From Science Fiction to Space-age
Religion

Summary
The Church of Scientology
is a controversial new religion developed by L. Ron Hubbard as an
extension of his earlier psychological theories of Dianetics.
Drawing on ideas from Buddhist and Hindu religious philosophy,
science fiction, and Western concepts in psychology and science, L.
Ron Hubbard produced a religion that sees all human beings as
immortal spirits (thetans) who have forgotten their identity and
become deceived by the very universe they mentally emanated in order
to amuse themselves. Scientology claims it can free the thetan to
realize his or her true nature and powers through certain
controversial procedures that allegedly heal the mind and free the
spirit.
Although the church
claims its beliefs are not incompatible with Christian faith, an
evaluation of what Scientology teaches in the areas of God, man, the
creation, salvation, and death proves this is not so. Scientology is
a powerful new religion whose teachings are inconsistent with the
beliefs of orthodox Christian faith.
Ours is an age of
religious cacophony, as was the Roman Empire of Christ's time. From
agnosticism to Hegelianism, from devil-worship to scientific
rationalism, from theosophical cults to philosophies of process:
virtually any world view conceivable is offered to modern man in the
pluralistic marketplace of ideas. Our age is indeed in ideological
and societal agony, grasping at anything and everything that can
conceivably offer the ecstasy of a cosmic relationship or of a
comprehensive Weltanschauung [world view]. -- John Warwick
Montgomery.[1]
One of the most
intriguing and controversial items found in today's religious
marketplace is The Church of Scientology. The church was founded by
Lafayette Ronald Hubbard (1911-1986) in California in the 1950s as
an extension of his earlier nonreligious theory of Dianetics.[2] (Dianetics
is believed to deals with mind and body; Scientology with the human
spirit, although they necessarily overlap in places. According to
the church, technically, "para-Scientology" is that branch of
Scientology involving past lives, mysticism, the occult, and so
forth.[3] For our purposes, the term Scientology is employed in its
broadest sense.)
Today Scientology boasts
over 700 centers in 65 countries and is one of the wealthiest of the
new religions. Celebrities such as Tom Cruise, John Travolta,
Kirstie Alley, and Sonny Bono are only a few of the Hollywood
faithful who actively endorse Scientology. But this new religion
also has its critics, as still-circulated issues of Readers
Digest (May 1980, September 1981) and Time magazine (May
6, 1991) reveal.
THE PHILOSOPHY OF SCIENTOLOGY
The basic tenets of
Scientology result from an eclectic mixture of Eastern philosophy
and the personal research of Hubbard into a variety of disciplines,
as well as the "data" uncovered from "auditing." Auditing is
Scientology's "counseling" or extensive examination of the present
life and "past lives" of the "preclear," or initiate. In one of its
many definitions, Hubbard has described Scientology as "the Western
Anglicized continuance of many earlier forms of wisdom."[4] These
include the Vedas, Taoism, Buddhism, Judaism, Gnosticism and early
Greek civilization; and the teachings of Jesus, Nietzsche, and
Freud. According to Hubbard, "Scientology has accomplished the goal
of religion expressed in all Man's written history, the freeing of
the soul by wisdom."[5]
Scientology divides the
mind into two components -- the analytic and the reactive,
roughly parallel to the conscious or rational mind and unconscious
or irrational mind. Experiences of extreme shock, pain, or
unconsciousness cause "engrams," or sensory impressions, to be
recorded in the reactive mind. These mental pictures are, in turn,
the cause of our emotional and even many physical problems today.[6]
They can be dislodged only through Scientology.[7]
While these memory
pictures are perfectly recorded, they lay dormant in the brain until
restimulated by a similar incident. When restimulated, they cause
conditioned, stimulus-response behavior which is counterproductive
to one's well-being. Thus, when the brain sees a similar situation
to a past threatening experience -- even though it is not now a
threat to survival, it responds as if it were, producing a form of
inappropriate and self-defeating behavior. For example, a boy falls
out of a tree just as a red car passes by and is knocked
unconscious. Later, even as a man, red cars (even red things) may
restimulate the episode in various ways and cause irrational
reactions. This man may thus refuse to ride in a red car and may
even get ill or dizzy when confronted with the possibility.
In this sense, we are all
more or less conditioned beings -- "machines" that simply respond to
their operator (i.e., the reactive mind). Scientology believes this
restimulation is fairly automatic. In other words, we are not free
beings: we are slaves of an "aberrated" (reactive) mind. Scientology
maintains that through Dianetic and/or Scientology therapy, we can
be directly exposed to our engrams, "erase" them, and become
"clear," or in control of our behavior ("at cause") rather than at
the mercy of a damaged reactive mind ("at effect").
