From:  Cook, Stephen L.  "The Sociology of Apocalyptic Groups."  Chapter 2 in Prophecy and Apocalypticism: The Postexilic Social Settting, 19-54.  Minneapolis: Fortress, 1995.
 
Please note that some of the italicized words are English transliterations of Hebrew words; that the bold hot-link numbers in parenthesis are links to endnotes (click on the number to jump to the endnote page); and the numbers in red brackets refer to the upcoming page number of the article.  The latter will help for citation purposes. 


 
[19]    Robert R. Wilson has listed a number of guidelines for using comparative material to elucidate aspects of Israelite religion (1), and these guidelines are central to the methodology used in this book. Following them, I rely only on twentieth-century sociological work and base my results on a survey of as many societies as possible (2), collecting information on the history of millennial groups and their ideas, leadership, and recruiting (3). The results of this survey will help to form hypotheses about apocalypticism, hypotheses that I shall subsequently test with respect to the relevant biblical teats. The exegesis of the texts will control the use of comparative material.
        The first problem is deciding how to select millennial groups for analysis. As Norman Gottwald has noted, some criteria for selective grouping [20] are needed (4). This issue of criteria is important, because using too narrow criteria in the selecting process would prejudice the study from the start (5). Thus, rather than presupposing a causality; or assuming that millennial groups are to be found in only one type of social milieu, I remain open to consider all groups whose members share certain ideas about the world (6).
        Based on a survey of groups with apocalyptic beliefs and ideas, I shall first describe the phenomenon of apocalypticism. Then, armed with a clarified understanding of apocalypticism, I shall critique deprivation theory and present a more critical view of the origins of millennialism.

The Problem of Definition
        The imprecision and ambiguity of the term apocalyptic in biblical scholarship make it necessary to define our terms before discussing eschatology (7) [21] and apocalypticism (8). The term apocalyptic is from the Greek apokalupto "uncover, reveal." The English adjective generally refers to a revelatory disclosure about the end time, describing an intervention from another, supernatural world. Because more specific definitions of this adjective are needed, some have suggested that the genre apocalypse should be distinguished from apocalypticism and apocalyptic eschatology (9). It remains unclear, however, whether these particular distinctions really help us better clarify apocalypticism (10). I think it is more helpful to distinguish between apocalypticism as a literary phenomenon, as a Weltanschauung (worldview) or type of (religious) thinking, and as a historical and social phenomenon.
        The term apocalyptic has been applied to a literary phenomenon, a worldview, and a social phenomenon, and I shall develop characterizations [22] of these three aspects of apocalypticism. In each case, I shall not attempt to give any one overarching definition. Instead, borrowing a concept of "family resemblance" from Ludwig Wittgenstein, I shall sketch various resemblances that overlap and crisscross so that the various examples of apocalyptic surveyed form a family. Kenelm Burridge suggests a way of comparing aspects of millennial phenomena reminiscent of Wittgenstein's family resemblance idea: This Wittgensteinian approach is taken up here, and it is used in opposition to the argument that presenting characteristic features of apocalypticism fails to clarify this phenomenon's essential or intrinsic nature (12). Apocalypticism does not exhibit invariably fixed ingredients, but neither does it have a statable essence. Rather, apocalyptic phenomena share certain specific overlappings and differences, and it is these that I seek to describe.
The Literary Phenomenon
        Apocalyptic literature is the aspect of apocalypticism most accessible to the biblical scholar. It is nonetheless difficult to identify and classify apocalyptic biblical and closely related texts. An important advance has been the classification of the genre "apocalypse" as a subcategory of apocalyptic literary phenomena. John J. Collins, who has defined the apocalypse [23] genre in terms of form and content, identifies fifteen apocalypses written between 250 B.C.E. and 150 C.E (13). The Jewish apocalypses include: Daniel 7-12, the Animal Apocalypse, the Apocalypse of Weeks, Jubilees 23, 4 Ezra, 2 Baruch, the Apocalypse of Abraham, 1 Enoch 1-36, the Heavenly Luminaries, the Similitudes of Enoch, 2 Enoch, the Testament of Levi 2-5, 3 Baruch, the Testament of Abraham 10-15, and the Apocalypse of Zephaniah.
