living on them. According to
Scientology, when people die their souls automatically return to the
implant station on Mars for "re-implantation" of false ideas
and then they're frozen and dropped into the oceans of Earth where they
find women about ready to give birth. Among these ideas which L. Ron
Hubbard and Scientology claim are false is the belief in Jesus Christ.
R6: The use of this term by Scientology leaders tend to indicate that
"R6" is a physical piece of a mental implant; specifically,
R6 is a physical manifestation of the mistaken beliefs of Christianity.
It was the touching of "R6" that established Christianity on
Earth, not our Lord and Savior, Jesus Christ.
-=-
So what do you think about the Church of Scientology's claim that their
religion is some how compatible with Christianity? Is Scientology
compatible with Christianity as is claimed by the leaders of the
organization? Well, if the beliefs of the organization as briefly
touched upon above wasn't enough to form an informed opinion, consider
L. Ron Hubbard's notorious history.
The Church of Scientology has -- since at least December of 1969 --
claimed that their Messiah L. Ron Hubbard "broke up black magic in
America... because he was well known as a writer and philosopher and
had friends among the physicists, he was sent in to handle the
situation [of black magic being practiced in a house in Pasadena
occupied by nuclear physicists.] He went to live at the house and
investigated the black magic rites and the general situation and found
them very bad... Hubbard's mission was successful far beyond anyone's
expectations. The house was torn down. Hubbard rescued a girl they
were using. The black magic group was dispersed and never recovered."
(Bare-Faced Messiah, Russell Miller, Page 112.)
That's what Scientology's leaders say. The truth, as always, is
completely opposite to what Scientology claims. In actual fact L.
Ron Hubbard took up residence with a quasi-Satanist known as John
Whiteside Parsons -- usually called Jack -- and studied under Parsons
the art of "black magic." Parsons himself was an adept of the
notorious Aleister Crowley who, along with Parsons and his wife,
created the Ordo Templi Orientis -- or OTO for short -- founded
specifically for the practice of sex magic (John Symonds, The Great
Beast, 1971.)
The girl Hubbard "rescued?" Well, living in the house was a
young woman -- age 18 -- named Sara Elizabeth Northrup (usually called
Betty) who had, before falling into the clutches of Parsons and Hubbard,
been a student at the University of Southern California. Rather than
"rescue" this young woman, L. Ron Hubbard had an affair with
the woman and eventually absconded to Florida with a large amount of
Parson's money and a boat named "Harpoon" which was originally
purchased in a money-making partnership between Hubbard and Parsons.
When Parsons went to Miami to try to recover his property, he was
informed by the harbor master that Hubbard and Sara had escaped.
Parsons drew a Pentagram on the floor of his hotel room and invoked
a Banishing Ritual while praying to Bartzabel, a demon of the planet
Mars. Parsons reports that it worked: "In a letter to Crowley
describing his actions, he was able to report a highly satisfactory
result: `At the same time, so far as I can check, his ship was struck
by a sudden squall off the coast, which ripped off his sails and
forced him back to port, where I took the boat in custody.'"
(Bare-Faced Messiah, Chapter 7.)
Was Hubbard's "mission" to Jack Parson's residence to
"rescue" a young girl and to "break up" a
"black magic" ring? If so, presumably doing so involved
participating in the ritual sex magic and having sexual relations with
the girl he was putatively "saving." In actual fact Hubbard
married Sara on the 10'th of August, 1946, never telling Sara that he
was still married to his current wife Polly Grubb.
As for Scientology's claim that the "black magic ring" had been
successfully broken up, that claim is also false. Contrary to what
the Scientology cult claims, Parson's house was not "torn down"
due to anything their mad Messiah L. Ron Hubbard had done. Jack Parsons
managed to finally meet his Judgement by blowing himself up one day
while working with explosives in a work shed on his property. With
Hubbard having acquired training under Parsons, Satan was through with
Parsons, knowing full well that Hubbard and his madness would continue
to be a much more powerful weapon against God and His Creation.
So, in L. Ron Hubbard and in the Scientology cult he created we find
Satanic lies and deception. We find that Scientology's leaders do
their best to deny what they are, what their Messiah was, and what
Scientology is really all about. In fact, we find the Anti-Christ in
Scientology. Scientology at its core is one of Satan's many ways to
deceive mankind into denying the need for the Salvation that is our
Lord and Christ Jesus, falling into the Pit for eternity everlasting.
You have been warned.
-=-
These ideals and policies of L. Ron Hubbard and of the cult he
created were originally collected and published on the Internet
and in newsletters the Watchman Fellowship.
See http://www.watchman.org/hubrel03.htm for further background
into Scientology's anti-Christian basis.
This list was modified by COSVM Web Site to the extent that some
clean-up and further commentary was added. COSVM Web Site also
added some additional items to the list which contradict totally
Scientology's claim that they're some how compatible with
Christianity.
Additions and corrections to this exposure should be sent to COSVM Web
Site at damotclese@gmail.com. Scientology works to deceive people is the
countless claims of all the good works they allegedly do -- and on rare
occasions actually does. One of the most notorious specific examples
of this is the cult's claims of having helped educate 1.5 million
African children. A letter to the South African Embassy by Mr. Tony
McClelland, President of CultAware in March of 1992, yielded this
response from Mr. Johan Klopper, Second Secretary of the South African
Embassy:
The use of the plight of children in third-world countries to try to
deceive people is a decidedly unChristian, cult-like behavior.
The name "Scientology"® is trademarked to the "Church" of Scientology. Neither this web page, nor this web site, nor any of the individuals mentioned herein assisting to educate the public about the Scientology organization's "Volunteer Minister" program are members of or representatives of the Scientology organization. Quotes used within this web page and within this web site are used according to the Fair Use laws of the United States.
If you find anything inaccurate or otherwise mistaken on this web page, please send a correction to COSVM at the e-mail address offered below -- with our thanks.
E-Mail COSVM Web Site