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- PSYCHOLICAL MANIPULATION AND SOCIETY
- Cultic Studies Journla, Vol. 12, No.
2, 1995
- Lambs to Slaughter: My Fourteen
Years with Elizabeth Clare Prophet and Church Universal Triumphant
- by John Joseph Pietrangelo, Jr. Self-published
(available from John Pietrangelo, 1039 E. Gifford Dr., Tucson,
AZ 85719), 1994, 143 pages. reviewed by Joseph Szimhart.
-
- Lambs to Slaughter is a self-published book about the author's
14-year hiatus as a devotee of Elizabeth Clare Prophet and her
Church
Universal and Triumphant (CUT). This
is a story about manipulated devotion and mind control from the
perspective of a former true believer. It is also an intimate
look at a prophet-guru during her formative years as the leader
of her own marginal religious movement. As with nearly every
notorious cult leader in recent decades, this story includes
the misuse of power, sex, and money by a less-than-genuine, self-proclaimed
spiritual leader of the planet.
-
- Pietrangelo first met Elizabeth Prophet
in 1969 when her group was called "The Summit Lighthouse"
in Colorado. He was a young and spiritually ambitious college
student from Mississippi who quickly fell under the allure of
Elizabeth Prophet and her then-husband, Mark Prophet, who founded
the church in the late 1950s. Mark and Elizabeth were spirit
mediums who called themselves "messengers." After their
marriage in 1961, they claimed to be the sole living messengers
of the ascended masters of all the world's religions, including
some whose names are idiosyncratic to the cult. In New Age parlance,
they "channeled" beings like , Jesus, Buddha, K-17,
Morya, Quan Yin, Afra, Hercules, Mighty Victory, Astrea, Shiva,
Pope John XXIII, and so onmore than 35 by my count.
-
- In actuality, today Elizabeth
Prophet heads one of the more successful
sects that stem from Rosicrucianism and, more specifically, from
the Theosophical Society founded by Helena P. Blavatsky and others
in 1875. Prophetâs church has between 5,000
and 15,000-plus adherents, with diversified commitments worldwide.
The core group of several hundred staff members is supported
by an estimated one to three thousand devotees living in Montana,
where the sect is headquartered.
- Such sects and channelers all claim
to represent a Great White Brotherhood (GWB) of ascended masters
who allegedly are guiding all of humanity into a new age of human
and planetary advancement. This new era is variously called the
New Age, the Aquarian Age, higher consciousness, a paradigm shift,
or the seventh cycle or round. Other noteworthy GWB sects are
theRamtha group led by J.Z.
Knight near Seattle, Washington, and
the Order of the Solar
Temple which performed a ritual murder/suicide
in October 1994 (and again in 1995), when more than 60 devotees
in Switzerland, Canada, and France died.
-
- CUT's parent group, the nearly defunct
I AM Activity, founded in 1934, has experienced a minor revival
since 1980. Pietrangelo became a church staff member in Colorado
in the early 1970s, when he took a position as a chef in the
kitchen which served a staff of 70. "My salary was twenty
dollars per month gross. So compensation for an assistant chef,
who labored some four hundred hours per month, was a grand total
of five cents an hour ... plus room and board," writes Pietrangelo
(p. 18). His room was a shared barracks in the attic of the church
center. Throughout the history of CUT, staff members have been
expected to make similar sacrifices. The leaders, however, have
always lived well.
-
- The author recounts the two most significant
relationships in his life as a result of his initiation into
the Summit Lighthouse, later renamed Church Universal and Triumphant
as a tax shelter (p. 84). He met his wife, Susan, during his
early years as a devotee. They had five children and remain happily
married despite their harried existence as cult members. He also
met Randall (Kosp) King, the man who became Elizabeth Prophet's
young, third husband after Mark Prophet died in 1973.
-
- Pietrangelo's first-person account
exposes the reader to a very personal journey into what the author
once believed was the most important position any human being
could have that of serving the one person who stood at the crux
of human destiny. In order to establish herself, Elizabeth Prophet
has claimed an incredible array of past lives including many
queens and saints. Her devotees call her "Mother,"
and believe she wears the crown of the World Mother (p. xvi).
Pietrangelo recounts his struggles with the Prophets, both of
whom exhibited loose tempers and a highly manipulative style
of leadership, using "crisis management" and deception:
"Life in the organization, as in all cults, was a roller
coaster ride with incredible highs and fearful lows. There is
never a dull moment, never a let-down of emotional tension"
(p. 72). For instance, just before Mark Prophet's untimely death
and afterwards, the members were required to buy survival equi
pment, gold and silver, and guns because of a predicted collapse
of the economy and the onset of a war. This activity was called
"Operation Christ Command," and the Prophets maneuvered
to profit from sales of supplies to the devout. Pietrangelo points
out that the church sold products at inflated prices, 40% to
50% higher than retail, to the nave "chelas" (literally,
slaves) (p. 73).