        Unfortunately, the larger literary category or macro-genre, "apocalyptic literature," is much more fluid than the genre "apocalypse" (14). Nevertheless, within this fluidity certain characteristics recur. These include the major features of dualistic language and the expression of futuristic but imminent eschatology as well as secondary features such as numerology and pseudonymity Employing the "family resemblance" approach, I shall attempt to describe these features as the best basis for this literature's generic classification. (15).
        Dualistic language is seen in such clear distinctions as that between the "Sons of Light" and the "Sons of Darkness" in the Qumran War Scroll and 1 Thessalonians 5:5. 2 Esdras 6:5 also speaks of two groups of people - those who now sin, and those who stored up treasures of faith and are secure for eternity. Besides picturing two opposing moral forces, this literature often contains a metaphysical dualism. Daniel 7, for example, dualistically distinguishes between heavenly and earthly planes of existence, and [24] Daniel 10:20 speaks of a battle on the heavenly plane that will affect events on earth (16). Finally, apocalyptic literature often expresses a dualism between this temporal world and the world to come. Thus, Revelation 21 pictures the present heaven and earth passing away; and the coming of a new heaven and earth and a new Jerusalem.
        Eschatology in apocalyptic literature involves an imminent inbreaking by God inaugurating a future age qualitatively different from this age. The eschatology described in Daniel 7:26-27 is thus one of radical transformation and discontinuity. Similarly, the Qumran War Scroll lays out a plan for a coming doomsday battle that will usher in the new world. Apocalyptic literature often contains descriptions of chaos and wars separating this age from the next (for example, 2 Esd. 5:4f.; Rev. 4:1-19:21). A final Judgment concludes these battles, determining who will enter the new kingdom and who will not. 1 Enoch 1:1 refers to this end-time judgment as the "day of distress for the removal of all the wicked! 1 QM 1:5 states that the final judgment will mean the "eternal annihilation of all the lot of Belial" (17).
        Other features often found in apocalyptic literature include a visionary manner of revelation. Thus, 1 Enoch 1:2 speaks of "a holy vision in the heavens which the angels showed me." Apocalyptic visions arc reported using extraordinary and exotic images, such as the arrogant goat sprouting many horns in Daniel 8:1-14 or the living creatures with six wings and full of eyes in Revelation 4:6-8. Further, apocalyptic literature frequently expresses notions of determinism and predestination. Apocalyptic texts may thus present an outline of history's predetermined stages. For example, Daniel 7 presents a blueprint for the world's future. The use of numbers and coded terms is also unique, especially in full-blown apocalyptic literature. Revelation 4:4 mentions twenty-four elders; Revelation 5:1 [25] mentions seven seals; in Revelation 8:8 one-third of the sea becomes blood; and in Revelation 13:18 the number of the beast is 666 (18). Angelology, demonology, and an emphasis on a messiah are additional frequent features of apocalyptic literature.
The Worldview
        Apocalyptic literature comes from an apocalyptic Weltanschauung or type of (religious) thinking (19). It is not merely a consciously chosen style or literary device. I am not suggesting any easy move from a type of biblical language to the minds of those using the language. We must, however, explain how the mythic-realistic, sometimes even wildly bizarre, language of apocalyptic writings could have been intelligible and important to the groups that wrote and read them (20).
        The form-critical assumption that genres are related to certain social phenomena sheds some light on this question (21). Worldviews themselves are one facet of such social phenomena because they are created by groups, not individuals (22). It is within groups that members share and support worldviews (23). If the mythic and bizarre language and beliefs of biblical and [26] related apocalyptic writings are to be explained satisfactorily, they must be related to a social setting with a millennial worldview.
        We lack knowledge about the social aspect of the apocalyptic texts from the Mediterranean and ancient Near Eastern world. But because the beliefs expressed by biblical and ancient biblically related apocalyptic literature bear such a strong family resemblance to those of groups sociologists refer to as "millennial," we may safely assume that this literature presupposes a parallel millennial Weltanschauung. Further, we can begin to flesh out the type of worldview behind biblical apocalyptic texts by outlining the resemblances among the sociological family of millennial groups. 
