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Why Religious Movements Succeed or Fail: . A Revised General Model By Rodney Stark. ISKCON Congregational Development Ministry. Rodney Stark. Distinguished Professor of the Social Sciences - Baylor University, Waco, Texas Co-Director - Institute for Studies of Religion
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Why Religious Movements Succeed or Fail: A Revised General Model By Rodney Stark ISKCON Congregational Development Ministry
Rodney Stark • Distinguished Professor of the Social Sciences - Baylor University, Waco, Texas • Co-Director - Institute for Studies of Religion • Founding Editor - Interdisciplinary Journal of Research on Religion • Honorary Professor of Sociology - Peking University, Beijing, China
Statistics: • Every year, hundreds of new religious movements appear. • Some are formed by disgruntled members from older groups. • Some will start because someone created or discovered a new religious culture and convinced others of its authenticity.
Regardless of their origins, almost every new group will have one thing in common: eventual failure. • Roughly, one religious movement out of 1,000 will attract more than 100,000 followers and last for 100 years. • Even most movements that achieve these modest results will be no more than a footnote in the history of religions.
Ten Propositions: • Other things being equal, religious movements will succeed to the degree that:
1. • They retain cultural continuity with the conventional faiths of the societies within which they seek converts.
2. • Their doctrines are non-empirical.
3. • They maintain a medium level of tension with their surrounding environment – are strict, but not too strict.
4. • They have legitimate leaders with adequate authority to be effective • A. Adequate authority requires clear doctrinal justifications for an effective and legitimate leadership • B. Authority is regarded as more legitimate and gains in effectiveness to the degree that members perceive themselves as participants in the system of authority.
5. • They can generate a highly motivated, volunteer, religious labor force, including many willing to proselytize.
6. • They maintain a level of fertility sufficient to at least offset member mortality.
7. • They compete against weak, local conventional religious organizations within a relatively unregulated religious economy.
8. • They sustain strong internal attachments, while remaining an open social network, able to maintain and form ties to outsiders.
9. • They continue to maintain sufficient tension with their environment – remain sufficiently strict.
10. • They socialize the young sufficiently well as to minimize both defection and the appeal of reduced strictness.
For more information, please contact the ISKCON Congregational Development Ministry Headquarters: SridhamMayapur, Cakra Building no. 128 Phone: (+91) 03472 – 245619 Website: namahatta.org Email: cdministry@namahatta.org