Rroym, thank you for starting this thread. It is potentially very helpful in terms of recovery, and I salute you and others who have posted here. There are always going to be differences of opinion about some authors, points of view, approaches, philosophies and . . . and, I don't know what all else. Favorite football teams?
In any case, there is a lot of information out there and it will expand everyone's horizons to just have an idea of what has helped others.
A book I have read recently that has helped me make sense of a lot of what I went through during my time in NTM is When Killing is a Crime by Tony Waters.
Dr. Waters is professor of sociology at California State University, Chico. He brings years of teaching and vast experience in actual field work to bear on what is really an introduction to criminology. He draws on examples from the Bible, Africa, American history. . . It is a very readable book, but by no means shallow.
Professor Waters reminds us that "homicide is a subset of interpersonal conflict," something we already knew if we ever read I John. By keeping this relationship between murder and other forms of conflict, it is easy to see the application to other areas of our lives. Killing is, as it were, a hook on which he is able to hang an awful lot of pertinent information.
He deals with concepts such as "statelessness" as they apply to the home (boarding school) and cults (NTM, whether you see it as a cult or not).
Also, he talks about the "need" for an "out group" and how various acceptable behaviors can become "criminalized" and then later accepted. Think "Salem Witch Trials." The application to NTM at large is no leap of logic.
Here is a quote, where Professor Waters quotes someone quoting someone else:
Imagine a society of saints, a perfect cloister of exemplary individuals. Crimes, properly so called will there be unknown; but faults which appear venal to the layman will create there the same scandal. . . . If, then, this society has the power to judge and punish, it will define these acts as criminal and treat them as such. . . .
Crime is then, necessary; it is bound up with the fundamental conditions of all social life, and by that very fact is useful, because these conditions of which it is a part are themselves indispensable in the normal evolution of morality and law. (page 16)
I won't write more lest his book suffer from poor representation. I recommend it without reservation and honestly believe it will be valuable in helping get a handle on the NTM experience, whether from the standpoint of MK, adult missionary or both.
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