        The worldview of millennial groups combines a linear view of history with a futuristic eschatology that pictures an imminent radical change in the way things are (24). This radical change may involve the expectation of a coming judgment (25), often including world or cosmic destruction or at least the destruction of a wicked enemy. The millennial Native American group known as the Smohalla cult, for example, claimed that the aging "Earth woman" would soon be destroyed and all whites would be annihilated at the end of time. Similarly, Melanesian cargo-cult prophecies predicted tidal waves that would destroy all Europeans (26). No matter how the eschaton is [27] conceived, it is believed imminent (27), although often presaged by a period of tribulation or messianic "birth pangs" (28).  Cosmic portents also act as harbingers of the end (29).
        According to apocalyptic worldviews, this radical changing of the ,world is accomplished by another, ontologically separate world. This intervention is by a deliverer from outside the world; a resurrection of the dead who may fight alongside the living; or the arrival of a messiah. The millennial Manseren cult in Melanesia, for example, expected the imminent arrival by boat of Manseren Mangundi, a messiah figure who had gained great power by capturing the Morning Star (30). Whether or not it expects a messiah, the apocalyptic worldview focuses on divine agency in bringing the eschaton (31).
[28]    In an apocalyptic worldview, the coming radical change in the world ushers in a qualitatively different existence. Either a cosmic renewal occurs, or a golden age arrives, or the earth is transformed into a paradise. Often, this new world is one in which wishes and hopes are fulfilled (32). One account of the message of the millennial Native American Ghost Dance of 1890 reads, "Next Spring Big Man (Great Spirit) come. He bring back all game of every kind . . . nobody but Indians everywhere and game all kinds thick' (33). This ushering in of paradise may be a return to the Urzeit (primordial time), and the descriptions of the new age may recall old creation myths known to the group (34).' The new-age hope also often expects a resurrection of the dead so the departed will dwell alongside the living in the new world. The message of the 1890 Ghost Dance, for example, included the belief that "Pretty soon . . . all dead Indians come back and live again. They all be strong just like young men, be young again" (35).
        Finally, a moral or ethical dualism is usually part of millennial worldviews. The elect are distinguished from the damned "as white from black" (36).  They see themselves as a moral elite, qualitatively different from the rest of humanity (37). This elite may be pictured as a remnant that will [29] survive the imminent judgment or be refined and tested in the coming tribulation. Thus in the millennial Ghost Dance of Tavibo (1870) it was taught that only "believing" Native Americans would be resurrected in the end time (38). In contrast, millennial groups hate or at least fear those on the other side of the ethical dualism (39).
The Social Phenomenon
        Groups that hold apocalyptic worldviews have definite sociological family resemblances. A third rubric for defining apocalyptic - that of the apocalyptic social institution - should therefore be distinguished from tile apocalyptic literary form and the apocalyptic worldview (40). As with millennial worldviews, my understanding of the social phenomenon of apocalypticism relies on a survey of millennial groups. I did not presuppose any one type of social matrix in choosing groups included in this survey, allowing that any family resemblances might not be at the level of the larger social matrices of the groups examined (41). Indeed, it is at the group level, rather than at the level of the larger social contexts of the groups, that sociological family resemblances appear (42).
        Robert R. Wilson has outlined the family resemblances between millennial groups (43). Millennialism is first of all a group phenomenon. Wilson states, "Apocalyptic religion is not an individualistic phenomenon but one which always appears in the context of a cohesive and relatively well organized group. Members of the group think of themselves as a group and [30] seek to maintain and preserve its structure" (44). The use by many millennial groups of initiation rituals helps strengthen this group identity (45). Other millennial groups secure a group commitment by requiring that members sell their possessions before joining (46).
        If the group is a highly organized one, it will have orders of personnel within it. This organizational hierarchy often includes a so-called millennial prophet or catalyst figure, a clique of special disciples, and an outer group of followers (47). In chapter 3 I shall show how tensions and challenges can arise within the group's organization as part of the group's history.
        The worldviews of many millennial groups include a vision of the coming new era including specific goals for the group (48). In settings involving acculturation, the group's goals often include revival or perpetuation of especially valued aspects of their own society's culture (49). At the same time, the future vision often anticipates that the millennial group will inherit the secrets and abundance of its enemies. Thus, Peter Worsley writes that in the case of the cargo cults, "Melanesians by no means rejected European culture in toto: they wanted the White man's power and riches, but they did not want the perpetuation of his rule" (50).
