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New Religious Movement

Scientology

A modern American-born movement built around L. Ron Hubbard’s self-help and spiritual technologies, organized as a church with a tiered path to spiritual freedom and the often-contested institutional structures that protect and transmit those teachings.

1954 - PresentAmericas1954

Quick Facts

Period
1954 - Present
Region
Americas
Key Figures
David Miscavige, L. Ron Hubbard, Mary Sue Hubbard +1 more

Key Figures

The Story

This narrative combines documented history with dramatized scenes for storytelling purposes.

Timeline

Publication of Dianetics: The Modern Science of Mental Health

**1950** — L. Ron Hubbard’s book Dianetics was published in 1950 and established the techniques and vocabulary (such as 'engrams' and auditing) that would serve as the intellectual foundation for later Scientology teachings. The book’s publication is a verifiable bibliographic milestone widely acknowledged by both adherents and scholars.

Incorporation of Early Scientology Churches

**1953-1954** — In the mid-1950s the movement formalized as religious organizations in the United States, with various local 'churches' and administrative structures incorporated to provide courses, auditing, and training; many sources cite 1954 as the year of formal institutional establishment. This transition marked a legal and organizational shift from Dianetics movements to churches of Scientology.

Purchase of Saint Hill Manor

**1959** — L. Ron Hubbard purchased Saint Hill Manor in East Grinstead, West Sussex, in 1959 and used it as an international training and administrative center for several years; the site became an emblematic institutional locus for the movement’s expansion in Europe.

Formation of the Sea Organization (Sea Org)

**1967** — In the late 1960s a dedicated religious order called the Sea Organization was formed to staff many of the Church’s training and management functions; it initially organized communal life aboard ships before moving to shore-based compounds. The Sea Org has played a central role in institutional transmission.

Guardian's Office Activities and Operation Snow White

**1970s** — During the 1970s the Guardian’s Office, an internal unit tasked with protecting the Church’s interests, engaged in covert activities that culminated in the FBI’s 1977 raids on Scientology offices in connection with Operation Snow White; subsequent legal prosecutions in the late 1970s documented the scope of these operations.

Convictions of Guardian's Office Personnel

**1979** — Following investigations into the Guardian’s Office operations, several staff members were indicted and convicted in U.S. courts for conspiracy and related charges; Mary Sue Hubbard, as head of the office, was among those legally implicated, and the trials had immediate institutional effects.

Formation of Religious Technology Center (RTC)

**1982** — In the early 1980s the Religious Technology Center was established as a corporate entity with the stated purpose of owning and safeguarding Hubbard’s trademarks and core materials; this legal architecture played a key role in later efforts to control dissemination of texts and training.

Death of L. Ron Hubbard

**1986** — L. Ron Hubbard died in 1986; his passing required institutional succession and consolidation of the movement’s administrative structures, prompting legal, managerial, and doctrinal efforts to preserve and transmit his teachings.

U.S. Internal Revenue Service Recognition of Tax-Exempt Status

**1993** — In 1993 the Internal Revenue Service reached an agreement recognizing certain Scientology entities as tax-exempt religious organizations, a documented legal outcome that changed the movement’s tax and legal standing in the United States and is frequently cited as an institutional turning point.

Media and Investigative Attention (Books and Documentaries)

**2009-2015** — A wave of investigative books, journalistic reports, and documentary films in the 2000s and 2010s — including high-profile works that drew on interviews and court records — brought renewed global attention and public debate to the movement’s practices and institutions. These publications stimulated legal and cultural responses on multiple fronts.

Publication of Going Clear

**2013** — Lawrence Wright’s book Going Clear: Scientology, Hollywood, and the Prison of Belief (2013) synthesized archival research, interviews, and reporting to offer a critical narrative of the movement’s history and institutional practices; it became a reference point for subsequent public debate and documentary adaptation.

Digital Exposure and Online Controversy

**2010s-early 2020s** — The circulation of internal documents online, the proliferation of former-member testimonies, and the use of digital platforms for advocacy and criticism have created new challenges and opportunities for both adherents and critics; online litigation and reputation-management efforts illustrate contemporary tensions over information in the digital age.

Sources

  • academic_book
    The Church of Scientology: A History of a New Religion

    Hugh B. Urban (Princeton University Press, 2011). Scholarly history analyzing the movement's origins, teachings, and institutional development.

  • primary_text
    Dianetics: The Modern Science of Mental Health

    L. Ron Hubbard (1950). Foundational text for Dianetics and the initial basis of Scientology practice.

  • reference_entry
    Scientology: A New History of a New Religion (Encyclopedia Entry)

    J. Gordon Melton and related reference works in encyclopedias of religion provide concise overviews and bibliographic guidance.

  • journalistic_book
    Inside Scientology: The Story of America's Most Secretive Religion

    Janet Reitman (Houghton Mifflin Harcourt, 2011). Investigative reporting on organizational life, programs, and controversies.

  • journalistic_book
    Going Clear: Scientology, Hollywood, and the Prison of Belief

    Lawrence Wright (Knopf, 2013). Investigative narrative that synthesizes interviews, archival documents, and reporting.

  • reference_entry
    Encyclopaedia Britannica — Scientology (entry)

    Panoramic reference summary useful for basic verifiable facts and chronology.

  • academic_article
    Revitalized Religious Movements and the State: The Politics of Scientology in Contemporary Scholarship

    Articles by scholars such as David G. Bromley and Anson D. Shupe analyze institutional strategies, legal encounters, and state relations.

  • legal_primary_source
    Legal documents and court records related to Operation Snow White and later IRS determinations

    Publicly accessible court records (FBI searches and indictments in the 1970s) and IRS documents concerning tax status in 1993 provide primary legal documentation of institutional events.

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