V. CONCLUSIONS
The above analysis clearly shows that while there is a certain incidence
of apostasy in new religious movements, the overwhelming majority of people
who disengage themselves from these non-conforming religions harbor no
lasting ill-will toward their past religious associations and activities.
While they frankly acknowledge the ways their religious needs and hopes
were disappointed, they were able to realize some positive meaning and
value from their past experiences. By contrast, there is a much smaller
number of apostates who are deeply invested in discrediting if not destroying
the religious
communities that once claimed their loyalties. In most cases, these
apostates were either forcibly separated from their religious community
through the intervention of family members and anti-cult groups, or soon
came under the influence of anti-cult groups and literature after their
own voluntary defection from a new religious group.
There is no denying that these dedicated and diehard opponents of the
new religions present a distorted view of the new religions to the public,
the academy, and the courts by virtue of their ready
availability and eagerness to testify against their former religious
associations and activities. Such apostates always act out of a scenario
that vindicates themselves by shifting responsibility for their actions
to the religious group. Indeed, the various brainwashing scenarios so often
invoked against the new religious movements have been overwhelmingly repudiated
by social scientists and religion scholars as nothing more than calculated
efforts to discredit the beliefs and
practices of unconventional religions in the eyes of governmental agencies
and public opinion. Such apostates can hardly be regarded as reliable informants
by responsible journalists, scholars, or jurists. Even the accounts of
voluntary defectors with no grudges to bear must be used with caution since
they interpret their past religious experience in the light of present
efforts to re-establish their own self-identity and self-esteem.
In short, on the face of things, apostates from new religions do not meet the standards of personal objectivity, professional competence, and informed understanding required of expert witnesses.
Lonnie D. Kliever
Dallas, Texas
January 24, 1995