Doctor Scratch wrote:I'm personally against labeling the LDS Church a "cult." Maklelan is right: sociologists of religion would characterize it as a "New Religious Movement." That said, I think Sock Puppet is onto something interesting when he wonders aloud what it is that causes TBMs to "bristle" as having the Church called a "cult." On the one hand, as Mak points out, there is this association with dangerous organizations like the Branch Davidians, or the Manson Family, etc. On the other hand, as Sock showed, there is an element in the definition of "cult" that cuts to the heart of an aspect of cultural Mormonism, which is the belief that loyal LDS are "different," more special, "elect," etc.
Which is found in virtually all Evangelical traditions, and especially in Calvinism, which holds that you have no choice and are either elect or not. Are all Calvinists cultists?
Doctor Scratch wrote:This, of course, leads back into the way that sociologists define and categorize "New Religious Movements." I believe it was David Bromley--the scholar that juliann famously mis-used--who said that a New Religious Movement (NRM) was more likely to be seen as "cult-like" the further apart it was from the mainstream.
But the mainstream of the Evangelical movement is more elitist than Mormonism. This criterion undermines your point.
Doctor Scratch wrote:So, really, Mormonism is in a bind here: the more distinctive and "special" it is, the more likely it will be viewed as a "cult."
And hypocritically so. Thus the annoyance.
Doctor Scratch wrote:The more in blends in with White Bread America, the less distinct and "elect" it will be. When you get right down to it, then, the pain at getting called a "cult" is really just the pain of being forced to compromise.
No, the problem in this instance does not lie with a Latter-day Saint desire to be "peculiar."