Unfortunately,
Scientology informs us, through reincarnation we have all been
accumulating engrams for trillions of years. Thus, to resolve hidden
engrams, not only must the initiate be mentally whisked back to
reexperience the damaging events of this life, but of many past
lives as well.
According to Scientology,
each person is really a thetan, an immortal spirit who has been so
damaged by engrams that he has forgotten he is immortal and even
forgotten he is a thetan. Thetans have absolute control over their
bodies, but, sadly, they think they are bodies (a terrible
fate) and hence are bound by the MEST (matter, energy, space, time)
universe. Each time a body dies, the thetan must enter another body,
but this brings with it all its trillions of years' accumulation of
engrams. Thetans thus are no longer free, but are in bondage to the
material universe.[8] Scientology claims it can free the thetan.
THEOLOGICAL PRESUPPOSITIONS
In light of the religious
claims of Scientology I will emphasize the theological
presuppositions of the church in six fundamental categories -- God,
man, creation, salvation, death, and the supernatural.
God
In the Church of
Scientology the concept of God would appear to be panentheistic
(believing that all finite entities are within, but not identical
to, God),[9] although monotheism could also be assumed. What the
church refers to as "the Supreme Being" is purposely left undefined
and not particularly relevant in Scientology theory or practice. It
is variously implied to be, or referred to as, "Nature," "Infinity,"
"the Eighth Dynamic," "all Theta" (life), and so forth. Usually the
individual Scientologist is free to interpret God in whatever manner
he or she wishes.[10]
Man
Scientology maintains
that in his true nature, man is not the limited and pitiful body and
ego he mistakenly imagines himself to be. He is a thetan whose
fundamental nature is basically good and divine. He is not morally
fallen; rather he is simply ignorant of his own perfection. His only
"Fall" was into matter, not sin. How did this Fall come about?
Apparently, trillions of
years ago thetans became bored, so they emanated mental universes to
play in and amuse themselves. Soon, however, they became more and
more entranced in their own creation until they were so conditioned
by the manifestations of their own thought processes that they lost
all awareness of their true identity and spiritual nature.[11]
They became hypnotized
and trapped by MEST. Compounding the problem was the accumulation of
endless engrams throughout trillions of years of existence. The
final result was a pitiful creature indeed -- a materially enslaved
entity existing as a mere stimulus-response machine. Today only
slavery to the reactive mind and bondage to the MEST universe (i.e.,
the physical body and environment) are what remain of once glorious
spiritual beings. Thus, the Scientology concept of man is described
in Scientology: A World Religion Emerges in the Space Age as
follows:
The PERSON in Scientology
is (and discovers himself to be) a Thetan (spiritual being) of
infinite creative potential who acts in, but is not part of, the
physical universe....
The Eternal
Indestructible Self (Atman) of the Hindu Upanishads early
foreshadowed the Scientology concept of the Thetan....
The Thetan is also
considered to be the innate source of his own projected universe,
which overlaps the created universes of other Thetans in a great
community of souls. Thus is formed the world of the senses, in
relation to which, like the Hindu "Lila," or "Divine Play," each
Thetan plays the Game of Life in concert with its spiritual
partners....
As a Being
descends...into Materiality, the manifestations of his communication
become heavier and more dense, and his experience of reality
deteriorates.[12]
Creation
The universe was not
created by a single supreme being ex nihilo (out of nothing),
thus having a separate existence of its own. Instead, the
Scientology universe constitutes a subjective, mental emanation or
"projection" of the thetans, having merely an agreed-upon (and not
actual) reality. Thus, the entire physical universe is a Game, a
product of thetan ingenuity (designed for escaping boredom) which
apparently emanates from an original thetan consensus to "create" in
pre-history.[13]
As a product of thetan
minds, the universe is capable of endless manipulation by an aware
or spiritually enlightened thetan. Thus, Scientologists may view
psychic powers developed through their church practices as a
confirmation of this teaching. But for a densely ignorant thetan
(principally, all non-Scientologists) the universe is a deceptive
and deadly spiritual trap. Ignorant thetans are bound by engrams and
think they are only physical bodies. As a result, they are weak,
impotent creatures enslaved to a material universe that inhibits
self-realization of their nature as an immortal spirit.[14] In
essence, the material creation as we know it is not only an illusion
but also a positive evil -- that is, a powerfully destructive
barrier one must overcome in order to advance spiritually.[15]
Salvation
This pitiful thetan
slavery to MEST and his own conditioned ignorance continued for
millennia until L. Ron Hubbard discovered the secret nature of
humankind and pioneered a solution to the thetan's misery by
developing a universal plan of salvation. Through Scientology
auditing, engrams may be neutralized and the thetan made
increasingly self-aware or "enlightened." By various techniques a
practical methodology was developed to enable the initiate to
recognize his (or her) spiritual existence, to separate from the
MEST body, and to begin to exert mental control over the MEST
universe. In other words, the initiate may eventually achieve a
state of "clear" and then, by progressing through numerous levels of
"Operating Thetan" ("OT"), increasingly achieve self-realization.
