Sounds Like A Cult - The Cult of Celebrity Megachurches
Episode Date: August 3, 2021One of our favorite topics to date: In this can’t-miss episode, we’re unpacking the wave of trendy evangelical church groups (like Hillsong, Mosaic, and Churchome), which use Silicon Valley-savvy ...marketing, celebrity endorsements, charismatic pastors, and a slew of doubtlessly culty recruitment techniques and power structures in an attempt to make Christ “cool” for masses of modern young people. Here to help us understand the cultishness of hipster Christianity is special guest Grace Baldridge, a musician and documentarian behind Refinery29’s “State of Grace” series, which tackles faith, queerness, and American culture. Be sure to follow @GraceBaldridge on Instagram!
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This is Sounds Like A Cult, a show about the modern day cults we all follow.
I'm Issa Medina, a comedian and documentarian, and I'm Amanda Montell, an author and linguist.
Every week here on the pod, Issa and I pick a different fanatical fringe group from the cultural
zeitgeist. From Peloton to the Cult of Trader Joe's to try and answer the big question.
This group sounds like a cult, but is it really?
What's up everyone? Issa here. Really quickly before we start, I wanted to let you all know
that tomorrow is the first Wednesday of the month, which means I have my monthly stand-up comedy show
at Formosa Cafe in Los Angeles. So if you want to come see my comedy live, check it out. Follow
me on Instagram at Issa Medina, I-S-A-A-M-E-D-I-N-A-A. I also wanted to give Amanda, my co-host,
a big shout out because her book, Cultish, The Language of Fanaticism,
just reached audiobook bestseller this week. Congrats Amanda! Now on to the episode.
So this week's cult is the Cult of Celebrity Mega Churches, and we all know a celebrity that's in
one. Whether you know it or not, we have a lot to say about this subject, but first off, I guess,
Amanda, do you want to tell our listeners kind of what we mean by Celebrity Mega Churches?
Yes. So this has been a personal obsession of mine for a long time, but essentially they're this
wave of evangelical church that have taken over definitely LA's Christian population and have,
since around the early 2010s, so these are these massive congregations of like thousands upon
thousands of people that have these names that sound more like apps than houses of God. They're
named things like mosaic, oasis, hill song. They have very like hashtag aesthetic social
media presences. They have very cool music that play throughout the services. They have say
micro batch coffee at every service and limited edition merch drops and celebrity endorsers.
It wasn't until Amanda kind of mentioned to me that she wanted to do an episode on this that I
didn't realize how many celebrities were in Celebrity Mega Churches. Some celebrities you
might not have known are in Celebrity Mega Churches are people like Justin Bieber, Courtney
Kardashian, Ashley Benson. I had no idea until recently, Chris Pratt apparently. Oh yeah. Of
course Kanye is a Celebrity Mega Churcher. Obviously celebrities feel really isolated
and they probably feel like these mega churches are a space to kind of surrender and get to have
your religious experience. I mean a lot of these people grew up religious, but they're kind of
rejecting the like boring Protestant churches they grew up with and they're attracted to these
churches that offer these Instagram feed friendly slogans like hope isn't canceled and talk of God's
healing powers to cure anxiety. Yeah because the thing with cults is that it's always the idea of
how cool they might seem to someone on the outside. Totally. So I have always always been obsessed
with evangelicalism. I grew up in an atheist Jewish household so it was just a belief system
that was really different to me and I really developed this obsession. First of all when I
was in middle school my best friend's mom was a born-again Christian and I would sometimes
skip Hebrew school to go accompany her to their evangelical mega church because it was so fascinating
to me just the sheer number of people who would congregate there and the fact that they would
listen to this sort of Mumford and Sons-esque indie rock music. Yeah I mean I grew up Catholic
and I had that same situation where if I slept over a Christian friend's house I would go to church
with them the next day and they had guitars and drums and things that were cool to the younger
crowd so I was like how come their church is so much fun? I'm going to this like Catholic
traditional church where they play classical music and I pass out the first five minutes.
