{"id":6940,"date":"2026-03-02T11:58:37","date_gmt":"2026-03-02T18:58:37","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/novus2.com\/righteouscause\/?p=6940"},"modified":"2026-04-15T18:59:33","modified_gmt":"2026-04-16T01:59:33","slug":"prophets-profits-and-secrets-uncomfortable-similarities-of-scientology-and-mormonism","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/novus2.com\/righteouscause\/2026\/03\/02\/prophets-profits-and-secrets-uncomfortable-similarities-of-scientology-and-mormonism\/","title":{"rendered":"Prophets, Profits, and Secrets: Uncomfortable Similarities of Scientology and Mormonism"},"content":{"rendered":"<p class=\"my-2 [&amp;+p]:mt-4 [&amp;_strong:has(+br)]:inline-block [&amp;_strong:has(+br)]:pb-2\">Place two of America&#8217;s most controversial religious movements side by side under the cold light of honest scrutiny, and what emerges is not merely comparison \u2014 it is a mirror. <span style=\"color: #000080;\"><strong>The parallels between Scientology and Mormonism are nothing short of startling.<\/strong> <\/span>Both organizations guard their most unconventional teachings behind carefully constructed layers of secrecy, revealing sacred knowledge only after members have made substantial commitments \u2014 whether financial, spiritual, or both. Both have faced intense, sustained, and well-documented scrutiny from former members who describe feeling manipulated, psychologically controlled, and deliberately kept in the dark about practices that, had they known them at the outset, might have changed everything about their decision to join.<\/p>\n<p class=\"my-2 [&amp;+p]:mt-4 [&amp;_strong:has(+br)]:inline-block [&amp;_strong:has(+br)]:pb-2\">This last point carries particular weight when examining Mormonism, because the majority of its membership never actually made a free and informed decision to join at all. Most Latter-day Saints are what sociologists call &#8220;<a href=\"https:\/\/www.patheos.com\/blogs\/kiwimormon\/2015\/05\/the-foolishness-of-the-calderwood-excommunications\/\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener\"><strong>Cradle Mormons<\/strong><\/a>&#8221; \u2014 born into the faith, raised within its culture, socialized by its community, and shaped by its narratives long before they possessed the critical thinking tools to evaluate any of it objectively. They did not choose Mormonism so much as inherit it, absorbing its truth claims the same way a child absorbs a native language \u2014 naturally, unconsciously, and without any competing framework for comparison. <span style=\"color: #000080;\"><strong>By the time questions arise, decades of emotional investment, family loyalty, and social identity are already deeply intertwined with belief, making genuine, objective examination feel not just difficult, but dangerous.<\/strong><\/span><\/p>\n<p style=\"text-align: left;\">From tiered knowledge systems and aggressive financial demands to the systematic silencing of critics and the veneration of charismatic founders, these two movements share a troubling blueprint. While mainstream Christianity faces its share of criticism, the sheer volume of ex-member testimonies, investigative documentaries, and whistleblower accounts targeting Scientology and Mormonism raises urgent questions that deserve honest examination. <span style=\"color: #000080;\"><strong>This article explores the uncanny similarities that reveal why thousands of former adherents from both groups have sounded the alarm\u2014and why their warnings should not be dismissed.<\/strong><\/span><\/p>\n<h2><span style=\"color: #000080;\"><strong>Graded Knowledge<\/strong><\/span><\/h2>\n<figure id=\"attachment_6946\" aria-describedby=\"caption-attachment-6946\" style=\"width: 300px\" class=\"wp-caption alignright\"><img loading=\"lazy\" decoding=\"async\" class=\"wp-image-6946\" src=\"https:\/\/novus2.com\/righteouscause\/wp-content\/uploads\/2026\/03\/john-travolta5.jpg\" alt=\"\" width=\"300\" height=\"343\" srcset=\"https:\/\/novus2.com\/righteouscause\/wp-content\/uploads\/2026\/03\/john-travolta5.jpg 500w, https:\/\/novus2.com\/righteouscause\/wp-content\/uploads\/2026\/03\/john-travolta5-263x300.jpg 263w, https:\/\/novus2.com\/righteouscause\/wp-content\/uploads\/2026\/03\/john-travolta5-131x150.jpg 131w, https:\/\/novus2.com\/righteouscause\/wp-content\/uploads\/2026\/03\/john-travolta5-300x343.jpg 300w\" sizes=\"auto, (max-width: 300px) 100vw, 300px\" \/><figcaption id=\"caption-attachment-6946\" class=\"wp-caption-text\"><em>Beyond the tabloid headlines, the &#8220;dark truth&#8221; regarding the Church of Scientology is extensively documented through decades of lawsuits, affidavits, government investigations, and testimonials from high-ranking former members.<\/em><\/figcaption><\/figure>\n<p>In Scientology, the structure of belief revelation is notoriously tiered, where core tenets and esoteric knowledge are disclosed only after members have committed substantial financial resources. The Church of Scientology employs what&#8217;s known as the <em>&#8220;Bridge to Total Freedom,&#8221;<\/em> a series of progressively expensive courses and auditing sessions that purportedly lead to spiritual enlightenment. However, the most controversial and secretive teachings, such as those involving Xenu, the Galactic Confederacy, and Thetans, are reserved for the highest levels of membership, known as Operating Thetan levels, which can cost hundreds of thousands of dollars to reach. This system not only maintains secrecy but also fosters a sense of exclusivity and commitment among those who have paid to advance.<\/p>\n<p><a href=\"https:\/\/youtu.be\/yGiHqp_Nr6I?si=3vuS9Tg_yxtWNMaX\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener\"><strong>In this video<\/strong><\/a>, Chris Shelton \u2014 a former Scientologist and outspoken critic of the organization \u2014 breaks down the specific steps of the upper half of Scientology&#8217;s Bridge to Total Freedom. Originally developed by L. Ron Hubbard in the mid-1960s, the Bridge represents the sequential path every Scientologist is expected to follow on their supposed journey toward spiritual immortality. Shelton&#8217;s firsthand experience as an insider gives him a unique and credible vantage point from which to examine these teachings. His analysis reveals not only what Scientology promises its most devoted members, but also the steep financial and personal costs required to reach the upper levels of this highly controlled spiritual hierarchy.<\/p>\n<figure id=\"attachment_6947\" aria-describedby=\"caption-attachment-6947\" style=\"width: 350px\" class=\"wp-caption alignright\"><img loading=\"lazy\" decoding=\"async\" class=\"wp-image-6947\" src=\"https:\/\/novus2.com\/righteouscause\/wp-content\/uploads\/2026\/03\/Mormon-baptism.png\" alt=\"\" width=\"350\" height=\"258\" srcset=\"https:\/\/novus2.com\/righteouscause\/wp-content\/uploads\/2026\/03\/Mormon-baptism.png 625w, https:\/\/novus2.com\/righteouscause\/wp-content\/uploads\/2026\/03\/Mormon-baptism-300x221.png 300w, https:\/\/novus2.com\/righteouscause\/wp-content\/uploads\/2026\/03\/Mormon-baptism-150x110.png 150w\" sizes=\"auto, (max-width: 350px) 100vw, 350px\" \/><figcaption id=\"caption-attachment-6947\" class=\"wp-caption-text\"><em>Baptism among the Mormons. 19th-century engraving.<\/em> Unknown Artist. Via Getty Images. Out of copyright, Rights Managed.<\/figcaption><\/figure>\n<p class=\"my-2 [&amp;+p]:mt-4 [&amp;_strong:has(+br)]:inline-block [&amp;_strong:has(+br)]:pb-2\"><span style=\"color: #000080;\"><strong>Similarly, Mormonism \u2014 officially known as The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints \u2014 practices a distinctive form of religious secrecy surrounding its temple rituals.<\/strong><\/span> While the Church&#8217;s basic doctrines and Sunday worship services are open to the public, certain sacred rites and ceremonies performed inside LDS temples are deliberately kept confidential. Faithful members consider these ceremonies so sacred that to reveal or discuss them openly would be to defile and profane their holy character. This is not mere institutional policy \u2014 it is a deeply held spiritual conviction that the temple represents the most consecrated space on earth, and that its ordinances must be zealously guarded from casual or irreverent exposure.<\/p>\n<p class=\"my-2 [&amp;+p]:mt-4 [&amp;_strong:has(+br)]:inline-block [&amp;_strong:has(+br)]:pb-2\">The restricted ceremonies include the Endowment, a multi-part ritual involving symbolic washing and anointing, the receiving of special temple garments worn beneath everyday clothing, and the making of solemn covenants with God. Also performed in temples are celestial marriage sealings \u2014 eternal marriage ceremonies believed to bind spouses and families together beyond death \u2014 and proxy ordinances performed on behalf of deceased ancestors, a practice unique to LDS theology.<\/p>\n<p class=\"my-2 [&amp;+p]:mt-4 [&amp;_strong:has(+br)]:inline-block [&amp;_strong:has(+br)]:pb-2\">Only members who have passed a series of formal worthiness interviews \u2014 conducted by both a local bishop and a stake president \u2014 are granted a temple recommend, the physical card that grants access to these rites. These interviews evaluate adherence to Church standards, including full tithe payment, sexual morality, and loyalty to Church leadership. Even then, the ceremonies themselves are typically explained only in vague, general terms beforehand, leaving many first-time temple attendees unprepared for what they will experience inside. Critics have argued that this carefully maintained secrecy creates an environment in which members cannot make fully informed decisions about participation. This concern becomes all the more acute given the Church&#8217;s eternal significance it attaches to these ordinances.<\/p>\n<p>This approach to secrecy in both religions can be seen as manipulative because it withholds critical information from potential converts until after they have made significant commitments, either financially or through baptism and lifestyle changes. In Scientology, the financial commitment can be immense, leading individuals to invest in a path they might not fully understand or agree with if all information were available upfront. In Mormonism, the secrecy around temple rituals means that converts might not fully comprehend the spiritual and cultural implications of their conversion until they are deeply integrated into church life. This can lead to a sense of betrayal or confusion if the practices do not align with their expectations or personal beliefs once they are finally revealed. Such practices raise ethical questions about informed consent and the right of individuals to make fully informed decisions regarding their spiritual lives.<\/p>\n<h2><span style=\"color: #000080;\"><strong>Financial Pressure<\/strong><\/span><\/h2>\n<p>The Church of Scientology operates under a unique <span style=\"color: #000080;\"><strong>&#8220;pay-to-progress&#8221;<\/strong> <\/span>system, where members must pay substantial fees to advance through its spiritual hierarchy. The structure of Scientology is designed around the &#8220;<a href=\"https:\/\/www.hollywoodreporter.com\/tv\/tv-news\/leah-remini-scientology-aftermath-examines-bridge-total-freedom-1035619\/\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener\"><strong>Bridge to Total Freedom<\/strong><\/a>,&#8221; a series of levels that purportedly lead to higher states of spiritual awareness and personal freedom. Each step on this bridge, from basic auditing sessions to advanced Operating Thetan (OT) levels, comes with a price tag that can accumulate into tens or even hundreds of thousands of dollars over time. For instance, the cost of the OT levels, which are considered the pinnacle of Scientology&#8217;s spiritual teachings, can be extremely high, with OT VIII alone reportedly costing upwards of $10,000. This financial commitment is not just a barrier to spiritual growth but also a significant economic burden on members, especially those who seek the &#8220;truths&#8221; at the highest echelons of the church&#8217;s doctrine. The financial aspect is often criticized as a means of control, where the promise of deeper understanding or personal betterment is dangled in front of members, contingent on their ability to fund their spiritual journey.<\/p>\n<p><span style=\"color: #000000;\">Jefferson Hawkins, Former Ex-Scientologist, now whistleblower: <a href=\"https:\/\/www.quora.com\/What-are-the-Scientology-OT-levels-What-does-one-get-when-they-reach-these-levels-or-pay-this-amount-of-money-to-reach-these-levels-I-am-not-a-member\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener\"><strong>What are the Scientology OT levels?<\/strong><\/a><\/span><\/p>\n<blockquote><p><em>Scientology adheres to the Gnostic belief that we are spiritual beings trapped in the physical universe of matter, energy, space, and time (called the MEST universe in Scientology). Thetan is the Scientology word for spirit. An \u201coperating\u201d thetan is believed to be \u201ccause\u201d over matter, energy, space and time, and can \u201coperate\u201d and affect the MEST universe without needing a body. The actual \u201cOT Levels\u201d have been published on line, and can be found with an internet search. They are fanciful and obscure, and read like science fiction. Scientologists believe that they will attain paranormal abilities when they reach \u201cOT,\u201d although such abilities have never been demonstrated or proven. The OT Levels up to 8 have been released, and Scientology promotes that there are 15 OT levels in all, although former insiders say that levels above 8 do not exist.<\/em><\/p><\/blockquote>\n<p>In contrast, The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) does not have a direct pay-to-progress system for accessing core religious teachings or rituals. However, the principle of tithing, which mandates that members give 10% of their income to the church, can place considerable financial pressure on adherents. This practice is not just about financial sacrifice; it&#8217;s a requirement for temple worthiness.<\/p>\n<p>As written in a previous essay at Righteous Cause: <a href=\"https:\/\/novus2.com\/righteouscause\/2026\/03\/01\/the-lds-church-heavenly-fathers-wealthiest-subsidiary\/\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener\"><strong>The LDS Church: Heavenly Father&#8217;s Wealthiest Subsidiary<\/strong><\/a><\/p>\n<blockquote>\n<figure id=\"attachment_6931\" aria-describedby=\"caption-attachment-6931\" style=\"width: 300px\" class=\"wp-caption alignright\"><img loading=\"lazy\" decoding=\"async\" class=\"size-medium wp-image-6931\" src=\"https:\/\/novus2.com\/righteouscause\/wp-content\/uploads\/2026\/03\/Gemini_Generated_Image_derr50derr50derr-300x300.png\" alt=\"\" width=\"300\" height=\"300\" srcset=\"https:\/\/novus2.com\/righteouscause\/wp-content\/uploads\/2026\/03\/Gemini_Generated_Image_derr50derr50derr-300x300.png 300w, https:\/\/novus2.com\/righteouscause\/wp-content\/uploads\/2026\/03\/Gemini_Generated_Image_derr50derr50derr-150x150.png 150w, https:\/\/novus2.com\/righteouscause\/wp-content\/uploads\/2026\/03\/Gemini_Generated_Image_derr50derr50derr-768x768.png 768w, https:\/\/novus2.com\/righteouscause\/wp-content\/uploads\/2026\/03\/Gemini_Generated_Image_derr50derr50derr-144x144.png 144w, https:\/\/novus2.com\/righteouscause\/wp-content\/uploads\/2026\/03\/Gemini_Generated_Image_derr50derr50derr-850x850.png 850w, https:\/\/novus2.com\/righteouscause\/wp-content\/uploads\/2026\/03\/Gemini_Generated_Image_derr50derr50derr.png 1024w\" sizes=\"auto, (max-width: 300px) 100vw, 300px\" \/><figcaption id=\"caption-attachment-6931\" class=\"wp-caption-text\"><em>In the doctrine of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, paying a full tithing (10% of annual increase) is considered a, if not the, fundamental commandment required to hold a temple recommend. A temple recommend is essential for entering the temple, where ordinances deemed necessary for exaltation in the highest degree of the celestial kingdom are performed.<\/em><\/figcaption><\/figure>\n<p class=\"my-2 [&amp;+p]:mt-4 [&amp;_strong:has(+br)]:inline-block [&amp;_strong:has(+br)]:pb-2\"><em>Tithing in the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints is not merely encouraged. It is, in practice, required \u2014 though the mechanism by which that requirement operates deserves careful examination.<\/em><\/p>\n<p class=\"my-2 [&amp;+p]:mt-4 [&amp;_strong:has(+br)]:inline-block [&amp;_strong:has(+br)]:pb-2\"><em>To obtain a temple recommend, a member must meet with their bishop for a private interview. Among the standard questions is one regarding tithing: specifically, whether the member considers themselves a full-tithe payer. LDS leadership has been careful, at the institutional level, to define a &#8220;full tithe&#8221; as ten percent of one&#8217;s &#8220;increase&#8221; \u2014 a term deliberately left open to individual interpretation. General Authorities have occasionally acknowledged that members may prayerfully determine what &#8220;increase&#8221; means in their own circumstances. In that narrow sense, the Church does not formally mandate a mathematically precise ten percent of gross income from every member in every situation.<\/em><\/p>\n<p><em><span style=\"color: #000080;\"><strong>But that institutional nuance rarely survives the bishop&#8217;s office.<\/strong><\/span> In practice, the temple recommend interview creates a binary outcome \u2014 recommend granted or recommend withheld \u2014 and the implied assumption underlying the tithing question is a full ten percent. Few bishops probe the theological subtleties of\u00a0increase\u00a0with their congregants. Few members leave that interview believing that nine percent, or a tithe calculated on net rather than gross income, will satisfy the requirement. The ambient teaching \u2014 reinforced across decades of General Conference addresses, Sunday School curriculum, and youth instruction \u2014 is clear: <span style=\"color: #000080;\"><strong>ten percent, paid consistently, is what faithfulness looks like. The doctrinal flexibility exists on paper. The social and ecclesiastical pressure points in only one direction.<\/strong><\/span><\/em><\/p>\n<p class=\"my-2 [&amp;+p]:mt-4 [&amp;_strong:has(+br)]:inline-block [&amp;_strong:has(+br)]:pb-2\"><em>The stakes of that pressure are not trivial. In LDS theology, the temple endowment and the sealing ordinance are not optional enhancements to salvation \u2014 they are prerequisites for exaltation in the Celestial Kingdom, the highest of three degrees of glory in the LDS afterlife. The other two \u2014 the Terrestrial and Telestial Kingdoms \u2014 represent lesser degrees of eternal reward, reserved for those who were honorable but not fully faithful, or who rejected the gospel altogether. Only the Celestial Kingdom offers what LDS theology calls exaltation: eternal progression, the presence of God the Father, and the continuation of the family unit throughout eternity. It is not merely the preferred destination. Within the believing Latter-day Saints&#8217; framework, it is the only destination that fulfills the entire purpose of mortal life, and access to it runs directly through the temple recommend that a full tithe makes possible.