Postby Yahshua » Sun Oct 02, 2005 3:09 pm
Conclusion
Examining of the Lofland Stark (1965) Model has shown it was the first to study the concept and the idea of the conversion process into a New Religious Movement. It gives the field of the Sociology of Religion a foundational model in which the sociologist of the Religions can then further along the researching in to why an individual joining into the New Religious Movement. In their model it assume that a person who joining into a New Religious Movement has the precondition in which he or she has experience and enduring the acutely felt tensions. And this precondition then added to the necessary stages in the conversion process in which one must to travel in order to fully commit to the Movement itself. Such as the second stage that which state that a person must be within a religious problem solving perspective. Follow by this leads him or her to define him or herself as religious seekers. For the original purpose of this paper is to examine this model in term of the preconditioning. Does it necessary for a person to experience and enduring acutely felt tension before he or she joins into the New Religious Movement? It shows by various other sociologists whom have study the conversion process as not a necessary factor for a person to be the case when they initially join up with the New Religious Movement. In fact the cases from the Eastern Lightning group have pointing to other sources in which a person initially joins up with the group. The cases pointing to the routes of the Networking in which the nonmembers has initial contact with the members and through the friendship with the members then the nonmembers then later on join into the group as well as the other routes of the conversion process in which the members using the tactic of the subterfuge whereas the group did not clearly state the group’s intention in the initial phases of the meeting with the nonmembers. In short what Lofland and Stark have given us is an important foundation in which later works can base upon it.
References
Galanter, Marc. 1999. Cults Faith, Healling and Coercion. New York. Oxford
University Press
Lofland, John and Rodney Stark. 1965. “On becoming a world-saver: A theory of conversion to a deviant Perspective.â€