Twisted Scriptures: Difference between revisions

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==Contents==
''Twisted Scriptures'' has an intended audience of people stuck in manipulative religious organizations.<ref name="malkin" /> Chrnalogar asserts that some churches manipulate text of the Bible to [[coercive persuasion|coerce]] followers.<ref name="honey" /> She describes how individuals can be subjected to [[mind control]] in order to become obedient to a religious movement.<ref name="honey" /> Readers are instructed to be able to determine how to notice if a church is manipulating the Scriptures or using abusive tactics.<ref name="honey" /> "Discipleship control is worse than having a domineering mother who tells you whom to marry!. You usually will be viewed as 'going against God' if you act in opposition to the advice of your discipler, but seen only as a headstrong child if you go against the wishes of your mother," writes Chrnalogar in the book.<ref name="malkin" /> Chrnalogar points out that mind control does not need to occur only with seversevere tactics, writing: "All that's needed is an environment where the information can be controlled, and more importantly, the way people perceive that information."<ref name="wong">{{cite journal | last =Wong | first =Catherine | title =St. Thomas on Deprogramming: Is It Justifiable? | journal =The Catholic Lawyer | volume =39 Catholic Law | issue =81|page=Footnotes: n86 | publisher =The St. Thomas More Institute for Legal Research of [[St. John's University School of Law]] | date =Summer / Fall, 1999 |quote=Deprogrammer Mary Alice Chrnalogar notes that mind control does not require extreme measures. She asserts: "All that's needed is an environment where the information can be controlled, and more importantly, the way people perceive that information." Mary Alice Chrnalogar, Twisted Scriptures 189 (1997). She explains that the existence of as few as six of Lifton's "psychological themes" are sufficient to exert control over cult members.}}</ref> She cites mind control characteristics identified by [[Robert Jay Lifton]], and asserts that only six of his "psychological themes" are required in order to manipulate followers in a cult.<ref name="wong" />
 
==Reception==