        Millennial groups usually believe that their vision and goals will be [31] realized within a framework provided by a supernaturally revealed timetable of past and future events. Wovoka, the Native American millennial catalyst figure associated with the Ghost Dance of 1590, had such a schema, which contained a description of past events including the creation. His blueprint for the future involved a "renewal" of all good people in the fall of 1890 and a subsequent renewal of everyone in the spring of that year. A resurrection and an enlargement of the earth would follow (51).
        As Robert R. Wilson argues, to realize its goals and find a way of living in the last days of history, the millennial group develops a practical program for action (52). This practical program may fall anywhere along a continuum from a passive to an active response. A passive program merely provides for the organization of group life, while an active program organizes collective action to help bring on, or at least prepare for, the eschaton. For example, Melanesian cargo cults actively prepared for the arrival of cargo shipments from the ancestors by building wharfs, airstrips, and storehouses (53).
        Another active response involves the performance of special rituals (54),' sometimes involving the creation or readaptation of special temples or cult objects (55). Thus, in the Ghost Dance millennial movement associated with [32] Wovoka, groups performed a ceremony in which the members moved slowly around a central tree. During this dance many of the participants experienced a trance state in which they visited the world of the dead (56). In other cultures, glossolalia is often reported to be a part of millennial ritual practices (57).
        The practical program of millennial groups may involve the partial or almost complete separation of the group from their world. Sometimes, but not always, groups physically separate from society to build rafts or move into shelters (58). Other millennial groups leave their communities to hold an extended vigil while awaiting the eschaton (59). Alternately, millennial groups may separate themselves in preparation for doomsday by refusing to work, destroying stockpiles of food, or spending all their savings. For example, in late-nineteenth-century New Guinea, a millennial catalyst figure named Tokeriu predicted a gigantic tidal wave that would submerge the whole coast. In response to his message, the people killed and ate three hundred to four hundred pigs, exhausting their reservoirs of wealth (60). This action was an act of faith in the belief that the end had almost arrived, that God would provide abundant food for them once the new era began.
        Because the eschatology of millennial groups stresses the total sovereignty of God in the coming cataclysm or war, these groups often do not take up arms (61). Nevertheless, the practical programs of active millennial [33] groups sometimes stress preparation for military action (62). Sometimes the end-time war is still understood as fought by God, the group's military preparations being viewed as merely symbolic (63). In other cases where group members make preparations for actual fighting, the group at least believes that the coming conflict will be carried out under supernatural control and protection. Thus, Sioux millennial groups involved in military conflicts with whites wore so-called ghost shirts, believed invulnerable to bullets (64).
        With respect to the relationship of ethical concern to millennialism, millennial groups tend to exhibit either blatantly unethical behavior and antinomianism or extreme self-control and discipline. Thus, some millennial group programs encourage members to engage in activities (such as orgies, drinking, or stealing) that go against their culture's norms (65). Burridge understands such experimentation with "no rules" as compatible with the millennial self-understanding of being in a transition phase between this world and the next (66). Thus, some millennial groups see themselves as living in an inverted world, or as already beginning to enjoy an existence that transcends the social conventions of this age.
        It would be untrue to argue, however, that millennial groups characteristically lack morality. Millennial group programs, in fact, often stress ethical diligence (67). Because the end-time judgment and new age are imminent, such diligence can be seen as especially warranted. Thus, apocalyptic language is frequently attested as a context of parenesis (68). Wayne Meeks [34] notes how ethical behavior sometimes also results from the community cohesion generated by an apocalyptic worldview. When group members are disposed to act for the community's well-being, internal discipline and obedience of leaders result (69).
 
"Proto-Apocalyptic"
        The term proto-apocalyptic has arisen from attempts to trace the origins of Jewish apocalyptic eschatology. Paul Hanson sees proto-apocalyptic eschatology , as part of a continuum from prophetic eschatology into apocalyptic eschatology (70). I do not assume such a continuum, but I retain the term proto-apocalyptic for the following reason (71).
        Some Persian-period Israelite literature exhibits the family resemblances found in more elaborate form in the Jewish apocalpytic texts written after 250 B.C.E. At the same time, this literature is different from subsequent apocalypses. The regularities and accepted features of these later works only developed with time. Further, the early biblical apocalyptic texts were not informed by many of the significant ideas and motifs found in the Hellenistic apocalypses. For example, Persian-period texts such as those in Isaiah and Zechariah do not emphasize a general resurrection (but see Isa. 26:19) or a judgment of the dead (but see Isa. 24:21-22), as Daniel and 1 Enoch do (72). For these reasons, the earlier literature requires a special designation recognizing its distance both from nonapocalyptic visionary literature (such as Amos's vision-cycle) and full-blown apocalyptic literature (such as the visions of Daniel) (73). I accept the term proto-apocalyptic as this designation.
