Foundations of New Religious Movements: Origins, Beliefs, and Sociological Frameworks
A scholarly introduction to the academic study of new religious movements — how they form, what they believe, and how sociologists and historians analyze religious innovation and change.
About this course
The term "new religious movement" — preferred by scholars over the more loaded "cult" — covers a vast and diverse range of spiritual communities that have emerged largely since the nineteenth century: from Theosophy and Christian Science through the New Age movement to contemporary syncretic traditions. Understanding why new religious movements form, how they develop, and how to analyze them without sensationalism or bias is an important scholarly and civic skill in a religiously plural world.
By the end of this course you will be able to define and apply the sociological distinction between sect, denomination, church, and new religious movement, describe the major theories of how new religious movements form, explain the social processes of conversion and commitment, and analyze specific movements within their historical and cultural contexts without resorting to either sensationalism or uncritical acceptance.
What you will learn:
- The sociology of religion: Weber's church-sect typology, Troeltsch's extensions, and Stark and Bainbridge's market model of religious innovation
- Why new religious movements emerge: religious, cultural, and social conditions that historically generate new spiritual movements
- The conversion process: Lofland and Stark's sequential model, the tension between push factors (leaving a previous worldview) and pull factors (attraction to new community)
- Major categories of new religious movements: world-renouncing, world-affirming, and world-accommodating types with illustrative examples from each
- Selected case studies: the Theosophical Society, Seventh-day Adventism, Pentecostalism, Scientology, and the New Age movement — examined for their origins, beliefs, and development
- Syncretism and spiritual bricolage: how contemporary individuals and movements combine elements from multiple traditions
- The anti-cult movement and the scholarly critique of it: why the term "cult" is analytically problematic and what legitimate scholarly concern it sometimes reflects
- Measuring religious harm and benefit: how scholars attempt to assess the effects of participation in new religious movements without prejudging the outcome
The course is structured as a sequence of readings organized by theory and case, with reflection prompts and comparative analysis exercises. Case studies are presented with equal analytical rigor regardless of the movement's public reputation.
This course is designed for students who are new to the academic study of new religious movements. No prior background in sociology or religious studies is required. The approach throughout is scholarly, neutral, and evidence-based.
What you'll get
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Short & focused
1h 18m of practical content
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Just a phone or computer with internet. No installs, no special hardware.
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Yes — full refund within 30 days, no questions asked.
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Forever. Once you purchase, the course is yours to revisit anytime.
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Yes. On completion you'll receive a certificate you can add to your LinkedIn profile.
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