(An "Operating Thetan" is one who is more and more aware of and
"operating" according to his true thetan abilities.)
Death
Death for Scientology is
sometimes a blessing, for it may permit the release of the soul from
the prison of the body (i.e., the evolution of the thetan [soul]
into a higher state of awareness). Nevertheless, in another sense
death is an event so appallingly ordinary (indeed, one which each
person has passed through trillions of times) that it is, in effect,
an irrelevant incident, almost inconsequential in the larger scheme
of things.[16]
The Occult
The employment of psychic
powers and out-of-body episodes (e.g., as a means for the thetan to
re-realize his or her true powers) is indicative of the church's
acceptance of the realm of the occult. Further, Hubbard's own son
goes so far as to affirm that "black magic is the inner core of
Scientology."[17] Hubbard himself allegedly confessed that a spirit
entity guided him throughout his life[18] and a number of scholarly
researchers have verified the occult nature of Scientology.[19]
CRITIQUE
Despite many successful
attempts by the Church of Scientology to inhibit criticism,[20]
there remains a sizable literature available to the researcher.
Particularly helpful are: (1) government investigations and reports,
(2) transcripts of innumerable court proceedings (whether
Scientology functions as plaintiff or defendant), (3) scholarly
review in any number of fields related to Scientology theory (e.g.,
philosophy, medicine, psychology, sociology, theology, ethics), (4)
analysis by the popular press and investigative reporting, in both
printed and visual media, and (5) the published literature of
current and former members.[21]
Scientology and/or
Dianetics are certainly not without testable claims, even though the
church alleges Hubbard has at no time made any claims for them.[22]
Still, Hubbard believed -- among many other things -- that his
philosophy and methodology (1) are superior in mental health
expertise, (2) (Dianetics) can be 100 percent successful and
increase one's I.Q., (3) can solve humankind's major problems, and
(4) are a rational and proven science (except where they impinge on
the study of the spirit).[23] But before Dianetics had evolved into
Scientology, it had been examined and critiqued by a variety of
investigators and invalidated as to its basic claims.[24]
Neither are most of the
claims of Scientology established. For example, one of the great
legal minds of our century is Oxford educated Lord Chancellor
Hailsham. He has twice held the highest office open to lawyers in
England, that of Lord Chancellor, as well as being the Minister of
Education and Minister of Science and Technology. He comments, "I do
not find [Scientology's] philosophical conceptions adequate to
support [its] theories...the factual basis on which they claim to
have produced good results on individuals do not seem to me to be
fully substantiated."[25]
As to its mental health
claims, the application of Scientology techniques has allegedly
harmed some people. Problems can arise from occult activity,
Scientology processes, and auditor inexperience.[26] They include
hallucinations and irrational behavior, severe disorientation,
strange bodily sensations, physical and mental illness,
unconsciousness, and suicide.[27] (As the notes will reveal, most of
the above hazards were admitted by Hubbard himself, although he
maintained they only occurred through misapplication of the
"technology" of Scientology.)
