That secret? Obedience. I saw the entire message of the bible as this: “sacrifice in order to obey”. But I did not realize this was no secret, and many millions of people had already found this. I did not realize I was just discovering the ubf heritage which had already been known by many.
I loved to know the insider language! I learned all the acronyms! I loved being “in”, having knowledge that no one else knew (or so I thought). I became a Pharisee but ignored and dismissed Jesus’ primary words to the Pharisees, such as in Matthew 12:7. Jesus desires mercy, not sacrifice; justice and love and hope as a friend, not obedience, loyalty and purity as a soldier.
To this day, ubf honors and glorifies those who read the entire bible through the lens of obedience, sacrifice and loyalty. [That ubf report sounds Christian, but when you understand the loaded redefined ubf meaning of words like “grace”, you begin to see a gospel different from what Jesus preached.]
]]>BigBear, I disagree with you on that. First, you can’t sweepingly charge “them”. Some time ago even you have been a part of “them”.
You can only charge those who directly harmed you, and only in a way that is provable and punishable by law. I think most of the things that happened were not of that nature. Judges can’t deal with “spiritual abuse”. Judges will see you as a mature and responsible citizen in the first place. If you neglected your children or your family, they will see it as your fault in the first place. They will have a hard time to understand that you did it because you were “brainwashed” and even if they understand it will be nearly impossible to prove.
It will be better to just educate people about what happened, and how it was possible, so that it won’t happen again, not seeking “revenge”. In a way, we are all guilty for allowing these things to be done to us and others for such a long time. There is a “sin of the shepherds” which weighs more but there is still also a “sin of the sheep” (http://www.founders.org/journal/fj15/article3.html).
Some extreme cases, maybe should be brought to court. But it’s not “the way to go” now. If anything, then this should have happened many years ago.
]]>Yes, gc. It could be actually the motto for a UBF reform. Jesus says in the Bible “Nor are you to be called instructors, for you have one Instructor, the Messiah.” and “They tie up heavy, cumbersome loads and put them on other people’s shoulders, but they themselves are not willing to lift a finger to move them.” For me, Mt23 is a clear rebuttal of everything UBF. With it’s authoritarian one-man-leadership and “disciple training” UBF deviated from the principles taught be Jesus and the apostle in the Bible, and it did so from the very beginnings of UBF (as you can clearly see in the 1976 letter). What UBF really needs is to “go back to the Bible”. Maybe we can all honor Samuel Lee by taking his slogan literally? The only problem that hindered us is that we first need to untangle the real meaning of words. For instance, “the Bible” should really mean the real Bible and not “UBF heritage” or whatever UBF says the Bible is. From there on, everything needs to be cleaned up and freed from the UBF associations until we can learn to thing clearly again. “Coworker” should mean “coworker” and not “spouse”. “Calling” should mean “heavenly calling” not “calling as UBF shepherd”. All the words in the Bible must be freed from their hidden UBF meaning and everything that is associated with them in the indoctrination process.
BigBear, Brian: What I expect from a book is that the focus is not so much on revealing all the ugly things (of course this must be done to a certain extent so everybody understands what we are talking about), but much more how it was possible that we could all be captivated in such a system, how our minds could be confused so much, why we tolerated abuse done on us and others, why we stayed for so many years. If you can concentrate on trying to explain that, the book can be very helpful. Many people don’t understand this, and even we can’t understand ourselves.
]]>Disturbing. No doubt this was learned from Slee’s incident of putting red pepper salt of some kind in the eyes of some shepherds who didn’t cry enough over something.
I don’t recall seeing this kind of physical abuse in my part of ubf, apart from sleep deprivation. The worst abuse of the bible I saw was when a friend of mine was demanded to write out some bible verses something like 400 times on paper… just a couple days before his bar exam. So instead of studying for the exam, he was writing bible verses out of obedience.
]]>I agree, gc. A large part of my recovery from ubf has been to “undefine” many terms. I began to just accept words for what they are. Love is love. Grace is grace. No need to seek out the “real meaning”. Also I try to no longer use so many adjectives. I noticed a while ago that I used to add adjectives to everything like “real love” or “true mission”, implying that everyone else didn’t know these things as well as me.
Some of us former members have created an extensive glossary of ubf words, exposing the redefinition of terms that is rampant in ubf. This re-defining of words and phrases seems to me to stem again from Confucianism, sort of a ubf version of the rectification of names principle.
]]>I find it funny that often (in my experience) analogies have been made that we should not hide/dwell in wilderness (away from the world and God’s flock), but rather go to it. Indeed, we should mix the sacred and profane. It is part of our normal Christian life.
Corporate relationships are too often applied in the Holy space thereby leaving us to be controlled by our inhibitions. Can we truly be friends and love each other in Jesus? or Are we just sneering and jeering based upon our “fixed ideas”? Go back to the Bible. Guess what! – Jesus’ public ministry was only a couple years and we get an episodic window into it. This does not mean that every day of our lives will be a replica of the gospels if we “make every effort” to live as disciples. Unfortunately, for most of us the mundane, trite and banal moves in on our routine and going back to the Bible cannot help that – it is a part of life.
Going back to the Bible can be the best armour against spiritual abuse…
]]>Good: Back to the Bible is the best part of Ubf. I know the Bible more than many Pastors and I did study the Bible much in Ubf. The inductive approach is good.
Bad: Ubf taught me to study the Bible to justify Ubf and its bad theology and abuse and its system. My director always severely rebuked me if my understanding of the Bible was different than his interpretation. I was call Shepherd Point for a few years to humiliate me because I always learn something different than what ubf taught in the passages. When looking back I could see it was a way to brainwash me into becoming a ubf leader. I always questioned ubf interpretation of scripture. The bad of bible study is that it is so controlled and and used to manipulate others for system instead of done in love.