<\/em><\/p>\n<p class=\"my-2 [&amp;+p]:mt-4 [&amp;_strong:has(+br)]:inline-block [&amp;_strong:has(+br)]:pb-2\"><em>A member who cannot obtain a temple recommend is not merely inconvenienced; they are, by the internal logic of LDS doctrine, excluded from the highest eternal reward their faith offers.<\/em><\/p>\n<\/blockquote>\n<p>The Salt Lake Tribune: <a href=\"https:\/\/www.sltrib.com\/religion\/2018\/03\/26\/does-tithing-requirement-for-entry-into-lds-temples-amount-to-mormons-buying-their-way-into-heaven\/\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener\"><strong>Does tithing requirement for entry into LDS temples amount to Mormons buying their way into heaven?<\/strong><\/a><\/p>\n<blockquote><p><em>Money may be the root of all evil, but, for Mormons, it also provides a pathway to the highest heaven.<\/em><\/p>\n<p><em>That\u2019s because to gain access to the sacred spaces and saving rituals of a Mormon temple, LDS believers must donate 10 percent of their income to the church.<\/em><\/p>\n<p><em>No payment? No entrance.<\/em><\/p>\n<p><em>\u201cYou can earn [a place in the presence of our Father in Heaven],\u201d LDS apostle Marion G. Romney once said, \u201cby observing faithfully day by day, and year by year, the law of tithing and the other requirements of the gospel of Jesus Christ.\u201d<\/em><\/p>\n<p><em>The Utah-based faith earns billions from commercial ventures every year beyond what it collects in member contributions, says Michael Quinn, whose latest book, \u201cThe Mormon Hierarchy: Wealth and Corporate Power,\u201d explores the world of Mormon money. \u201cBut if you cut out tithing, the reserves would be depleted within a relatively short time.\u201d<\/em><\/p><\/blockquote>\n<h2><span style=\"color: #000080;\"><strong>Dissident Voices<\/strong><\/span><\/h2>\n<p>The sheer volume of cautionary tales and critical accounts from former members of both Mormonism \u2014 officially known as The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints \u2014 and Scientology serves as a significant red flag regarding the inner workings and ethical practices of these organizations. These warnings are not the isolated grievances of a disgruntled few. They represent a broad, consistent, and well-documented pattern of testimony from individuals who lived inside these institutions for years, and in many cases, for decades. Their accounts consistently focus on psychological manipulation, authoritarian control, financial exploitation, and hidden or controversial practices that prospective members are never told about upfront. When thousands of independent voices \u2014 spanning different countries, cultures, and generations \u2014 tell remarkably similar stories of coercion and disillusionment, intellectual honesty demands that those accounts be taken seriously. They are vital to consider when evaluating the true nature, culture, and human impact of these organizations.<\/p>\n<h3><span style=\"color: #800000;\"><strong>Mormonism<\/strong><\/span><\/h3>\n<p class=\"my-2 [&amp;+p]:mt-4 [&amp;_strong:has(+br)]:inline-block [&amp;_strong:has(+br)]:pb-2\">Ex-Mormons <a href=\"https:\/\/mrm.org\/leave-their-church\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener\"><strong>frequently share experiences<\/strong><\/a> of feeling profoundly misled \u2014 even betrayed \u2014 by an institution they trusted with their deepest spiritual convictions, their finances, and in many cases, their entire sense of identity. <span style=\"color: #000080;\"><strong>For countless former members, the unraveling begins not with a crisis of faith, but with a crisis of information.<\/strong><\/span> Historical facts that the Church quietly omitted or carefully sanitized begin to surface: the disturbing complexities of Joseph Smith&#8217;s personal life, including his secret polygamous marriages to teenage girls and other men&#8217;s wives; the Church&#8217;s deeply troubling 19th and 20th century racial policies that barred Black members from the priesthood and temple until 1978; and the gap between the idealized founding narrative taught in Sunday School and the far more troubling historical record documented by credible historians.<\/p>\n<p class=\"my-2 [&amp;+p]:mt-4 [&amp;_strong:has(+br)]:inline-block [&amp;_strong:has(+br)]:pb-2\">The pressure to conform runs deep and is rarely subtle. Members are expected to observe a strict code of personal conduct known as the Word of Wisdom \u2014 abstaining from alcohol, coffee, tea, and tobacco \u2014 while also adhering to exacting standards of dress, language, media consumption, and social association. But the pressure extends far beyond lifestyle rules. Members are quietly discouraged from questioning Church leadership, studying unauthorized historical sources, or voicing doubts openly, with the unspoken understanding that persistent questioning signals a spiritual deficiency rather than an honest intellectual pursuit. Doubt, in LDS culture, is not a doorway to deeper faith \u2014 it is a warning sign to be confessed and corrected. For those who cannot silence their questions, the social consequences can be devastating: strained marriages, fractured family relationships, and the slow suffocation of an identity built entirely within the walls of a community that demands absolute loyalty in return for belonging.<\/p>\n<p class=\"my-2 [&amp;+p]:mt-4 [&amp;_strong:has(+br)]:inline-block [&amp;_strong:has(+br)]:pb-2\">The emotional wounds cut even deeper for LGBTQ members and women navigating the Church&#8217;s rigid positions on sexuality and gender roles. For LGBTQ Latter-day Saints, the experience of simply existing within the Church&#8217;s doctrinal framework carries a <a href=\"https:\/\/scholarsarchive.byu.edu\/cgi\/viewcontent.cgi?article=11175&amp;context=etd\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener\"><strong>documented psychological toll<\/strong><\/a>. A peer-reviewed study found that 75.2% of LGBTQ LDS participants experienced guilt and shame directly linked to their religious beliefs about their own identity. Peer-reviewed research further confirms that the conflict between sexual identity and LDS doctrine is a measurable risk factor for depression and suicidality among young members. In past decades, BYU students who privately sought help from Church leaders regarding their sexuality were, in some cases, referred to electroconvulsive conversion therapy \u2014 an experience survivors describe as both physically painful and deeply humiliating. And when the Church issued its 2015 policy labeling members in same-sex marriages as apostates and barring their children from baptism, the LDS LGBTQ community experienced what the president of Affirmation described as widespread psychological trauma, with a documented spike in youth suicides that drew national media attention.<\/p>\n<figure id=\"attachment_6385\" aria-describedby=\"caption-attachment-6385\" style=\"width: 252px\" class=\"wp-caption alignright\"><img loading=\"lazy\" decoding=\"async\" class=\"size-medium wp-image-6385\" src=\"https:\/\/novus2.com\/righteouscause\/wp-content\/uploads\/2026\/02\/the-tanners-252x300.jpg\" alt=\"\" width=\"252\" height=\"300\" srcset=\"https:\/\/novus2.com\/righteouscause\/wp-content\/uploads\/2026\/02\/the-tanners-252x300.jpg 252w, https:\/\/novus2.com\/righteouscause\/wp-content\/uploads\/2026\/02\/the-tanners-859x1024.jpg 859w, https:\/\/novus2.com\/righteouscause\/wp-content\/uploads\/2026\/02\/the-tanners-126x150.jpg 126w, https:\/\/novus2.com\/righteouscause\/wp-content\/uploads\/2026\/02\/the-tanners-768x916.jpg 768w, https:\/\/novus2.com\/righteouscause\/wp-content\/uploads\/2026\/02\/the-tanners-300x358.jpg 300w, https:\/\/novus2.com\/righteouscause\/wp-content\/uploads\/2026\/02\/the-tanners-850x1014.jpg 850w, https:\/\/novus2.com\/righteouscause\/wp-content\/uploads\/2026\/02\/the-tanners.jpg 1101w\" sizes=\"auto, (max-width: 252px) 100vw, 252px\" \/><figcaption id=\"caption-attachment-6385\" class=\"wp-caption-text\"><em>No examination of Mormon defectors can be complete without beginning with Jerald and Sandra Tanner, the husband-and-wife team who essentially created the field of critical Mormon studies as a sustained scholarly enterprise spanning multiple decades of dedicated research.<\/em><\/figcaption><\/figure>\n<p class=\"my-2 [&amp;+p]:mt-4 [&amp;_strong:has(+br)]:inline-block [&amp;_strong:has(+br)]:pb-2\"><a href=\"https:\/\/www.mormonstories.org\/home\/truth-claims\/women-in-mormonism\/\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener\"><strong>Women in the Church<\/strong><\/a> face a parallel \u2014 if quieter \u2014 form of institutional marginalization. Mormon women cannot hold the priesthood, cannot exercise financial authority without male supervision, cannot establish budgets for their own organizations without a bishop&#8217;s approval, and were not even consulted before the Church&#8217;s foundational &#8220;Proclamation on the Family&#8221; was issued in their name. The Church vigorously opposed the Equal Rights Amendment in the 1970s and excommunicated outspoken feminist advocate Sonia Johnson for daring to challenge its patriarchal power structure.<span class=\"inline-flex\" aria-label=\"Women in the Church | Gender Roles, History &amp; Experiences\" data-state=\"closed\">\u200b<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"my-2 [&amp;+p]:mt-4 [&amp;_strong:has(+br)]:inline-block [&amp;_strong:has(+br)]:pb-2\">And for those who finally walk away, the stories are rarely simple \u2014 as documented in our essay,\u00a0<strong>&#8220;<a href=\"https:\/\/novus2.com\/righteouscause\/2026\/02\/04\/the-most-prominent-latter-day-saint-defectors-who-why-where\/\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener\"><em>The Most Prominent Latter-day Saint Defectors: Who? Why? Where?<\/em><\/a>&#8220;<\/strong> \u2014 where the journeys of twenty of the most prominent individuals who left the LDS Church reveal a recurring pattern of disillusionment, doubt, and courageous departure. The temple ceremonies, once revered as the most sacred experiences of their lives, can transform into haunting symbols of manipulation \u2014 rituals they were never honestly prepared for, never given the full theological context to evaluate, and never truly free to refuse without risking the loss of family relationships, community standing, and their eternal standing before God.<\/p>\n<h3><span style=\"color: #800000;\"><strong>Scientology<\/strong><\/span><\/h3>\n<p class=\"my-2 [&amp;+p]:mt-4 [&amp;_strong:has(+br)]:inline-block [&amp;_strong:has(+br)]:pb-2\">Similarly, former Scientologists have produced a staggering volume of testimony about the manipulative and often predatory tactics employed within the organization. The notorious\u00a0<strong>&#8220;<a href=\"https:\/\/en.wikipedia.org\/wiki\/Fair_game_(Scientology)\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener\">Fair Game<\/a>&#8221; <\/strong>policy\u00a0\u2014 codified in writing by L. Ron Hubbard himself \u2014 formally authorized the targeting of critics and defectors with harassment, character assassination, surveillance, and legal warfare. Under Fair Game, those declared &#8220;<a href=\"https:\/\/en.wikipedia.org\/wiki\/Suppressive_person\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener\"><strong>Suppressive Persons<\/strong><\/a>&#8221; by the Church are considered, in Hubbard&#8217;s own words, to have <em>&#8220;no rights of any kind&#8221;<\/em> and may be <em>&#8220;tricked, sued, lied to, or destroyed&#8221;<\/em> without discipline from the organization. Courts have confirmed the policy&#8217;s existence and ongoing use, with attorneys documenting systematic harassment campaigns against former members as recently as 2024.<\/p>\n<p class=\"my-2 [&amp;+p]:mt-4 [&amp;_strong:has(+br)]:inline-block [&amp;_strong:has(+br)]:pb-2\">The auditing process \u2014 marketed to recruits as a transformative path to personal enlightenment \u2014 carries a far darker dimension that only becomes apparent from the inside. Auditing sessions require members to disclose their most intimate secrets, fears, and past transgressions, all of which are meticulously recorded and kept on permanent file by the Church. Former members consistently report that this <a href=\"https:\/\/www.shortform.com\/books\/blog\/how-does-scientology-control-its-members.html#:~:text=the%20fear%20of%20having%20personal%20secrets%20exposed%20can%20be%20a%20powerful%20motivator%20for%20continued%20compliance%20with%20the%20church's%20demands.\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener\"><strong>personal information<\/strong><\/a> is weaponized against those who later attempt to leave or speak out \u2014 functioning not as a confessional, but as an institutional blackmail archive.<\/p>\n<p class=\"my-2 [&amp;+p]:mt-4 [&amp;_strong:has(+br)]:inline-block [&amp;_strong:has(+br)]:pb-2\">The\u00a0<a href=\"https:\/\/en.wikipedia.org\/wiki\/Sea_Org\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener\"><strong>Sea Organization<\/strong><\/a> \u2014 Scientology&#8217;s elite clergy \u2014 represents perhaps the most disturbing dimension of the organization&#8217;s labor practices. Members of the Sea Org are required to sign a symbolic billion-year contract and routinely work in excess of 100 hours per week for compensation that has been documented at as little as pennies per hour. Lawsuits filed in California and elsewhere have accused the Church of human trafficking and forced labor, with plaintiffs describing conditions beginning as young as age ten. Members who attempt to leave are frequently presented with a &#8220;<a href=\"https:\/\/www.reddit.com\/r\/scientology\/comments\/192k5li\/freeloader_debt\/\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener\"><strong>Freeloader Bill<\/strong><\/a>&#8221; \u2014 invoices for training and auditing received during their service, totaling in some documented cases over $180,000, a financial trap deliberately designed to make departure feel economically impossible.<\/p>\n<p class=\"my-2 [&amp;+p]:mt-4 [&amp;_strong:has(+br)]:inline-block [&amp;_strong:has(+br)]:pb-2\">The financial demands of ascending Scientology&#8217;s &#8220;<strong><a href=\"https:\/\/en.wikipedia.org\/wiki\/The_Bridge_to_Total_Freedom\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener\">Bridge to Total Freedom<\/a>&#8220;<\/strong>\u00a0are equally staggering. The full cost of progressing through all auditing levels and courses has been estimated at $300,000 to $500,000 or more, with members routinely pressured by Church registrars to take out loans, liquidate retirement savings, and max out credit cards to fund their spiritual advancement. The promise of revelation at the upper levels of the Bridge \u2014 including the closely guarded secrets of OT III, Hubbard&#8217;s cosmological narrative about the galactic overlord Xenu \u2014 is dangled just far enough ahead to keep members financially committed, spiritually dependent, and psychologically invested in a journey that the Church ensures they can never quite complete.<\/p>\n<p class=\"my-2 [&amp;+p]:mt-4 [&amp;_strong:has(+br)]:inline-block [&amp;_strong:has(+br)]:pb-2\">Mike Rinder, a former upper-level Scientologist, discusses how Scientology is rife with doctrine that not only conflicts with societal and cultural norms but flies in the face of common sense. Rinder spent nearly five decades inside the Church of Scientology, rising to serve as a member of its highest governing body, the Sea Organization, and as the church&#8217;s global spokesperson \u2014 making him one of the most authoritative voices to ever speak out against the institution he once defended. Sadly, Rinder passed away on December 5, 2024, leaving behind a legacy as one of Scientology&#8217;s most courageous and consequential critics, whose candid testimony helped untold numbers of people understand the manipulative systems at the heart of the organization.<\/p>\n<blockquote><p><span style=\"color: #000080;\"><strong>It\u2019s all on You, Dude<\/strong><\/span><\/p>\n<figure id=\"attachment_1182\" aria-describedby=\"caption-attachment-1182\" style=\"width: 300px\" class=\"wp-caption alignright\"><img loading=\"lazy\" decoding=\"async\" class=\"wp-image-1182 size-medium\" src=\"https:\/\/novus2.com\/righteouscause\/wp-content\/uploads\/2024\/05\/mike-rinder-300x200.jpeg\" alt=\"\" width=\"300\" height=\"200\" srcset=\"https:\/\/novus2.com\/righteouscause\/wp-content\/uploads\/2024\/05\/mike-rinder-300x200.jpeg 300w, https:\/\/novus2.com\/righteouscause\/wp-content\/uploads\/2024\/05\/mike-rinder-1024x682.jpeg 1024w, https:\/\/novus2.com\/righteouscause\/wp-content\/uploads\/2024\/05\/mike-rinder-150x100.jpeg 150w, https:\/\/novus2.com\/righteouscause\/wp-content\/uploads\/2024\/05\/mike-rinder-768x511.jpeg 768w, https:\/\/novus2.com\/righteouscause\/wp-content\/uploads\/2024\/05\/mike-rinder-1536x1022.jpeg 1536w, https:\/\/novus2.com\/righteouscause\/wp-content\/uploads\/2024\/05\/mike-rinder-850x566.jpeg 850w, https:\/\/novus2.com\/righteouscause\/wp-content\/uploads\/2024\/05\/mike-rinder.jpeg 2048w\" sizes=\"auto, (max-width: 300px) 100vw, 300px\" \/><figcaption id=\"caption-attachment-1182\" class=\"wp-caption-text\"><span style=\"color: #000000;\"><em>Ex-Scientologist Mike Rinder, who was completely rejected by his entire family after leaving the Church of Scientology, knows firsthand the cost of walking away from a high-control group. He discusses cognitive dissonance <a href=\"https:\/\/www.mikerindersblog.org\/cognitive-dissonance-2\/\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener\"><strong>in his blog<\/strong><\/a>: &#8220;Anybody who\u2019s ever been affiliated with a religion has experienced cognitive dissonance in spades. Cult members face this phenomenon on a daily basis.&#8221;<\/em><\/span><\/figcaption><\/figure>\n<p><em>LRH carefully crafted Scientology so that when members ran into therapy technique and church policy that didn\u2019t make sense\u2014cognitive dissonance\u2014they would blame themselves for any discord they felt. Feelings of doubt, dissension, or disharmony were the result of something they did, some misunderstood word they bypassed, some crime they committed, were withholding, and didn\u2019t want revealed.<\/em><\/p>\n<p><em>LRH knew his tech was flawed and that most of his theories flew in the face of conventional science. And therefore, he kept having to formulate and adjust tech and policy to counter members\u2019 cognitive dissonance. When that didn\u2019t work, he eventually became a crazy recluse\u2014which is another prime example with which Scientologists are forced to contend. If the man was such a powerful thetan\u2014the biggest spiritual being on the planet\u2014why did he go into hiding and eventually die a sick and broken man? How do church members reconcile that? The answer: Just like those cult members who had to bend their minds around a world not destroyed by flood, Scientologists are taught to believe that LRH had to \u201cdrop his body\u201d in order to handle the rest of the universe.<\/em><\/p>\n<p><em><span style=\"color: #000080;\"><strong>Cognitive dissonance makes it extremely difficult to talk reasonably with members of a cult,<\/strong><\/span> as they\u2019ve been trained to justify what they\u2019ve been taught with one, crazy, harebrained excuse after another. Everything from prohibiting blood transfusions, to females not showing their faces in public, to believing that millions of years ago, at the behest of an evil galactic overlord, our spiritual selves were frozen and shipped to Earth in spaceships looking like old DC-8s\u2014and oh yeah\u2026dropped into volcanoes.