L. Ron Hubbards Wacky Worldview

March 1st, 2006 by Carl Thomas.

The Rolling Stone (not a magazine that is quoted on this site very often) has a really long article about the scientology cult. Here are some excerpts.diah.jpg

Auditing is purchased in 12.5-hour blocks, known as “intensives.” Each intensive can cost anywhere from $750 for introductory sessions to between $8,000 and $9,000 for advanced sessions. When asked about money, church officials can become defensive. “Do you want to know the real answer? If we could offer everything for free, we would do it,” says Rinder. Another official offers, “We don’t have 2,000 years of acquired wealth to fall back on.” But Scientology isn’t alone, church leaders insist. Mormons, for example, expect members to tithe a tenth of their earnings.

My church teaches the tithe. But the truth is that many in the church don’t tithe and they still are pastored. That’s what pastors do. In any event the article tells about lots of the wackiness.

Among the wacky beliefs:

Scientologists must be “invited” to do OT III. Beforehand, they are put through an intensive auditing process to verify that they are ready. They sign a waiver promising never to reveal the secrets of OT III, nor to hold Scientology responsible for any trauma or damage one might endure at this stage of auditing. Finally, they are given a manila folder, which they must read in a private, locked room.

These materials, … assert that 75 million years ago, an evil galactic warlord named Xenu controlled seventy-six planets in this corner of the galaxy, each of which was severely overpopulated. To solve this problem, Xenu rounded up 13.5 trillion beings and then flew them to Earth, where they were dumped into volcanoes around the globe and vaporized with bombs. This scattered their radioactive souls, or thetans, until they were caught in electronic traps set up around the atmosphere and “implanted” with a number of false ideasincluding the concepts of God, Christ and organized religion. Scientologists later learn that many of these entities attached themselves to human beings, where they remain to this day, creating not just the root of all of our emotional and physical problems but the root of all problems of the modern world.

Yikes!!! Not hard to call this false teaching.

Time Magazine did an article on these folks a while ago and had to fight the cult in court for years afterward. Lets see how strong the Rolling Stone legal department is.

hattip: GetReligion Image from :Clambake


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