Summary Of Sect

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Sects are smaller groups composed of members who were originally part of a church. They tend to form when the larger church organization’s leaders “become too involved in secular issues” (Conley, 2015). As the sect attracts and acquires new members, it becomes larger, accepted, and considered a mainstream grouping in society or church, from which a splinter group, or sect, then may form due to discontent with church practices. This process becomes a repeating cycle. Conley uses the example of the Methodist church; it first was a sect dissatisfied with church practices of the 18th century, and was persecuted; it then grew in number, and began to be considered a mainstream denomination, changing its policies to those more socially acceptable.

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