Picture of author.

Ronald M. Enroth

Author of Churches That Abuse

22 Works 725 Members 5 Reviews

About the Author

Works by Ronald M. Enroth

Tagged

Common Knowledge

Birthdate
1938-10-28
Gender
male
Nationality
USA
Education
University of Kentucky (PhD|Sociology)
Occupations
sociologist

Members

Reviews

This book was on my husband’s bookshelf for years, and he pulled it out to show me during a conversation we were having the other day about a church we used to attend in San Francisco in the 1970s and 80s. Once I started reading, I couldn’t put it down. Published in 1972, it’s about a “movement” of young evangelical Christians that emerged in the late 1960s-early 1970s. This was about me and “my people,” and I was curious about how our story fit in with the book’s research on the beliefs, the cults, and the churches of that time.

In our late teens, we eloped and joined a Christian commune in early 1973 in Southern CA, after first attending Calvary Chapel in Costa Mesa, CA in 1972. The commune turned into a cult not long after we all moved to Vancouver, WA and my husband and I soon escaped. (Could have been an example from this book). A few years later my husband and I were living in San Francisco and cautiously began attending a church called Park Presidio Bible Church, which coincidentally was formerly pastored by Edward E. Plowman, who is mentioned in this book and was strongly involved in the “Jesus Movement.” In fact, he wrote a book similar to The Jesus People, mentioning many of the same people and documenting the same facts about hippies who gave up drugs for Jesus, and lived in communes and cults.

I found The Jesus People to be engrossing from a historical point of view, but disappointing to me as it ended too soon. So much happened after 1972 related to the various Christian churches and leaders. The “movement” began in the late 1960s and there was so much more to be written after this was published in 1972. For instance, Calvary Chapel and its founder Chuck Smith (and Lonnie Frisbee) are mentioned in passing, while today the church is a well-established international foundation of 1,800 churches. The authors had no idea at that time which groups would become cults and which would go on to become healthy, lifechanging organizations. The perspective of time makes a difference!

There are some black and white photos scattered throughout the book, but I would have liked more images. Nonetheless, this is a valuable and fascinating historic snapshot of a unique time of idealistic believers, sincere leaders, and manipulative cults.
… (more)
½
 
Flagged
PhyllisReads | 1 other review | Sep 30, 2023 |
I survived this movement. It's like everyone in my parents' generation and their own scene took some type of religious LSD. Interesting book. Provides some context...
 
Flagged
scottcholstad | 1 other review | Dec 17, 2019 |
They're not doctrinally programmed robots, but people with real needs
 
Flagged
kijabi1 | Jan 2, 2012 |
I found this small easy to read book so immensely useful when I was working through my own exit from a religious cult that I bought 6 extra copies to hand out to contacts and friends I met going through the same experiences.

Enroth describes case after case of persons traumatized by the forms of authority, elitism, manipulation, life-style and thought control, discipline and expulsion and the rest. The great value of these examples is that the reader going through the same (leaving a family that was that person's whole life and now suddenly alone without a world to quickly relate to anymore) that they are not alone or unique.

Not that this book is a mere litany of woes. Enroth comments on each case study and clarifies with some skill and common humanity what the real emotional and mental issues facing each victim are. He is helping both the reader in all-too-familiar situations understand themselves better, and also would-be helpers to understand them too.
… (more)
 
Flagged
neilgodfrey | Nov 29, 2006 |

Awards

You May Also Like

Statistics

Works
22
Members
725
Popularity
#35,032
Rating
½ 3.4
Reviews
5
ISBNs
28
Languages
3

Charts & Graphs