<\/em><\/p><\/blockquote>\n<h2><span style=\"color: #000080;\"><strong>Additional comparisons<\/strong><\/span><\/h2>\n<h3 style=\"text-align: left;\"><span style=\"color: #800000;\"><strong>Claims of Exclusivity and Unique Statuses<\/strong><\/span><\/h3>\n<p class=\"my-2 [&amp;+p]:mt-4 [&amp;_strong:has(+br)]:inline-block [&amp;_strong:has(+br)]:pb-2\">Both Scientology and Mormonism make a breathtaking claim \u2014 that they alone possess the divine keys to ultimate spiritual or philosophical truth, eternal progression, and a salvation unavailable anywhere else on earth. This carefully cultivated aura of exclusivity is no accident. It is a foundational architectural feature of both systems, designed to distinguish the initiated from the uninitiated, the worthy from the unworthy, the enlightened from the spiritually blind.<\/p>\n<p class=\"my-2 [&amp;+p]:mt-4 [&amp;_strong:has(+br)]:inline-block [&amp;_strong:has(+br)]:pb-2\">The promise of secret knowledge and elevated status is, in both traditions, among the most powerful psychological tools in the institutional arsenal. For those on the inside \u2014 those who have paid the price of admission through conformity, compliance, and financial sacrifice \u2014 it forges an intense sense of belonging, a conviction that they are among the chosen few who have glimpsed what the rest of humanity cannot see. <span style=\"color: #000080;\"><strong>That bond can feel intoxicating. It can also become a prison.<\/strong><\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"my-2 [&amp;+p]:mt-4 [&amp;_strong:has(+br)]:inline-block [&amp;_strong:has(+br)]:pb-2\">For those who fall short \u2014 who cannot afford the next level, who fail the worthiness interview, who begin to ask the wrong questions \u2014 the message is equally powerful and far more devastating:\u00a0<span style=\"color: #800000;\"><strong><em>you are not enough<\/em><\/strong><\/span>. The same exclusivity that unites the inner circle quietly marginalizes, shames, and alienates those on its edges. Families are fractured. Friendships dissolve along invisible lines of spiritual rank. And individuals who dare to walk away often find themselves cut off not only from their community, but from their entire sense of identity and purpose.<\/p>\n<p class=\"my-2 [&amp;+p]:mt-4 [&amp;_strong:has(+br)]:inline-block [&amp;_strong:has(+br)]:pb-2\">This dynamic demands a reckoning. When spiritual exclusivity becomes a mechanism of control \u2014 when the promise of divine knowledge is leveraged to retain members through fear, shame, and social isolation rather than genuine transformation \u2014 the ethical foundations of that system deserve unflinching scrutiny.<\/p>\n<h3><span style=\"color: #000080;\"><em><strong>Mormonism<\/strong> <\/em><\/span><\/h3>\n<figure id=\"attachment_6949\" aria-describedby=\"caption-attachment-6949\" style=\"width: 350px\" class=\"wp-caption alignright\"><img loading=\"lazy\" decoding=\"async\" class=\"wp-image-6949\" src=\"https:\/\/novus2.com\/righteouscause\/wp-content\/uploads\/2026\/03\/generated-image-14-1-300x184.png\" alt=\"\" width=\"350\" height=\"215\" srcset=\"https:\/\/novus2.com\/righteouscause\/wp-content\/uploads\/2026\/03\/generated-image-14-1-300x184.png 300w, https:\/\/novus2.com\/righteouscause\/wp-content\/uploads\/2026\/03\/generated-image-14-1-150x92.png 150w, https:\/\/novus2.com\/righteouscause\/wp-content\/uploads\/2026\/03\/generated-image-14-1-768x471.png 768w, https:\/\/novus2.com\/righteouscause\/wp-content\/uploads\/2026\/03\/generated-image-14-1.png 800w\" sizes=\"auto, (max-width: 350px) 100vw, 350px\" \/><figcaption id=\"caption-attachment-6949\" class=\"wp-caption-text\"><em>According to Joseph Smith&#8217;s 1838 account of the First Vision, he was told by Jesus Christ that all existing Christian churches were wrong and their creeds were &#8220;an abomination in his sight&#8221;. The professors were described as corrupt, teaching commandments of men while denying the power of godliness. This necessitated a &#8220;restoration of all things.&#8221; The phrase &#8220;restoration of all things&#8221; is not explicitly stated in the 1838 First Vision account itself \u2014 it is a theological conclusion drawn from the broader Latter-day Saint restoration narrative.<\/em><\/figcaption><\/figure>\n<p class=\"my-2 [&amp;+p]:mt-4 [&amp;_strong:has(+br)]:inline-block [&amp;_strong:has(+br)]:pb-2\">Mormonism makes a claim so audacious that it staggers the imagination: that every Christian church on the face of the earth fell into total apostasy shortly after the death of the original apostles, that the true Gospel of Jesus Christ was lost to mankind for nearly two thousand years, and that God Himself chose an obscure, nineteen-year-old farm boy in upstate New York to single-handedly restore it. That young man was Joseph Smith \u2014 and according to LDS theology, his divine commission was not merely to reform a corrupted church or revive a dormant faith. It was to rebuild the Kingdom of God from the ground up, brick by brick, revelation by revelation, as the sole authorized representative of the Almighty on earth.<\/p>\n<p class=\"my-2 [&amp;+p]:mt-4 [&amp;_strong:has(+br)]:inline-block [&amp;_strong:has(+br)]:pb-2\">This claim of exclusive divine authority is not a peripheral feature of LDS theology. It is its beating heart. The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints does not present itself as one valid Christian tradition among many. It presents itself as the\u00a0<em>only<\/em>\u00a0true church \u2014 the singular institution bearing the restored priesthood authority, the only organization through which saving ordinances can be performed and recognized by God. Every other denomination, however sincere, however ancient, however theologically rich, is regarded as operating without divine authorization.<\/p>\n<p class=\"my-2 [&amp;+p]:mt-4 [&amp;_strong:has(+br)]:inline-block [&amp;_strong:has(+br)]:pb-2\">But the theological ambition of Mormonism reaches far beyond even this extraordinary claim. At the summit of LDS doctrine stands a teaching so radical that it remains largely concealed from investigators and new converts until they are deeply embedded in the faith: the doctrine of\u00a0<strong>exaltation<\/strong>, or eternal progression. Faithful Latter-day Saints who honor their covenants, endure to the end, and attain the Celestial Kingdom&#8217;s highest degree do not merely enter heaven \u2014 they become\u00a0<em>gods<\/em>. They inherit their own worlds. They create spirit children. They preside over eternal kingdoms as divine beings, following a path blazed by the very God they worship \u2014 who was once, according to the famous Sermon in the Grove delivered by Joseph Smith in 1844, a mortal man Himself.<\/p>\n<p class=\"my-2 [&amp;+p]:mt-4 [&amp;_strong:has(+br)]:inline-block [&amp;_strong:has(+br)]:pb-2\">Undergirding all of this is the Church&#8217;s insistence that its living prophet \u2014 currently the President of the Church \u2014 receives direct, binding revelation from God in real time, distinguishing LDS leadership from every other Christian denomination on earth. The prophet speaks. Heaven listens. And the faithful are expected to follow without hesitation, trusting that the man at the podium in General Conference carries the full weight of divine authority behind every word.<\/p>\n<p class=\"my-2 [&amp;+p]:mt-4 [&amp;_strong:has(+br)]:inline-block [&amp;_strong:has(+br)]:pb-2\">It is a theological architecture of breathtaking scope \u2014 and one that demands the most rigorous and unflinching scrutiny.<\/p>\n<h3><span style=\"color: #000080;\"><em><strong>Scientology<\/strong><\/em><\/span><\/h3>\n<p class=\"my-2 [&amp;+p]:mt-4 [&amp;_strong:has(+br)]:inline-block [&amp;_strong:has(+br)]:pb-2\">Scientology does not present itself as a religion in any conventional sense \u2014 and that distinction is entirely by design. Instead, it boldly positions itself as a\u00a0<em>spiritual technology<\/em>: a precise, systematic, and purportedly scientific pathway to total spiritual freedom, built not on the shifting sands of faith or belief, but on what its founder, L. Ron Hubbard, claimed were immutable, empirically verifiable laws of the human mind and spirit. Where Christianity asks you to believe, Scientology promises to <em>prove<\/em>. Where other traditions offer hope, Scientology offers a\u00a0<em>procedure<\/em>. It is, in Hubbard&#8217;s own framing, nothing less than the first truly workable science of the human soul \u2014 and it will cost you everything to find out if he was right.<\/p>\n<p>Scientology\u2019s &#8220;<a href=\"https:\/\/cesnur.net\/wp-content\/uploads\/2023\/11\/tjoc_7_6_4_miklovicz.pdf\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener\"><strong>spiritual technology<\/strong><\/a>&#8221;\u00a0\u00a0Dianetics (1950s) was transformed into a formal, trademarked religious system, utilizing engineering terms like &#8220;Standard Operating Procedure&#8221; (SOP) to describe auditing and training. It transitioned from a mental therapy to a spiritual practice aimed at addressing the soul (theta), with the <a href=\"https:\/\/en.wikipedia.org\/wiki\/E-meter\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener\"><strong>E-meter<\/strong><\/a> serving as a key technological tool to measure emotional states. This &#8220;Standard Tech&#8221; is now managed by the Religious Technology Center to ensure precise application and orthodoxy.<\/p>\n<p class=\"my-2 [&amp;+p]:mt-4 [&amp;_strong:has(+br)]:inline-block [&amp;_strong:has(+br)]:pb-2\">At the center of Scientology&#8217;s cosmology sits a revelation so breathtaking, so world-historically transformative, that one can only marvel at the stunning incompetence of every philosopher, theologian, scientist, and spiritual teacher who ever lived for failing to stumble upon it first. Socrates missed it. Aristotle missed it. Augustine, Aquinas, Kant, Hegel, Einstein \u2014 all of them, apparently, just not quite smart enough. It took a pulp science fiction writer from Tilden, Nebraska, to finally crack the code of human existence that had eluded the combined intellectual firepower of civilization for several thousand years.<\/p>\n<figure id=\"attachment_6950\" aria-describedby=\"caption-attachment-6950\" style=\"width: 350px\" class=\"wp-caption alignright\"><img loading=\"lazy\" decoding=\"async\" class=\"wp-image-6950\" src=\"https:\/\/novus2.com\/righteouscause\/wp-content\/uploads\/2026\/03\/Gemini_Generated_Image_ryj9yqryj9yqryj9-300x300.png\" alt=\"\" width=\"350\" height=\"350\" srcset=\"https:\/\/novus2.com\/righteouscause\/wp-content\/uploads\/2026\/03\/Gemini_Generated_Image_ryj9yqryj9yqryj9-300x300.png 300w, https:\/\/novus2.com\/righteouscause\/wp-content\/uploads\/2026\/03\/Gemini_Generated_Image_ryj9yqryj9yqryj9-150x150.png 150w, https:\/\/novus2.com\/righteouscause\/wp-content\/uploads\/2026\/03\/Gemini_Generated_Image_ryj9yqryj9yqryj9-768x768.png 768w, https:\/\/novus2.com\/righteouscause\/wp-content\/uploads\/2026\/03\/Gemini_Generated_Image_ryj9yqryj9yqryj9-144x144.png 144w, https:\/\/novus2.com\/righteouscause\/wp-content\/uploads\/2026\/03\/Gemini_Generated_Image_ryj9yqryj9yqryj9-850x850.png 850w, https:\/\/novus2.com\/righteouscause\/wp-content\/uploads\/2026\/03\/Gemini_Generated_Image_ryj9yqryj9yqryj9.png 1024w\" sizes=\"auto, (max-width: 350px) 100vw, 350px\" \/><figcaption id=\"caption-attachment-6950\" class=\"wp-caption-text\"><em>Ever wonder what a soul looks like after trillions of years? We fired up Google Gemini&#8217;s Nano Banana image model to visualize cosmic intelligences spanning countless lifetimes, and the results are absolutely out of this world! Unlocking the universe&#8217;s oldest secrets, one pixel at a time.\u00a0<\/em><\/figcaption><\/figure>\n<p class=\"my-2 [&amp;+p]:mt-4 [&amp;_strong:has(+br)]:inline-block [&amp;_strong:has(+br)]:pb-2\">The revelation? Every human being is, at their core, an immortal spiritual being called a\u00a0<a href=\"https:\/\/en.wikipedia.org\/wiki\/Thetan\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener\"><strong>thetan<\/strong><\/a>\u00a0\u2014 an entity of virtually limitless power and perception that has become tragically imprisoned within the prison of its own forgotten history. Presumably, the greatest minds in human history were simply too busy developing mathematics, medicine, democracy, and the theory of relativity to notice that they were actually ancient cosmic intelligences operating inside meat-based vehicles. One shudders to think what Plato might have accomplished had he only had access to an e-meter.<\/p>\n<p class=\"my-2 [&amp;+p]:mt-4 [&amp;_strong:has(+br)]:inline-block [&amp;_strong:has(+br)]:pb-2\">Thetans, according to Hubbard, are not merely old souls carrying the wounds of this lifetime. They are cosmic intelligences who have lived\u00a0<em>trillions<\/em>\u00a0of years across countless lifetimes \u2014 including, critically, lifetimes within extraterrestrial civilizations whose catastrophic traumas are still lodged, invisibly and devastatingly, within the unconscious mind. That this staggering truth escaped the attention of every neuroscientist, psychologist, and spiritual master in recorded history is, we are apparently expected to accept, simply one of those things.<\/p>\n<p class=\"my-2 [&amp;+p]:mt-4 [&amp;_strong:has(+br)]:inline-block [&amp;_strong:has(+br)]:pb-2\">These accumulated traumas \u2014 called\u00a0<a href=\"https:\/\/www.britannica.com\/topic\/engram-Scientology\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener\"><strong>engrams<\/strong><\/a>\u00a0\u2014 are the source of every human limitation, every irrational fear, every chronic failure, every disease of the body and dysfunction of the mind. They are the chains. And Scientology, it claims, holds the only key.<\/p>\n<p class=\"my-2 [&amp;+p]:mt-4 [&amp;_strong:has(+br)]:inline-block [&amp;_strong:has(+br)]:pb-2\">That key is\u00a0<a href=\"https:\/\/en.wikipedia.org\/wiki\/Auditing_(Scientology)\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener\"><strong>auditing<\/strong><\/a>\u00a0\u2014 a metered, one-on-one counseling process in which a trained auditor guides the subject through the systematic identification and erasure of engrams using a device called an E-meter, which measures subtle changes in the body&#8217;s electrical resistance. Session by session, level by level, the faithful Scientologist ascends\u00a0<span style=\"color: #000080;\"><strong>The Bridge to Total Freedom<\/strong><\/span>\u00a0\u2014 a carefully mapped hierarchy of spiritual grades that promises progressively extraordinary rewards: relief from anxiety, then clarity of mind, then the recovery of past-life memories, and finally, at the summit of the Bridge, the awesome and terrifying threshold of\u00a0<a href=\"https:\/\/www.britannica.com\/topic\/operating-thetan-level\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener\"><strong>Operating Thetan<\/strong><\/a>.<\/p>\n<p class=\"my-2 [&amp;+p]:mt-4 [&amp;_strong:has(+br)]:inline-block [&amp;_strong:has(+br)]:pb-2\">The OT levels \u2014 particularly the notorious\u00a0<a href=\"https:\/\/www.scientology-lies.com\/scientology\/levels\/ot-iii.html\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener\"><strong>OT III<\/strong><\/a>\u00a0\u2014 are among the most closely guarded secrets in contemporary religion. Reaching them requires years of auditing, absolute institutional loyalty, and expenditures that frequently exceed hundreds of thousands of dollars. What awaits at OT III is Hubbard&#8217;s account of\u00a0<a href=\"https:\/\/en.wikipedia.org\/wiki\/Xenu\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener\"><strong>Xenu<\/strong><\/a>, a galactic overlord who, 75 million years ago, allegedly transported billions of beings to Earth, destroyed them with hydrogen bombs, and implanted their disembodied souls \u2014 called\u00a0<strong>body thetans<\/strong>\u00a0\u2014 into the survivors, where they remain attached to human beings to this day, silently compounding their misery. At the upper OT levels, members are promised the recovery of abilities that defy the laws of physics: the capacity to control matter, energy, space, and time through thought alone \u2014 to operate, at last, as the godlike beings Hubbard insisted they always were.<\/p>\n<p class=\"my-2 [&amp;+p]:mt-4 [&amp;_strong:has(+br)]:inline-block [&amp;_strong:has(+br)]:pb-2\">It is a narrative of breathtaking ambition. It is also a narrative strategically designed so that its most extraordinary \u2014 and most scrutinized \u2014 claims are revealed only\u00a0<em>after<\/em>\u00a0years of financial investment, psychological conditioning, and social isolation from anyone who might call those claims into question.<\/p>\n<h2><span style=\"color: #000080;\"><strong>Criticisms of Scientology and the LDS Church<\/strong><\/span><\/h2>\n<h3 style=\"text-align: left;\"><span style=\"color: #800000;\"><strong>Focus of Criticism<\/strong><\/span><\/h3>\n<p class=\"my-2 [&amp;+p]:mt-4 [&amp;_strong:has(+br)]:inline-block [&amp;_strong:has(+br)]:pb-2\">The criticisms leveled against both Scientology and the LDS Church are neither fringe complaints nor the invention of hostile outsiders. They are substantive, well-documented, and shared by thousands of former members, independent historians, investigative journalists, and credentialed scholars who have examined these organizations with serious scholarly rigor.<\/p>\n<p class=\"my-2 [&amp;+p]:mt-4 [&amp;_strong:has(+br)]:inline-block [&amp;_strong:has(+br)]:pb-2\"><span style=\"color: #000080;\"><strong>Scientology faces perhaps the most severe institutional indictment<\/strong><\/span> of any organization operating under the legal protection of religious status in the modern era. Critics \u2014 including former high-ranking officials who spent decades at the organization&#8217;s inner core \u2014 paint a portrait of a system architected from the ground up around financial extraction and psychological dependency. The tiered belief structure of the Bridge to Total Freedom is not merely a spiritual ladder; it is a revenue engine, deliberately designed so that the most tantalizing promises of enlightenment are always one enormously expensive step beyond the member&#8217;s current reach. The accusations of mind control are not metaphorical. Former members describe a sophisticated apparatus of thought-stopping techniques, sleep deprivation, social isolation, and information control that systematically dismantles a member&#8217;s capacity for independent critical thinking. And for those who finally summon the courage to walk away, the organization&#8217;s response has been documented repeatedly in court records and investigative journalism: surveillance, harassment, the weaponization of auditing disclosures, and the destruction of personal and professional reputations with ruthless institutional efficiency.