Prophet Wanted: Entry-Level Position, No Tablets or Burning Bush Required

Aug 31, 2006 10:40

New York Times, USA
Aug. 28, 2006
Michael Luo

The help-wanted ad had the whiff of a practical joke. “Documentary will pay you $5,000 to start your own religion,” it said. “No exp. necessary.”“I laughed out loud,” said Joshua Boden, 35, a bald-headed bassist in an indie rock band, the Angelic Bombs, who stumbled across the ad in the Village Voice ( Read more... )

religion, society, media, cults

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Comments 15

min0taur September 1 2006, 02:41:50 UTC
I have to doubt that most religions we'd recognize as such have origins in a deliberate act of "founding." Seems likelier they sort of coalesce like planets, starting out as what we'd call cults: One person has a vision or a conversion or an epiphany, tries to put it across, it resonates enough with some folks that they start hanging around and become fervent followers, then they bring in their friends and relatives. Get enough folks on the bandwagon to reach critical mass, and the rest of it follows like a chain reaction: people take it upon themselves to work up tenets of belief and us-versus-them ideologies, giving the original vision some consistency (either by oversimplifying it into dogma or overcomplicating it into mystery), and after awhile it's a movement that has some momentum. Then all it has to do is accrue cultural staying power, and that comes about largely as a result of historical accident -- the social standing of a few key converts, a few wars here and there -- and later by sheer repetition ("what I tell you three ( ... )

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kabuki_no_kaze September 5 2006, 05:10:22 UTC
I think I see Boden's mistake. People don't want to be told 'figure it out yourself'. That's what we're all trying to do anyway. People don't want to reinvent the wheel. They don't want to dig religious insights out of the bedrock of life. They want to reap the fruits of generations of wise and spiritually-tuned-in people who have already done that for them. Fasting in the desert is lonely, and you may end up with nothing to show for it. Better to sign on with someone who already has something to show for it. Saying, in essence, 'no, I don't have anything particularly new or insightful to impart, just the common-sense wisdom of an ordinary man' is so far from a sales pitch that it's practically an anti-pitch.

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min0taur September 5 2006, 15:36:51 UTC
>"Saying, in essence, 'no, I don't have anything particularly new or insightful to impart, just the common-sense wisdom of an ordinary man' is so far from a sales pitch that it's practically an anti-pitch."

Sure would be refreshing, though.

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