        I shall therefore use the term proto-apocalyptic to describe those Persian [35] period religious texts, viewpoints, and practices that have clear affinities with the full-blown apocalypticism found in the subsequent Hellenistic and Roman periods (74). The use of this term here, however, should not be taken as implying acceptance of any typology presupposing a trajectory from prophetism to apocalypticism.

A Critique of the Causal Theory of Deprivation
Problems with the Original Concept of Deprivation
        The sociological concept of deprivation originally had to do generally with unsatisfactory economic conditions or at least the existence of a social setting involving other observable lacks or stresses (75). Deprivation commonly involves a group's being dispossessed or kept from those things that it needs and expects to have. Early deprivation theorists viewed this observable type of social matrix of deprivation as the cause of millennialism. When biblical scholars examine biblical apocalyptic groups as alienated and disenfranchised, they are presupposing this original causal explanation.
        It has become clear that this general concept of deprivation is inadequate to account for the phenomenon of millennialism. Too many millennial groups are not observably deprived. List 1 provides examples of millennial groups that cannot be accounted for by the original concept of deprivation. Many such millennial groups that are associated with the upper echelons of society have been overlooked by anthropologists. This is because, as Worsley notes, these groups are not usually associated with mass movements, which may appear more interesting to study (76).

List 1. Examples of Nondeprived Millennial Groups

"Relative" Deprivation as Also Inadequate
        In 1959, in an attempt to add sophistication to deprivation as all explanatory principle, David F. Aberle developed his notion of relative deprivation. By adding the term relative, he widened the concept of deprivation to encompass any uneven relation between expectations and means for satisfaction as well as objective hardship or oppression (103).
        Aberle defined relative deprivation as "a negative discrepancy between legitimate expectation and actuality" (104). He contended that this new concept of relative deprivation accounts for much more of the data than previous concepts of objective deprivation.  I want to argue that this more sophisticated concept of relative deprivation is still inadequate for understanding the cause and nature of millennialism.
        An initial problem with relative deprivation theory is that of nonoccurrence: Aberle's concept is unable to predict millennialism (105). Even documented [41] disasters that cause objective deprivation may not provoke a millennial response. Typhoon Ophelia, which hit Ulithi in Micronesia in 1960, did not provoke any millennial groups (106). Social arenas displaying economic and social deprivation may not produce millennial groups either. Rene Ribeiro notes that millennial movements have not formed among blacks in Brazil, although this group is at the lower end of the social ladder and has endured severe deprivations (107). Similarly, the Sabbatian movement (see List 1, item 7) did not gain more supporters or spread more quickly in areas of persecution or economic deprivation than in prosperous and free areas (108).  If objective deprivation has little predictive value for millennialism, relative deprivation, which is more common, has even less. In my judgment, the problem of nonoccurrence weakens the strength of the correlation between deprivation and millennialism and suggests that, at best, deprivation may merely precipitate other more direct causes of millennialism (109).
[42]     An even stronger problem with relative deprivation theory involves its inherent elasticity, which raises the problem of circular argument (110).  The theory is much too easily applied: almost any group can be seen as relatively deprived (111). This being the case, it is too easy' for adherents of deprivation theory to apply their interpretation in every case of millennialism, even when empirical warrants are not obvious.
        The deprivation explanation becomes not an empirical observation but a principle of interpretation: on principle, some basis for a group feeling of relative deprivation is teased out of each millennial group examined, because millennial groups are defined from the outset as relatively deprived. This criticism of circularity is put forcibly by Sylvia L. Thrupp: "As with Freudian theory; proponents [of the deprivation explanation] have to base their case on faith that if we had perfect information, all of the facts would fall consistently into place as they wish" (112).
[43]     A final major problem with relative deprivation theory is its reductionism. Advocates of the theory often assume that millennialism is an unhealthy or pathological phenomenon within a closed social system. Many Western scholars, especially those with a naturalistic worldview, consider the millennial belief in a new world a delusion (113). These scholars then logically search for a crisis situation, or at least a feeling of frustration or deprivation, that can account for such a "pathological" response (114). This assumption is open to criticism.
