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Scam Religion: Difference between revisions

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Often a [[Parody Religion]]. See also [[Church of Happyology]] and [[God Guise]]. Contrast [[Path of Inspiration]], where the cult members are [[Obliviously Evil]] [[Mook]]s of some kind of [[Evil Overlord]] or [[Ancient Conspiracy]], and [[Scary Amoral Religion]], which leads its followers into depravity.
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'''NOTE:''' Only add examples that can be objectively verified to be scams ''according to the narrative. Thus, '''[[No Real Life Examples, Please|NO Real Life examples]]''', since we can't see our world from the outside. That includes any religion that ''you'' personally consider to be a scam, no matter what evidence you have or how large majority of mankind agrees with you. If you think this trope is being ''[[Invoked Trope|invoked]]'' in real life, it's probably a [[Parody Religion]].
 
{{noreallife|since we can't see our world from the outside. That includes any religion that ''you'' personally consider to be a scam, no matter what evidence you have or how large majority of mankind agrees with you. If you think this trope is being ''[[Invoked Trope|invoked]]'' in real life, it's probably a [[Parody Religion]].}}
 
{{examples}}
 
== Anime and Manga ==
 
* ''[[Fullmetal Alchemist]]'': The Church of Leto, led by [[Sinister Minister|Father Cornello]], who gathers followers in Lior by convincing them he can do amazing miracles with power given to him by the sun god, Leto. In reality he's just a regular alchemist (and not even a particularly talented one), albeit one with a Philosopher's Stone that enhances his alchemy. Edward uncovers the scam very early on in the manga. Much, ''much'' later, we find out he was going to [[Life Energy|use his follower's souls]] as part of the [[Gambit Pileup]] orchestrated by the [[Big Bad]].
** It's implied that the Ishvalan religion was invented by {{spoiler|Father}} in order to have an easy genocide target when the time came. Of course, its also implied that this god intervened in the fight between {{spoiler|Wrath}} and Scar, blinding the former with a ray of light at a key moment, so [[Maybe Magic, Maybe Mundane|who knows]].
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== Comic Books ==
 
* ''[[Fables]]'': in The Great Fables Crossover, [[Unwanted False Faith|the belief in Blue Boy]] temporarily turns into this as Jack takes over as its shepherd.
 
== Film ==
 
* In ''[[Leap of Faith (film)|Leap of Faith]]'', [[Steve Martin]]'s character is a self-confessed [[Con Man]] who sees religion simply as a way to scam the people who attend his revival meetings. However, he's forced to rethink his views on religion when {{spoiler|the people's faith starts resulting in actual miracles.}}
 
== Literature ==
 
* ''[[The Chronicles of Narnia]]'': The seventh book features a monkey trickster who makes people believe in a fake Aslan that is really a donkey in a cheap lion costume.
* <s>Scientology?</s> Nothing to see here. There's Fosterism in ''[[Stranger in A Strange Land]]''.
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* Fighting a scam religion forms the main plots of books eight and nine of ''[[Ranger's Apprentice]].''
 
== Live -Action TV ==
 
* The ''[[Sliders]]'' episode "Prophets and Loss" has a fundamentalist church which "sends its believers to paradise" with what the protagonists think is Sliding technology {{spoiler|but is actually a human incinerator}}.
* ''[[Law and Order]]'' ''[[Special Victims Unit]]'' the SVU team take on a cult leader, who brainwashes women into his cult by making them his wives so he can get access to their bank accounts.
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== Radio ==
 
* [[Hudson and Landry]]'s "Fredrickism" skit; involving the worship of creator Freddie Schultz, obeying the 26 Commandments grants you immortality, and under investigation by the IRS.
 
== Tabletop Games ==
 
* ''[[Transhuman Space]]'', with its memetic science, has several bizarre religions, most of which are at least partly engineered. Some of them are genuine, at least one [[Unwanted False Faith|started as a joke that got out of hand]], and then there's things like Ecoherence, which is pretty close to being an eviromentalism-themed [[Church of Happyology]], carefully designed to create "self-reinforcing cycles of dependency", and charging for brain-scans to judge how "coherent" its followers are. And the Unified Way, which was created ''[[Path of Inspiration|as a weapon]]''.
* ''[[Dragonlance]]'' had the Seekers, who used the void left after the gods abandoned the world in the wake of the Cataclysm to seize power by peddling false religion.
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== Theatre ==
 
* The Rhythm of Life Church in the musical ''[[Sweet Charity]]''. It was supposedly founded at the urging of a mysterious Voice:
{{quote|And the voice said, "Brother, there's a million pigeons
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== Video Games ==
 
* ''[[Fall From Heaven]]'' has a spirit magic user in the backstory who regularly did this.
* ''[[Fable|Fable II]]'' features [[Fun with Acronyms|T.O.B.Y.]], the Temple of Business and Yodeling, also known as the Temple of Benevolent Yokels. A quest in Bloodstone involves you running errands for the founder, Toby, but you eventually find out it's just a front for Toby to find suckers he can con into buying useless crap or running errands for him.
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{{quote|'''Minato''': You're scamming them, too?}}
 
== WebcomicsWeb Comics ==
 
* The Church of Wayne in ''[[Scary Go Round]]'' is really just a con to net money and women for Wayne.
 
== Western Animation ==
 
* Movementarianism from ''[[The Simpsons]]'' (which is also Happyology).
* ''[[South Park]]'' has portrayed both Scientology and Mormonism is this way. Ironically, other episodes have shown that Mormons are the only people who get into Heaven, [[Spoof Aesop|so it's not taking itself that seriously]].
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[[Category:Sociology Tropes]]
[[Category:Religion Tropes]]
[[Category:Scam Religion{{PAGENAME}}]]
[[Category:Empowerment]]
[[Category:No Real Life Examples, Please]]
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