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Church in Arizona, United States Potter's House Christian Fellowship Christian Fellowship Ministries The Door, Victory Chapel 34°37′50.48″N 112°25′38.33″W / 34.6306889°N 112.4273139°W / 34.6306889; -112.4273139 (Potter's House) Location Prescott, Arizona Country United States Denomination Non-denominational, Pentecostal Previous denomination Foursquare Gospel Church ...
Lofland published his findings in 1964 as a doctoral thesis entitled The World Savers: A Field Study of Cult Processes, and in 1966 in book form by Prentice-Hall. The book introduced the expression doomsday cult to the English language and since then the expression has been commonly used in various contexts. [3] [4]
In 2005, 1,500 people were regularly attending the church. [5] [6] [7] By 2010, about 4,000 people were watching the church's broadcast of worship on the church's official site. [8] Worships are broadcast by satellite in 37 countries and in Internet. [9] In 2015, the church had expansion work done in its building to create a capacity of 2,500 ...
But the church, she says, was actually a cult. Walker spent her formative years, since age 8, in the group. She says it was a place where members were unable to question leaders "without facing ...
According to the sociologist Bruno Étienne, an expert on religious issues, the SRCM publishes books as any other group but does not proselytize, and has never been convicted: "To us, it is fully a NMR (new religious movement), modern religious group, although based on an ancient tradition, and subject to serious arguments advanced by others ...
"Heaven's Gate: The Cult of Cults" (Max) In 1997, 39 members of Heaven’s Gate, a celibate religious sect, died in a mass ritual suicide timed to the approach of the Hale-Bopp Comet. The deceased ...
The New England Institute of Religious Research studies cult-like organizations. [5] Pardon is a former pastor. [6] [7] In 1993, Mather served as the organization's co-director, [8] and in 2005 as its director. [3] Pardon's article on determining when Bible study can degrade into a destructive cult was cited in the book When Prayer Fails. [9]
Glenn Close spent her childhood as a member of a cult-like religious group called the Moral Re-Armament.