Encyclopedia > Process Church of the Final Judgment

  Article Content

Process Church

Redirected from Process Church of the Final Judgment

The Process Church of the Final Judgment was a religious cult that flourished in the 1970s, founded by the Englishman Robert de Grimston. It originally developed as a splinter client cult[?] group from Scientology. The members of the group underwent a social implosion and moved to Xtul[?] on Mexico's Yucatan peninsula, where they developed a religious theology. They believed in four gods: Jehovah, Lucifer, Christ and Satan, which were interpreted as personality types. These gods were in conflict, but the gods were to be reconciled, at which point the world would end. They later established their base of operations in the United States.

They were often viewed as Satanic on the grounds that they worshipped both Christ and Satan; however they believed that Satan would become reconciled to Christ, and that they were coming at the end of the world to judge humanity, Christ to judge and Satan to execute judgment. (Their worship of a being generally considered evil but which they believed had repented and turned good, and the impression this created of them being Satanists, makes them similar to the Yezidis).

In April, 1974 Robert de Grimston was removed by the council as leader.They disliked the increasingly Satanic emphasis of his teachings. After this the group fell apart; the council rejected de Grimston and went on to form the Foundation Church of the Millennium, later called the Foundation Faith of God. This group has moved further away from the original Processean beliefs, and increasingly resembles a traditional Christian denomination. De Grimston attempted to restart the Process Church several times, but he could never replace his original following.

A detailed history of the Process Church is contained in William S. Bainbridge's book "Satan's Power". (Note he changes the name of the group and the people involved in this book, in order to hide their identity.)



All Wikipedia text is available under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License

 
  Search Encyclopedia

Search over one million articles, find something about almost anything!
 
 
  
  Featured Article
Bullying

... basis of authority. The first to have the title of "Tyrant" was Pisistratus in 560 BC. In modern times Tyrant has come to mean a dictator who rules with ...

 
 
 
This page was created in 24.2 ms