<\/p>\n<p class=\"my-2 [&amp;+p]:mt-4 [&amp;_strong:has(+br)]:inline-block [&amp;_strong:has(+br)]:pb-2\"><span style=\"color: #000080;\"><strong>The LDS Church operates with considerably more cultural respectability<\/strong> <\/span>\u2014 and in many respects deserves it. Its members are, by and large, among the most generous, community-minded, and morally earnest people in American religious life. But respectability does not immunize an institution from scrutiny, and the criticisms directed at the Church are serious and historically grounded. The Book of Mormon&#8217;s claimed historical narrative \u2014 ancient Israelites sailing to the Americas and building civilizations that left no trace in the archaeological or genetic record \u2014 has been examined exhaustively by secular and believing scholars alike, with no corroborating physical evidence discovered despite nearly two centuries of searching. The Church&#8217;s historical concealment of its temple ceremonies raises profound questions about informed consent, particularly when those ceremonies contain elements \u2014 including, until 2019, a ritual throat-slitting gesture symbolizing the penalty for revealing sacred oaths \u2014 that members are never warned about before their first temple visit. And the Church&#8217;s 19th-century practice of polygamy, including the documented marriages of Joseph Smith to women as young as fourteen and to wives already married to living husbands, remains an open historical wound that institutional cordiality cannot close.<\/p>\n<p class=\"my-2 [&amp;+p]:mt-4 [&amp;_strong:has(+br)]:inline-block [&amp;_strong:has(+br)]:pb-2\">Both organizations demand an uncomfortable but necessary question from anyone willing to look honestly: When the gap between what an institution\u00a0<em>proclaims<\/em>\u00a0and what it\u00a0<em>practices<\/em>\u00a0becomes wide enough, at what point does faith become complicity?<\/p>\n<h3><span style=\"color: #800000;\"><strong>Orders of Magnitude<\/strong><\/span><\/h3>\n<p class=\"my-2 [&amp;+p]:mt-4 [&amp;_strong:has(+br)]:inline-block [&amp;_strong:has(+br)]:pb-2\">The scale of criticism leveled against both Scientology and the LDS Church is not merely substantial \u2014 it is overwhelming, relentless, and impossible to dismiss as the product of bias or bad faith. What has emerged over decades is nothing short of a vast, converging chorus of dissent: thousands of books, investigative documentaries, academic studies, court filings, government inquiries, and the raw, unfiltered testimonies of former members who walked away from everything they had ever known to tell the truth about what they experienced inside.<\/p>\n<figure id=\"attachment_6951\" aria-describedby=\"caption-attachment-6951\" style=\"width: 275px\" class=\"wp-caption alignright\"><img loading=\"lazy\" decoding=\"async\" class=\"wp-image-6951\" src=\"https:\/\/novus2.com\/righteouscause\/wp-content\/uploads\/2026\/03\/Leah-Remini-225x300.jpg\" alt=\"\" width=\"275\" height=\"367\" srcset=\"https:\/\/novus2.com\/righteouscause\/wp-content\/uploads\/2026\/03\/Leah-Remini-225x300.jpg 225w, https:\/\/novus2.com\/righteouscause\/wp-content\/uploads\/2026\/03\/Leah-Remini-768x1024.jpg 768w, https:\/\/novus2.com\/righteouscause\/wp-content\/uploads\/2026\/03\/Leah-Remini-113x150.jpg 113w, https:\/\/novus2.com\/righteouscause\/wp-content\/uploads\/2026\/03\/Leah-Remini-1152x1536.jpg 1152w, https:\/\/novus2.com\/righteouscause\/wp-content\/uploads\/2026\/03\/Leah-Remini-300x400.jpg 300w, https:\/\/novus2.com\/righteouscause\/wp-content\/uploads\/2026\/03\/Leah-Remini-850x1133.jpg 850w, https:\/\/novus2.com\/righteouscause\/wp-content\/uploads\/2026\/03\/Leah-Remini.jpg 1536w\" sizes=\"auto, (max-width: 275px) 100vw, 275px\" \/><figcaption id=\"caption-attachment-6951\" class=\"wp-caption-text\"><em>Leah Remini: Scientology and the Aftermath was an Emmy-winning A&amp;E docuseries (2016\u20132019) where actress Leah Remini and former high-ranking member Mike Rinder exposed alleged abuse and the policy of &#8220;disconnection&#8221; within the Church of Scientology. The show ran for 3 seasons, winning two Primetime Emmys for Outstanding Informational Series.<\/em><\/figcaption><\/figure>\n<p class=\"my-2 [&amp;+p]:mt-4 [&amp;_strong:has(+br)]:inline-block [&amp;_strong:has(+br)]:pb-2\"><em><span style=\"color: #000080;\"><strong>For Scientology,<\/strong><\/span><\/em> the indictment is sweeping. Pulitzer Prize-winning journalist Lawrence Wright&#8217;s\u00a0<a href=\"https:\/\/www.amazon.com\/Going-Clear-Scientology-Hollywood-Prison\/dp\/0307745309\/ref=tmm_pap_swatch_0\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener\"><strong><em>Going Clear<\/em><\/strong><\/a>\u00a0\u2014 later adapted into an HBO documentary that shook the entertainment world \u2014 methodically dismantled the organization&#8217;s claims and exposed the machinery of control beneath them. Janet Reitman&#8217;s\u00a0<a href=\"https:\/\/www.amazon.com\/Inside-Scientology-Americas-Secretive-Religion\/dp\/0547750358\/ref=tmm_pap_swatch_0\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener\"><strong><em>Inside Scientology<\/em><\/strong><\/a>\u00a0offered a decade of investigative reporting distilled into a damning institutional portrait. The Emmy Award-winning television series\u00a0<a href=\"https:\/\/en.wikipedia.org\/wiki\/Leah_Remini:_Scientology_and_the_Aftermath\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener\"><strong><em>Leah Remini: Scientology and the Aftermath<\/em><\/strong><\/a>\u00a0gave voice to survivor after survivor, episode after episode, season after season \u2014 each account more harrowing than the last. These are not fringe voices whispering from the margins. These are documented, corroborated, legally tested accounts that have withstood enormous institutional pressure to be silenced.<\/p>\n<p class=\"my-2 [&amp;+p]:mt-4 [&amp;_strong:has(+br)]:inline-block [&amp;_strong:has(+br)]:pb-2\"><span style=\"color: #000080;\"><em><strong>For the LDS Church,<\/strong><\/em><\/span> the critical literature is equally vast. From Fawn Brodie&#8217;s landmark 1945 biography\u00a0<a href=\"https:\/\/novus2.com\/righteouscause\/wp-content\/uploads\/2026\/02\/No-Man-Knows-My-History.pdf\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener\"><strong><em>No Man Knows My History<\/em><\/strong><\/a> to the modern investigative journalism of The Salt Lake Tribune \u2014 a Pulitzer Prize-winning newspaper that has dedicated decades to holding the institution accountable \u2014 the documented concerns about LDS truth claims, financial opacity, and institutional control span generations and disciplines. Websites such as <a href=\"http:\/\/www.mormonthink.com\/\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener\"><strong>MormonThink<\/strong><\/a> and the <a href=\"https:\/\/novus2.com\/righteouscause\/wp-content\/uploads\/2026\/02\/CES-Letter.pdf\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener\"><strong>CES Letter<\/strong><\/a> have reached millions of current and former members with carefully sourced historical and doctrinal challenges that the Church has never meaningfully answered.<\/p>\n<p class=\"my-2 [&amp;+p]:mt-4 [&amp;_strong:has(+br)]:inline-block [&amp;_strong:has(+br)]:pb-2\">When criticism reaches this magnitude \u2014 when it spans continents, generations, courtrooms, newsrooms, and the personal histories of hundreds of thousands of ordinary men and women \u2014<span style=\"color: #000080;\"><strong> it ceases to be criticism at all. It becomes a reckoning.<\/strong><\/span><\/p>\n<h3><span style=\"color: #800000;\"><strong>In contrast to Orthodox Christianity<\/strong><\/span><\/h3>\n<figure id=\"attachment_6952\" aria-describedby=\"caption-attachment-6952\" style=\"width: 300px\" class=\"wp-caption alignright\"><img loading=\"lazy\" decoding=\"async\" class=\"size-medium wp-image-6952\" src=\"https:\/\/novus2.com\/righteouscause\/wp-content\/uploads\/2026\/03\/Le_massacre_des_Albigeois-300x269.jpg\" alt=\"\" width=\"300\" height=\"269\" srcset=\"https:\/\/novus2.com\/righteouscause\/wp-content\/uploads\/2026\/03\/Le_massacre_des_Albigeois-300x269.jpg 300w, https:\/\/novus2.com\/righteouscause\/wp-content\/uploads\/2026\/03\/Le_massacre_des_Albigeois-150x134.jpg 150w, https:\/\/novus2.com\/righteouscause\/wp-content\/uploads\/2026\/03\/Le_massacre_des_Albigeois.jpg 363w\" sizes=\"auto, (max-width: 300px) 100vw, 300px\" \/><figcaption id=\"caption-attachment-6952\" class=\"wp-caption-text\"><em>Criticism of Christianity wasn&#8217;t always met with polemic diatribes and apologetic dissertations. The massacre and broader <a href=\"https:\/\/simple.wikipedia.org\/wiki\/Albigensian_Crusade\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener\"><strong>Albigensian Crusade<\/strong><\/a> (1209\u20131229) were directly initiated by Pope Innocent III to eliminate the Cathars (Albigensians) in southern France, who were viewed as heretics due to their, in the eyes of Rome, fundamental criticism and rejection of Catholic doctrine, sacraments, and hierarchy.<\/em> Via Wikipedia. Public Domain.<\/figcaption><\/figure>\n<p class=\"my-2 [&amp;+p]:mt-4 [&amp;_strong:has(+br)]:inline-block [&amp;_strong:has(+br)]:pb-2\">Traditional orthodox Christianity, by contrast, occupies a fundamentally different position in the landscape of religious criticism. Critique of Christianity is ancient, diverse, and genuinely wide-ranging \u2014 originating from atheists, agnostics, secular philosophers, adherents of competing world religions, and even from reform movements within Christianity itself. It encompasses sweeping questions about the historical reliability of Scripture, the philosophical coherence of a triune God, the problem of evil and suffering, and the complicated legacy of the institutional Church across two millennia of history. These are serious questions, and honest Christianity has never been afraid to engage them.<\/p>\n<p class=\"my-2 [&amp;+p]:mt-4 [&amp;_strong:has(+br)]:inline-block [&amp;_strong:has(+br)]:pb-2\">But there is a crucial distinction that must not be overlooked. The criticism directed at Christianity, however voluminous, is largely theological and philosophical in nature. It debates ideas \u2014 the resurrection, the canon, the atonement, the existence of God. It does not, in the main, center on allegations of systematic psychological manipulation, financial exploitation, coercive exit penalties, government investigations, or the deliberate concealment of institutional practices from members who have given their lives to the faith.<\/p>\n<p class=\"my-2 [&amp;+p]:mt-4 [&amp;_strong:has(+br)]:inline-block [&amp;_strong:has(+br)]:pb-2\">The criticism aimed at Scientology and the LDS Church, by contrast, is concentrated, structural, and deeply personal. It is not primarily a debate about metaphysics. It is a documented indictment of organizational behavior \u2014 of what these institutions\u00a0<em>do<\/em>\u00a0to people, not merely what they\u00a0<em>believe<\/em>\u00a0about God. That distinction matters profoundly. Christianity has faced two thousand years of intellectual challenge and emerged with its core claims still standing. <span style=\"color: #000080;\"><strong>The question for Scientology and Mormonism is not whether their theology can survive scrutiny \u2014 it is whether their institutions can survive accountability.<\/strong><\/span><\/p>\n<h3><span style=\"color: #800000;\"><strong>Here&#8217;s why the difference exists<\/strong><\/span><\/h3>\n<p style=\"text-align: left;\">It&#8217;s important to note that both the LDS Church and Scientology have their defenses against these criticisms, and many of the claims are contested. <span style=\"color: #175c6b;\"><span style=\"color: #000000;\">Numerous books, documentaries, and testimonies from former members of both organizations have brought scrutiny to their secretive practices, financial demands, and allegations of control over members&#8217; lives. For Scientology, high-profile defectors like Leah Remini have brought attention to what they describe as coercive practices, including disconnection from family members critical of the church and aggressive legal tactics against dissenters. Similarly, the LDS Church has faced criticism over its historical revisionism, the treatment of women and minorities within the church, and past policies like the exclusion of Black members from the priesthood until 1978.<\/span><\/span><\/p>\n<h2 style=\"text-align: left;\"><span style=\"color: #000080;\"><strong>10 Things common to both Scientology and Mormonism<\/strong><\/span><\/h2>\n<p>Much of the foundational research informing this comparison draws upon the extensive documentation compiled by <a href=\"http:\/\/www.mormonthink.com\/glossary\/scientology.htm\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener\"><strong>MormonThink<\/strong><\/a>, an independent website maintained by active and former Latter-day Saints committed to presenting an honest, balanced examination of LDS Church history and doctrine. While MormonThink&#8217;s original analysis provided the research framework and evidentiary foundation for this discussion, the descriptions, observations, and commentary presented in the following ten points have been independently researched, freshly written, and expanded with additional context and theological perspective. The goal is not merely to catalog surface-level similarities between Scientology and Mormonism, but to examine what those parallels reveal about the deeper structural and psychological dynamics at work within both organizations \u2014 and what they mean for the men and women navigating life inside them.<\/p>\n<h3><span style=\"color: #800000;\"><strong>1 \u2013 Keeping secrets about the religion from its members<\/strong><\/span><\/h3>\n<p class=\"my-2 [&amp;+p]:mt-4 [&amp;_strong:has(+br)]:inline-block [&amp;_strong:has(+br)]:pb-2\">One of the most striking structural parallels between Scientology and Mormonism is the deliberate, staged concealment of each organization&#8217;s most controversial beliefs and practices from those on the outside \u2014 and even from members who have devoted years of their lives to the institution.<\/p>\n<p class=\"my-2 [&amp;+p]:mt-4 [&amp;_strong:has(+br)]:inline-block [&amp;_strong:has(+br)]:pb-2\">Scientology is uniquely transparent about its opacity. Prospective members and casual investigators are presented with a carefully curated public face \u2014 self-improvement courses, personality tests, and the accessible language of L. Ron Hubbard&#8217;s\u00a0<em>Dianetics<\/em>\u00a0\u2014 while the organization&#8217;s most theologically extraordinary claims remain locked behind years of costly advancement. Only members who have spent tens or hundreds of thousands of dollars ascending the Bridge to Total Freedom are gradually initiated into the deeper cosmological narrative, including the infamous OT III materials revealing Hubbard&#8217;s account of the galactic overlord Xenu and the origins of human suffering. Those who stumble upon these teachings prematurely are not celebrated for their curiosity \u2014 they are warned that unauthorized exposure to upper-level material can cause serious psychological harm. The secrecy is not incidental. It is the architecture.<\/p>\n<p class=\"my-2 [&amp;+p]:mt-4 [&amp;_strong:has(+br)]:inline-block [&amp;_strong:has(+br)]:pb-2\">Mormonism operates through a remarkably similar structure of graduated disclosure. Investigators attending missionary discussions and even lifelong Sunday-attending members are never informed about the full content of LDS temple ceremonies \u2014 the initiatory washings and anointings, the ceremonial robes, the secret names, or the elaborate system of signs, tokens, and passwords believed to be necessary for entrance into the celestial kingdom after death. The deep Masonic roots of the endowment ceremony \u2014 including elements such as the <a href=\"https:\/\/web.archive.org\/web\/20240516055646\/https:\/\/mormonismi.net\/temppeli\/temple_ritual_altered5_utlm.shtml\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener\"><strong>Five Points of Fellowship<\/strong><\/a>, a ritual posture borrowed directly from Freemasonry that was quietly removed from the ceremony in 1990 \u2014 are never disclosed to ordinary members, let alone to prospective converts. Joseph Smith was initiated into Freemasonry in March 1842, and within weeks had introduced the first version of the temple endowment, a chronological proximity that independent historians have found impossible to dismiss as a coincidence.<\/p>\n<p class=\"my-2 [&amp;+p]:mt-4 [&amp;_strong:has(+br)]:inline-block [&amp;_strong:has(+br)]:pb-2\">In both cases, the institutional logic is identical: reveal just enough to attract and retain, while reserving the most unusual \u2014 and most scrutinized \u2014 teachings for those already too financially, socially, and emotionally invested to walk away easily. It is a model that relies not on the strength of its secrets, but on the vulnerability of those from whom they are kept.<\/p>\n<h3><span style=\"color: #800000;\"><strong>2 \u2013 You&#8217;ll be lost without us<\/strong><\/span><\/h3>\n<p class=\"my-2 [&amp;+p]:mt-4 [&amp;_strong:has(+br)]:inline-block [&amp;_strong:has(+br)]:pb-2\">One of the most telling indicators of an institution&#8217;s true spiritual health is not what it promises its members \u2014 it is what happens to those members when they finally leave.<\/p>\n<p class=\"my-2 [&amp;+p]:mt-4 [&amp;_strong:has(+br)]:inline-block [&amp;_strong:has(+br)]:pb-2\">The documentary record on former Scientologists is unambiguous. From\u00a0<em>Leah Remini: Scientology and the Aftermath<\/em>\u00a0to\u00a0<em>Going Clear<\/em>\u00a0to countless independently produced interviews and testimonials, a consistent pattern emerges: men and women who spent years \u2014 sometimes decades \u2014 inside Scientology describe the moment of departure not as spiritual devastation, but as liberation. They speak of breathing freely for the first time. Of laughing without guilt. Of rebuilding relationships that the organization had systematically dismantled. Of rediscovering a sense of self that had been slowly erased through auditing, conformity demands, and institutional surveillance. The happiness they describe is not the fragile, performance-based contentment of those still striving to reach the next level of the Bridge \u2014 it is the deep, hard-won relief of people who have escaped something that was consuming them.<\/p>\n<p class=\"my-2 [&amp;+p]:mt-4 [&amp;_strong:has(+br)]:inline-block [&amp;_strong:has(+br)]:pb-2\">The testimony of former Latter-day Saints tells a remarkably similar story. A visit to post-Mormon communities \u2014 on platforms such as Reddit&#8217;s r\/exmormon, which boasts hundreds of thousands of members, or through the wealth of personal narratives collected at websites like ExMormon.org and TheMormonCurtain.com \u2014 reveals an overwhelming consensus among those who have left: life after the LDS Church, while often painful in transition, is experienced by the vast majority as profoundly more authentic, more joyful, and more free.<\/p>\n<p class=\"my-2 [&amp;+p]:mt-4 [&amp;_strong:has(+br)]:inline-block [&amp;_strong:has(+br)]:pb-2\">This is not a minor footnote. When the people who know an institution most intimately \u2014 who lived inside it, sacrificed for it, and built their entire identities around it \u2014 consistently report that their lives dramatically improved the moment they walked away, that collective witness constitutes a moral verdict that no institutional press release or apologetic rebuttal can credibly answer. Institutions that truly serve human flourishing do not typically produce refugees. They produce graduates.