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Rogue Messiahs: Tales of Self-Proclaimed Saviors [Hardcover]

Colin Wilson (Author)
3.5 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (10 customer reviews)


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Book Description

July 1, 2000

Throughout history, Western culture has been bedeviled by false prophets, charlatans, and self-appointed messianic figures. Their appetites for destruction and depravity have led to broken lives and worse-mass suicide and even mass murder. Why does this occur again and again?

In Rogue Messiahs, Colin Wilson compellingly recounts the stories and outrageous claims, acts, and abuses of 25 self-proclaimed messiahs who have arisen in the last 300 years. He uncovers the probable factors that turn earnest religious leaders, mystics, or well-intentioned cult leaders into violent, abusive, murderous, and paranoid rogue messiahs.

This gallery of spiritual fakers includes many familiar names and faces: David Koresh, leader of the Branch Davidians; Shoko Asahara, founder of the Aum Supreme Truth cult; Rev. Jim Jones; founder of the infamous Jonestown; Jeffrey Don Lundgren, Mormon con man and murderer; Ervil LeBaron and family, deranged cultist, prophets, and murderers; Rock Theriault, late twentieth-century French Canadian self-proclaimed messiah. Further, Wilson includes a study of others who achieved spiritual insight instead of destruction, and demonstrates that mayhem and benevolence are often two sides of the same coin.

These would-be messiahs, in Wilson’s analysis, are all driven by a childish dream of absolute power. Almost always, they cross the line from inspiration to paranoia, and from the teaching to killing-genuine aspiration mixed with self-deception, says Wilson. This is an incisive review of the motives and madness of cult leaders, spiritual con men, and would-be saviors.



Editorial Reviews

From Library Journal

Wilson's lucid survey of the lives, claims, actions, and abuses of cult leaders makes for compelling reading. He outlines the psychological makeup of these individuals and provides an intriguing narrative that keeps the reader's interest, providing many case histories that most will not be familiar with. The author also focuses on the followers of these "rogue messiahs," whose own personalities allow them to be swept up by the messages of cult leaders and who feed the cult's illusion of power and destiny. The reader gains insight into David Koresh of the Branch Davidians, Jim Jones and Jonestown, and Abram Smith and the Oneida Community, to name a few. The exposition of each cult leader completes another chapter in Wilson's study wherein he highlights the behaviors of these cult leaders and their tendency to fall into a number of well-defined patterns. Wilson (The Outsider) has written more than 80 works, and this book is likely to attract many readers because it is easy to read and focuses on biographical details about cult leaders. Recommended for academic and public library collections dealing with crime and cults.DLeroy Hommerding, Fort Myers Beach P.L. Distict., FL Sports & Recreation
Copyright 2000 Reed Business Information, Inc.

From Booklist

Prolific ruminator and ooky novelist Wilson undertakes to find a more or less universal explanation for the phenomenon of self-proclaimed messiahs. Such saviors need not be divine. One chapter considers "The Psychiatrist as Messiah," for instance, indicating that Wilson's coverage takes in persons who profess or exhibit the ability to bend followers' minds, usually with some promise of some sort of salvation as a lure. So Freud shares the spotlight with Koresh, Manson, and Crowley, not to mention Joseph Smith, founder of Mormonism. Wilson accords each a brief but detailed profile. He writes with an urgency that surges through the book and bespeaks his apparent commitment to describing the totality or, at least, the metaphysical pith of each individual subject. In the introduction, he succinctly limns his initial sexual experience, perhaps as a way of cleansing his own soul before dissecting those of the assembled messiahs, which would be only fair. Damned interesting stuff on a devilishly vital and timeless subject. Mike Tribby
Copyright © American Library Association. All rights reserved

Product Details

  • Hardcover: 304 pages
  • Publisher: Hampton Roads Publishing (July 1, 2000)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 1571741755
  • ISBN-13: 978-1571741752
  • Product Dimensions: 9 x 6.3 x 1.2 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 1.4 pounds
  • Average Customer Review: 3.5 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (10 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #1,403,711 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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32 of 33 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Totally involving and enlightening, September 14, 2000
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This review is from: Rogue Messiahs: Tales of Self-Proclaimed Saviors (Hardcover)
An illuminating study of the minds of messiahs and their disciples, which broadens to include more familiar personalities, such as Freud and Comte. I firmly believe that modern psychology could only benefit by approaching issues of criminality and "messiah-dom" more after the fashion of Wilson. The insights the book provides are numerous, and Wilson's writing provokes one to think about both the subject matter at hand and more general issues as well. The broad range of case studies he draws upon are fantastically interesting - the book is compulsively readable, and I had to slow myself down on occasion to make sure I was absorbing it all. The introduction alone, with a discussion of the nature of sex and other themes in the book, was worth the price of admission.

Most of the innumerable cases Wilson examines undergo a probing analysis of their central participants (one, that of Edward Arthur Wilson or "Brother Twelve", seems a little incomplete). Wilson's tremendous range of knowledge makes these analyses all the more compelling.