Hubbard also claimed that
Scientology is a proven science that is rational and utilizes
scientific principles. However, Hubbard's methods contradict this
assertion and reveal that scientifically his research methodology is
questionable or unreliable.[28] Even his own son claims that for the
multimillion bestseller Dianetics: The Modern Science of Mental
Health he did no research at all....what he did, really, was
take bits and pieces from other people and put them together in a
blender and stir them all up -- and out came Dianetics! All the
examples in the book -- some 200 "real-life experiences" -- were
just the result of his obsessions with abortions and unconscious
states....In fact, the vast majority of those incidents were
invented off the top of his head. The rest stem from his own secret
life, which was deeply involved in the occult and black magic. That
involvement goes back to when he was sixteen.[29]
Further, researchers who
have examined the only "scientific" instrument in Scientology
allegedly capable of producing "data" have concluded it is useless
as to its claimed abilities. This instrument is the "E-meter," an
electric meter which is used to "locate" engrams. The E-meter
accurately measures variations in the electrical resistance of the
human body, like a galvanometer. But "none of the Scientology
theories associated with, or claims made for, the E-meter is
justified. They are contrary to expert evidence...."[30]
Scientology Ethics
Scientology maintains a
strong position outwardly on ethical issues:
The practice of Scientology results in a
higher level of ethics and integrity....[31]
Millions already believe the Ethics of
Scientology carry more weight and honesty than the traditional and
confused laws of nations.[32]
The Church of Scientology International
memberships -- your link to other honest ethical people.[33]
Unfortunately,
Scientology does not always live up well to its own ethical
confessions, partly because its ethics seem to be valid only for
those it deems worthy of them. For example, critics of the church
may be treated as enemies.[34]
We should also note that
Scientology has its own unique definitions for terms. Thus words
used in the above quotations -- such as ethics -- carry not
only accepted meanings but also Scientological ones.[35]
Truth Is Stranger than Fiction
This brings us to a
related problem in Scientology: its subjective use of terms so that
data is manipulated to conform to the alleged discoveries and truths
of Scientology. Perhaps the most fruitful area to begin with is by
noting Hubbard's expertise as a science fiction writer. In fact,
many of the themes one finds in Scientology can also be found in his
science fiction works.[36]
For Hubbard "life is a
game," and this is about the only thing that gives it any real
meaning.[37] The various exploits of thetans in the past trillions
of years are their lila (or sport) -- the games they play to
keep eternal boredom at bay. Certainly many critics would contend
that the adventures of thetans -- as chronicled in, for example,
Hubbard's A History of Man and Have You Lived Before This
Life? -- should be ranked among his science fiction work. From
the latter book consider one alleged "past life" incident of a
Scientology counselee as uncovered by a Scientology auditor using
his E-meter:
The preclear was on Mars without a body
469,476,600 years ago, creating havoc, destroying a bridge and
buildings. The people were called by an alarm to temple. PC
[preclear] went and broke the back pew, and the Temple tower. He
wandered in town and saw a doll in a window, and got entrapped
[inside the doll] trying to move its limbs. People seized it, beat
it up, and threw the doll out of the window (30 ft. drop). The doll
was taken roughly to the Temple, and was zapped by a bishop's gun
while the congregation chanted "God is Love." When the people left,
the doll, out of control, staggered out and was run over by a large
car and a steamroller. It was then taken back to the Bishop, who
ordered it to be taken (in a lorry with others) to dig trenches or
ditches for 2,000 years. (The whole incident took nearly 2,000,000
years.) Then it was taken and the body was removed and the PC was
promised a robot body. The thetan (PC) went up to an implant station
and was put into an ice-cube and went by flying saucer and was
dropped at Planet ZX 432.[38]
Hubbard himself confesses
that truth is so strange one cannot actually distinguish between
science fiction and science fact (a revelation he also
found useful for rejecting or manipulating the "illusions" of
conventional knowledge). For example, Hubbard once noted, "One of
the closest pieces of work to a thetan is Alice in Wonderland....He
can mock up [invent, make] white rabbits and caterpillars and Mad
Hatters. He'd find himself right in his element."[39] And, "When you
look at man's location in the MEST Universe and what he has or has
not been through the picture is just incredibly wild...it's just too
fantastic for words, so of course, nobody would believe it."[40]
If we recall Hubbard's
teaching on the material creation we remember it is an illusion:
"The MEST universe can be established easily to be an
illusion...."[41] It is not that the universe does not exist,
rather, it has no objective, independent reality. It is a frivolous
mental game created and played by thetans. Conventional reality
simply results from the primordial thetan agreement ("mock-up") and
no more.[42] Thus, "objective" reality is simply a temporary
subjective manifestation of the mind of thetans.