It's marketing, it's marketing. In our SoulCycle episode we talked about how SoulCycle has become
more like church but church has actually become more like SoulCycle and I found this vanity
fair piece from 2019 where this Jewish reporter was going and visiting Mosaic one of these
celebrity mega churches to try and understand the appeal and the pastor this very like quote
unquote charismatic white guy was like okay if I can't convince you to convert to Christianity
by coming to our church services at Mosaic can I take you to a SoulCycle class and he took him
to a SoulCycle class where the teacher was an evangelical Christian in hopes that that would
convince him instead. It's funny that you say convince him because actually we're talking
about converting religions here it's crazy that this priest literally thought that he could quote
unquote convince someone to entirely switch religions that's something that you're born into
or you go through a really really long process of deciding and doing research and choosing a faith
because it calls to you that's not what faith is about you don't recruit people to attend you recruit
people to believe. Totally and there have been allegations brought forth against these various
mega churches there have been people who've worked there who said that it felt like working for a
corporation that's what these celebrity endorsers and the convincing or conversion is all about
it's just marketing to them and you can hear it in the language I mean the language of these
celebrity mega churches sounds like the language of a Silicon Valley startup they'll use buzzwords
like join our intentional and authentic community of holistic missional Christ followers it's like
all the same language they're treating it like a business. Yeah I found an article that said
that they operate like a nightclub because they include like reserved seating for celebrities
and then the ordinary attendees are in the back and so all of a sudden they're prioritizing people
by their importance and that's not I don't know like I believe in God I think I don't think that's
what God would have wanted but the question here is do we think they're doing it because of the money
or do we think they're doing it because they think that making Jesus cool will make people want to
believe in Jesus? So even if they truly believe deep down that they're doing this because Christ
would want them to and that's the reason why they'll say bait and switch LGBTQ plus people
into thinking that this is an accepting community when it's really not or they will exploit people's
labor the pastor might really believe in his soul that he's ultimately doing all of this to serve
Christ but that paints him as a sort of prophet and that is the ultimate sign of a destructive
cult like what's that quote that said in a cult the leader claims to talk to God in a religion
that person is dead it's going to be interesting to learn from our guests today because I think
something that's important to talk about is the process of joining one of these mega churches
so I think it's going to be interesting how they aside from obviously recruiting really famous people
how they make you want to join and to see what the costs of joining are yeah and if there are any
exit costs I'm so curious to learn from our guests where they get all this money from I know
traditional churches of course people donate money I just wonder if there's more of a structural way
of getting money out of regular people like what is the end game what are they trying to do here
like are they trying to take over the entire world or are they just trying to have a religious
experience I'm just so confused like where does this power hunger come from and what's it directed
at that's a great question what is the end game because I don't know I don't think they're going
to be able to like get on the Instagram feed of a Hasidic Jewish person like they're not going to
be able to convince the entire world to join their religion so I think they do I think they
literally think that though but maybe not maybe they're just so blinded by their immediate goals
which is like raise x amount of money that it blinds them from their ultimate purpose which
is just to create a space worshiping their god I've said this before but like the word sacred
literally means set aside sacred space should be set aside it shouldn't take over your entire life
and it shouldn't take over the lives of others we're not professionals on religions by any means
so we wanted to bring on a guest that maybe knew a little bit more about the cult of celebrity
megachurches and we can answer all these questions that we have to see if this is a cult or not
so up next we're going to be talking to our guest Grace Semler Baldridge who is a musician
media host and the creator of this incredible video docu series on refinery 29 called state of
grace which talks about christianity in contemporary culture we're excited to talk to her about the
cult of celebrity megachurches let's just jump right into it do you want to tell us who you are
and your experiences with hipster megachurches or megachurches and how you developed an interest
in them sure well my name is grace baldridge and i'm a recording artist who records under my middle
name which is semler but i've also worked in the documentary space and been a host on a series that
was called state of grace which explored the intersection of faith and american life and of
course you can't ignore the influence of white western evangelicalism in the united states today