        First, there is no evidence that those holding millennial worldviews must suffer from a psychopathology (115). This view is a kind of prejudice in which scholars take their own established position as an assumed healthy norm (116). Thus, Burridge, reacting against this view of millennialism as a [44] kind of social pathology, states that the "vocabulary of relatively deprived, frustrated, and so on" is a view "to be expected of scholars securely ensconced in an established station" (117).
        Second, the assumption that millennialism as a pathological effect must have a material cause (that is, some imbalance within the social system) is misguided. This argument is based on a positivistic conception that all phenomena within a social system can be explained by ironclad laws of cause and effect. But this conception is an example of blatant reductionism. To cite Hillel Schwartz, such a view has no room for the paradoxical and for imbalances within society (118). It incorrectly sees society as a closed system in which social "energy" is never created or destroyed.
        Schwartz argues that millennialism is not an effect, balanced against an actual or perceived wrong in society, within such a closed universe (119). Millennial "outbursts," like the new wealth created by an entrepreneur, may stem front newly emergent creative "energy." This more holistic approach allows that a millennial group may result from something as simple as a group realization of the variety of available worldviews. Such a realization would allow for the propagation of a new and radically-different symbolic universe. In other cases, the emergence of a millennial worldview may be best described in terms of religious motives. Genuine beliefs and motives caused the Sabbatian movement. Because people believed that the Messiah had come, their whole world waxed and waned (120).
        When biblical scholars infer from deprivation theory that a particular social milieu causes the millennial groups that produce apocalyptic literature, they adopt from this reductionistic model a view of the relationship between a literary form and its setting foreign to the assumptions of traditional form criticism (121). Form criticism does not presume to address the [45] ambitious question of the "cause" of specific genres or forms (Gattungen). The relationship between a linguistic convention and its setting is too complex to be reduced to setting as cause and Gattung as effect (122). Form criticism has the more modest task of identifying the repeating social occurrence in which a particular linguistic form achieves an intention (123).
        Consider the relationship of the prophetic announcement of judgment to its Sitz-im-Leben. The form of a prophet's judgment announcement and the way it is delivered are affected by the delivery setting and society's constructs and expectations, but the society and setting are not the cause or basis of the message's transmission. The message results from a perceived experience of a divine revelation or contact with the supernatural. Because prophetic activity occurs in different environments and locales, it cannot be viewed as caused by any one of these settings. Neither a specific socioeconomic environment nor a given locale (such as a street corner or a [46] temple) can be claimed as the cause of prophetic messages. We do not ask what setting "causes" phenomena such as prophecy or preaching. Similarly; we arc asking the wrong question if we inquire what setting causes an apocalyptic vision.

A More Critical View of the Origins of Millennialism
The Proper Level of Focus Is the Millennial Group. The deprivation approach to the form criticism of apocalyptic texts has oversimplified the relationship between text and setting, and also adopted from sociology too broad an understanding of setting (124). Form criticism, for its part, does not focus on the question of the wider socioeconomic factors and environments that may influence or, in some philosophies, even cause human actions and thoughts. It is concerned with the narrower sphere of life or institution, whose regulations and needs influence and form associated manners of speech and writing (125). To understand the sermon genre, one does not look for commonality among the various denominations and societies within which worship occurs. Rather, one looks to the narrower institution of worship itself. By the same token, form-critical analysis of apocalyptic literature should concern itself with the institution of the millennial group as the sociological level that exhibits the most commonality among the many examples of millennial religion.

Postive Motivating Factors Must Be the Focus of Investigation. Different types of social arenas harbor millennial groups - commonality is found only at the narrower group level. Therefore, millennial groups cannot be characterized as always arising in reaction to a situation of deprivation. This discovery helps us do, justice to millennial groups' creative and active aspects. This is an important corrective, because deprivation theory has too long viewed millennial religion only in negative or compensatory terms (126). By the same token, the factors motivating millennialism have been viewed too one-sidedly as lacks or negative elements. Constructive or active motivating [47] factors are characteristically present behind millennial groups, and these have been insufficiently explicated. Therefore, future investigation should focus on millennial groups and their positive causes. After all, the creative activity, of the millennial institution, not an amorphous deprivation void, is what produces apocalyptic literature.