<\/p>\n<h3><span style=\"color: #800000;\"><strong>3 \u2013 Excessive financial conditions for Church membership<\/strong><\/span><\/h3>\n<p class=\"my-2 [&amp;+p]:mt-4 [&amp;_strong:has(+br)]:inline-block [&amp;_strong:has(+br)]:pb-2\">In Scientology, spiritual advancement is explicitly and unapologetically transactional. Members must progress through more than thirty sequential levels \u2014 a journey the Church calls the <em>Bridge to Total Freedom<\/em> \u2014 each requiring paid auditing sessions in which a trained practitioner guides the member through a process of psychological examination using a device called an E-meter. These sessions are not cheap. The cumulative cost of ascending the full Bridge has been estimated at anywhere from $300,000 to over $500,000, and members are routinely pressured by Church registrars to exhaust personal savings, liquidate retirement funds, and take on significant debt in pursuit of the next spiritual milestone. The higher levels \u2014 the Operating Thetan levels \u2014 are kept deliberately secret from those who have not yet paid their way to them, dangling the promise of extraordinary spiritual revelation just far enough ahead to keep members financially committed and psychologically dependent.<\/p>\n<div class=\"relative font-sans text-base text-foreground selection:bg-super\/50 selection:text-foreground dark:selection:bg-super\/10 dark:selection:text-super\">\n<div class=\"min-w-0 break-words [word-break:break-word]\">\n<div id=\"markdown-content-17\" class=\"gap-y-md after:clear-both after:block after:content-['']\" dir=\"auto\">\n<div class=\"has-inline-images my-2 first:mt-0 [&amp;:has([data-inline-type=image])+&amp;:has([data-inline-type=image])_[data-inline-type=image]]:hidden [&amp;:has(table)_[data-inline-type=image]]:hidden\">\n<div>\n<div>\n<div class=\"prose dark:prose-invert inline leading-relaxed break-words min-w-0 [word-break:break-word] prose-strong:font-bold [&amp;_&gt;*:first-child]:mt-0 [&amp;_&gt;*:last-child]:mb-0\">\n<p class=\"my-2 [&amp;+p]:mt-4 [&amp;_strong:has(+br)]:inline-block [&amp;_strong:has(+br)]:pb-2\">Mormonism operates through a different mechanism, but the underlying dynamic \u2014 spiritual access contingent upon financial compliance \u2014 is strikingly similar, and its consequences reach far beyond the individual believer. As documented extensively in a previous essay in this series,\u00a0<a href=\"https:\/\/novus2.com\/righteouscause\/2026\/03\/01\/the-lds-church-heavenly-fathers-wealthiest-subsidiary\/\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener\"><strong><em>The LDS Church: Heavenly Father&#8217;s Wealthiest Subsidiary<\/em><\/strong><\/a>, the humble thirty-five-cent tithe of a struggling widow in rural Mexico is not flowing into a modest congregational budget. It is flowing into the financial engine of one of the wealthiest religious institutions on the face of the earth \u2014 an organization sitting atop an estimated $293 billion in total assets, with an investment portfolio that grows faster than it can be spent. <span style=\"color: #000080;\"><strong>Tithing is not merely a spiritual discipline in the LDS Church. It is the foundational revenue mechanism of a global financial empire.<\/strong><\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"my-2 [&amp;+p]:mt-4 [&amp;_strong:has(+br)]:inline-block [&amp;_strong:has(+br)]:pb-2\">And yet the theological pressure to pay it remains absolute. Members are required to pay ten percent of their annual income as a condition of receiving a temple recommend \u2014 the physical card that unlocks access to Mormonism&#8217;s most sacred spaces and most essential ordinances. While LDS apologists correctly note that one can technically remain a Church member without paying tithing, the practical consequences of non-compliance are severe, far-reaching, and in LDS theology, eternal. Without a current temple recommend, a member cannot enter any LDS temple \u2014 and the stakes of that exclusion are not merely social. Temple ordinances, including the Endowment and celestial marriage sealing, are considered essential to achieving the highest degree of glory in the Celestial Kingdom. Non-tithe-payers cannot attend the temple wedding of their own child, the sealing of a grandchild, or participate in proxy ordinances for deceased ancestors. In a faith where family relationships are believed to extend into eternity itself, exclusion from these ceremonies carries a weight that is not merely painful \u2014 it is existential. For a member already struggling to keep the lights on, the choice is not simply between giving and not giving. It is between financial survival and spiritual belonging \u2014 and the institution collecting that ten percent has, by its own financial leadership&#8217;s admission, more money than it will ever need.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<\/div>\n<\/div>\n<\/div>\n<\/div>\n<\/div>\n<\/div>\n<h3><span style=\"color: #800000;\"><strong>4 \u2013 Believers often defend the religion with the comment that &#8220;it&#8217;s a good organization,&#8221; whether or not it is true<\/strong><\/span><\/h3>\n<p class=\"my-2 [&amp;+p]:mt-4 [&amp;_strong:has(+br)]:inline-block [&amp;_strong:has(+br)]:pb-2\">When confronted with documented allegations of abuse, financial exploitation, and institutional control, many <span style=\"color: #000080;\"><strong>Scientologists retreat to a familiar and well-rehearsed defense:<\/strong><\/span> that Scientology is, at its core, a force for good in the world. This narrative is not spontaneous \u2014 it is carefully cultivated and relentlessly promoted by the Church itself, which directs members to point to humanitarian initiatives such as the &#8220;<a href=\"https:\/\/www.amazon.com\/Way-Happiness-English-Ron-Hubbard\/dp\/1599700530\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener\"><strong>The Way to Happiness<\/strong><\/a>&#8221; guidebook, drug rehabilitation programs like Narconon, and literacy campaigns as evidence of the organization&#8217;s benevolent character. For believers still inside the system, these programs are genuine sources of pride. They represent tangible proof that their commitment, their sacrifice, and their financial investment are producing something meaningful in the world.<\/p>\n<p class=\"my-2 [&amp;+p]:mt-4 [&amp;_strong:has(+br)]:inline-block [&amp;_strong:has(+br)]:pb-2\">What this defense consistently fails to address, however, is the profound gap between the organization&#8217;s public-facing humanitarian image and the lived experiences of those who have passed through its inner machinery. Pointing to a pamphlet about happiness does not answer allegations of forced labor in the Sea Organization. Citing a literacy program does not explain the Fair Game policy, the auditing files used as leverage against departing members, or the billion-dollar financial demands placed on ordinary believers chasing a spiritual destination that perpetually recedes before them. Institutions are not absolved of institutional sins by their charitable programs \u2014 a truth that applies with equal force to any organization that wraps exploitation in the language of enlightenment.<\/p>\n<p class=\"my-2 [&amp;+p]:mt-4 [&amp;_strong:has(+br)]:inline-block [&amp;_strong:has(+br)]:pb-2\"><span style=\"color: #000080;\"><strong>Among Latter-day Saints, the defense takes a different but equally powerful form.<\/strong> <\/span>Many faithful members are genuinely, deeply uncomfortable engaging the more controversial dimensions of their Church&#8217;s history, finances, or institutional behavior \u2014 not out of dishonesty, but out of something far more human: the desire to protect something precious. When pressed, they tend to redirect the conversation toward personal testimony \u2014 heartfelt, emotionally resonant accounts of lives transformed, families strengthened, and souls anchored by faith. They speak of the warmth of ward community, the comfort of eternal family doctrine, and the peace that comes from a structured, purposeful life oriented around a transcendent calling.<\/p>\n<p class=\"my-2 [&amp;+p]:mt-4 [&amp;_strong:has(+br)]:inline-block [&amp;_strong:has(+br)]:pb-2\">These testimonies are real, and they deserve to be received with genuine respect and compassion. <span style=\"color: #000080;\"><strong>The human experience of belonging, meaning, and spiritual peace is not a small thing \u2014 it is, for many people, the very foundation upon which an entire life is built.<\/strong> <\/span>Millions of Latter-day Saints have found exactly that within their faith community, and they are not alone. Catholics and Evangelicals, Muslims and Buddhists, Orthodox Jews and Pentecostals \u2014 believers across every tradition and on every continent speak with equal sincerity and equal emotional conviction about the transformative power of their faith. The tears are real. The sense of divine presence is real. The comfort drawn from community, ritual, and transcendent purpose is real and deeply human. No honest critic of any religious institution should ever lose sight of that.<\/p>\n<p class=\"my-2 [&amp;+p]:mt-4 [&amp;_strong:has(+br)]:inline-block [&amp;_strong:has(+br)]:pb-2\"><span style=\"color: #000080;\"><strong>But emotional fulfillment \u2014 however profound, however universally attested across the full spectrum of human religious experience \u2014 cannot serve as a shield against documented institutional concerns.<\/strong><\/span> The sincerity of a believer&#8217;s experience has never been, in any tradition, a reliable indicator of the integrity of the institution that shaped it. History is littered with devout men and women who were genuinely transformed by communities whose leadership was simultaneously engaged in practices that demanded accountability. A person can be authentically blessed by a faith community while that community&#8217;s governing structures engage in financial opacity, psychological coercion, or the exploitation of the vulnerable. Personal peace and institutional accountability are not in competition with one another. They never have been. To demand both simultaneously is not an act of hostility toward believers \u2014 it is an act of profound respect for the truth they themselves claim to hold sacred.<\/p>\n<p>Mormon Stories: <a href=\"https:\/\/www.mormonstories.org\/home\/truth-claims\/testimony-feeling-the-spirit\/\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener\"><strong>Testimony\/Feeling the \u201cSpirit\u201d<\/strong><\/a><\/p>\n<blockquote><p><em>The LDS Church teaches members from childhood to rely upon feeling the spirit to confirm truth, promoting a personal connection to God which stems from its uniquely powerful priesthood-conferred Gift of The Spirit. Church leaders and missionaries often instruct members and investigators of the religion that once they confirm through prayer that the Book of Mormon is \u201ctrue,\u201d they can then know that Joseph Smith was a true prophet of God, which naturally means the LDS Church is Christ\u2019s one true church. The Church relies heavily upon patriarchal authority as the means by which humanity learns God\u2019s truths. Its exclusively male leadership structure is endowed with spiritual gifts, keys, powerful discernment and authority.<\/em><\/p>\n<p><em>Upon learning factual LDS history and doctrines, many members begin to question if feelings and emotion are valid mechanisms of confirming truth. The modern Church insists that it is impossible to receive a valid personal revelation that is contrary to that of the leadership, let alone a prompting that may lead one to step away from the \u201cone true church.\u201d Questions of faith are to be handled privately with local priesthood leaders, as publicly questioning the Brethren has led many to church discipline or even excommunication.<\/em><\/p><\/blockquote>\n<h3><span style=\"color: #800000;\"><strong>5 \u2013 Read only faith-promoting materials produced by us<\/strong><\/span><\/h3>\n<p class=\"my-2 [&amp;+p]:mt-4 [&amp;_strong:has(+br)]:inline-block [&amp;_strong:has(+br)]:pb-2\">Both Scientology and the LDS Church have long maintained a calculated posture of information control, actively discouraging their members from engaging with any material that originates outside officially sanctioned channels. This is not a peripheral policy \u2014 it is a foundational strategy of institutional self-preservation, and in both organizations it runs remarkably deep.<\/p>\n<p class=\"my-2 [&amp;+p]:mt-4 [&amp;_strong:has(+br)]:inline-block [&amp;_strong:has(+br)]:pb-2\">In the LDS Church, members are consistently steered toward <a href=\"https:\/\/www.churchofjesuschrist.org\/study\/new-era\/2007\/07\/q-and-a-questions-and-answers\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener\"><strong>faith-promoting resources<\/strong><\/a> produced and approved by Church headquarters. Sunday School curricula, official Church publications, and pastoral guidance from local leaders all reinforce the message that spiritual safety lies in staying within approved informational boundaries. The Church has issued explicit guidance warning members to be highly selective about online research, cautioning that the Internet is rife with &#8220;anti-Mormon&#8221; material designed to deceive and destroy faith. Doubt, within this framework, is recast not as a legitimate intellectual response to evidence, but as a spiritual vulnerability to be guarded against \u2014 a subtle but powerful form of epistemological control that conditions members to distrust their own critical faculties before they even begin to question.<\/p>\n<p class=\"my-2 [&amp;+p]:mt-4 [&amp;_strong:has(+br)]:inline-block [&amp;_strong:has(+br)]:pb-2\">Scientology takes this dynamic to a far more aggressive extreme. The organization formally classifies negative or critical information as\u00a0<strong>&#8220;<a href=\"https:\/\/www.mikerindersblog.org\/how-scientologists-deal-with-entheta\/#:~:text=in%20simple%20english%2C%20entheta%20is%20bad%20news.%20it%20is%20not%20something%20that%20is%20untrue%2C%20just%20something%20you%20don%E2%80%99t%20want%20to%20hear.%20anything%20that%20will%20cause%20upset%20(or%20in%20the%20case%20of%20scientology%20itself%2C%20doubt%20about%20it).\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener\">entheta<\/a>&#8220;<\/strong>\u00a0\u2014 a pseudo-technical term from Hubbard&#8217;s invented vocabulary meaning, in plain language, anything that might cause doubt about Scientology. Critically, as former senior Church official Mike Rinder has noted, &#8220;entheta&#8221; is not defined as something\u00a0<em>untrue<\/em>\u00a0\u2014 it is simply something you don&#8217;t want to hear. Truth is irrelevant. The emotional and psychological impact on the member is the only criterion that matters.<\/p>\n<p class=\"my-2 [&amp;+p]:mt-4 [&amp;_strong:has(+br)]:inline-block [&amp;_strong:has(+br)]:pb-2\">Members who are discovered consuming entheta \u2014 whether a critical website, a news article, or a conversation with a skeptical friend \u2014 face immediate intervention, mandatory &#8220;handling&#8221; sessions, and potential ethics investigations. Specific websites critical of Scientology have been formally listed as suppressive content, and members are instructed to disengage immediately upon encountering them. Internet usage itself has been a subject of formal Church guidance, with members warned that unsupervised online exploration poses a direct threat to their spiritual progress on the Bridge.<\/p>\n<p class=\"my-2 [&amp;+p]:mt-4 [&amp;_strong:has(+br)]:inline-block [&amp;_strong:has(+br)]:pb-2\"><span style=\"color: #000080;\"><strong>Critics across both traditions have identified this systematic information restriction for what it is: the hallmark architecture of a closed, high-control group.<\/strong><\/span> When an institution must shield its members from outside perspectives in order to retain their loyalty, the implied admission is devastating \u2014 that the institution&#8217;s claims cannot survive open, honest scrutiny.<\/p>\n<h3><span style=\"color: #800000;\"><strong>6 \u2013 Common use of Internet filters to block unapproved websites<\/strong><\/span><\/h3>\n<p class=\"my-2 [&amp;+p]:mt-4 [&amp;_strong:has(+br)]:inline-block [&amp;_strong:has(+br)]:pb-2\">Both Scientology and the LDS Church have taken deliberate, documented steps to control the information their members can access \u2014 and in the digital age, that control has extended directly into the architecture of their internet infrastructure.<\/p>\n<p class=\"my-2 [&amp;+p]:mt-4 [&amp;_strong:has(+br)]:inline-block [&amp;_strong:has(+br)]:pb-2\">Scientology is well known for filtering its organizational wifi networks to block websites critical of the Church, ensuring that members connecting through Church facilities encounter only information the institution has pre-approved. The message is unambiguous: the internet is a dangerous place, and the Church will decide what its members are permitted to read.<\/p>\n<p class=\"my-2 [&amp;+p]:mt-4 [&amp;_strong:has(+br)]:inline-block [&amp;_strong:has(+br)]:pb-2\">The LDS Church employs a strikingly similar strategy. MormonThink.com \u2014 one of the most thoroughly documented and carefully sourced websites examining LDS Church history and doctrine \u2014 is actively blocked on the wifi networks of LDS meetinghouses and chapels across the United States. Members who attempt to access the site from within their own ward building will find it quietly, invisibly unavailable. The Church does not announce this filtering. It simply ensures that certain questions cannot be asked on its property.<\/p>\n<p class=\"my-2 [&amp;+p]:mt-4 [&amp;_strong:has(+br)]:inline-block [&amp;_strong:has(+br)]:pb-2\">Perhaps most telling is the treatment of missionaries \u2014 the young men and women who dedicate eighteen months to two years of their lives to full-time service for the Church. The iPads issued to missionaries are equipped with content filters that restrict access exclusively to Church-approved websites and applications. These are adults, many of them legally old enough to vote and serve in the military, being handed a curated window onto a carefully managed version of reality.<\/p>\n<p class=\"my-2 [&amp;+p]:mt-4 [&amp;_strong:has(+br)]:inline-block [&amp;_strong:has(+br)]:pb-2\">Church leadership frames these restrictions in the language of spiritual protection \u2014 a safeguarding of testimonies against faith-undermining material. Critics, however, identify something far more troubling: an institutional architecture deliberately engineered to prevent members from encountering documented history, credible scholarship, or the testimonies of former members who left and lived to tell the story. <span style=\"color: #000080;\"><strong>When an organization must actively suppress access to information to retain its members&#8217; loyalty, it raises a question that no amount of spiritual framing can deflect \u2014 <span style=\"color: #800000;\"><em>what is it so afraid they might find out?