
The Seekers (rapturists) - Wikipedia
The Seekers, also called The Brotherhood of the Seven Rays, were a group of rapturists or a UFO religion in mid-twentieth century Midwestern United States. The Seekers met in a nondenominational church, the group originally organized in 1953 by Charles Laughead, a staff member at Michigan State University in East Lansing, Michigan .
When Prophecy Fails - Wikipedia
When Prophecy Fails: A Social and Psychological Study of a Modern Group That Predicted the Destruction of the World is a classic work of social psychology by Leon Festinger, Henry Riecken, and Stanley Schachter, published in 1956, detailing a study of a small UFO religion in Chicago called the Seekers that believed in an imminent apocalypse.
Inside UFO cult - who waited to be abducted by aliens while …
Dec 21, 2021 · A cult of extraterrestrial believers in the US thought that they would be abducted by a UFO firstly on December 21, and then while they sang Christmas carols on December 24. The group, known as ‘The Seekers’, were led by Dorothy Martin, a woman who claimed to have an ability to channel messages from distant entities.
Inside UFO doomsday cult ‘The Seekers’ that saw believers wait to …
Dec 23, 2022 · The Seekers, a religious group led by Dorothy Martin, believed that a catastrophic, world-ending flood was afoot. They expected a group of aliens called the Guardians to come and abduct them ahead of the apocalypse. Although the …
Seekers - Wikipedia
The Seekers, or Legatine-Arians as they were sometimes known, were an English dissenting group that emerged around the 1620s, probably inspired by the preaching of three brothers – Walter, Thomas, and Bartholomew Legate. Seekers considered all organised churches of their day corrupt and preferred to wait for God's revelation.
Leon Festinger, The Seekers, and cognitive dissonance
Dec 7, 2022 · In the 1950s, The Seekers, a small doomsday cult (a.k.a. The Brotherhood of the Seven Rays) predicted when the world would end. Festinger, who would study The Seekers with Henry Riecken and Stanley Schachter, read about the cult leader's predictions in a local newspaper and "saw a made-to-order way of putting his theory [of cognitive dissonance ...
The Christmas the Aliens Didn’t Come - The Atlantic
Dec 18, 2015 · At 6 o’clock on Christmas Eve, 1954, a small group of people gathered on the street outside Dorothy Martin’s home in Oak Park, Illinois, singing Christmas carols and waiting. But this was no...
Apocalypse Oak Park: Dorothy Martin, the Chicagoan Who …
May 20, 2011 · Though it’s a work of psychology, it’s written in a narrative that reads like a combination of investigative journalism and Charles Portis’s brilliant cult spoof Masters of Atlantis.
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out a study of a small UFO cult called the Seekers that believed that a great flood was imminent and that spacemen would rescue those who were true believers. Festinger wanted to find out how the members of the cult would cope when they realized that this apocalyptic event did not happen.