Ugly: The Bible study was abusive. Once the director ordered onions to be cut up and put in my younger brothers eyes so he would cry during testimony writing. Many times I saw the diector do abusive things but he told me it was how they trained disciples and I came to believe this was normal. He had Samuel Lee in him for sure. My family warned me about the abuse and how he degraded my family when they came to worship. I should have left sooner.
I cannot find any evidence to call ubf directors as “pastors”, but your point is very good, Joshua. One reason we cannot codify ubf doctrines is because the directors are all over the place in terms of what they belief, even switching positions from Sunday to Sunday.
I believe this comes from “inductive study” only. This is not really study per se. It is just drawing conclusions quickly and then “going back to the bible”. Bible study in ubf, as I look back, was more of an exercise in obedience than any kind of learning mechanism. As I mentioned in my article, real study would involve both inductive and deductive methods, along with some Greek and Hebrew and most certainly study of 2,000 years of Christian history in some way. Real study would allow for critical thinking.
So “go back to the bible” has been used as a means of thought-stopping and behavior control.
]]>So I think you are correct, “go back to the bible” also has the meaning “go back to ubf” and “stay in ubf”.
]]>However, I remember that SL used that motto during the 2001 reform movement; I never heard it before. I (and probably many others around that time) understood it as a summary of the following claims: 1. The UBF ways were always rooted in the Bible 2. The reformers deviated from the Bible. 3. Go back to the old ways instead of getting influenced by the reformers.
This becomes clearer when you remember that for SL “the Bible” and “the UBF ways” were synonymous. SL always held a Bible in his hand. He sometimes called a fundamentalist UBF member a “man/woman of the Bible”. These were those who did radical things like neglecting their family for UBF or doing other strange UBFish things. Or he said they had “a smell of the Bible,” and he claimed to be the ultimate prototype of such a man who smelled of the Bible.
For SL, his own interpretation of the Bible and the Bible itself were one and the same. Those people who had a “smell of the Bible” in his view were in reality those who had a smell of UBF. In SL’s interpretation of the Bible, world mission (not love) was the highest command, and world mission was equal with SL/UBF style campus mission. So SL/UBF style campus mission was the highest command, and it was no problem for him to order divorces, abortions, inhumane trainings, to shame and malign critics, fake photos and do many other unethical and unbiblical things because he believed they were “venial sins” that could easily be committed in order to fulfill the “real” essence of the Bible, which was UBF style campus mission. All of this smelled really awful, but he succeeded in convincing people that it was the “smell of the Bible”, so they put up with it.
“Back to the Bible” in his distorted views meant ignoring all the legitimate criticism from the reformers and go back to the old ways. In the time of the 2001 reform movement it was used with this meaning as a kind of battle cry.
SL was always a bit “cleverer” than others. Sarah Barry’s answer to the reformers was simply “no reform!”. Sarah Hong’s answer to me was “you can wait for reform until we are all buried”. But SL’s answer was “go back to the Bible”. He was always indirect. He would not say “no reform!”. He would not even speak that word “reform” out, he only spoke of “rebellion” or “R group”. And when he said “go back to the Bible” it was clear to everyone who was on the side of the Bible and who were the heretics.
Let me say clearly that I personally don’t believe that SL/UBF style campus mission was ever rooted in the Bible. Already in 1976 we have shocking reports of misappropriation of moneys and other severe authority abuse by SL. So to “go back to the Bible” is misleading as an advice for UBF. UBF’s own account of history (http://ubf.org/node/155) gives a better clue about the roots of UBF: “They began to have a burning zeal to overcome their own fatalistic problems and start a new life. They gained a sense of pride and mission.” Pride was the driving force of SL, and he infected others with this pride. He sometimes tried to appear as humble or as serving a “manger ministry” but that was only masquerade. It was a ministry based on human ambition and misreading of the Bible from the very beginnings. All good deeds, devotion, suffering, dedication, prayer in UBF (which I do not want to deny) were always tainted with this pride and the bad ideology. Whenever you smelled it, you were told to not trust your nose (conscience, Holy Spirit, ethical norms and common sense) but only trust you “spiritual leaders” who defined for you which smells were good and which were bad.
Visitors who attend UBF events immediately notice a “cult smell”. I remember how intensely I noticed it when I had my first testimony sharing sessions and my first conference. But you know, if you stay in a smelly environment for a long time, you don’t notice it any more. And even if sometimes it still annoys you, you start to believe this is “the smell of the Bible”.
]]>The good: God’s word became ingrained in my mind and heart. Relevant Bible verses frequently come to mind when I encounter various life situations. I feel God’s presence through the remembrance of His word.
The bad: Prooftexting meaning from scripture to support whatever position the pastor wants to take.
The ugly: Demanding ritualistic, legalistic obedience to rigid Bible study practices, such Bible study appointments or testimony writing/sharing.
]]>The good: My utmost gratitude to God is that through UBF God taught me to love Scripture as God’s word to this very day.
The bad: Don’t read Bible commentaries. Rely on your own inspiration, which practically means rely on what your UBF leaders teach you.
The ugly: Focusing on duty and mission, while assuming or not highlighting the exquisite beauty and majesty of Christ and the gospel. Also, (inwardly) focusing exclusively on UBF, causing elitism, exclusivity and superiority, rather than humbly collaborating with other churches and ministries as one cog in the universal church.
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