Hello, I am creating a support network for those who have left Armstrongism, particularly the PCG. Please spread awareness of fringe religious groups and their effects of millions of people across the globe. Awareness and support is lifesaving.
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@leavingthepcg
Hello, I am creating a support network for those who have left Armstrongism, particularly the PCG. Please spread awareness of fringe religious groups and their effects of millions of people across the globe. Awareness and support is lifesaving.

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A red flag in general is somebody having a "me against the world" attitude - IE, "oh, I'm a good person but nobody understands me, everyone is jealous of me, they all want to tear me down" etc., etc. People with strong spiritual beliefs sometimes extend this attitude beyond the physical or obvious world. You might hear something like, "I'm a higher dimensional being sent here to help the world ascend, and that's why all these demons, aliens, and government agents keep coming after me." Or it might be "I'm the Archangel Michael, and that's why Satan's always manipulating people into sabotaging me and getting in my way." Or maybe "I'm here to spread the truth of the Old Religion; those other people who told you I'm wrong are actually agents of the Vatican." People like this can have a very overwhelming presence because everything they're saying sounds so important. If you've never met anyone like this before, you might think, "wow, I should pay attention!" As this person keeps carrying on about how everyone is out to get them and stop their divine mission, you might feel more and more obligated to protect them and do everything you can to help them. One thing these people really can't tolerate is other points of view. You might see them bemoaning how the world is full of cold, heartless skeptics. You might see them trying to tear people down as arrogant or full of their own egos. They might accuse people of being possessed, manipulated, or full of ego over the tiniest of perceived disagreements. They'll invent elaborate conspiracies to explain why the world just doesn't agree with them. They basically want to live in a world where they have all the answers, or at least have all the answers that really matter.
This is why these people often end up starting cults, or at least try to. They want to create a social environment in which they are the ultimate arbiters of what's real and fake, what's good and bad, and so on. Again, if you haven't met a lot of people like this, it can be easy to get swept up in everything they're saying, because they sound like they really have an exceptional and important existence. But the thing is, people who make big grand spiritual claims really aren't all that uncommon. I've read about and encountered many, many people like this. Some prominent examples you can look into yourself include Sherry Shriner, Amy Carlson, and Ruth E. Norman.
Let's be real: All of these people who claim they're in the middle of some grand cosmic scheme can't all be right because so many of their claims conflict and preclude each other. And why should we think any of them are right when they all keep being wrong about things in pretty serious ways? And moreover, why should we let someone dictate our reality on the grounds of a claim any rando could make?
Contempt for nonbelievers is a red flag in any form of spirituality.
Lifton's eighth criteria for identifying a high-demand group--or "cult"--is "Dispensing of Existence". This helps explain the concept of members having "contempt for nonbelievers". This aspect does not alone make a group a cult, but it is absolutely a red flag.
Lifton's Eight Criteria helps to identify high control groups, or cults. The eight criteria include:
Milieu Control Perhaps the most important aspect of what makes a "high-demand group" is information and communication control. Members are often isolated from "outsiders", including outside sources not approved by leaders within the group, and family or friends that are not part of the group. Members are often made to "cut off" family and friends that are considered hostile toward the group.
Mystical Manipulation High-demand groups, particularly religious ones, will often use or manipulate events in order to further their message and bolster their doctrine. Examples of this are making prophecies or predictions that get repeatedly altered or forgotten about, or pointing to past predictions as being confirmed by a current event.
Demand for Purity Humans are flawed, and high demand groups exploit this fact by demanding perfection of their members. Sometimes, groups will even acknowledge that perfection is unachievable, but that individuals are perpetually at fault for being the only reason they cannot achieve it. This enhances feelings of guilt and shame, leading the member to feel as if the only way to improve themselves is to seek help from the group.
Confession High control groups exploit their members emotionally by having them "confess" supposed wrongdoings to another member or members. This makes the member vulnerable and constantly alert to their own and others' "sins". It is the promotion of hyper-policing of self and peers.
Sacred Science The group's ideology is held as the ultimate, capital-T "Truth"; it is the one standard by which all aspects of life must be measured. This often leads to science-denial, conspiracy-minded thinking, and isolating oneself based on the belief that others are unenlightened.
Loaded Language Members of cults will often reveal that they are a member of an in-group in the use of language. The group creates unique vocabulary, or changes/enhances the use of a term in order to create a doctrine of thought. This tactic helps to reform the member's thought process by embedding concepts into their minds that can be easily repeated and recognized through the repeated use of a simple phrase or word.
Doctrine Over Person Group belief is held as the ultimate "truth", trumping personal experience, beliefs, values, or reasoning. If the member feels or believes that something about the group is "off" or "untrue", they are taught to dismiss those thoughts and to internalize guilt about having "doubts".
Dispensing of Existence This describes the portion of thought control that creates an "us vs. them" attitude in the member. The member may be convinced that those outside the group are "sinful", "damned", "unenlightened", "ignorant", etc.
More people are vulnerable to joining cults online than ever before, but former cult members and research reveals how to deprogram yourself and your loved ones.
A great resource for those with loved-ones one high-demand groups.

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A talk by Megan Phelps-Roper, a former member of the Westboro Baptist Church, where she explains the mental processes she went through in order to leave the group and shares her four strategies for effective communication with people in high demand groups:
1. Assume good or neutral intent
2. Ask questions
3. Stay calm
4. Make the argument
Is PCG God's true Church? Or is there spiritual abuse and financial exploitation awaiting as a result of one's involvement? If you are readi
Mike's Enlightenment Page provides information and resources for those leaving the Philadelphia Church of God, such as answering questions you may have feared asking those around you, and publishing letters about inner-church goings-on (which is crucial for those with family in the Church). For many people, websites like these are part of the first step toward deprogramming.
Watching this for the first time genuinely felt like a punch to the gut. It felt like being seen after being invisible your entire life. Please watch this video if you have ever wondered what Armstrongism is and how it influences thousands of people around the world to this day.