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The Cult Phenomenon in the United States (1979) ("Statement of Rev. Dr.

George
Swope.")
Joint-Congressional Proceedings,
statements by Rev. Dr. George Swope
INFORMATION MEETING ON THE CULT PHENOMENON IN THE UNITED STATES, February 5, 1979,
318 Russell Senate Office Building, Washington, D.C. P.91-95. of Transcript of
Proceedings.

Senator Dole. Our next witness is Dr. George Swope.

STATEMENT OF REV. DR. GEORGE SWOPE.

Dr. Swope. Members of the Senate and of the House, we clergymen appreciate your
invitation to participate in this hearing and share with you the concerns of our
colleagues across America.

Obviously there are clergymen who live in ivory towers of speculation and who have
never listened seriously to the charges of former cult members who allege two
basic conditions that are worthy of Congressional investigation:

First, mind control of members by their leaders.

Second, illegal activities and physical and psychological damage done to members.

Theological theorists make an attempt to stop any sophisticated investigation and


may even be stimulated to do so by cult leaders.

On the other hand, hosts of realistic clergymen and hundreds of thousands of


active lay people want the government to use its investigative powers to look into
the alleged dark and devious crannies of cult practices.

The hundreds of clergymen and thousands of lay people to whom I have spoken voiced
the query repeatedly: Why doesn't the government do something?

None of us wants there to be an investigation of beliefs. The investigation should


focus on alleged destructive and illegal practices and the mind control that makes
these practices possible.

On February 2nd, Attorney General Bell, referring to Patty Hearst, stated that he
believed she was brainwashed. If she was brainwashed by a simplistic political
cult, obviously there is great probability that young adults are brainwashed in
sophisticated religious cults.

I, along with some other pastors, agree with Dean John Roach of the Fletcher
School of Law at Tufts University to understand the First Amendment as intended
not to protect religions from people who might oppose or investigate them, but to
protect people from religions that might exploit them.

I submit to you that the fears of our Founding Fathers are being realized if the
testimony of hundreds of former cult members is to be believed.

The Southern Baptist Convention, the largest Protestant denomination in America,


is concerned enough about the aberrations of the cults that they have a staff
member, a former member of the Unification Church, to deal with this growing
problem.

I can cite other denominational and ecumenical groups which are taking similar
action. A small sampling of religious periodicals indicates wide concern amoung
religious people in our land. Here is the Lutheran Standard, "Captive to a Cult,
How I was Freed."

St. Anthony's Messenger, "Reverend Sun Myung Moon, Master of Manipulation."

Southern Baptist Royal Service, a number of articles.

The National Jewish Monthly, "What Makes a Moonie."

The Jewish Community Relations Council of Greater Philadelphia, "The Challenge of


the Cults."

And then increasingly in medical journals there are similar articles :

The American Family Physician, "Destructive Cultism."

The AMA Family Health, "Beware the Man who can Manipulate the Mind," dealing with
mind control specifically and not with cults as such.

As I think of these denominations who are concerned, I understand then why I have
been invited to speak in Russian and Greek Orthodox churches, Anglican, Roman
Catholic, and Protestant churches, Jewish synagogues, Unitarian churches, and
councils of churches and ministers' associations.

Why? Because clergy and laity alike are becoming increasingly concerned. You
members of Congress must know that certain of the cults hold you in contempt.

An NBC documentary, aired in May of 1975, made this point regarding Mr. Moon, the
messiah of the Unification Church, who sought unsuccessfully to address a joint
session of Congress.

On January 17 of this year, the Unification Church repeated its contempt of you by
a full page caricature of a worthy member of the House with his head mounted on
the body of a chicken laying an egg in a Congressional investigation.

The statements accompanying the caricature were, as you might expect, highly
selective. If a political cartoonist had drawn such a picture, we might smile. But
when a purportedly religious organization spends thousands of dollars to place it
in full page ads, the obvious intent is not wry humor, but insult and intimidation
of others who might consider investigation.

Many Protestant clergymen and church members beg of you to investigate certain
cults before there is another Jonestown on a farm purchased in an isolated area of
Canada by one group or on the plantation in an isolated area of Columbia, South
American, purchased by another, or on the island off the coast of South Korea,
purchased by a third.

This last instance, I was told that a three-year member of the Unification Church
who recently left the group, stated that the island is to be a place of retreat,
should the group experience worldwide opposition; and the leader of the
Unification Church is reported to have hinted broadly that pressures on the
Unification Church could result in death.

Shades of Guyana. I am a Baptist minister. Members of the Congress, I tell you


frankly, if you receive hundreds of accusing letters from parents of young adults
who have joined the Baptist denomination, and if you receive hundreds of
statements from young adults who have left the Baptists alleging mind control, the
potential for suicide and murder, illegal immigration and financial practices, and
other destructive physical and psychological activities, I feel it would be your
duty to establish a task force to investigate these allegations against my own
denomination.

The appeal to a religious domino theory, if today Congress investigates Moon,


tomorrow it will investigate the presiding Bishop of the Episcopal Church, is
patent nonsense, and echoes the little boy's cry of wolf, wolf.

Responsible church leaders must think realistically and courageously and


pragmatically and not become unwitting tools for dangerous cults.

It seems to many of us that the time for investigation has arrived.

[Applause.]

Senator Dole. Again I would hope that those in the audience on either side would
give us a chance -- we are about 10 minutes behind schedule. We would like to
submit questions. WE would hope you would all be patient. We can all applaud
everybody after we finish.

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