For me, the difference between a church, a sect and a cult is a difference of degree. A church is the original: it is the thing that starts it all off. In Christianity it would be the main churches that eventually became known as the Catholic Church with the base in Rome. Then there was the split between the East and the West—the schism. Then there was the Protestant Reformation. Sects would be subsets of both: they would have some of the teachings but would disagree on certain matters. Cults would introduce new and novel ideas and get further away from the original truths and teachings of the churches. So this is the difference in degree that I would point out. I think that Stark and Brainbridge (Defining Cults/Sects, n.d.) define these distinctions well and I would use their definition as a rule to explain the differences. However, I do think that it would be easy to interchange all three as most would not be able to say that there was an “original” church. I think that only in Christianity was there ever an original church, as it is so unique in history. I disagree...
I think historians do not like to use the words because they do not want to offend in today’s PC climate.References
Defining Cults/Sects. (n.d.). Digital File.
The Sect-Church Process. (n.d.). Digital File.
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