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Cult: A Theological Definition
Following is my definition of a cult. There are a few disciplines in
which to define the word, such as psychology and sociology, but this is
a theological definition. Further, it is Christ centered and will thus
provide the Christian with a christocentric lens through which to
discern religious movements. First I’ll give the four-step definition,
and then I’ll break down each portion and put flesh on each portion.
(1) The word “cult” means “group,” “sect,” “religion,” “movement,” or
what have you. (2) We want to find out what a group teaches about four
important areas of doctrine: God (especially Jesus), humanity, sin, and
salvation. (3) When the group teaches heresy concerning any of the above
(especially concerning who Jesus is), it is either a pseudo-Christian or
a non-Christian group. (4) Pseudo-Christian groups claim to be
Christian, non-Christian-groups do not.
(1) Cult = Group
You may choose never to use the word “cult,” because the words
“pseudo-Christian” and “non-Christian” are most important. Then you can
simply add “group” or “religion” or “sect” or “movement.”
(2) Four Areas of Doctrine
Now comes the heart of the issue. What does the group teach about God,
humanity, sin, and salvation? I list God first, for if this is off base,
then it is likely that the other areas are heretical as well. For
example, the New Age Movement generally teaches that all is God. If all
is God, then that makes each human being God. If each person is God,
then each person is not a sinner. If we are not sinners, there is no
need for the biblical doctrine of salvation.
Space prohibits opportunity for a detailed explanation of all four
areas, so I’ll focus on the most important area—God. Narrowing even
further, the person of Christ becomes the focal point.
What a person or group thinks about Jesus Christ is the acid test to
determine whether or not that person or group is inside the Christian
camp. Why? Why is Christology so important? First, when the true and
living God introduced himself to Moses at the burning bush, he said of
himself, “I AM” (Exod. 3:14). A designation, or name if you will, of the
God of the universe is “I AM.” Second, Jesus in John 8:58 claims,
“Before Abraham came into existence, I AM.” Here Jesus claims to be God
the Son, Yahweh in the flesh (see John 1:1,14). Third, and finally, the
reason that the identity of Jesus is essential comes in John 8:24: “If
you do not believe that I AM, you will die in your sins.” I take this to
mean that anyone who intently denies who Jesus claimed to be will
die in his or her sins.
(3) Heresy Concerning Jesus
In 2 Corinthians 11:4 Paul writes of those who preach “another Jesus.”
We can apply this to our times: There are among us today counterfeit
Christs. The “Jesus” of the Jehovah’s Witnesses is Michael the
Archangel, the first creature created by Jehovah God. “Jesus is
not God the Son,” say the Jehovah’s Witnesses. The “Jesus” of the Mormon
church is the first spirit-child born to Heavenly Father and Heavenly
Mother (a resurrected god and Goddess, both possessing body parts, who
had intercourse in order for Heavenly Mother to become pregnant with the
spirit-child Jesus). Mormons further believe that Jesus became a
god as a spirit-child. Then, in order for Jesus to gain a body on earth,
Heavenly Father came to Mary and had intercourse with her. The “Jesus”
of Christian Science is not God. The “Jesus” of the Unification Church
is not God, and he failed to accomplish his mission on earth (which
should have been producing sinless offspring with his wife) by getting
crucified. |
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(4) The Claim to Be Christian, or Not
All the above groups claim to be Christian, but teach heresy in their
understandings of Jesus. Thus they are pseudo-Christian. Some
non-Christian groups are Hare Krishna, other Hindu groups, various
Buddhist religions, Islam, modern-day Judaism, fraternal organizations
such as the Masonic Lodge, Eastern Star, DeMolay, Rainbow Girls, Job’s
Daughters and Odd Fellows, and all New Age groups (included here is the
Unity School of Christianity).
If you choose to accept my definition, there is a third type of
cult-group-religion, the Christian group. This is the body of believers,
worldwide, who believe in the essentials of Christianity, such as the
Trinity (which includes the person of Jesus as fully God and fully man,
and the Holy Spirit as a person and as God), the virgin birth, sinless
life, substitutionary atonement, and bodily resurrection of Jesus, and
Jesus as the only way of salvation (by grace through faith in Christ
alone).
The Resurrection of Jesus
Pseudo- and non-Christian groups frequently deny the bodily
resurrection of Jesus (see John 2:19-22 for proof that Jesus was bodily
resurrected). For example, Jehovah’s Witnesses claim Jesus was raised
from the dead, but say his resurrection was in spirit only—after he died
his body was forever gone. By the phrase “Jesus was raised from the
dead” Christian Scientists mean that Jesus’ mind was raised from dead
thoughts to living thoughts.
Breaking the Sound Barrier
From the above two examples you see that people in pseudo-Christian
groups sound like the real thing when making theological
statements. Thus, when dealing with people in other religions
(especially pseudo-Christian) it is imperative that you ask the person
to whom you are talking to define the terms s/he is using. This
is especially true when a person states something with “Jesus” in the
phrase. Which “Jesus” are they talking about? (Remember that there are
counterfeit Christs.) Also, keep in mind that Jehovah’s Witnesses,
Mormons, and other pseudo-Christian groups may even end prayers with “in
the name of Jesus,” but all the while they define Jesus in a way that is
totally opposite from what the Bible teaches. When asking a person to
define terms you are beginning to break the sound barrier, that is, you
are breaking through and exposing as false the Christian-sounding
terminology of the person.
A Final Word
When talking people from other religions it is imperative that we treat
them as Jesus would treat them. There is much to this statement—it is
not just a catchphrase. Every situation is different, because people are
different. They join pseudo- and non-Christian cults for a legion of
reasons. Some are simple followers who may not even know the core
doctrines of the group; others may know the doctrines, but remain in the
cult for reasons other than the theological or the spiritual. Others are
in because of the doctrines, and among these we may find those who are
teachers and leaders (and remember that Jesus treated the false teachers
and false leaders differently, with much more severity). In every
situation pray that the Holy Spirit gives you the approach that Jesus
would use.
Steven Tsoukalas |