Such a universe, of
course, cannot give true objective knowledge about things, for
things per se have no independent existence and are capable of
endless manipulation by an aware thetan. For Hubbard, only an
unaberrated thetan (i.e., one who by means of Scientology is truly
enlightened) knows things as they really are and, apparently,
Hubbard was the most enlightened thetan of all. Thus, for
Scientologists who agree, that which Hubbard says is true is
that which really is true, no matter how fantastic or
disharmonious with currently accepted knowledge.[43]
SCIENTOLOGY AND CHRISTIANITY
Despite the fact that as
late as 1971 (close to 20 years after the Church of Scientology was
founded) at least one book by Hubbard carried the straightforward
claim that "Scientology...is not a religion,"[44] it has become a
religion and one in competition with the Christian church. Consider
a survey conducted by the Church of Scientology itself. This poll,
which involved over 3,000 members, determined that the background of
Scientologists is predominantly Christian (roughly 40 percent
Protestant and 26 percent Catholic). A full 70 percent of those with
Christian backgrounds affirmed that they still considered themselves
practicing members of their Christian faith, which means that almost
half (47 percent) of those polled still consider themselves
Christian.[45]
These findings combined
with the additional facts that 37 percent of those surveyed had
received college degrees and 80 percent were from the middle class
indicate that Scientology constitutes an appealing and powerful
organization with an educated class of people, most of whom have
been recruited from Christian churches. And yet the response of
Christianity to this situation has been almost nonexistent. Just as
the Scientologist who considers him or herself a Christian does not
recognize the inconsistency of that position, the Christian church
has not yet recognized the risk Scientology poses to its own fold.
In a rational universe
two contrary religions might be false, but both cannot be true.
Thus, if the Christian world view is true (and I have shown
elsewhere how this may be reasonably established on
revelational-empirical grounds -- using the strict measure of legal
criteria[46]), then that which contradicts it cannot be true.
In the area of theology,
there are several key issues that people have pondered most
consistently -- and most personally. They concern the area of
theology proper (the existence and nature of God) as well as the
questions of revealed theology (does God exist for me?),
anthropology (who or what am I?), soteriology (how can I be saved?),
and thanatology (what happens when I die?).
These questions raise the
issues of the nature of God, man, salvation, and death. No issues
are more fundamental or important -- for to answer these questions
in error will, like a philosophical leaven, spread corruption
throughout one's world view. Below we will briefly compare and
contrast Scientology's answers to the questions with the answers
provided in the Bible.
God
As noted, Scientology is
fundamentally panentheistic. It teaches that there are a multitude
of thetans who, "collectively" with all life, could be said to
comprise the Supreme Being (see note 9). This contradicts the
biblical teaching that there is only one sovereign and perfect
Creator God from all eternity -- without beginning or end,
immutable, who exists in three Persons, and is infinitely holy,
just, and loving (e.g., Gen. 1:1; Isa. 43:10-11; Acts 5:3-4; Isa.
61:8; Mal. 3:6; 1 Tim. 2:5; Titus 2:13; 1 John 4:8-10).
Man
Scientology teaches that
man is an immortal spirit like the atman in Hinduism. As in
Hinduism, man may be considered a deity of sorts who has forgotten
he is divine.
The Bible rejects the
idea that man is an ignorant god who needs only enlightenment or
self-realization. Man is a creation of God, made in God's image. His
problems do not result from engrams or boredom, but from sin and
self-centeredness (Rom. 3:10-18; Eph. 2:1-3).
If there is one
supporting pillar of Scientology upon which everything rests, it is
the concept of thetans. Nearly everything of importance in
Scientology is predicated on the existence of thetans and their
conforming to the status Hubbard has given them. Obviously, if there
is no thetan as Hubbard defines it, the practices of Scientology are
without justification.
Consider the biblical
view. There is only one eternal God in the universe (Isa. 43:10-11).
He created man (body and spirit) as a finite creature at a point in
time (Gen. 2:7). Hence it is impossible that divine beings such as
Scientology's thetans can exist. Biblically then,
Scientology's philosophy, techniques, solutions to problems, and
final goals are based upon underlying presuppositions that are
inherently incorrect.
Put more simply, if no
thetan exists, then most of Scientology is based on error. For
"almost the entirety of Scientology consists of discovery and
refinements of methods whereby the Thetan can be persuaded to
relinquish his self-imposed limitations."[47]
Nevertheless, because
Scientology deals with the mind and certain practical considerations
(e.g., communication skills) it may also use or discover relevant
information about human psychology. Unfortunately, if such data is
placed into an overall world view that is false or questionable,
even though the data may be true, it may be misused in support of an
errant philosophy.
For example, during
Scientology counseling, the auditor (counselor) may extract certain
feelings or information from the initiate that indicate an
irrational fear of falling and a problem with vertigo. This
observation may be true. But because the more enlightened auditor
has already interpreted the initiate as a thetan ignorant of its
many lifetimes, and because his E-meter has supposedly "located" an
engram (the incident related to experiencing dizziness) from ten
trillion years ago, the auditor may interpret such information
wrongly -- as a past-life incident where the person is falling out
of a spaceship.
