J. Gordon Melton
Reverend J. Gordon Melton, Ph.D. (both John and James have been used as his first name) is the director of the Institute for the Study of American Religion and is a research specialist with the Department of Religious Studies at the University of California, Santa Barbara. He is listed as an expert on The Family International by said cult, and has defended them for many years.
Melton has frequently been labelled as a cult apologist, as he often works for such groups (including terrorist cult Aum Shinrikyo [1], many of whose leaders were later sentenced to death by Japanese courts) through cult-funded research projects and books or as an expert witness.
In the mid 1990s, Melton was heavily involved in a British custody case involving The Family. He testified on behalf of the group and helped them defuse the inevitable damning indictment of the previous abuse of children in the group. He was also very involved in the creation of The Family's Charter and has made no secret of the fact that he dreamed of single-handedly bringing the group into the mainstream.
Countercult activist Anton Hein and others have often criticized Melton because of what they consider excessive skepticism of the testimonies of former members of new religious movements. The following is excerpted from expert testimony for the Local Church in its lawsuit against Spiritual Counterfeit Project:
DR. MELTON: When you are investigating groups such as this, you never rely upon the unverified testimony of ex-members.
MR. MORGAN: Why?
DR. MELTON: To put it bluntly, hostile ex-members invariably shade the truth. They invariably blow out of proportion minor incidents and turn them into major incidents, and over a period of time their testimony almost always changes because each time they tell it they get the feedback of acceptance or rejection from those to whom they tell it, and hence it will be developed and merged into a different world view that they are adopting.
- Source: apologeticsindex.org
In 1986, before his later turnabout defense of the cult, Melton wrote the following regarding the Children of God (as The Family International was then known):
"The sexual manipulation in the Children of God has been so thoroughly documented that it is doubtful whether the organization can ever, in spite of whatever future reforms it might initiate, regain any respectable place in the larger religious community." — J. Gordon Melton, "Encyclopedic Handbook of Cults in America", pg.158 (1986). ISBN 0824090365
In his later writings about the Family, Melton has apparently created a unique and limited definition of child sexual abuse that excludes many behaviors classified by the legal system as criminal acts of child sexual abuse. In a 2004 book about the Family, Melton argued that an adult woman fondling the genitals of a toddler was not an "adult-child sex act" and thus does not constitute child sexual abuse:
"One new set of letters, Sex Questions and Answers (1979), provided the opportunity to reiterate the positive perspective on sex that had become so integral to the Family. The new dialogue on children and sexuality was initiated in an autobiographical treatment of Berg's own developing sex life. Using himself as an example in My Childhood Sex! Doing What Comes Naturally (1978), he wrote that pre-pubescent children should be left alone to discover and experience sex naturally so that by the time they hit puberty, they would undergo a smooth transition into their teen years. "If you were already accustomed to it, there wouldn't be any big deal about it, nothing new! It's only natural!" He also recalled that his Mexican babysitter used to stroke his penis to relax him so that he would take his nap—apparently a widespread Latin practice at one time.19
19. This practice can hardly be described as an adult-child sex act as has been hinted at in some anti-Family writings. It offered no sexual satisfaction to the adult and had as its object the speedy drifting to sleep of the child. Alex Comfort, in his 1982 book More Joy of Sex (New York: Crown Publishers), documented this old custom: "Male babies, incidentally, get erections early on and nursemaids used to quieten them by bringing on the nearest thing a baby can contrive to orgasm. Some pediatricians now say this over stimulates the child: at a later stage it would do, so we can't give an opinion as to whether it's wise or not, but since many primitives masturbate babies, it's most likely harmless, and the baby appears to like it" (p. 13.)" [2]
Payment received from The Family
A donation of USD $10,065.83 from The Family to J. Gordon Melton in the year 2000 is documented on page 38 of the Family Care Foundation's 990 Form below.
- FCF 990 Form - 2000 (1,007 KB)
Additionally, The Family funded and edited Melton's 1994 book about the cult, Sex, Slander, and Salvation, and currently advertise it on their website. [3]
Books on The Family by J. Gordon Melton
- Sex, Slander, and Salvation ISBN 0963950126 (1994)
- The Children of God ISBN 1560851805 (2004)
External links
- J. Gordon Melton: Why he is considered a cult apologist — Apologetics Index
- Apologetics and Academic Supporters of the Family — MovingOn.org
- When Scholars Know Sin — Stephen Kent and Theresa Krebs
- Cult Apologists? Gordon Melton — A set of media articles on Rick Ross website
- J. Gordon Melton — Wikipedia.org