<\/em><\/span><\/strong><\/span><\/p>\n<h3><span style=\"color: #800000;\"><strong>7 \u2013 Detractors of the faith are labeled as liars and &#8220;Anti&#8221;<\/strong><\/span><\/h3>\n<p class=\"my-2 [&amp;+p]:mt-4 [&amp;_strong:has(+br)]:inline-block [&amp;_strong:has(+br)]:pb-2\">When the HBO documentary\u00a0<em>Going Clear: Scientology and the Prison of Belief<\/em>\u00a0premiered at the Sundance Film Festival in 2015, the Church of Scientology did not wait quietly for the storm to pass. It launched one of the most aggressive institutional counterattacks in the history of American religious public relations. Teams of Church representatives personally contacted film critics, editors, and entertainment journalists before the film&#8217;s broadcast premiere, flooding newsrooms with lengthy written rebuttals and demanding that reviews reflect the Church&#8217;s objections. Official spokespeople denounced director Alex Gibney as a propagandist, characterizing the documentary not as journalism but as a calculated hit piece assembled from the grievances of embittered defectors. Every former member who appeared on screen was publicly branded a liar, a criminal, or a spiritually compromised individual with personal vendettas to settle. The strategy was transparent but deliberate: if the messenger could be destroyed, the message might be neutralized. It largely failed.\u00a0<em>Going Clear<\/em>\u00a0drew nearly 1.7 million viewers on its premiere night \u2014 one of the largest audiences in HBO documentary history \u2014 and went on to win three Emmy Awards. The Church&#8217;s furious response, rather than dampening public curiosity, arguably amplified it.<\/p>\n<p class=\"my-2 [&amp;+p]:mt-4 [&amp;_strong:has(+br)]:inline-block [&amp;_strong:has(+br)]:pb-2\">The institutional reflex within the LDS Church operates through a different mechanism, but serves an identical purpose. For decades, the Church and its members have deployed the label\u00a0<strong>&#8220;<a href=\"https:\/\/www.fairlatterdaysaints.org\/answers\/Criticism_of_Mormonism\/Anti-Mormon\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener\">anti-Mormon<\/a>&#8220;<\/strong>\u00a0as a catch-all category for any criticism, historical documentation, or theological challenge that reflects unfavorably on the institution. The term is strategically elastic. It can be applied to a bitter personal enemy, a secular historian, a former bishop, or a peer-reviewed academic journal \u2014 the label carries no meaningful distinction between sources, only a blanket dismissal of their legitimacy. More significantly, it carries a theological charge that goes beyond mere disagreement. In LDS culture, &#8220;anti-Mormon&#8221; material is frequently characterized not simply as inaccurate, but as spiritually dangerous \u2014 the work of dark influences designed to undermine faith and lead souls astray.<\/p>\n<p class=\"my-2 [&amp;+p]:mt-4 [&amp;_strong:has(+br)]:inline-block [&amp;_strong:has(+br)]:pb-2\">The practical consequences of this framing are profound. Members who encounter troubling historical facts \u2014 about polygamy, about the Book of Abraham papyri, about the multiple conflicting accounts of Joseph Smith&#8217;s First Vision \u2014 are conditioned to treat that discomfort not as an invitation to investigate, but as a spiritual warning sign to retreat. Curiosity becomes suspect. Independent research becomes an act of potential apostasy. The effect is a closed epistemological loop in which the only sources deemed trustworthy are those approved by the very institution under scrutiny.<\/p>\n<p class=\"my-2 [&amp;+p]:mt-4 [&amp;_strong:has(+br)]:inline-block [&amp;_strong:has(+br)]:pb-2\">Critics and former members alike have identified this dynamic as one of the most psychologically coercive features of LDS institutional culture \u2014 not because it involves overt force, but because it relocates the burden of proof entirely. <span style=\"color: #000080;\"><strong>The question is no longer whether the Church&#8217;s claims can withstand examination. The question becomes whether the member is spiritually strong enough to resist the temptation to look.<\/strong><\/span><\/p>\n<h3><span style=\"color: #800000;\"><strong>8 \u2013 The founders and top leaders are hero-worshipped<\/strong><\/span><\/h3>\n<p class=\"my-2 [&amp;+p]:mt-4 [&amp;_strong:has(+br)]:inline-block [&amp;_strong:has(+br)]:pb-2\">One of the most striking parallels between Scientology and Mormonism is the manner in which both organizations have elevated their founders to a status that transcends ordinary religious veneration \u2014 crossing the threshold from respect into something that more closely resembles hero worship, and in some expressions, virtual deification.<\/p>\n<p class=\"my-2 [&amp;+p]:mt-4 [&amp;_strong:has(+br)]:inline-block [&amp;_strong:has(+br)]:pb-2\">Within Scientology, L. Ron Hubbard is not merely remembered as the organization&#8217;s founder \u2014 he is enshrined as a <a href=\"https:\/\/afflictor.com\/2013\/05\/03\/they-become-fanatics-on-the-subject-impervious-to-argument-quick-to-cut-themselves-off-f\/\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener\"><strong>figure of unparalleled genius<\/strong><\/a> whose every word carries the weight of absolute spiritual authority. His writings, recorded lectures, and policy letters are treated not as historical documents subject to interpretation or revision, but as the final, definitive word on every matter of theology, science, and human behavior. Special events mark his birthday each year with elaborate institutional celebrations. Buildings and facilities bear his name. His photograph occupies a place of honor in Scientology centers worldwide. Most tellingly, his works are never updated, corrected, or questioned \u2014 they are preserved and enforced with the zealotry of scripture. To critique Hubbard is not merely to disagree with a historical figure. Within the culture of Scientology, it is to attack the very foundation of reality itself \u2014 an act that invites immediate and severe institutional consequences.<\/p>\n<p class=\"my-2 [&amp;+p]:mt-4 [&amp;_strong:has(+br)]:inline-block [&amp;_strong:has(+br)]:pb-2\">Mormonism mirrors this dynamic with its own distinctive theology of prophetic authority. Joseph Smith, the Church&#8217;s founding prophet, occupies a position in LDS theology that has no precise parallel in orthodox Christianity. Members are taught that Smith&#8217;s prophetic calling was unique and indispensable \u2014 that the restoration of the Gospel through him was the <a href=\"https:\/\/medium.com\/@WilliamClayton\/joseph-smith-the-prophet-the-man-the-legend-the-myth-the-villain-the-hero-2388806c373a#:~:text=joseph%20smith%20in%20many%20saints%20eyes%20is%20considered%20to%20be%20up%20on%20the%20same%20level%20as%20even%20christ%20himself%2C%20a%20man%20so%20devoted%2C%20so%20righteous%2C%20so%20sincere%20and%20loving%20that%20he%20even%20sealed%20his%20testimony%20by%20dying%20as%20an%20innocent%20lamb%20to%20the%20slaughter%2C%20becoming%20a%20heroic%20martyr.\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener\"><strong>pivotal event in human history<\/strong><\/a> since the resurrection of Jesus Christ. Brigham Young, Smith&#8217;s successor and the Church&#8217;s second president, taught explicitly in the\u00a0<em>Journal of Discourses<\/em> that entry into the highest degree of heaven \u2014 the Celestial Kingdom \u2014 is contingent upon receiving the personal consent of Joseph Smith himself. <span style=\"color: #000080;\"><strong>This extraordinary claim places Smith not merely as a historical messenger but as an eternal gatekeeper to divine exaltation.<\/strong><\/span><\/p>\n<p>In the official <a href=\"https:\/\/www.churchofjesuschrist.org\/study\/manual\/gospel-topics\/joseph-smith?lang=eng\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener\"><strong>LDS Library of Topics and Questions<\/strong><\/a>, they write:<\/p>\n<blockquote><p><em>In the Doctrine and Covenants we learn that \u201cJoseph Smith, the Prophet and Seer of the Lord, has done more, save Jesus only, for the salvation of men in this world, than any other man that ever lived in it.\u201d<\/em><\/p><\/blockquote>\n<div class=\"xdj266r x14z9mp xat24cr x1lziwak x1vvkbs x126k92a\">\n<div dir=\"auto\"><span style=\"color: #000080;\"><em><strong>Joseph Smith quote of the day.<\/strong><\/em><\/span><\/div>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"x14z9mp xat24cr x1lziwak x1vvkbs xtlvy1s x126k92a\">\n<blockquote>\n<div dir=\"auto\"><em>\u201cI have more to boast of,\u201d he\u2019s reported to have said, \u201cthan ever any man had. I am the only man that has ever been able to keep a whole church together since the days of Adam. \u2026 Neither Paul, John, Peter nor Jesus ever did it. I boast that no man ever did such work as I. The followers of Jesus ran away from him; but the Latter-day Saints never ran away from me yet\u201d (\u201cHistory of the Church,\u201d 6:408-409).<\/em><\/div>\n<\/blockquote>\n<\/div>\n<p>Deseret.com: <a href=\"https:\/\/www.deseret.com\/2014\/9\/4\/20547771\/joseph-smith-wasn-t-arrogant-or-boastful\/\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener\"><strong>Joseph Smith wasn&#8217;t arrogant or boastful<\/strong><\/a><\/p>\n<blockquote><p><em>Some critics like to use a quotation attributed to Joseph Smith as a weapon against him.<\/em><\/p>\n<p><em>The comment seems arrogant, lacking the humility appropriate to a prophet or even an ordinary member of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints.<\/em><\/p>\n<p><em>But at least four points should be remembered when evaluating it. Much of what follows is taken from a personal message I wrote that became the basis of a FairMormon wiki post on the subject.<\/em><\/p>\n<p><em>First, the context: Joseph was applying a passage from the apostle Paul (2 Corinthians 11-12) to his own perilous situation. The idea of \u201cboasting\u201d wasn&#8217;t Joseph\u2019s; it was Paul\u2019s. The critics typically forget that.<\/em><\/p>\n<p><em>Second, Joseph seems actually to be praising his followers\u2019 faithfulness, not himself.<\/em><\/p>\n<p><em>Third, Joseph didn\u2019t write the quotation; it was reconstructed after his death. Thus, it almost certainly doesn\u2019t represent his precise words. Even \u201cHistory of the Church\u201d (often called the \u201cDocumentary History\u201d) says that it rests upon a &#8220;synopsis&#8221; by Thomas Bullock.<\/em><\/p>\n<p><em>Fourth, Joseph\u2019s authenticated personal statements plainly reveal him to have been a humble and sincere man, struggling to do the will of God as he understood it \u2014 and this particular statement should be placed in the context of his overall life and behavior.<\/em><\/p><\/blockquote>\n<p class=\"my-2 [&amp;+p]:mt-4 [&amp;_strong:has(+br)]:inline-block [&amp;_strong:has(+br)]:pb-2\">Daniel Peterson&#8217;s defense of Joseph Smith&#8217;s infamous boast is a masterclass in apologetic sleight of hand. The argument rests on four pillars \u2014 context, intent, authorship, and character \u2014 and each one, examined honestly, collapses under its own weight.<\/p>\n<p class=\"my-2 [&amp;+p]:mt-4 [&amp;_strong:has(+br)]:inline-block [&amp;_strong:has(+br)]:pb-2\">The claim that Joseph was merely echoing Paul&#8217;s rhetorical device of <em>&#8220;boasting&#8221;<\/em> in 2 Corinthians might carry weight if the content of the boast were remotely comparable. Paul boasted of his\u00a0<em>weaknesses<\/em>\u00a0and\u00a0<em>sufferings<\/em>\u00a0for Christ (2 Corinthians 11:30). Joseph Smith, by contrast, boasted that he had accomplished what\u00a0<em>Jesus himself had not<\/em>\u00a0\u2014 keeping his followers together where Christ had failed. <span style=\"color: #000080;\"><strong>These are not parallel arguments. They are not even in the same theological universe.<\/strong><\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"my-2 [&amp;+p]:mt-4 [&amp;_strong:has(+br)]:inline-block [&amp;_strong:has(+br)]:pb-2\">The authorship defense \u2014 that the statement was reconstructed after Joseph&#8217;s death by admiring disciples and therefore cannot be held against him \u2014 is a convenient argument that LDS apologists would never extend to critics. If posthumous reconstruction renders damaging statements unreliable, it renders favorable ones equally so. The apologist cannot have it both ways.<\/p>\n<p class=\"my-2 [&amp;+p]:mt-4 [&amp;_strong:has(+br)]:inline-block [&amp;_strong:has(+br)]:pb-2\">Most tellingly, Peterson cites Joseph&#8217;s private expressions of humility as evidence of his true character \u2014 while dismissing the public statement as an inaccurate reconstruction. But sincere humility does not require a defense team. The Jesus whom Joseph claimed to surpass said simply,\u00a0<em>&#8220;Learn from me, for I am gentle and humble in heart&#8221;<\/em>\u00a0(Matthew 11:29). He did not boast that his disciples never ran from him. He\u00a0<em>wept<\/em>\u00a0when they did.<\/p>\n<p class=\"my-2 [&amp;+p]:mt-4 [&amp;_strong:has(+br)]:inline-block [&amp;_strong:has(+br)]:pb-2\"><span style=\"color: #000080;\"><strong>The statement stands. The defense does not.<\/strong><\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"my-2 [&amp;+p]:mt-4 [&amp;_strong:has(+br)]:inline-block [&amp;_strong:has(+br)]:pb-2\">This theology of unquestioned authority extends directly into present-day institutional practice. Members of the LDS Church are expected to sustain their living Prophet and the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles without public dissent. Those who openly challenge or contradict prophetic teachings risk formal Church discipline, up to and including excommunication \u2014 a consequence that carries devastating social and relational implications in a community where nearly every friendship, family relationship, and social bond runs through the institution. The 1993 excommunications of the so-called &#8220;<a href=\"https:\/\/en.wikipedia.org\/wiki\/September_Six\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener\"><strong>September Six<\/strong><\/a>&#8221; \u2014 a group of prominent LDS scholars and feminists disciplined for their intellectual and theological challenges \u2014 served as a vivid public reminder of where the boundaries of acceptable discourse lie.<\/p>\n<p class=\"my-2 [&amp;+p]:mt-4 [&amp;_strong:has(+br)]:inline-block [&amp;_strong:has(+br)]:pb-2\">In both organizations, the effect is the same: the founder&#8217;s legacy becomes an untouchable orthodoxy, and the living leadership inherits the protective shield of that veneration. <span style=\"color: #000080;\"><strong>Dissent is not debated \u2014 it is punished.<\/strong><\/span><\/p>\n<h3><span style=\"color: #800000;\"><strong>9 \u2013 Severing the Bonds of Family: A Shared and Devastating Pattern<\/strong><\/span><\/h3>\n<p class=\"my-2 [&amp;+p]:mt-4 [&amp;_strong:has(+br)]:inline-block [&amp;_strong:has(+br)]:pb-2\">Few institutional practices reveal the true character of an organization more starkly than what it does to families who dare to disagree. Both Scientology and the LDS Church have developed sophisticated \u2014 and deeply destructive \u2014 mechanisms for fracturing the most fundamental human relationships when loyalty to the institution is perceived to be at risk.<\/p>\n<p class=\"my-2 [&amp;+p]:mt-4 [&amp;_strong:has(+br)]:inline-block [&amp;_strong:has(+br)]:pb-2\">In Scientology, the weapon of choice is a policy known as\u00a0<a href=\"https:\/\/en.wikipedia.org\/wiki\/Disconnection_(Scientology)\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener\"><strong>disconnection<\/strong><\/a>. When a member is deemed insufficiently loyal, openly critical, or simply unwilling to continue funding their spiritual advancement, they risk being labeled a <em>&#8220;Suppressive Person&#8221; <\/em>\u2014 a designation that effectively strips them of their humanity in the eyes of fellow members. Once that label is applied, practicing Scientologists are required to sever all contact with the designated individual, regardless of the relationship involved. Spouses stop speaking to spouses. Parents stop acknowledging children. Siblings who once shared a lifetime of memories are reduced, overnight, to strangers. No communication. No interaction. No acknowledgment that the relationship ever existed. The policy is not presented as punishment \u2014 it is framed as spiritual self-protection, a necessary quarantine against the contaminating influence of those who have turned against the truth. But the human wreckage it leaves behind tells a different story entirely, one documented in courtrooms, therapists&#8217; offices, and the grief-stricken testimonies of thousands of families torn apart by institutional decree.<\/p>\n<p class=\"my-2 [&amp;+p]:mt-4 [&amp;_strong:has(+br)]:inline-block [&amp;_strong:has(+br)]:pb-2\">The LDS Church operates through a different mechanism, but the outcome is hauntingly similar. <span style=\"color: #000080;\"><strong>There is no formal written policy of disconnection in Mormonism \u2014 but there does not need to be.<\/strong> <\/span>The social and theological architecture of LDS culture accomplishes the same result organically. When a member leaves the Church \u2014 particularly when they leave openly, citing historical or doctrinal concerns \u2014 the response from believing family members and friends is frequently one of withdrawal, suspicion, and quiet shunning. Former members who have contributed to platforms such as MormonThink.com have publicly documented how their intellectual honesty cost them their marriages, their relationships with their children, and their standing within communities they had belonged to for their entire lives.<\/p>\n<p class=\"my-2 [&amp;+p]:mt-4 [&amp;_strong:has(+br)]:inline-block [&amp;_strong:has(+br)]:pb-2\">The theological pressure driving this behavior is real and deeply embedded. Active members are taught, explicitly and implicitly, that association with doubters poses a spiritual danger \u2014 that faith is fragile enough to be undermined by honest conversation. And so the ex-member is kept at arm&#8217;s length, not out of personal animosity, but out of a genuine fear that proximity to doubt might unravel the believer&#8217;s own carefully constructed certainty. The result, regardless of intent, is the same devastating isolation. In both Scientology and Mormonism, the institution&#8217;s survival is prioritized above the sanctity of the family \u2014 and it is ordinary men, women, and children who bear the cost.<\/p>\n<h3><span style=\"color: #800000;\"><strong>10 \u2013 Both groups have been labeled as a cult and the members as brainwashed<\/strong><\/span><\/h3>\n<p class=\"my-2 [&amp;+p]:mt-4 [&amp;_strong:has(+br)]:inline-block [&amp;_strong:has(+br)]:pb-2\">The term <span style=\"color: #800000;\"><strong>&#8220;cult&#8221;<\/strong><\/span> has been applied to both Scientology and Mormonism by outside observers for decades \u2014 and increasingly, by those who once belonged to these organizations themselves. The distinction matters enormously. When the label comes from critics who have never set foot inside these institutions, it can be dismissed as ignorance or prejudice. When it comes from former insiders who gave years \u2014 or entire lifetimes \u2014 to these organizations, it carries an entirely different and far more sobering weight.<\/p>\n<p class=\"my-2 [&amp;+p]:mt-4 [&amp;_strong:has(+br)]:inline-block [&amp;_strong:has(+br)]:pb-2\"><span style=\"color: #000080;\"><strong>In the case of Scientology, the testimony is unambiguous and impossible to ignore.