If we realize that the
entire purpose of Scientology is to help a (biblically) nonexistent
thetan realize its true nature, we must conclude that it does not
deal in the realm of reality. If no thetan exists, what else may a
Christian inquirer into Scientology conclude?
Salvation
Salvation in Scientology
progresses from personal ignorance and bondage to matter into
gnostic enlightenment and freedom from the MEST body and universe.
At an ultimate cost of tens of thousands of dollars, one is
progressively "saved" from engrams by knowledge (Scientology
beliefs) through good works (Scientology auditing and practice,
etc.) to arrive at the highest state of "operating thetan."
The Bible, on the other
hand, teaches that salvation is a free gift. One is redeemed from
sin on the principle of grace, simply through faith in Christ's
atonement (Eph. 2:8-9; John 6:47; Heb. 11:1; 1 John 2:2).
Death
Scientology claims that
death is endlessly repeatable through reincarnation and is hence
almost inconsequential. Death, however, is at least potentially
beneficial in that it may permit the release of the soul from the
prison of the body.
Biblically, death is a
one-time event that carries either the most sublime of blessings
(eternal heaven) or the most horrible of consequences (eternal
hell). Death leads to an irreversible fate for both the saved and
the lost and thus human beings have one lifetime only to make
their peace with God (Heb. 9:27; Matt. 25:46; Luke 26:19-31; Rev.
20:10-15).
In conclusion,
Scientology does not conform in basic world view or particular
teaching with Judeo-Christian revelation in any sense; indeed,
examined as a whole, it fundamentally rejects Christian faith.
Hubbard rejected Christ's deity and mission as figments of
unenlightened minds and therefore Hubbard's philosophy "is not
interested in saving man, but it can do much to prevent him from
being 'saved.'"[48]
We may observe that
Scientology does entertain a fine goal in attempting to improve the
world and man's lot within it, whether materially or spiritually.
Many practitioners are dedicated and selfless in seeking such ends.
Nevertheless, each Scientologist must weigh the scales of his or her
own conscience to determine the best manner in which to achieve such
goals. If man is not a thetan as Scientology claims, but a fallen
being in need of redemption as Christianity teaches, what will have
been the fruit of a lifetime of work?
It would be wise for
Scientologists with a Christian background (indeed, for all
Scientologists) to listen to the words of Jesus afresh:
"For what will a man be profited if he gain the whole world and
forfeits his soul? Or what will a man give in exchange for his
soul?" (Matt. 16:26) And, "This is eternal life, to know Thee, the
only true God and Jesus Christ, whom Thou has sent." (John 17:3)
NOTES
1 John Warwick
Montgomery, Faith Founded on Fact (Nashville: Thomas Nelson
Publishers, 1978), 152-53.
2 L. Ron Hubbard, Dianetics Today (Los Angeles: Church of
Scientology of California, 1975), III; and LRH Personal Secretary
Office, ed., What Is Scientology? (Los Angeles: Church of
Scientology of California, 1978) 209; cf. Christopher Evans,
Cults of Unreason (New York: Dell, 1975), 17-134 for early
problems and controversies.
3 L. Ron Hubbard, The Creation of Human Ability (Los Angeles:
The Publications Organization Worldwide, 1968), 189.
4 Ibid., 177.
5 Ibid., 180; cf. Church of Scientology Information Service,
Department of Archives, Scientology: A World Religion Emerges in
the Space Age (1974), 3-17.
6 Impact or injury must be involved for an engram to register. "The
engram is the single and sole source of aberration and psychosomatic
illness." (Hubbard, Dianetics Today, 43, 47; cf. 37-106 and
especially 38-59.)
7 E.g., Hubbard, Dianetics Today, 947-51; L. Ron Hubbard,
The Volunteer Minister's Handbook (Los Angeles: Church of
Scientology of California, 1976), 551-52; cf. the comments of former
14-year member Cyril Vosper in The Mind Benders (London:
Neville Spearman, 1971), 164-66, and member Peter Gillham in
Telling It Like It Is: A Course in Scientology Dissemination
(Phoenix: Institute of Applied Philosophy, 1972), 26.
8 See L. Ron Hubbard, Scientology: A History of Man
(Sussex, England: L. Ron Hubbard Communications office, 1961),
12-76, especially 53-60 for a discussion of alleged evolutionary
dynamics and their impact on one's current life. Cf. the discussion
in Evans, 38-47 and Roy Wallis, The Road to Total Freedom: A
Sociological Analysis of Scientology (New York: Columbia
University Press, 1977), 103-4.
