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The Religion that Kills: Christian
Science, Abuse, Neglect, and Mind Control
Linda Kramer
Lafayette
LA: Huntington House, 2000. 269 page paperback.
Reviewed by
Frank MacHovec, Ph.D.
This book describes “the hidden world of
Christian Science” from the author’s experience from childhood through 30 years,
as a member until she realized it “operates from a flawed premise and falls
short of its utopian premise” (11). There are 12 brief chapters arranged in two
parts. Part One consists of four chapters on “foundational issues.” The
remaining chapters are in Part Two on “Christian Science and mind control.”
There is no bibliography. Three appendices consist of: A (Christian
Science and the Bible), a 35-page discourse that could have been a
chapter; B (My story, a journey to freedom),
the author’s religious autobiography that could have been the first chapter, and
C (Resources), a 3-page list of
18 books and sources that could have been the customary references section. The
preface contains material important to the book’s purpose and should have begun
Chapter 1. It is information about the founding of Christian Science and how it
differs from mainstream Christianity. The introduction describes the author’s
experience as a Christian Scientist and its similarities to religious cults.
Chapter 1 begins an explanation of the
disillusionment of many who left Christian Science despite “many good memories”
and its “solid moral values” (17). She views Christian Science as a cult that
uses mind control, labels she uses reluctantly: “They bother me, too” and she
writes “not to hurt anyone” but “to help explain what happened to me” (19).
Chapter 2 explains church doctrine, rooted in Genesis “that since God is
spiritual and made everything good” so everything created “must also be
spiritual and good” (22). We are spiritual, not mortal or material, and
Christian Science is “a scientific method of healing based on spiritual laws”
(24). Sin and sickness are “illusions” at a lower material level and we are
“saved as we gradually leave material beliefs behind” (25). Chapter 3 refers to
books the author found helpful with her commentaries of them. At 47 pages,
chapter 4 is the longest in the book and focuses on Mary Baker Eddy, her sickly
childhood, home life, and adult years. Her “semi-invalidism” (41) disappeared
when Dr. Phineas Quimby, a mesmerist, treated her with reassuring talk and light
physical therapy. It helped shape her understanding of the effect of spiritual
belief on illness, though she had lifelong apprehension that mesmeric forces
were used against her. Later, she fell on ice and “was expected to die” but by
reading the Bible she arose “healed and free” on the third day (42). Her
behavior is described, positive and negative, as a charismatic founder, leader,
prophet, and healer.
The chapters that make up Part Two examine
Christian Science in the light of the literature on mind control. Church
practices and its Manual of the Mother
Church are critiqued with references from mind control sources such
as Cialdini, Hassan, Lifton, Martin, and Singer. Lifton’s eight criteria are
applied in detail with examples from the author’s experience, case histories,
and accepted church practices. Christian Science “differs from the more obvious
mind control groups” because “it does not need to break its members wills”
(150). Instead, “irresistible carrots – absolute truth, healings, a foolproof
way to overcome life’s problems, guaranteed salvation” (150). Individuality is
subjugated to doctrine: “The things that make us human are dangerous to
Christian Science” (162). Everything experienced “must be spiritualized into
something else” (198). The book ends with a typical ex-Christian Scientist’s
comment: “It’s nice to be real.”
This book is one of many written by former
church, temple, or cult members describing their experiences before, during, and
after their involvement. This one is specific to Christian Science and provides
details of how it differs from traditional Christian belief and practice. It
reflects more disillusionment than anger or resentment and is valuable in its
insightful comparisons of church practices and their similarity to mind control
techniques of other groups. It is clearly and concisely written, well
referenced, and fulfils its goal to evaluate Christian Science “from a secular
psychological viewpoint” for readers who want to understand its “stark
realities” and to reassure “those trying to recover from them” (p. 15).
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