<\/strong><\/span> Former members featured in Alex Gibney&#8217;s landmark HBO documentary\u00a0<em>Going Clear<\/em>\u00a0\u2014 based on Lawrence Wright&#8217;s Pulitzer Prize-winning research \u2014 did not merely critique the organization. They looked directly into the camera and described themselves as having been\u00a0<span style=\"color: #800000;\"><strong>brainwashed<\/strong><\/span>. These were not marginal or disgruntled figures. They were senior officials, celebrity members, and deeply committed believers who had invested decades of their lives and hundreds of thousands of dollars into the organization before finally breaking free. Their unanimous characterization of Scientology as a cult reflects what is arguably the prevailing view of the broader world \u2014 a view shared by mental health professionals, cult intervention specialists, and government bodies in multiple countries that have investigated or restricted Scientology&#8217;s activities.<\/p>\n<p class=\"my-2 [&amp;+p]:mt-4 [&amp;_strong:has(+br)]:inline-block [&amp;_strong:has(+br)]:pb-2\">Perhaps most damningly,\u00a0<a href=\"https:\/\/en.wikipedia.org\/wiki\/Ronald_DeWolf\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener\"><strong>Ronald DeWolf<\/strong><\/a>\u00a0\u2014 L. Ron Hubbard&#8217;s own grandson \u2014 has publicly described Scientology as a <em>&#8220;dangerous cult,&#8221;<\/em> a characterization that strikes at the very heart of the organization&#8217;s claims to divine legitimacy. When the founder&#8217;s own family lineage repudiates the institution in the strongest possible terms, the burden of proof shifts decisively onto those who would defend it.<\/p>\n<p>Follow this link to our previous essay, &#8220;<a href=\"https:\/\/novus2.com\/righteouscause\/2024\/06\/11\/the-rise-and-fall-of-scientologys-magic-a-case-study-in-cult-evolution\/\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener\"><strong>The Rise and Fall of Scientology&#8217;s Magic: A Case Study in Cult Evolution.<\/strong><\/a>&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>For Mormonism, the <em>&#8220;cult&#8221;<\/em> designation is more contested and more nuanced. Many scholars of religion apply a sociological rather than pejorative definition \u2014 noting that the LDS Church exhibits characteristics common to high-demand religious groups, including authoritarian leadership structures, thought-stopping mechanisms, us-versus-them framing, and the use of social pressure to enforce conformity. Whether one uses the word <em>&#8220;cult&#8221;<\/em> or prefers clinical terms such as &#8220;high-control religion,&#8221; the underlying behavioral patterns that prompt the question deserve serious and honest examination.<\/p>\n<p>Although a few Christian preachers have referred to Mormonism as a cult, some knowledgeable former members say it has <span style=\"color: #000080;\"><strong><em>cult-like<\/em><\/strong><\/span> behavior but fall short of using the term cult, as it conjures up images of Hare Krishnas and Moonies. Some former members of the LDS Church unequivocally believe Mormonism is a cult and consider themselves &#8220;brainwashed.&#8221; This is not the case with mainstream Christian churches, like the Lutherans, for example.<\/p>\n<h3><span style=\"color: #800000;\"><strong>A summary<\/strong><\/span><\/h3>\n<p>It only takes a <a href=\"https:\/\/www.google.com\/search?q=scientology+and+mormonism+critics&amp;newwindow=1&amp;sca_esv=292e527dce65be8d&amp;sca_upv=1&amp;ei=0noVZtOgHrDOkPIP6euOqAg&amp;ved=0ahUKEwjT0fmK1LWFAxUwJ0QIHem1A4UQ4dUDCBA&amp;uact=5&amp;oq=scientology+and+mormonism+critics&amp;gs_lp=Egxnd3Mtd2l6LXNlcnAiIXNjaWVudG9sb2d5IGFuZCBtb3Jtb25pc20gY3JpdGljczIFECEYoAEyBRAhGKABMgUQIRifBUifUVC3ClitTXABeAGQAQCYAXegAZYJqgEEMC4xMbgBA8gBAPgBAZgCDKACugnCAgoQABhHGNYEGLADwgILEAAYgAQYigUYkQLCAgsQABiABBiKBRiGA8ICBhAAGBYYHpgDAIgGAZAGBJIHBDEuMTGgB6wm&amp;sclient=gws-wiz-serp\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener\"><strong>quick Google search<\/strong><\/a> to see the excessive number of websites, discussion boards, videos, and social media from former members of both Scientology and Mormonism warning people not to join these religions because something is wrong with them. There are not hundreds of websites dedicated to warning people about churches like the Methodist Church, the Episcopalian Church, or the Baptist Church. There are no <span style=\"color: #000080;\">&#8220;<strong>Recovery From<\/strong> <b>Presbyterians<\/b>&#8220;<\/span> websites (that I know of).<\/p>\n<p><a href=\"https:\/\/novus2.com\/righteouscause\/2024\/12\/17\/scientology-and-mormonism\/recovery-from-presbyterians\/\" rel=\"attachment wp-att-5839\"><img loading=\"lazy\" decoding=\"async\" class=\"aligncenter size-full wp-image-5839\" src=\"https:\/\/novus2.com\/righteouscause\/wp-content\/uploads\/2024\/12\/Recovery-from-Presbyterians.jpg\" alt=\"\" width=\"750\" height=\"212\" srcset=\"https:\/\/novus2.com\/righteouscause\/wp-content\/uploads\/2024\/12\/Recovery-from-Presbyterians.jpg 750w, https:\/\/novus2.com\/righteouscause\/wp-content\/uploads\/2024\/12\/Recovery-from-Presbyterians-300x85.jpg 300w, https:\/\/novus2.com\/righteouscause\/wp-content\/uploads\/2024\/12\/Recovery-from-Presbyterians-150x42.jpg 150w\" sizes=\"auto, (max-width: 750px) 100vw, 750px\" \/><\/a><\/p>\n<p class=\"my-2 [&amp;+p]:mt-4 [&amp;_strong:has(+br)]:inline-block [&amp;_strong:has(+br)]:pb-2\">An illuminating historical parallel exists between the founding and consolidation phases of both movements. L. Ron Hubbard relates to Joseph Smith as David Miscavige relates to Brigham Young \u2014 each pair representing the visionary founder followed by the iron-fisted consolidator who transformed a fledgling religious movement into a disciplined, centralized, and often ruthless institutional machine. The Scientology of today, under Miscavige&#8217;s authoritarian grip, bears striking resemblance not to the modern, polished LDS Church of the 21st century, but to the early Utah period of Mormonism \u2014 raw, coercive, and operating with the unaccountable ferocity of an institution still fighting for its survival. If history is any guide, a fair institutional comparison between the LDS Church and Scientology may require another century of maturation before Scientology sheds enough of its sharp edges to occupy a similar cultural position. Whether it survives long enough to do so remains an open question.<\/p>\n<p class=\"my-2 [&amp;+p]:mt-4 [&amp;_strong:has(+br)]:inline-block [&amp;_strong:has(+br)]:pb-2\">Within LDS culture, there is a dismissive saying frequently deployed against those who leave the faith:\u00a0<span style=\"color: #000080;\"><strong><em>&#8220;People can leave the Church, but they can&#8217;t leave the Church alone.&#8221;<\/em>\u00a0<\/strong><\/span>The implication is that former members who continue to speak about their experiences are driven by bitterness, obsession, or dishonesty \u2014 that their voices are suspect precisely because they chose to walk away. It is a rhetorically clever device, and it is profoundly misleading.<\/p>\n<p class=\"my-2 [&amp;+p]:mt-4 [&amp;_strong:has(+br)]:inline-block [&amp;_strong:has(+br)]:pb-2\">The reality is very nearly the opposite. Former members \u2014 particularly those who left after years of careful study of LDS Church history \u2014 are typically among the most thoroughly informed people one could consult on the subject. Their departure was not impulsive. It was, in most cases, the painful conclusion of an exhaustive investigation that active members are culturally discouraged from undertaking. They have read the primary sources, examined the historical documents, and wrestled with the contradictions that the official Church curriculum carefully avoids. Their perspective deserves not dismissal, but serious engagement \u2014 and almost certainly more intellectual weight than the rehearsed testimony of a nineteen-year-old missionary who has never been exposed to the significant and well-documented problems embedded in Mormon history. Silencing the most informed voices in a conversation is not a sign of institutional confidence. It is a sign of institutional fragility.<\/p>\n<h2><span style=\"color: #000080;\"><strong>Scientology and Mormonism in the news<\/strong><\/span><\/h2>\n<p>In 2012, Damian Thompson, a columnist for the Daily Telegraph, <a href=\"https:\/\/web.archive.org\/web\/20120707195556\/http:\/\/blogs.telegraph.co.uk\/news\/damianthompson\/100169512\/where-mormonism-meets-scientology\/\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener\"><strong>shared his thoughts<\/strong><\/a> on the similarities between Scientology and Mormonism.<\/p>\n<blockquote><p><em>We can take it for granted that Tom Cruise \u2013 whose divorce proceedings are already such a catastrophe for Scientology \u2013 will never talk in public about <a href=\"https:\/\/simple.wikipedia.org\/wiki\/Xenu\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener\"><strong>Xenu<\/strong><\/a>. The existence of this intergalactic emperor, who flourished c 75,000,000 BC, was top secret until the Church\u2019s enemies took to the internet. Advice to journalists: if you ask Cruise about Xenu, the doors of Hollywood (where the Church wields immense influence) will slam in your face.<\/em><\/p>\n<p><em>On the other hand, it\u2019s safe to ask any Scientologist about <a href=\"https:\/\/en.wikipedia.org\/wiki\/Kolob\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener\"><strong>Kolob<\/strong><\/a>. This is the star, or possibly planet, that is closest to the throne of God. Astronomers haven\u2019t found it \u2013 yet \u2013 but it served as the inspiration for the planet <a href=\"https:\/\/en.wikipedia.org\/wiki\/Kolob#:~:text=Kolob%20as%20the,Glen%20A.%20Larson.\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener\"><strong>Kobol in Battlestar Galactica<\/strong><\/a>.<\/em><\/p>\n<p><em>Why is it safe to ask Cruise about Kolob? Because it\u2019s Mormon, not Scientologist: it appears in <a href=\"https:\/\/en.wikipedia.org\/wiki\/Criticism_of_the_Book_of_Abraham#:~:text=Since%20its%20printing%2C%20the%20Book,that%20his%20interpretations%20are%20inaccurate.\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener\"><strong>The Book of Abraham<\/strong><\/a>, \u201ctranslated\u201d from Egyptian papyri by Joseph Smith, the founder of Mormonism. I use inverted commas because Smith couldn\u2019t read Egyptian. The papyri were funerary texts.<\/em><\/p>\n<p><em>The person you mustn\u2019t ask about Kolob is Mitt Romney. The teaching isn\u2019t a secret, but Latter-day Saints aren\u2019t keen to discuss it. These days they stress their similarity with Christianity, and there\u2019s no Kolob in the Gospels.<\/em><\/p>\n<p><em>Yet there are striking similarities between the sects founded by Joseph Smith and L Ron Hubbard. These brilliant mavericks used popular culture to produce cosmologies that they marketed aggressively, though reserving some esoteric details for senior initiates.<\/em><\/p>\n<p><em><a href=\"https:\/\/mormonmemo.com\/blog\/view-of-the-hebrews-the-book-of-mormon\/\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener\"><strong>Smith invented a journey<\/strong><\/a> by ancient Hebrews to America \u2013 a typical fantasy of that era \u2013 and dabbled in the occult. Hubbard mined the seam of mid-20th-century American science fiction, and also devised a brain-cleansing technique called Dianetics that was supposed to produce perfect recall. It failed hilariously.<\/em><\/p>\n<p><em>Critics accused Smith and Hubbard of telling porkies. The former\u2019s <a href=\"https:\/\/carm.org\/mormonism\/the-book-of-abraham-papyri-and-joseph-smith\/\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener\"><strong>interpretation of the Egyptian papyri<\/strong><\/a>, which he encountered in a travelling mummy exhibition, is plain embarrassing. <a href=\"https:\/\/tonyortega.org\/2020\/11\/04\/l-ron-hubbards-stolen-valor-a-new-breakdown-of-his-bogus-medals-by-a-military-veteran\/\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener\"><strong>As for Hubbard, his war service was a work of the imagination<\/strong><\/a> to rival the science fiction he wrote before he discovered religion and its tax-exempt status. Both organisations are extremely interested in money, and very good at acquiring it.<\/em><\/p><\/blockquote>\n<h2><span style=\"color: #000080;\"><strong>Comparative Sexual Themes<\/strong><\/span><\/h2>\n<p>The two prophets were heartily interested in the opposite sex: Smith acquired as many as 40 wives, while Hubbard encouraged teenage girl \u201cofficers\u201d to wear hot pants.<\/p>\n<p><a href=\"https:\/\/www.npr.org\/sections\/thetwo-way\/2014\/11\/11\/363324816\/mormon-church-admits-founder-joseph-smith-had-up-to-40-wives\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener\"><strong>In a 2014 article at NPR<\/strong><\/a>, Sam Sanders wrote that the Mormon Church had admitted that its founder, Joseph Smith, had up to 40 wives:<\/p>\n<blockquote>\n<figure id=\"attachment_564\" aria-describedby=\"caption-attachment-564\" style=\"width: 300px\" class=\"wp-caption alignright\"><img loading=\"lazy\" decoding=\"async\" class=\"wp-image-564\" src=\"https:\/\/novus2.com\/righteouscause\/wp-content\/uploads\/2024\/04\/wives-of-Joseph-Smith.jpeg\" alt=\"\" width=\"300\" height=\"450\" srcset=\"https:\/\/novus2.com\/righteouscause\/wp-content\/uploads\/2024\/04\/wives-of-Joseph-Smith.jpeg 602w, https:\/\/novus2.com\/righteouscause\/wp-content\/uploads\/2024\/04\/wives-of-Joseph-Smith-200x300.jpeg 200w, https:\/\/novus2.com\/righteouscause\/wp-content\/uploads\/2024\/04\/wives-of-Joseph-Smith-300x450.jpeg 300w\" sizes=\"auto, (max-width: 300px) 100vw, 300px\" \/><figcaption id=\"caption-attachment-564\" class=\"wp-caption-text\"><span style=\"color: #000000;\"><em>Joseph&#8217;s polygamy was not widely known till the the last few months of his life. He denied it repeatedly until then. He also preached against polygamy, though he practiced it.<\/em><\/span><\/figcaption><\/figure>\n<p><em>In an essay posted without fanfare to its website in late October, the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints said for the first time that Joseph Smith, founder of the Mormon church, had as many as 40 wives. Some of those women were also married to friends of his. And one was only 14 when she became Smith&#8217;s wife.<\/em><\/p>\n<p><em>The essay points out several details about Smith&#8217;s marriages. It says that an angel appeared to Smith &#8220;three times between 1834 and 1842 and commanded him to proceed with plural marriage.&#8221; The third time that angel appeared, the essay says, it threatened to destroy Joseph unless he obeyed. Smith&#8217;s wives were believed to be between the ages of 20 and 40 at the time they were &#8220;sealed&#8221; or married to him. But the youngest wife sealed to Smith was only 14 years old when she married him. This young bride was also the daughter of two of Smith&#8217;s close friends.<\/em><\/p>\n<p><em>Jana Reiss, who blogs for Religious News Service and co-authored the book Mormonism for Dummies, told NPR that the church&#8217;s new statements on polygamy took up to two years to complete and are the &#8220;culmination of a very long bureaucratic process to get this researched, written and approved.&#8221;<\/em><\/p>\n<p><em>Reiss says that approach can be harmful to some Mormons. &#8220;If you don&#8217;t find out about those controversial things at church &#8230; instead you find out about it in a late-night Google search when you&#8217;re at home alone, scratching your head, thinking why in the world did no one ever tell me this, then everything else is called into question as well.&#8221;<\/em><\/p><\/blockquote>\n<p>In our previous essay, &#8220;<a href=\"https:\/\/novus2.com\/righteouscause\/2026\/02\/06\/joseph-smith-failed-polygamist\/\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener\"><strong>Joseph Smith: Failed Polygamist<\/strong><\/a>,&#8221; this subject is discussed extensively:<\/p>\n<blockquote><p><em>The introduction of plural marriage into Mormon doctrine represents one of the most controversial and consequential developments in American religious history. While faithful Latter-day Saint (LDS) narratives have traditionally portrayed this practice as a divine commandment revealed to Joseph Smith through angelic visitation, a careful examination of the historical record, primary sources, and theological framework reveals a markedly different picture\u2014one in which personal desire, opportunistic theology, and the consolidation of ecclesiastical authority played determining roles in the establishment and perpetuation of this practice.<\/em><\/p>\n<p><em>This analysis begins from a premise that many believing members find difficult to accept:<span style=\"color: #000080;\"><strong> the introduction of plural marriage in Mormon doctrine came initially from an inability to control Joseph Smith&#8217;s sexual appetites<\/strong><\/span>, with the same pattern applying to subsequent leaders of the LDS movement. This assertion is not made lightly or without substantial historical documentation. Rather, it emerges from a synthesis of contemporary accounts, the prophet&#8217;s own recorded statements and actions, documentary evidence of his relationships, <span style=\"color: #000000;\">and\u2014most significantly\u2014the conspicuous absence of the primary theological justification for the practice: offspring from these unions.<\/span><\/em><\/p><\/blockquote>\n<p><a href=\"https:\/\/www.cs.cmu.edu\/~dst\/Library\/Shelf\/la90\/la90-1a3.html\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener\"><strong>The Scientology Story<\/strong><\/a> (Los Angeles Times series, 1990):<\/p>\n<blockquote><p><em>L. Ron Hubbard enjoyed being pampered.<\/em><\/p>\n<p><em>He surrounded himself with teen-age followers, whom he indoctrinated, treated like servants and cherished as though they were his own children.<\/em><\/p>\n<p><em>He called them the &#8220;Commodore&#8217;s messengers.&#8221;<\/em><\/p>\n<p><em>&#8221; &#8216;Messenger!&#8217; &#8221; he would boom in the morning. &#8220;And we&#8217;d pull him out of bed,&#8221; one recalled.<\/em><\/p>\n<p><em>The youngsters, whose parents belonged to Hubbard&#8217;s Church of Scientology, would lay out his clothes, run his shower and help him dress. He taught them how to sprinkle powder in his socks and gently slip them on so as not to pull the hairs on his legs.<\/em><\/p>\n<p><em>They made sure the temperature in his room never varied from 72 degrees. They boiled water at night to keep the humidity just right. They would hand him a cigarette and follow in his footsteps with an ashtray.<\/em><\/p><\/blockquote>\n<figure id=\"attachment_560\" aria-describedby=\"caption-attachment-560\" style=\"width: 180px\" class=\"wp-caption alignright\"><img loading=\"lazy\" decoding=\"async\" class=\"wp-image-560\" src=\"https:\/\/novus2.com\/righteouscause\/wp-content\/uploads\/2024\/04\/Hubbards-Messengers.jpg\" alt=\"\" width=\"180\" height=\"282\" srcset=\"https:\/\/novus2.com\/righteouscause\/wp-content\/uploads\/2024\/04\/Hubbards-Messengers.jpg 373w, https:\/\/novus2.com\/righteouscause\/wp-content\/uploads\/2024\/04\/Hubbards-Messengers-191x300.jpg 191w, https:\/\/novus2.com\/righteouscause\/wp-content\/uploads\/2024\/04\/Hubbards-Messengers-300x471.jpg 300w\" sizes=\"auto, (max-width: 180px) 100vw, 180px\" \/><figcaption id=\"caption-attachment-560\" class=\"wp-caption-text\"><em>Messengers&#8217; uniforms were white shorts, tie tops, and platform shoes with knee-high socks.