that was heavily present in the episodes so we covered abortion the death penalty conversion
therapy religion and faith in schools and then our last episode was about the christian music
industry which is strangely enough the industry that i sort of find myself in now because i've
been writing music about my faith from a queer perspective so that's me my dad is an episcopal
priest i was raised in the rectory i grew up in belgium i should say i grew up in waterloo belgium
and so i was raised in an affirming denomination but when it came to like youth group and mission
trips that was typically outsourced to groups like young life and other american evangelicals
that would come to belgium and put on churchy type things for the kids what could go wrong
and my parents would send me off to those places that's how i was introduced to the unique brand
of christian cruelty and exclusion that is the evangelical church today it's so funny talking
about it in hindsight right when i was a kid i would always have friends who went to church camp
and i was so jealous like i wanted to be a part of it and now i'm very grateful that i was not
oh yeah it's strange too because specifically young life something that i now know is part of
their practice is that they really targeted obviously the popular kids at school so you'd
have these young life leaders who did not have any kids that went to our school men predominantly
that were in their 30s to 40s would just hang around campus figure out who the cool kids were
and then invite them into these like pancake breakfasts and stuff and so that's how i started
going i'm so glad that you brought this up because i talk about in my book how a common myth about the
type of people who wind up in cults is that they're desperate and disturbed and intellectually
deficient but why would a cult want someone like that they want winners yeah and so it makes sense
that they would target the popular kids well because by doing that literally our prom king and queen
were the ones that they were like let's get them to pancake breakfast and so then i want to go to
pancake breakfast because i don't know what i wanted to be i really was so lost but i think
i wanted to be like prom king so i wanted to go to these breakfasts and like be in and and then you
have these small group circles where you're with the prom queen who interestingly enough now the
person i'm referring to is a good friend of mine who has since deconstructed and is like openly
queer anyway i would be in a small group with this person and then i felt like i'm in the in circle
because we're all confessing our innermost desires and like there's no reason for this person ordinarily
to bump into me in the hallway and say grace like i've really had this thing on my heart that i've
been wrestling through but now at these weird young life pancake breakfasts we're all revealing
our innermost secrets and i feel so included and that's all any high schooler really wants right
is like a group of friends that they feel like they're really close with and like they have
something that bonds them together like the secret and they open up to each other that's the the love
bombing and such uh i could literally talk about this forever i'm so obsessed with the intersection
of evangelicalism and our contemporary american culture which so emphasizes like individualism
and personal brands which really conflicts with the ideology that your identity only serves christ
yada yada interesting stuff so let's pivot to a conversation about these hipster celebrity mega
churches can you describe the culture of these mega churches like hill song mosaic etc what do
you think is appealing about them and what sets them apart from other types of protestant churches
well there are a few things that are at play one they do come from a charismatic tradition so a
charismatic tradition means that they are playing on the charisma the personality the personal draw
and brand of a pastor so even though they might say that like jesus is the one doing the work like
it's jesus if we were to have like the guy from ferris bueller's day off that's like bueller verbatim
say the exact same message that these mega church pastors are saying you would not be having the same
volume of people and sheer attention that they are amassing and they know that like it is about
how they deliver the message so inherently it is about them and how they do it we love a star
just like culturally especially in the united states and these pastors position themselves
as stars look at the lighting look at the smoke machines it's a production yeah so there's that
i also think that these pastors in these celebrity mega churches have benefited from their proximity
their intentional proximity to celebrity two stars just this past weekend justin beaver was on stage
next to juda smith two of the most successful wealthiest people justin beaver in the pop space
and juda smith in the faith space that have ever existed on a stage i think it was at the staple
center juda smith is talking in his microphone about how jesus has saved justin beaver this like
broken man and i don't want to invalidate how probably very real those feelings are for those
two individuals but talking about how god has like blessed them in front of a crowd of people who will
never ever imagine that sort of security and stability in their life and it's because of like
the love of jesus so that is the prosperity gospel even if they're packaging it a little bit differently
yeah so i think it's through their charismatic teaching and then i think it's the proximity to