9 On panentheism see Scientology: A World Religion Emerges,
21-24; L. Ron Hubbard, Dianetics and Scientology Technical
Dictionary (Los Angeles: Church of Scientology of California,
1975), 429; L. Ron Hubbard, Ceremonies of the Founding of the
Church of Scientology (Los Angeles: The American St. Hill
Organization, 1971), 41; Reality magazine, no. 121, 3;
Hubbard, The Creation of Human Ability, 277; Advance,
no. 35, 14-15; no. 36, 6.
10 Hubbard, What Is Scientology? 200. Wallis (112n.) observes
that God "does not figure greatly in either theory or practice."
11 See notes 8 and 9.
12 Scientology: A World Religion Emerges in the Space Age,
21-24.
13 Ibid. Cf. Hubbard, The Creation of Human Ability,
9-21; Hubbard, Technical Dictionary, 432; and L. Ron Hubbard,
Scientology 8-8008 (Los Angeles: The American St. Hill
Organization, 1967), 106-8.
14 Ibid.
15 Ibid. and L. Ron Hubbard, Scientology: The Fundamentals
of Thought (Los Angeles: American St. Hill Organization, 1971),
91, 98; Edward Lefson and Ruth Minshull, comps. When in Doubt
Communicate: Quotations from the Works of L. Ron Hubbard (Ann
Arbor, MI: Scientology Ann Arbor, 1969), 73, 123; Advance,
no. 19, 114.
16 E.g., cf. L. Ron Hubbard, "Death," Advance, no. 24, 9, 22
and L. Ron Hubbard, Have You Lived Before This Life? (Los
Angeles: The Church of Scientology of California, Department of
Publications Worldwide, 1968), passim.
17 "Penthouse Interview: L. Ron Hubbard, Jr.," Penthouse,
June 1983, 113 (CRI files). Cf. Brent Corydon and L. Ron Hubbard,
Jr., L. Ron Hubbard: Messiah or Madman? (Secaucus, NJ: Lyle
Stuart, 1987), 307, 333.
18 Corydon and Hubbard, Jr., 256.
19 E.g., Wallis, 122; Harriet Whitehead, "Reasonably Fantastic: Some
Perspectives on Scientology, Science Fiction and Occultism," in
Irving Zaretsky and Mark P. Leon, Religious Movements in
Contemporary
America
(Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press, 1974), 582.
20 See Reader's Digest, May 1980, September 1981; Newsweek,
20 November 1978; Christianity Today, 20 February 1975.
21 Among the official government reports are those by Australia
(1965), Britain (1971), South Africa (1972), and New Zealand (1969).
Popular press reports include Today's Health, December 1968;
Life, 15 November 1968; Parents magazine, June 1969;
Christianity Today, 21 November 1969; The Nation, 22
May 1972; Reader's Digest, May 1980, September 1981; as well
as The Washington Post, Wall Street Journal, London Sunday Times,
Los Angeles Times, St. Petersburg Times, etc. Among critical
books are Corydon and Hubbard, Jr., L. Ron Hubbard, Messiah or
Madman? Vosper, The Mind Benders; George Malko,
Scientology: The Now Religion; Robert Kaufman, Inside
Scientology; and Evans, Cults of Unreason. Among
television investigations are ABC News Close-Up, New Religions:
Holiness or Heresy? 2 September 1976, and NBC Primetime
Saturday, 14 June 1980. Scholarly treatments include Wallis,
The Road to Total Freedom.
22 What Is Scientology? 5.
23 The tremendous extent of Hubbard's claims can be found in
ibid. and L. Ron Hubbard, Dianetics Today, VIII, 94,
108-15, 618, 962; Handbook for Preclears (Los Angeles: The
American St. Hill Organization, 1971), 5-6; L. Ron Hubbard,
Self-Analysis (Los Angeles: The Church of Scientology of
California, 1968), 178; Evans, 78-79; L. Ron Hubbard,
Scientology: The Fundamentals of Thought (Los Angeles: American
St. Hill Organization, 1971), 119; L. Ron Hubbard, Science of
Survival (Sussex, England: L. Ron Hubbard College of
Scientology, 1951), 3; Advance, no. 25, 4, 16; Hubbard,
Dianetics Today, 115; Advance, no. 43, back cover; no.
25, 4-5, 16; no. 55, 18; What Is Scientology? 199; Evans,
78-79; L. Ron Hubbard, Scientology 8-80, 7; L. Ron Hubbard,
Scientology 8-8008 (Los Angeles: The American St. Hill
Organization, 1952), 47.
