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Brief Report: Perceived Psychological Abuse and the Cincinnati Church of Christ

Donna L. Adams, R.N.

The Cincinnati Church of Christ (CCC) is an affiliate of the International Churches of Christ (formerly known as the “Boston Movement”), one of the fastest growing and most controversial new religious groups in the United States (Giambalvo & Rosedale, 1996; Yeakley, 1988).  The purpose of this study was to compare former members of the CCC with graduates of InterVarsity Christian Fellowship (IV), a mainstream evangelical campus ministry, on the degree to which they perceived their group environments to be psychologically abusive, as measured by the Group Psychological Abuse Scale (GPA - Chambers, Langone, Dole, & Grice, 1994). 

Fifty-four former CCC members and 49 IV graduates, all recruited by word-of-mouth were sent the GPA.  Twenty-eight scales were returned by CCC subjects and 27 by IV subjects.  None of the former CCC subjects were exit counseled or deprogrammed, and none received assistance from cult-educational organizations.  T-tests were calculated to test for differences between the groups on the four subscales of the GPA: Compliance, Exploitation, Mind Control, and Anxious Dependency. 

Table 1 shows the Means and Standard Deviations for both groups on the four GPA subscales. 

 

Table 1 CCC and IV Subjects’ Means and Standard Deviations on GPA Subscales 

Subscale/Group        Mean                       Standard Deviation

Compliance                                        

  CCC                      4.71                    .34

  IV                         1.82                    .67

Exploitation                                       

  CCC                      2.89                    .67

  IV                         1.48                    .37

Mind Control                                      

  CCC                      4.49                    .51

  IV                         1.51                    .45

Anxious Dependency                           

  CCC                      3.30                    .66

  IV                         1.21                    .30

 

All t-tests were significant at the .05 level, indicating that the two groups differed on each subscale.

 The primary limitation of this study is that subjects were not selected randomly from the populations of interest, a deficiency common to this and many other areas of study.  Also, the GPA measures retrospective perceptions of psychological abuse.  The degree to which these perceptions reflect the abusiveness or nonabusiveness of the group environments in question cannot be answered adequately until additional research is conducted.

 References

Chambers, W. F., Langone, M. D., Dole, A. A., & Grice, J. W.  The Group Psychological Abuse Scale: A Measure of the Varieties of Cultic Abuse.  Cultic Studies Journal, 11(1), 88-117.

Giambalvo, C., & Rosedale, H. R. (Eds.).  The Boston Movement:  Critical perspectives on the International Churches of Christ.  Bonita Springs, FL: AFF, 1996.

Yeakley, F.  The discipling dilemma.  Nashville, TN: Gospel Advocate Company, 1988.

 Cultic Studies Journal, Vol. 15, No. 1, 1998

This article is an electronic version of an article originally published in Cultic Studies Journal, 1998, Volume 15, Number 1, pages 87-88. Please keep in mind that the pagination of this electronic reprint differs from that of the bound volume. This fact could affect how you enter bibliographic information in papers that you may write.


Adams, Donna L.: "Brief Report: Perceived Psychological Abuse and the Cincinnati Church of Christ"
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