The Scientology Church
Question answered by honorarykid in Scientology
Anonymous asked this question on 8/22/2000:
what do they belive?
honorarykid gave this response on 8/22/2000:
This text was snipped from one of my FAQ answers, with
some minor edits made.
---
Scientology beliefs basically center around the idea that L.
Ron Hubbard discovered a methodology to free people from
life's problems. The nature of these beliefs is wide ranging
and some are downright bizarre.
One is first introduced to Scientology's beliefs with the
book "Dianetics." Dianetics claimed that we all have
engrams (negative mental pictures) in our minds which
inhibit our happiness and progress in life.
A later belief is taught that we are all infested with the
spirits of dead space aliens (Body Thetans), and that each
of us is actually a reincarnated dead space alien spirit, too.
Actually, according to Hubbard, we have all been
reincarnated many times in meat bodies, here on Earth,
because we're too stupid to know that we are really Godlike
spirit beings, with no need for meat bodies.
The reason we're so stupid and confused is because we've
been brainwashed by other evil space aliens who want us
kept as meat body slaves, here on Earth (Sidebar: what
recently released major motion picture of a bad LRH story,
does this remind you of?).
And finally, there is one underlying belief in Scientology,
common to all these previous cosmologies. That is, that a
trained Scientology auditor can help you rid yourselves of
engrams (at first) and Body Thetans (later on) and that in
doing so, your health, intelligence and happiness will
improve, and later, as you Clear your BTS, you will also gain
magical, mystical super powers, including the ability to
astrally travel, do remote viewing, move things through
sheer force of will, and even control space-time itself.
People can believe in these "discoveries" by Hubbard, and
practice them outside the purvey of the Church of
Scientology, in what is called the "Free Zone", or they can
join the Church of Scientology.
The Church of Scientology is operated as a tightly bound,
many would say a cultic group (I am one of these, BTW,
just so you know where I'm coming from) of people, who
share not only the belief that Hubbard discovered these
amazing truths, but that planetary dissemination is
necessary, and that the Church of Scientology is the only
hope for mankind's betterment. Church of Scientology
members generally believe that "Clearing the Planet"
(making everyone into a Scientologist)is their biggest goal.
This ideal mirrors Hubbard's growing megalomania, as his
organization expanded and grew more powerful. The CoS
takes this to the point where nations and laws and other
institutions are considered inferior and sometimes even
obstructions to mankind's improvement. Hubbard wrote
volumes of "administration tech" which outline the need to
attack and harm critics, and some of the actual techniques
which could be used to do so. Hubbard taught his follows
to try and destroy those who stand in the way of
Scientology's expansion, and unfortunately, many of
today's Scientologists still believe this is the right and
proper thing to do.
The political part of the Church of Scientology demands
money, loyalty, obedience, and behaves generally like a
totalitarian political movement. Members are wrung out of
their money and labor, controlled, indoctrinated, socially
engineered into believing Hubbard's and the CoS' paranoias.
They are elitist, exclusive and at the top levels, I believe
constitute a legitimate threat to democratic institutions.
Hubbard told his followers that he was not a God. But then
he proceeded to demand to be treated like one. To many
fervent followers, Hubbard's tech is infallible and perfect,
and only human error in the application can be faulted if it
doesn't do what it promises...
Both groups, the Free Zoners and the CoS Scientologists
revere Hubbard to a certain degree. But inside the CoS, the
reverance approaches that of worship. Scientologists clap
and yell "hip hip hurrah" at portraits of LRH. They keep a
vacant office in every Scientology facility, complete with a
pack of his favorite brand of cigarettes, waiting for his
return.
Most Free Zone practitioners use auditing techniques in a
largely benign way, for their own personal improvement.
They have no global organization which rabidly defends the
memory of Hubbard, and many Free Zone scientologists
fully understand that the political behaviors of the Church
of Scientology belie the claims that it makes people "more
ethical."
Anonymous rated this answer:
do they believe in hell and heaven
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