The term cult apologist is a pejorative term used by some opponents of cults to describe religious scholars, social scientists, and other persons who write about cults and new religious movements and whose writings are considered by these opponents as uncritical or not sufficiently critical. The words apologist derive from the Greek apologia (Greek: Ἀπολογία), meaning the defense of a position against an attack (and not from the English word apology, which is exclusively understood as a defensive plea for forgiveness for an action that is open to blame). Early uses of the term include, Plato's Apology (the defense speech of Socrates from his trial) and the early Christian Apologists, defending their faith.
Other uses of the term 'apologetics' includes the field of Christian study that defends biblical truth against anything that opposes it. *
The expression cult apologist may derive from a related neologism that was coined by the evangelical Christian countercult movement writer Walter Martin. In 1955, Martin had published a Christian handbook The Rise of the Cults. In Martin's discussion about developing theological resources and responses to cults he remarked: "We have proposed, therefore, that an inter-denominational Bureau of Information be formed … This Bureau of Information has recently been realized with the inauguration of a special division of Zondervan Publishing Company entitled The Division of Cult Apologetics." (Martin, The Rise of the Cults, Grand Rapids: Zondervan, 1955, p. 106).
Martin used the neologism Cult Apologetics in a positive and self-referential way to identify ministries that evangelize those involved in cults. He used the term again in his next book The Christian and the Cults (Zondervan 1956, p. 6). Martin's relationship with Zondervan continued until 1966, which is when the Division of Cult Apologetics ceased as a publishing operation. Martin ruefully alludes to the break-down of this relationship with the publisher in his fictional book Screwtape Writes Again (Vision House 1975, pp. 79-80).
The positive use of the term cult apologetics by evangelicals recurs in the book by Robert and Gretchen Passantino, Answers to the Cultist at Your Door (Harvest House, 1981, p. 13) and also by Alan Gomes in his contributory chapter in the first posthumous edition of Martin's The Kingdom of the Cults (1997 ed., p. 333).
However, in view of the persistent and negative use of the term cult apologist by various evangelical countercult apologists, it appears that the neologism cult apologetics has both fallen into disuse and also metamorphosed into a word of opprobrium.
See also Apologetics.
Christian countercult Anton Hein's "Apologetics Index" website defines a 'cult apologist' as:
Tilman Hausherr, a critic of Scientology and other groups he considers to be cults, wrote:
Some allegations against cult apologists are:
In some cases these allegations have been heavily substantiated. In May 1995, after the sarin gas attack on the Tokyo subway, American scholars James R. Lewis and Gordon Melton flew to Japan to hold a pair of press conferences in which they announced that the chief suspect in the murders, religious group Aum Shinrikyo, could not have produced the sarin that the attacks had been committed with. They had determined this, Lewis said, from photos and documents provided by the group. However, the Japanese police had already discovered at Aum's main compound back in March a sophisticated chemical weapons laboratory that was capable of producing thousands of kilograms a year of the poison.previous attack with sarin that had killed seven and injured 144.*" target="_blank" > Lewis openly disclosed that "AUM the trip ahead of time", but claimed that this was "so that financial considerations would not be attached to our final report".[http://www.holysmoke.org/sdhok/jap-waco.htm" target="_blank" >*.
Scholars who have been accused of cult apologism include Dick Anthony, Eileen Barker, David G. Bromley, Douglas E. Cowan, Jeff Hadden, Irving Hexham, Massimo Introvigne, Gordon Melton, and Anson Shupe.
Protagonists in the Christian countercult such as Anton Hein (apologeticsindex.org anti-cult activists such as Rick Ross Tilman Hausherr*," target="_blank" >and professor of psychology and author of several books and articles on cults Benjamin Beit-Hallahmi [http://www.apologeticsindex.org/c59.html, accuse certain groups to be cult apologists, including:
Scholars accused of being cult apologists, in turn, reply to the criticism levelled at them by stating that they consider themselves champions of religious freedom and tolerance. Douglas E. Cowan writes:
In a paper presented to the 2002 Society for the Scientific Study of Religion Conference*, Douglas Cowan presents the political, ethical, economic and personal impact of such distinction and the range of opinion about what "cult apologist" means in the context of three basic domains as follows:
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"Cult apologist".
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