hollywood and celebrity and then i also think that that all ties into the prosperity gospel
it all reeks of late stage capitalism gripping on yes the business of religion and a lot of people
are getting wise to that and being like wait a second jesus was poor as hell he hated money what
are we doing yeah and you talking about justin beaver on stage that is essentially the macro
version of someone cool going to hang out outside of a high school and inviting the cool kids to
the pancake breakfast that's exactly what it is wow i hadn't like put that connection together
but you're completely correct in that it is really the macro blown out version of when you target
the popular kids to say look these people are tithing they're coming to our church gathering
they're endorsing our organization yeah why aren't you like i mean justin beaver he's really
he's got it together sure he's had his struggles but not in a way that will ever separate him from
living in total security stability financially secure in a happy marriage why wouldn't you trust us
the funny thing about religion is that i feel like religious people lean into being like you and
justin beaver are the same person so just lean into your prayers and you'll both be just as happy
as each other yeah equally with with the exact amount of concerns like your student loan debt
justin beaver isn't thinking about his student loan debt what's your problem so what do you think
are some of the cultiest things about these churches anything from the marketing or celebrity
endorsements to the rituals to the power structures well i think the power structure
definitely can lean culty because oftentimes they keep it within the family so a lot of times
you'll have a head pastor and then underneath the junior pastor will be someone who is directly
related oftentimes the like descendant of that head pastor so mosaic comes to mind in that regard
and you see that along with hill song as well in hill song you have a similar sort of power
structure where a lot of people who either were basically family members or actual family members
are in that sort of line of succession really to i guess gain the throne yeah especially because
so my dad is an episcopal priest and he went to divinity school like he has his masters in divinity
and i don't know what the criteria is necessarily for a lot of the celebrity mega churches i think
the criteria predominantly is like will put you through a course so basically you're not even getting
outside education i know that's how it was at mosaic you just go through mosaic college so
you're not even getting an outside degree from somewhere else where you might be able to learn
deeper context deeper meaning examine scripture in a new way they're like no no no we know how to
examine scripture don't don't go anywhere else keep your money is good here and then you pay and
go up into the structure oh that's just like the cult where my dad spent his teenagers which was
called synonym and you weren't allowed to go to an outside school as a kid that also to me seems like
an exit cost because after a certain point if you're only getting a type of education and not
like a more universal education that limits your prospects for other careers oh totally this is a
generalization but in a hypothetical situation if you were to go to using them as again as an example
like mosaic college get your degree from there from their teaching and then go to any mainline
christian nomination be like well i have a degree from mosaic i guarantee you that they would be like
you gotta you have to do something else because that's only good for mosaic like that's monopoly
money anywhere else like that doesn't really help us great you can get a crowd going on hollywood
boulevard with a transient sort of open door policy of congregants that are there for three years
realize that it's all smoke and mirrors and leave but are you going to be with a congregation for
15 years unless you are literally a member of that family probably not i think also the marketing
is pretty similar because it's broad it's vague they do steer away from specific policy and i think
also specific theology which is very strange because overtly they're christian but you'd be hard
pressed to find like jesus and christ in the branding they'll say other things like freedom
belonging inclusive yeah inclusive welcome it has to be a one-size-fits-all gospel to get as many
people through the door and then the the flip of the switch though is that the theology is actually
quite regressive when you get into it but they don't want you to know that i i mean i really
think there's going to be a moment of reckoning because like speaking of the event yesterday
at the staple center with all those celebrities on stage i don't know how many times i'm going
to make a video about this juda smith does not believe that queer people can or should get married
or be baptized in an organization that he is the head of that he presides over how long does that
scale for i mean chris pratt gets dragged on twitter basically every month for attending
hill song and justin beaver and the kardashians and haley beaver have all been able to just sort of
skirt by by attending an openly endorsing church home which is juda smith's organization that has
the exact same policy with regards to lgbtq plus exclusion and they know you they know that right
i don't know that they do because i think celebrities get a really different manual
like they're because they're not serving they're not volunteering their time in the same way as