-
- It took the author 14 years of sometimes
tortured belief before he and his wife finally made the break
from CUT and Elizabeth Prophet in 1983. It may be difficult
for some people to understand how an otherwise intelligent man
could do this. What most people do not understand is the process
that someone goes through before and after conversion to any
extremist view and allegiance to that view. Pietrangelo intersperses
his story with commentary about the persuasiveness of the leaders
and how their subtle and not-so-subtle influences led to his
mind control, or "brainwashing." Only too late did
he realize how much his emotional investment in the group promise
could be manipulated.
-
- The promise included not only the ultimate
opportunity for personal and planetary salvation, but also the
power with which to subvert and conquer all evil. The two most
important elements in the CUT formula for salvation are a strong
allegiance to Mother and the practice of decreeing. Decreeing
is a form of rapid chanting of a large collection of prayers,
commands, and invocations used by CUT members for self-improvement,
planetary purification, and self-defense. CUT teachings include
identifying a host of "dark forces" in the guise of
black magicians, spirit entities, and evil, colored rays that
become pervasive in the consciousness of the believer. Pietrangelo
was caught in this tangled web of forces, which only Mother Prophet
could truly identify for him. He had unwittingly entered a psychic
minefield with only one way out: through Mother's direction that
is, until 1983 when he had an intimate chat with his longtime
friend Randall King.
This is perhaps the most revealing and
most controversial portion of Lambs to Slaughter. By 1980
Randall King had been divorced from Prophet and exiled from the
cult. After many months of confused existence, King began to
collect his wits and his self-esteem. He met with Gregory Mull,
another former CUT member, who had been sued by CUT's leader
for money. In order to protect himself, Mull initiated a countersuit
claiming fraud, psychological slavery, and money owed him from
six years of unpaid services as a church architect. Mull had
been kicked out by Prophet after he learned that she was using
the devoteesâ written confessions as references
when they were supposed to have been burned. King became a star
witness for Mull, who won his case against Prophet and CUT. In
1986 Mull was awarded approximately 1.5 million dollars.
Pietrangelo reports that Prophet tried
to manipulate him into testifying against King in her behalf,
but she made one too many errors. Prophet tried to convince Pietrangelo
that King once had threatened her with a knife and drew blood.
Pietrangelo confronted King with this information. It was then
that King, shocked by the lie, opened up to his friend and told
his bizarre tale, a tale that included months of erotic massages
and mutual masturbation with Mother, even before Mark Prophet
died. According to King, one week after Mark's death, Elizabeth
brought forth (channeled) Mother Mary, like a personality puppet,
to marry her and Randall in a very private ceremony, after which
they had intercourse.
Sex among the Philistines or the unenlightened
is one thing, but in CUT teachings, extramarital sexual contact
has been strictly forbidden. It was not the sex, however, that
bothered Pietrangelo; he was most angered by the ugly duplicity
of the woman to whom he had submitted his soulâs
salvation, albeit a woman he had begun to dislike. He told his
wife what he had learned. They both snapped out of their enchantment
with CUT and left, never to return.
Pietrangeloâs testimony
is tinged with remnants of a wounded disciple who is still angry,
even though he claims to have recovered. He lacks the cool objectivity
of a trained sociologist who might overlook anecdotal evidence
in an assessment of CUT. I can imagine some scholars I know dismissing
Pietrangelo as merely another disgruntled person seizing on anything
that might feed a "reaction formation." I do not see
him in that light.
Since 1980 I have interviewed many former
CUT staffers and several dozen former members. From 1979â80
I myself was a devoted student of CUTâs teachings
and attended three CUT conferences, so I have some idea of the
nature of the group. Pietrangeloâs story is
well within the realm of truthâof that I am
quite certain. The value of his book is inestimable for the curious
new recruit who has doubts, and for the burnt-out staff person
who may be wondering whom he or she may have been serving all
those years.
Another book was published on CUT earlier
in 1994 by more sympathetic scholars (Church Universal
and Triumphant in Scholarly Perspective, edited by
J.R. Lewis and J.G. Melton, published by Syzygy: Journal
of Alternative Religion and Culture). Compared to
Lambs to Slaughter, Lewis and Meltonâs
presentation is anemic, lacking all sense of the exaggerated
drama within the cult, and provides no convincing analysis of
the all-important leader, Elizabeth Prophet.
Prophetâs staged grandiosity
as well as her childish vulnerability come through strongly in
Pietrangeloâs portrayal of her. However, he
often lapses into an old game that ex-cult members play: "my
guru was better than your guru," meaning that Mother was
more conniving, convincing, clever, and classy than other false
prophets. He writes, "Elizabeth is unequaled .... A more
skillful Sophist can not be found" (p. 38). The suggestion
is: "It took the best to program me. I would not
have fallen for just anybody." Of course, such claims
are subjective because even the most committed seekers rarely
submit to more than two or three gurus before they finally get
the point.
If anything, that is the point of the
book: once a person is conned into the orbit of a manipulative
leader and the system controlled by one, it could be a long time
before one realizes how deep the deception and how sinister the
manipulation had been. Lambs to Slaughter
is the honest confession of one who now does.
Joseph P. Szimhart
Cult Information Specialist/Exit Counselor
Pottstown, Pennsylvania
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