TUL620 URBAN POOR MOVEMENT LEADERSHIP

Analysis of Erich Hoffer's "The True Believer"

The Nature of Mass Movements

In a time of accelerating change, social structures around the world are under attack. Families and communities are being disrupted and undergoing decay. Natural and man-made disasters, food shortages and global migration all feed into and heighten the problem. The global environment is ripening for the emergence of mass movements.

The purpose of this section is to understand the causal factors and principles that impact the emergence of a mass movement and how we might be able to catalyze and influence the direction and outcomes of such a movement. Our hope is that we might catalyze a mass movement that will provide a platform for “Connecting Resources to Needs” for the poor and underprivileged people in developing nations.

Adherents to Mass Movements
It is imperative that we understand the strength and depth of the convictions of adherents to mass movements. Awareness of their commitment helps us to understand the influence and impact they have within their social structures. They are a powerful force to be reckoned with. Most adherents to mass movements come with a similar mindset. As such, most movements are interchangeable. One movement can be substituted or birthed from another. Adherents typically embody the following characteristics:

Environmental Factors that Set the Stage for a Mass Movement
There are a host of environmental factors that help to set the stage for the emergence of a mass movement. The decentralization of networks and organizations, and the disruption of social structures, have already been discussed. In his book “The True Believer: Thoughts on the Nature of Mass Movements”, author Eric Hoffer provides a more comprehensive list to include the following.


One of the closing statements in Eric Hoffer’s book summarizes the power and impact of emerging mass movements.


“In democracies people are too soft, too pleasure loving and too selfish to die for a nation, a God or a holy cause. This lack of a readiness to die, we are told, is indicative of an inner rot – a moral and biological decay. The democracies are old, corrupt and decadent. They are no match for the virile congregations of the faithful who are about to inherit the earth.”

(quoted from the starfish website)


Discuss factors which Hoffer identifies that cause self-sacrifice or that unify movements.

Biblical Passages about this Principle

Write out two passages about either this principle of unity or of self sacrifice

A Leader who Models this Principle

Describe the difference between the three types of movement leaders he identifies. How do you relate these to the five Leadership roles of Ephesians 4:11-13?

Readings

Hoffer, E. (1951). The True Believer. New York and London, Harper & Row.