other parishioners will have to like people that i've spoken with when we were working on the show
their volunteer hours were virtually a second job with the the amount of time that they're
putting in and spending because it's all serving the kingdom so you shouldn't expect to get paid
and things like that the beavers are not doing that like they're not like cleaning the toilet and
i don't think they see the costs of the influence that they have because regular people like you
mentioned have to give so much more to these communities to belong to the communities and all
people see is they'll see one of the kardashians attended church home and they seemingly have a
great relationship with the queer community so they surely would not attend a church that's
unaffirming they just don't know their due diligence and these organizations i they're
churches but let's call them what they are they are like religious organizations they're businesses
they hide their policy i was live on tiktok like three months ago where you can chat with church
home live and you can ask them policy questions it's like fascinating especially when people are
with you because people don't realize how much they will gaslight you and be evasive and not
answer a question so i'm asking yes or no questions live to church homes like policy people because
they like to feign that they have an open door policy like we have nothing to hide like ask us
whatever and i'm like do you believe that being gay is a sin and they'll be like god loves everyone
and i'm like oh my gosh like this is crazy yeah but they'll answer specific other questions you
can ask do you think that stealing is a sin they're like well it does say in the bible hear this and
this and then when you turn it on issues of inclusion they've been pretty cagey on issues of
racial justice i do think that they benefit from being so vague but i think that a tide is going
to turn i think when these people start having kids and then their kids are coming out and wondering
about the boundaries to inclusion then i don't know if they will make a definitive statement which
i think would be the right thing to do and hold themselves accountable for the regressive policies
of the past or if they'll just pretend like they were always inclusive the whole time which we know
is not true when you join a cult you usually are reeled in by like levels of participation and so my
question is with religion and these new age churches how do they paint these different levels
to keep you in are there different levels that you can become a part of that's a great question
because they're absolutely are and this was something that i wasn't quite familiar with until
we were interviewing people for different episodes so you'll have like the head figure who's like the
charismatic leader of the church and then you'll have maybe let's say a few pastors junior pastors
underneath him that offer their own unique brand of charismatic preaching but distinctly still within
the same universe as the head preacher you're not going to hear a sermon that would contradict
something that you would have heard from the head pastor a week prior then levels underneath that
it's like you have members of the worship band and you like worship band is like front and center so
being on that worship team is pretty elite level you're getting to be up on the stage it's something
that i know for a lot of people was hoarded over them friends of mine that were basically under
studies that were always sort of like like let on let on let on that's totally what it was like if
you just do this they've really been like liking this to kind of keep you on the hook for a while
but then there are other like there's leadership in the parking attendance and so they do create like
these tiers yeah and like who's doing the ushering to get you into the church who's organizing the
small groups organizing the fundraising drive the tides and so within each system you want to go up
through those ranks i mean it now that i'm saying it it kind of outlines like a pyramid
like a pyramid oh no but yeah basically there is like a power structure that you can join into
whether or not you even want to be a preacher we are so incentive based so many of us just as people
what's the next goal what's the next level i want to get to the next rung and so a lot of these
churches create that where there really shouldn't be i mean it should just be like okay parking
how let's just figure it out yeah it should be a logistical thing yeah like a logistical
parking but then you'll have team leaders that are like i'm the leader of parking or i'm like the
leader of the ushering and i'm the leader of the greeters the people who are greeting you and then
there'll be people underneath the head greeters and you are working to prove that you can be a head
greeter and once you're involved in it then it's your entire headspace and it's your whole friend
group we're saying before while we were chatting that soul cycle has become more like church but
church has become more like soul cycle and this reminds me that like church has become gamified
yeah it's about finding favor less with god which i think you find favor with god when you get right
with who the creator created you to be that that was my experience so long as i was fighting myself
and i was closeted i was the furthest i'd ever been from god yeah as soon as i was able to accept
who i was created to be was when i had this connection to the divine and an interest in
scripture however in these church environments you're not searching for a greater connection to