One complaint: I do wish the book supplied a bibliography. Wilson draws on so much information that I often want to read some of the fascinating sources he quotes, but these are not always listed in the text.

I have little doubt I will read this book again. It goes far beyond its subtitle, being more than just retellings of lurid and fascinating stories, to become an exciting and rewarding work.

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23 of 23 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Rogue Messiahs, December 14, 2002
This review is from: Rogue Messiahs: Tales of Self-Proclaimed Saviors (Hardcover)
How are people like David Koresh and Jim Jones able to attract a huge following of believers? Why do those followers stay with them, even to the point of self-destruction?
In Rogue Messiahs: Tales of Self-Proclaimed Saviors, Colin Wilson analyzes the lives of more than two dozen individuals responsible for the destruction or death of hundreds of loyal disciples. He also includes interviews with the ordinary people who got caught up in believing whatever the self-proclaimed messiahs taught.
Wilson has published more than eighty books, on a wide range of subjects, and is generally regarded as one of the most erudite and well-informed authors of our time.
He says that, "to begin with, we have to recognize that these 'messiahs' are driven by two basic human needs, power and sex." He goes on to explain that virtually all humans have these same needs, but in the messiahs, the needs have exploded beyond normal limits. The messiahs generally start out well-intentioned, and may even help some people in their early years. But they "cross the line from inspiration to paranoia, and from teaching to killing--genuine aspiration mixed with self-deception."
Wilson also discusses fact that five percent of the members in any group are dominant individuals. Five percent of the dominant members are "so dominant that they automatically become leaders of every group." Of this last group, a very small percentage are geniuses or become great leaders. The remaining dominant individuals "are obsessed by their personality, and the impact it makes on other people." It's from this group that the rogue messiahs are drawn. Not only are they dominant individuals, they require others to acknowledge their dominance.
Most of the people drawn into the webs woven by the messiahs believe they're following an idea. Wilson says that "all human beings long for powerful conviction, for ideas that seem to offer them a new and more meaningful way of life." Once they accept the ideas promulgated by the leaders, they find it difficult, if not impossible, to break away from the group.
In counterpoint, Wilson also analyzes the personalities of dominant individuals "whose dispositions led instead to spiritual insights of great benefit to humankind and continue to influence our lives today," and deftly shows how the same basic traits can be turned to either good or evil.
Readers interested in the workings of the human mind will find Rogue Messiahs fascinating and insightful. It belongs in the library of all those who wish a better understanding of the human condition.
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28 of 31 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars A word from the publisher, August 25, 2000
By 
Frank DeMarco (Charlottesville, Va) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Rogue Messiahs: Tales of Self-Proclaimed Saviors (Hardcover)
I have been a fan of Colin Wilson's writing since discovering his novel The Mind Parasites in 1970. In recent years it has been gratifying to become not only one of his many, many friends (he is the most generous of men) but also one of his publishers. (That's why at first I didn't give his book a rating; I'm hardly impartial. But then I found that without a rating, one can't submit a review. So, be warned) Colin's central thread in all his work is his conviction that humans are at the brink of an evolutionary leap that will make us more aware of our abilities, more conscious, more godlike in our powers. This conviction runs through all his work, which ranges from widely across disciplines. He is also an immensely talented novelist of ideas, writing science fiction, detective stories, fantasy, etc. -- all as a way of exploring the implications of his ideas. Rogue Messiahs is his exploration into the "why" of the cults that have defaced our time. And, typical of his multi-disciplinary approach, in this book he looks behind the headlines to explore what it might mean for us as a species. He is a great story-teller, and not the least of his talents is his ability to tie together subjects that at first glance have not much to do with each other. Reading his books is always an exercize in making unsuspected connections, so that even when you disagree with his conclusions you have profited from accompanying him on the journey.
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Inside This Book (learn more)
First Sentence:
Early in the afternoon of April 19, 1993, CNN began to broadcast pictures of the final assault on the Branch Davidian compound in Waco, Texas, where David Koresh and his followers had been holding police and federal authorities at bay for fifty-one days. Read the first page
Key Phrases - Statistically Improbable Phrases (SIPs): (learn more)
rogue messiahs, most messiahs, transformational system
Key Phrases - Capitalized Phrases (CAPs): (learn more)
Kirk Allen, Jim Jones, David Koresh, Madame Blavatsky, Brother Twelve, New York, Joseph Smith, Eddie Marston, Theosophical Society, Rock Theriault, Dan Jordan, Sabbatai Zevi, Jeffrey Lundgren, Madame Zee, Abode of Love, Los Molinos, Mark Chynoweth, Mary Connally, Oneida Community, Valdes Island, Golden Dawn, San Francisco, United States, Jesus Christ, Lloyd Sullivan
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Front Cover | Table of Contents | First Pages | Index | Back Cover | Surprise Me!
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