24 See "Book Review," Journal of the American Medical
Association, 29 July 1950, 1220-2; Post-Graduate Medicine,
October 1950; Newsweek, 16 October 1950; "Dianetics,"
Consumer Reports, August 1951; "Questions and Answers,"
Today's Health, November 1950; Robert Lee Smith, "Scientology,"
Today's Health, December 1968; Anderson, 94-97.
25 Lord Chancellor Hailsham, "The Door Wherein I Went," The Simon
Greenleaf Law Review 4, 1984-85, 51.
26 E.g., John Ankerberg and John Weldon, The Facts on the Occult
(Eugene, OR: Harvest House, 1992); L. Ron Hubbard, The Book of
Case Remedies, Clearing Series 2, expanded ed. (Los Angeles:
American St. Hill Organization, 1971), insert A3 (after p. 24); L.
Ron Hubbard, Dianetics 55! (Los Angeles: The American St.
Hill Organization, 1973 edition), 157-59; Hubbard, Scientology: A
History of Man, 50; Hubbard, The Creation of Human Ability,
1, 134, 171; Hubbard, Dianetics Today, 466, 933; Vosper, 98.
27 Anderson, 12, 83, 92, 126, 133; Hubbard, The Creation of Human
Ability, 149, 175-76, 241, 267; Hubbard, Scientology 8-80,
52-53; Hubbard, Dianetics 55! 167-69; cf. Hubbard,
Scientology: A History of Man, 75; Hubbard, Dianetics Today,
535, 623; Robert Kaufman, Inside Scientology: How I Joined
Scientology and Became Superhuman (New York: Olympia Press,
1972), 153, 160, 164, 200-201, 219-24, 241; Book of Case Remedies,
Second Series, expanded ed., 29; Technical Dictionary,
209-10, 365; Hubbard, Have You Lived Before This Life? 170;
Reader's Digest, May 1980, 89; September 1981, 28;
Willamette
Week (Portland,
OR), 3 September 1979, 15.
28 E.g., Vosper, 78-79;
Anderson,
95-97, passim.
29 Penthouse, 113; cf. Corydon and Hubbard, Jr., 270-71.
30 Kevin Anderson, Report of the Board of Inquiry into
Scientology (Melbourne: AC Brooks Government Printer, 1965), no.
9, 95-97. This report is difficult to locate but contains invaluable
information. Cf. Evans, 63-66; Wallis, 197.
31 What Is Scientology? 77.
32 Vosper, 132.
33 Source magazine, no. 22, 1.
34 See Hubbard, Introduction to Scientology Ethics
(Los Angeles: American St. Hill Organization, 1973), 49; Richard
Behar, "The Thriving Cult of Greed and Power," Time, 6 May
1991, 50-57; Eugene H. Methvin, "Scientology: Anatomy of a
Frightening Cult," Readers Digest, May 1980, 86-91 (part 2:
Sept. 1981, 75-80).
35 For illustrations see the definitions in the Scientology
Technical Dictionary.
36 Compare Scientology theory with Hubbard's science fiction works,
e.g., Ole Doc Methuselah, Slaves of Sleep, Death's Deputy, The
Final Blackout, The Dangerous Dimension, The Tramp, Fear, King
Slayer, and Typewriter in the Sky.
37 E.g., L. Ron Hubbard, Scientology: A New Slant on Life
(Los Angeles: The American St. Hill organization, 1971), 38-39;
Lefson and Minshull, 40.
38 Hubbard, Have You Lived Before This Life? 63-64.
39 L. Ron Hubbard, "Making an O.T. -- Part Two," Advance, no.
33, 6.
40 L. Ron Hubbard, "What's Wrong with This Universe?" Advance,
no. 45, 4.
41 Hubbard, Scientology 8-8008, 133.
42 Ibid., 106-8; Hubbard, The Creation of Human Ability,
249.
43 See e.g., Vosper, 28-42; Wallis, 249-50.
44 Hubbard, The Creation of Human Ability, 1971 printing or
earlier, 251.
45 What Is Scientology? 246-47; cf. Wallis, 72.
46 E.g., see John Ankerberg and John Weldon, Do the
Resurrection Accounts Conflict and What Proof Is There That Jesus
Rose from the Dead? (Chattanooga, TN: Ankerberg Theological
Research Institute, 1990, esp. section III).
47 Vosper, 31.
48 Hubbard, Dianetics: The Modern Science of Mental Health
(Sussex, England: Publications Organization Worldwide, 1968), 105.
Cf. 408; Hubbard, The Volunteer Minister's Handbook, 348-49;
Wallis, 104.
Copyright the
Christian Research Journal, Summer 1993