the divine it's like a greater connection and favor within this community yeah this is so
insightful but on a more lighthearted note we wanted to play a little game with you so so ready
for a game yay we're gonna bring it home with a game this is a game we sometimes play on our
podcast it's called culty quotes there are gonna be a few rounds and here's how you play
we're each going to alternate reading you a series of quotes each quote is either going to be lyrics
from a hipster christian song or writings from a notorious cult leader and you're gonna have to
guess okay okay great i'll go first are you ready i'm ready i've been training for this my whole
life i'm excited here we go i belong to the kingdom of god that's my country that's a hipster christian
song no that was a quote from the cult leader david berg the children of god yeah you know there's
a christian band called for king and country i was like that's got to be their like name brand song
no that was the children of god's notorious leader david berg who wanted to make christ
sexy for the new 70s generation yikes who doesn't okay i would join your cult race thanks round number
two is this a hipster christian lyric or a cult leader quote the spirit of the lord is upon me
to bind up the brokenhearted and set the captives free all right i hope i don't sound like a
broken record but that's a hipster christian song you're right yeah well all of this is gonna sound
like a hipster christian song for me because i am that like that's what i grew up with that's
your bias and that's okay yeah that was from uh the song kingdom glory by ryan ellis all right
so for the last quote i'm ready is this a hipster christian song lyric or a writing from a cult
leader sticks and stones may break my bones but only you can make these bones come alive that
sounds like such a hipster christian lyric to me again like his bones come alive that's also from
the bible where it's like breathe on these old bones like they're dry yeah but so many cults start
with the bible i know they do don't they that's what this is all about really i still think it's a song
lyric you are correct you're right you're right ding ding ding who okay that's that's a song called
sticks and stones by an artist called cas yeah that sounds about right i'm gonna have to do some
research on these christian songs dude they slap they're super soothing i mean the chord progression
is scientifically soothing if you just don't think about the specifics of what you would need to do
and who you would need to become to belong to the group then it's very soothing the christian music
industry is so specific on what you can and can't say i talked to an artist they were not allowed to
say the word hell in one of their songs which you'd think would be allowed because christians love
condemning people to hell like they love talking about it even though christians love
the judgment day imagery you can't actually reference it directly in in their music that's
like probably why they got so mad that little nazi x was like hey they hated it they were like come
on like that's our thing they're so comfortable talking about the place where other people are
gonna go according to them and then they get mad when little nazi x is like well i'm gonna throw
party in hell they're like no he's having too much fun hell is supposed to suck and now and now
like all of gen z is like let's go to fucking hell we love hell grace this has been a true
delight in every possible way where can people keep up with you in your work sure you can follow me
on all my social media platforms at grace baldridge and you can listen to my music wherever you
stream music look up my artist named similar scm l er and i have new music coming out this fall i
just sold out my first headline show in los angeles but hopefully they're gonna need more shows in
la in the future amazing thank you so much grace bye see ya so isa out of the three cult categories
live your life watch your back and get the fuck out what do we think about hipster mega churches
i don't want to sound like a broken record on this podcast and i think we will have all kinds of
cults but actually i was gonna say hipster mega churches are a watch your back but i kind of feel
like they need to be a get the fuck out i agree oh really yeah well when you were gonna say watch
your back i was about to be like disagree and i caught myself i caught myself yeah i think
the light that grace shed on the dynastic quality of the leadership how they always keep it in the
family and they're trying to suck people into the levels but you can never take down the person at
the top yeah because someone that they're related to is just going to usurp them i think that makes
a power structure super predatory i think it's a get the fuck out i completely agree and also when
it affects your belief system that is a skeleton to the way that you live your life it's really
dangerous everything the emotional exploitation the labor exploitation she was talking about
i don't think it's the best place to get your spiritual fix yeah exactly because there are
other options out there that said if mosaic wants to endorse our podcast we'll read about yeah they
have the money that's our show thanks so much for listening we'll be back with a new cult next week
but in the meantime stay culty but not too culty sounds like a cult was created produced and edited
by amanda montel and isa medina our theme music is by kasey colby and if you like this episode
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