I'm thinking of
starting my own religion ....
You know, for
something to do ....
Last semester I took
a course called Cults and Religious Controversy, taught by the lovely and
talented expert in new religious movements, Susan J. Palmer. In this course we
studied all sorts of different off-the-cuff religious movements including the
Solar Temple, the Raelians, the Children of God, the Hare Krishnas, the
Heaven's Gate and the Branch Davidians.
There are apparently
hundreds of religions out there at any given moment. Anyone with a little
charisma and a new idea can start one. I've got a surefire formula all figured
out.
Here's how it's
done, in case you feel like starting one yourself. (Now is a good time because
of the coming end of the millennium and possible apocalypse.)
Part one: In the
style of "do it yourself" greeting cards, pick one option from each
section and string them together to create your own story of a prophetic vision
and foundation for a new religion.
Eg. I was minding my
own business, happily watching television when suddenly I was contacted by the
spirit of a long-dead yogic master via a ghostly apparition that appeared
before me. I was taken outside my body and a message was delivered to me. The
message was this: The end of the world is at hand.
Your turn.
You were minding
your own business, happily: doing your laundry/ walking in the woods/ sleeping/
sitting on the toilet/ watching television/ taking a shower at the gym/ getting
drunk in a bar/ driving along the Jacques Cartier Bridge/ clipping your
toenails/ making soup.
When suddenly you
were contacted by: God/ aliens/ the spirit of a long-dead yogic master/ the
tooth fairy/ leprechauns/ the cat people/ the man in the moon/ Keith Moon/ the
mother goddess/ your mother/ Mackenzie King.
Via (section
optional): the invasion of your own body/ your cat/ the telephone/ a spaceship/
a ghostly apparition/ television, radio or other household appliance/ the
Internet/ UPS/ Canada Post (yeah right)/ an angel/ a stranger/ the wind.
You were: taken on
board a spaceship/ transported to another world/ too stunned to do anything but
stand there like a dope/ unable to control your bowels/ taken outside your
body/ put into a trance-like state/ overcome by an unbelievable feeling of
peace/ suddenly very hungry.
A message was
delivered to you. The message was this: the end of the world is at hand/
extraterrestrials created the Earth/ canaries are planning a hostile takeover/
Barney the Dinosaur is the Antichrist/ the creators are angry with us/ you are
the messiah/ Keith Moon was the messiah/ Satan is living among us/ the aliens
are coming/ computers are the work of the devil/ The Backstreet Boys are the
work of the devil/ air is poisonous/ don't eat yellow snow/ God is a pigeon/
the body is only a vehicle for the soul.
Part two:
Creating an image.
You must deliver
your message to the rest of the world. But before you begin recruitment you
should look the part of the religious leader. Experiment with your image until
you find the right one for you. You must be comfortable with it since you will
have to maintain it for the rest of your life as a prophet. These are just a
few fashion tips that seem to have worked for others.
Men should have:
thinning hair, worn either long or completely shaved. Facial hair is optional.
Clothing should be either drab '70s garb or a single-colour cotton robe or
suit. Oversized medallions are good. A vacant, slightly psychotic look in the
eyes is good also. (Look up pictures of Rael, David Koresh and Herff
Applewhite.)
Women should have:
an unintimidating, painfully unfashionable and slightly motherly appeal. (Look
up pictures of Elizabeth Claire Prophet of the Summit Lighthouse.) Looking sexy
and beautiful is bad because you will alienate half of your potential recruits.
Most women will not follow someone they can hate instead. Or you could try the
kooky, crazy lady look and wear tiaras, poofy dresses and carry a magic wand.
(Look up pictures of Uriel, of Unarius.)
Part three:
Concocting a good recruitment strategy.
The last step is to
recruit followers who will help spread your message and fund your mission.
This can be tricky.
You must entice people into your organization by offering them something they
can't resist while setting special rules and regulations that will make them
feel separate from and superior to the rest of society. Do as in Part One.
If you follow me you
will (select two): attain enlightenment/ be saved while the rest of the world
is destroyed/ get to have lots of guilt-free sex/ live forever/ appear on the
Jerry Springer show/ travel to distant planets/ accumulate free air miles/ find
peace/ find your keys/ never have to pay off your credit card.
But you must never
again (select three): see your family/ eat meat/ drink alcohol or coffee/
smoke/ have sex (does not work if you picked "have lots of sex" in
Part One)/ listen to music/ gamble/ dance/ work/ wear shoes/ have your own
possessions/ watch television/ watch porn/ contact the outside world/ clip your
toenails.
So you should have
something like: "If you follow me you will live forever and accumulate
free air miles but must never again eat meat, listen to music or wear
shoes." And voila!
That should be
enough to get you started. The rest is up to you. Two last tips: try to avoid
committing mass murders or suicides. This is not a good way of ensuring
survival as we have learned from the Heaven's Gate, the Branch Davidians and
many others. Also, if you have predicted the end of the world, put off setting
a date as long as possible. If you must set one, set it beyond your lifetime so
you won't be embarrassed at work the next morning.
Good luck! And see
you at the apocalypse.
courtesy Elizabeth Bromstein
Now you can test your
Enlightenment again:
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