BECOMING A COFS REVEREND On 20 Jun 98, Steve Jebson <naismith@pop.a001.sprintmail.com> continued the discussion on "How do you become a CoS "Reverend"? >Warrior wrote: >> >> >>In article <358bd2e9.56626922@enews.newsguy.com>, mirele@newsguy.com >> >>Deana Holmes asked: >> >>> >> >>>How do you get this title? Is it a part of one's hat? >> >>>Please enlighten me and I'm sure, others. >> >> >On 20 Jun 1998 10:35:04 -0700, Warrior <warrior@entheta.net> wrote: >> > >> >> The way one becomes a "reverend" in Scientology is by doing a short >> >>little course called "The Minister's Course". It takes about 20 hours >> >>(less for a fast student) to complete the Scientology course of study >> >>to be certified as a "minister". >> >> > >Right. The course when I saw it was a little longer than this, but >I'm sure essentially the same. It includes a few PLs and one thin >(a little over 100 pages) book to teach all a Scientology 'minister' >needs to know about religion. I think it was called 'The Great >Religions of the World', or something similar. > >> In article <358f1607.14678973@news.atnet.at>, ralph@atnet.at Ralph >> Hilton added: >> > >> >As an interesting side note many peole were rushed through this >> >course when Flag moved to land in 1975. >> >There was a book on the course about comparative religion. >> >Most of the copies available for study were photocopies illegally >> >made by Sea Org copyright terrorists. >> >I also observed various copyright terrorists using photcopies of >> >the book "Brighter Grammar". >> >> A similar thing was done in PAC. The Sea Org males were told we >> all had to do the "Minister's Course" because the US Government's >> Selective Serice System would be re-activating the draft. It was >> therefore explained to us that by being "ministers" we would be >> exempt from being drafted into military duty by reason of being >> ordained ministers. >> >> Personally, I believe the real reason for ordering male Sea Org >> members to complete the course was related to the ongoing (at that >> time) IRS tax cases. I figured that by having more "ministers", the >> cult would *appear* to be more "religious". My opinion is that we >> SO staff were told an "acceptable truth" by someone in the Guardian >> Office. > >I disagree with this conclusion. When I was on staff in an org, the >same order came down - this was in Dec 79 or Jan 80. I remember >specifically that it came from the GO. I assumed at the time that >it was a response to the taking of American hostages by Iran just >before this, which led to talk of war and a renewed draft. > >> In PAC, female SO members were not required to do the course, but >> they were not forbidden either. > >Women can't be drafted, of course. Further evidence that the whole >scheme was an involved form of draft-dodging. Also, if the draft >had been brought back, it could have been used to threaten staff >who were thinking about leaving. > >I wonder how this was handled when there really was a draft? Maybe >Pilot or somebody else who was around orgs in the Vietnam period >can say how they avoided losing male staff to the draft. I did the Minister's Course in 1968. At that time it was a long checksheet, about twice as long as an academy training level, and it was pretty much never done by anybody unless they needed to be able to cover the Chaplin's post. At that time The Chaplin was in the Qual (qualifications or QC) Division, had to be a trained auditor, and had some power to fix things for somebody who was having trouble in the org. It was generally done as a second hat by the senior review auditor or Qual Sec and other review auditors such as myself usually did the checksheet so that we could cover the post if the official Chaplin was tied up on other cycles. This was at one time a major org correction and fix it type post where you needed all your auditor training and policy knowledge to try and sort things out. In later years they decided to make The Chaplin a PR action and moved it out of Qual and into the public divisions, basically cutting the Chaplins balls off. Up until that time, sometimes a fiesty Chaplin would take on Ethics or Execs or C/Ses and really try to fix something and they had the authority of the Qual Sec behind them. The checksheet I did had that "Great Religions" book (I think it was "The Great Religions By Which Men Live", but it has been decades). I remember it as being shallow but resonable. I recall it as a paperback of 200 or so pages, but maybe I'm remembering another book that was on the checksheet. And the checksheet also had other things on it like star rate checking out on The Book Of Revelations etc. as well as lots of early LRH tapes. It wasn't really a shallow course although it was no more than a drop in the bucket on an immense topic like comparative theology. But at least it was a real start on the subject. Then in, I think it was 1969, the order came down that all professional auditors in the US had to be Ministers for legal reasons. The long and arduous Minister's checksheet was immediately replaced by a quickie Minister's course less than a quarter of the size of the previous one and every Class 2 or above auditor on staff was ordered to do the course. It has never been the same since. And, as noted in the earlier postings, the org periodically has a big push to make ministers for one leagal reason or another. So they are a dime a dozen. The order, by the way, applied to men and women alike, so we had lots of cute girl auditors walking around in mini-skirted minister's costumes and occasionally performing Sunday Services and Marriages etc. That was still the sexually loose sixties era so everybody (including me) thought it was jolly good fun. As far as the draft goes, there was about a year of US Drafting before the quickie ministers course came out. Since the psychs were considered Fair Game, it became a matter of pride that any trained auditor could cave the Draft Board psych in and get a 4F. I remember one guy who just went into the draft psych and sat there doing total TR 0, reacting to nothing. Eventually they delicately moved him to a wheel chair and rolled him down to the street and out of the building at which point he thanked them and went on his way. Another guy told them that he didn't want to die in yet another 3rd rate war on a 4th rate planet on the edge of the galaxy. It wouldn't surprise me if some of the OTs chanted implant items at the psych. Fair game after all. But here I'm only guessing because I was lower level and couldn't be told about OT stuff then. As far as I know, no staff or trained auditors or OTs were inducted, at least not at the large org where I was at. The rumor was that you should put Scientologist down in big bold letters on the papers that the draft board had you fill out because they were getting scared of us and what we'd pull next. There was one fringe public guy who did get drafted. Then he went AWOL and came running into the org for help. Ethics and the Chaplin handled him, got him hooked up with a lawyer, and he got a court ruling that he never should have been inducted in the first place, being mentally unfit for military duty, and he got away with the whole thing. But we were really lucky that nobody got committed while playing these games with the psychs. In retrospect, I think that the draft board psychiatrists were bending over backwards to let us off and shared much of the anti-war sentiment that was sweeping the country at that time. Best, The Pilot
Back to the Main Page