<\/em><\/figcaption><\/figure>\n<p>After being singled out by the IRS for evading taxes in about 1970, Hubbard decided to escape on the open waters aboard a vessel known as the Apollo. During this time, he adopted the titles of &#8220;Commodore&#8221; and had children of Sea Org members, organized as the <strong><a href=\"https:\/\/en.wikipedia.org\/wiki\/Commodore%27s_Messenger_Organization\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener\">Commodore&#8217;s Messenger Organization<\/a><\/strong> (CMO) referred to as &#8220;Messengers,&#8221; attend to his needs, such as lighting his cigarettes, fetching his beverages, documenting his words, preparing his baths, and catering to his every desire. According to various reports, a significant number of these messengers were young women who were described as attractive and dressed in revealing attire, including hot pants and halter tops. This created a disturbing dynamic where underage individuals were objectified and exploited in a sexualized manner while serving Hubbard&#8217;s needs. These girls were not just messengers, though; they were Hubbard&#8217;s enforcers and essentially his snitches. They were fiercely loyal to him and did whatever he said.<\/p>\n<p>How did Scientology leader L. Ron Hubbard&#8217;s Messengers begin? <a href=\"https:\/\/youtu.be\/gniImwrktfc\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener\"><strong>Janis Gillham Grady gives first-hand<\/strong><\/a> stories about the early days of the Messengers (she was one of the original 4 girls), starting at age 12 and working directly with Hubbard 6 hours a day, 7 days a week, for many years. This is Part 1 of a series that includes never-before-seen photos from the early days of the Sea Organization, L. Ron Hubbard, and his messengers- beginning in 1968 through the early 70s.<\/p>\n<h2><span style=\"color: #000080;\"><strong>Ex-Mormon, Ex-Scientologist Get Together<\/strong><\/span><\/h2>\n<p><img loading=\"lazy\" decoding=\"async\" class=\"alignright wp-image-6953\" src=\"https:\/\/novus2.com\/righteouscause\/wp-content\/uploads\/2026\/03\/Chris-Shelton-video-300x188.png\" alt=\"\" width=\"350\" height=\"220\" srcset=\"https:\/\/novus2.com\/righteouscause\/wp-content\/uploads\/2026\/03\/Chris-Shelton-video-300x188.png 300w, https:\/\/novus2.com\/righteouscause\/wp-content\/uploads\/2026\/03\/Chris-Shelton-video-150x94.png 150w, https:\/\/novus2.com\/righteouscause\/wp-content\/uploads\/2026\/03\/Chris-Shelton-video-768x482.png 768w, https:\/\/novus2.com\/righteouscause\/wp-content\/uploads\/2026\/03\/Chris-Shelton-video-850x534.png 850w, https:\/\/novus2.com\/righteouscause\/wp-content\/uploads\/2026\/03\/Chris-Shelton-video.png 1000w\" sizes=\"auto, (max-width: 350px) 100vw, 350px\" \/><a href=\"https:\/\/youtu.be\/rOISo29UbT4?si=TkiYMSx9g7MSILBY\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener\"><strong>In this video<\/strong><\/a>, John Dehlin sits down with ex-Scientologist, author, and popular YouTuber Chris Shelton for a wide-ranging and deeply revealing conversation that many viewers may find both surprising and unsettling. Chris spent over two decades inside Scientology \u2014 including years in the elite Sea Organization \u2014 before finally breaking free and becoming one of the most articulate and informed critics of the organization. He knows the inner machinery of Scientology not as an outside observer, but as someone who lived it, breathed it, and eventually dared to walk away from it.<\/p>\n<p>This episode explores a brief but eye-opening history of Scientology, with particular focus on the startling parallels between Scientology founder L. Ron Hubbard and Latter-day Saint church founder Joseph Smith. The similarities are not superficial. Both men were charismatic, controversial, and larger-than-life personalities who claimed unique divine or cosmic authority. Both demonstrated a pattern of financial exploitation, sexual impropriety, and a remarkably convenient ability to receive new &#8220;revelations&#8221; whenever circumstances demanded. Both constructed elaborate theological systems designed to inspire devotion, discourage doubt, and insulate their organizations from outside scrutiny.<\/p>\n<p>What makes this conversation especially valuable is Chris&#8217;s insider perspective. He is not speaking in abstractions \u2014 he is describing the lived psychological experience of being inside a high-control religious organization, which makes his observations about Mormonism not merely academic, but viscerally recognizable to anyone who has ever sat in a pew, attended a testimony meeting, or paid a tithing settlement. If you have ever wondered why intelligent, educated, and otherwise rational people remain loyal to institutions that strain credulity, this conversation may be the most important one you watch.<\/p>\n<p>The following is a summary of the discussion:<\/p>\n<div class=\"prose dark:prose-invert inline leading-relaxed break-words min-w-0 [word-break:break-word] prose-strong:font-bold [&amp;_&gt;*:first-child]:mt-0 [&amp;_&gt;*:last-child]:mb-0\">\n<blockquote>\n<h3 id=\"scientology--mormonism-with-chris-shelton-pt-2--ep\" class=\"mb-2 mt-4 [.has-inline-images_&amp;]:clear-end font-editorial font-bold text-lg first:mt-0 md:text-lg [hr+&amp;]:mt-4\"><span style=\"color: #000080;\"><strong>Scientology &amp; Mormonism with Chris Shelton, Pt. 2 \u2014 Episode 1190<\/strong><\/span><\/h3>\n<p class=\"my-2 [&amp;+p]:mt-4 [&amp;_strong:has(+br)]:inline-block [&amp;_strong:has(+br)]:pb-2\"><em>This episode continues a comparative conversation between the John Dehlin and Chris Shelton, a former Scientologist turned critic, drawing striking parallels between the founding of Scientology and Mormonism.<\/em><\/p>\n<h3 id=\"dianetics-and-the-appeal-of-self-help\" class=\"mb-2 mt-4 [.has-inline-images_&amp;]:clear-end font-editorial font-bold text-lg first:mt-0 md:text-lg [hr+&amp;]:mt-4\"><span style=\"color: #800000;\"><strong>Dianetics and the Appeal of Self-Help<\/strong><\/span><\/h3>\n<p class=\"my-2 [&amp;+p]:mt-4 [&amp;_strong:has(+br)]:inline-block [&amp;_strong:has(+br)]:pb-2\"><em>The discussion opens by contextualizing L. Ron Hubbard&#8217;s Dianetics within the broader landscape of 1950s mental health, when psychiatry was still largely experimental. Shelton argues that Hubbard&#8217;s pseudoscience was no more speculative than Freudian or behavioral methods of the era. Both hosts agree that people&#8217;s desperate desire to feel worthy, relieve anxiety, and find meaning makes them vulnerable to charismatic systems \u2014 whether religion, Dianetics, or alternative healing \u2014 and that this psychological hunger drives the growth of new religious movements.<\/em><\/p>\n<h3 id=\"hubbards-rise-and-early-fraud\" class=\"mb-2 mt-4 [.has-inline-images_&amp;]:clear-end font-editorial font-bold text-lg first:mt-0 md:text-lg [hr+&amp;]:mt-4\"><span style=\"color: #800000;\"><strong>Hubbard&#8217;s Rise and Early Fraud<\/strong><\/span><\/h3>\n<p class=\"my-2 [&amp;+p]:mt-4 [&amp;_strong:has(+br)]:inline-block [&amp;_strong:has(+br)]:pb-2\"><em>After Dianetics became a bestseller in May 1950, Hubbard quickly pivoted from author to lecturer, charging fees and improvising doctrine as he traveled the country. A pivotal public embarrassment came when a woman presented as the first &#8220;Clear&#8221; \u2014 someone with perfect recall \u2014 could not even remember the color of Hubbard&#8217;s tie moments after seeing it. The failure exposed the gap between Hubbard&#8217;s promises and reality, but with no internet and no easy fact-checking, he escaped widespread accountability.<\/em><\/p>\n<h3 id=\"mythology-fabrication-and-parallel-to-joseph-smith\" class=\"mb-2 mt-4 [.has-inline-images_&amp;]:clear-end font-editorial font-bold text-lg first:mt-0 md:text-lg [hr+&amp;]:mt-4\"><span style=\"color: #800000;\"><strong>Mythology, Fabrication, and Parallel to Joseph Smith<\/strong><\/span><\/h3>\n<p class=\"my-2 [&amp;+p]:mt-4 [&amp;_strong:has(+br)]:inline-block [&amp;_strong:has(+br)]:pb-2\"><em>The hosts highlight how Hubbard constructed a false backstory \u2014 claiming he had healed himself of combat blindness and lameness at a naval hospital \u2014 to legitimize Dianetics. This pattern of embellishment and growing mythology is drawn directly into comparison with Joseph Smith, whose foundational stories also expanded and changed over time. Both men made bolder claims as time progressed, and both had early co-founders who ultimately turned against them.<\/em><\/p>\n<h3 id=\"financial-collapse-and-the-phoenix-principle\" class=\"mb-2 mt-4 [.has-inline-images_&amp;]:clear-end font-editorial font-bold text-lg first:mt-0 md:text-lg [hr+&amp;]:mt-4\"><span style=\"color: #800000;\"><strong>Financial Collapse and the Phoenix Principle<\/strong><\/span><\/h3>\n<p class=\"my-2 [&amp;+p]:mt-4 [&amp;_strong:has(+br)]:inline-block [&amp;_strong:has(+br)]:pb-2\"><em>By the end of 1950, Dianetics foundations had collapsed financially due to Hubbard&#8217;s mismanagement, personal scandals (including kidnapping his daughter and domestic abuse), and public attacks from scientists in Time and Life magazines. This mirrors the Kirtland period of early Mormonism, when Joseph Smith faced financial ruin, mass defections, and accusations of fraud. Remarkably, both leaders managed to rise from total collapse and rebuild \u2014 what the hosts call a &#8220;phoenix from the ashes&#8221; pattern common to charismatic founders.<\/em><\/p>\n<h3 id=\"the-e-meter-and-the-birth-of-theta\" class=\"mb-2 mt-4 [.has-inline-images_&amp;]:clear-end font-editorial font-bold text-lg first:mt-0 md:text-lg [hr+&amp;]:mt-4\"><span style=\"color: #800000;\"><strong>The E-Meter and the Birth of Theta<\/strong><\/span><\/h3>\n<p class=\"my-2 [&amp;+p]:mt-4 [&amp;_strong:has(+br)]:inline-block [&amp;_strong:has(+br)]:pb-2\"><em>In 1951\u201352, Hubbard adopted a galvanic skin response device \u2014 essentially one third of a lie detector \u2014 rebranded as the &#8220;electro-psychometer&#8221; or <span style=\"color: #800000;\"><strong>e-meter<\/strong><\/span>. He claimed it measured electrical charge from mental image pictures stored in the mind. Using this device during auditing sessions, subjects began &#8220;discovering&#8221; engrams from past lives, which introduced a spiritual dimension into what had been framed as a science. This shift from pseudo-scientific self-help into a metaphysical framework \u2014 introducing the concept of &#8220;theta&#8221; (a life force) \u2014 laid the groundwork for Scientology&#8217;s eventual emergence as a religion.<\/em><\/p>\n<h3 id=\"ongoing-parallels-as-a-structural-framework\" class=\"mb-2 mt-4 [.has-inline-images_&amp;]:clear-end font-editorial font-bold text-lg first:mt-0 md:text-lg [hr+&amp;]:mt-4\"><span style=\"color: #800000;\"><strong>Ongoing Parallels as a Structural Framework<\/strong><\/span><\/h3>\n<p class=\"my-2 [&amp;+p]:mt-4 [&amp;_strong:has(+br)]:inline-block [&amp;_strong:has(+br)]:pb-2\"><em>Throughout the episode, the hosts treat these comparisons not as coincidence but as a recognizable <span style=\"color: #800000;\"><strong>playbook of cult formation:<\/strong><\/span> charismatic founder, fabricated biography, early excitement followed by scandal, financial implosion, key defections, and eventual doctrinal reinvention. The conversation frames both Hubbard and Joseph Smith as textbook examples of how new religious movements are born and sustained through psychological need and institutional momentum.<\/em><\/p>\n<\/blockquote>\n<\/div>\n<h2 class=\"my-2 [&amp;+p]:mt-4 [&amp;_strong:has(+br)]:inline-block [&amp;_strong:has(+br)]:pb-2\"><span style=\"color: #000080;\"><strong>Same Architecture, Different Wallpaper<\/strong><\/span><\/h2>\n<p class=\"my-2 [&amp;+p]:mt-4 [&amp;_strong:has(+br)]:inline-block [&amp;_strong:has(+br)]:pb-2\">History has a long memory, and it does not always flatter the institutions that would prefer it stay silent.<\/p>\n<p class=\"my-2 [&amp;+p]:mt-4 [&amp;_strong:has(+br)]:inline-block [&amp;_strong:has(+br)]:pb-2\">The Latter-day Saints have, undeniably, traveled an extraordinary distance from their turbulent 19th-century origins. Polygamy is officially gone. The theocratic political ambitions of the Brigham Young era have been quietly retired. The most overtly controversial doctrines have been softened, reframed, or buried in footnotes. By the standards of modern American religious life, the LDS Church presents a wholesome, family-centered, community-minded face to the world \u2014 and for millions of its members, that face reflects a genuinely lived reality.<\/p>\n<p class=\"my-2 [&amp;+p]:mt-4 [&amp;_strong:has(+br)]:inline-block [&amp;_strong:has(+br)]:pb-2\">But institutions cannot fully outrun their DNA. The authoritarian impulse that drove early Mormon leadership \u2014 the demand for absolute loyalty, the suppression of dissent, the financial opacity, the carefully maintained boundary between what leaders know and what members are permitted to know \u2014 did not disappear when the Church modernized its public image. It adapted. It became more sophisticated, more legally careful, and more culturally palatable. But the architecture beneath the updated fa\u00e7ade remains remarkably familiar to anyone who has studied the history honestly.<\/p>\n<p class=\"my-2 [&amp;+p]:mt-4 [&amp;_strong:has(+br)]:inline-block [&amp;_strong:has(+br)]:pb-2\">In their own 19th-century moment, the early Latter-day Saints were regarded by much of the American public with precisely the same mixture of alarm, fascination, and disbelief that Scientology provokes today. They were the dangerous new movement. The secretive &#8220;cult.&#8221; The organization that demanded everything from its members and answered to no one. The comparison is not merely rhetorical \u2014 it is historical.<\/p>\n<p class=\"my-2 [&amp;+p]:mt-4 [&amp;_strong:has(+br)]:inline-block [&amp;_strong:has(+br)]:pb-2\">The LDS Church cleaned up its act. But the evasiveness endures \u2014 in sealed financial records, in carefully worded non-answers from institutional spokesmen, in the persistent gap between what leadership knows and what the widow faithfully tithing her thirty-five cents is ever told. And the public, whatever its conscious opinion of organized religion, is remarkably good at sensing that gap intuitively.<\/p>\n<p class=\"my-2 [&amp;+p]:mt-4 [&amp;_strong:has(+br)]:inline-block [&amp;_strong:has(+br)]:pb-2\">Scientology may yet follow the same long arc toward institutional respectability. Or it may not survive the scrutiny of the information age long enough to find out. Either way, the lesson embedded in both of these movements is the same one the Hebrew prophets announced centuries before either organization existed: that no institution, however sacred its claims, is exempt from the demands of truth, transparency, and justice for the least of those within its care.<\/p>\n<p><em><span style=\"color: #000080;\"><strong>Amos 5:21-24<\/strong><\/span><\/em>\u00a0is perhaps the most thunderous prophetic indictment of religious institutionalism in all of Scripture. God declares through Amos:\u00a0<em>&#8220;I hate, I despise your religious festivals; your assemblies are a stench to me&#8230; Away with the noise of your songs! I will not listen to the music of your harps. But let justice roll on like a river, righteousness like a never-failing stream.&#8221;<\/em>\u00a0The message is unmistakable \u2014 elaborate religious ceremony means nothing to God when justice for the vulnerable is withheld.<\/p>\n<p><span style=\"color: #000080;\"><em><strong>Isaiah 10:1-2<\/strong><\/em><\/span>\u00a0speaks directly to institutional systems designed to exploit the powerless:\u00a0<em>&#8220;Woe to those who make unjust laws, to those who issue oppressive decrees, to deprive the poor of their rights and withhold justice from the oppressed of my people, making widows their prey and robbing the fatherless.&#8221;<\/em><\/p>\n<p class=\"my-2 [&amp;+p]:mt-4 [&amp;_strong:has(+br)]:inline-block [&amp;_strong:has(+br)]:pb-2\"><span style=\"color: #000080;\"><strong>The struggling widow in rural Mexico is still waiting for an answer.<\/strong><\/span><\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>Place two of America&#8217;s most controversial religious movements side by side under the cold light of honest scrutiny, and what emerges is not merely comparison \u2014 it is a mirror. The parallels between Scientology and Mormonism are nothing short of startling. Both organizations guard their most unconventional teachings behind carefully constructed layers of secrecy, revealing&#8230;<\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":1,"featured_media":5838,"comment_status":"open","ping_status":"open","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"footnotes":"","jetpack_publicize_message":"","jetpack_publicize_feature_enabled":true,"jetpack_social_post_already_shared":true,"jetpack_social_options":{"image_generator_settings":{"template":"highway","default_image_id":0,"font":"","enabled":false},"version":2}},"categories":[44,45,27],"tags":[],"class_list":["post-6940","post","type-post","status-publish","format-standard","has-post-thumbnail","hentry","category-latter-day-saints","category-mormonism","category-scientology"],"jetpack_publicize_connections":[],"jetpack_featured_media_url":"https:\/\/novus2.com\/righteouscause\/wp-content\/uploads\/2024\/12\/Gemini-Smith-and-Hubbard.jpg","jetpack_sharing_enabled":true,"_links":{"self":[{"href":"https:\/\/novus2.com\/righteouscause\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/6940","targetHints":{"allow":["GET"]}}],"collection":[{"href":"https:\/\/novus2.com\/righteouscause\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts"}],"about":[{"href":"https:\/\/novus2.com\/righteouscause\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/types\/post"}],"author":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/novus2.com\/righteouscause\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/users\/1"}],"replies":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/novus2.com\/righteouscause\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/comments?post=6940"}],"version-history":[{"count":8,"href":"https:\/\/novus2.com\/righteouscause\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/6940\/revisions"}],"predecessor-version":[{"id":7548,"href":"https:\/\/novus2.com\/righteouscause\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/6940\/revisions\/7548"}],"wp:featuredmedia":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/novus2.com\/righteouscause\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/media\/5838"}],"wp:attachment":[{"href":"https:\/\/novus2.com\/righteouscause\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/media?parent=6940"}],"wp:term":[{"taxonomy":"category","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/novus2.com\/righteouscause\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/categories?post=6940"},{"taxonomy":"post_tag","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/novus2.com\/righteouscause\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/tags?post=6940"}],"curies":[{"name":"wp","href":"https:\/\/api.w.org\/{rel}","templated":true}]}}