        One actual positive factor allowing for millennialism is a belief predisposition. Simply put, a millennial group will not form unless the belief that apocalyptic events can happen is allowed (127). Thus, the traditions or literature carried by the group must allow for a radical inbreaking of God. At the least, the group must have a linear view of history and believe in a God outside of history (128).
        Beyond this, potential millennial groups are often further predisposed (129). Events can call currently held worldviews into question creating cognitive dissonance - a situation ripe for millennialism. For example, the Irvingites (see List 1, item 8) arose in an atmosphere predisposed toward millennialism (130). As the millennial group was coming into existence, an outbreak of glossolalia occurred in Scotland. At the same time, eschatological expectations were raised by the sermons of Rev. James Stewart, a traveling preacher (131). Finally, the recent revolutions in Europe were taken as a sign of a great apostasy, that God would not tolerate. The French Revolution aimed at "liberating" humanity from religion and royal authority. The Revolution, which ushered in years of instability in the rest of Europe, horrified the upper-class supporters of the English crown (132). Indeed, the events they observed around them contradicted their mundane view of the world, creating a mood of apocalyptic tension.
        Similarly, before Sabbatian millennialism arose, a predisposition for belief in the imminence of the Messiah's arrival was excited by kabbalism. Indeed, by the seventeenth century, kabbalism had created a widespread [48] expectation that apocalyptic events were imminent (133). As a result, a predisposition toward millennial belief was rife both among the common people and in the writings of leading rabbis.
        Given such a predisposition, a catalyst such as an influential literary work, or a teacher, or a visionary is often a second positive motivating factor in the rise of millennialism (134). Such a catalyst brings any latent eschatological expectations to the surface, acts as a symbol for the group, and helps to bring an apocalyptic group-vision to a focus (135). The millennial [49] catalyst figure often seizes upon the ancient myths of the group and integrates them into a linear view of world history. An apocalyptic worldview is generated as mythic paradigms are fused with a futuristic type of world-historical thinking (136). Alternatively, if apocalyptic traditions are accessible to the group, catalysis may involve giving these traditions a central place in the group's consciousness. Thus, the worldview of an older apocalyptic writing may undergo recrudescence when the work is drawn on for guidance at a time of worldview reconstruction. Because familiarity with apocalyptic traditions and writings usually reflects systematic study; scribalism can be an important factor in the formation of a millennial group.
        In the case of the Irvingites, Edward Irving's preaching of a corning cataclysmic end provoked a new universe of meaning among his predisposed group. This new symbolic universe better fit the group's experience, accounting for the glossolalia and the European revolutions. At the same time, it also consisted of beliefs and values incompatible Nvith the group members' older worldview.

Advantages of a Worldview Theory over Deprivation Theory. A focus on positive factors that allow for a group's new apocalyptic worldview overcomes the deprivation model's tendency toward psychological explanation. This tendency, is reductionistic, making millennialism look like a coping mechanism. Also, because deprivation is a psychological term, focusing on individuals' feelings and psyches, by itself deprivation theory does not allow sociologists to discuss group issues and group formation. Thus, scholars have tried to combine deprivation theory with other approaches, like cognitive dissonance theory, in order better to move from individuals' psychological states to group attempts at resolving psychological turmoil [50] through worldview reconstruction (137). Scholars' new sociological sophistication, however, in fact renders deprivation theory unnecessary. Worldviews, the creation of groups, not individuals, are indeed social phenomena (138); but groups re-create worldviews for various reasons and not only in reaction to conditions of deprivation. Thus, focusing on what facilitates a group's creation of a new apocalyptic worldview helps push our sociological understanding of millennialism forward, as long as we remember that deprivation is not always at issue.
        Data such as that of List 1 above show that deprivation is not a necessary cause of a group's creation or adoption of an apocalyptic worldview. The evidence shows that a change in worldview can take place among many kinds of groups, even among groups in power who do not feel resentment like those in a setting of deprivation. This is not incredible. Sociological studies reveal that people with power and high social rank often develop and hold worldviews seemingly inconsistent with their status (139). Thus Andrew D. H. Mayes can note the suggestion that, "In the framework of a differentiated society; it may be that apocalyptic eschatology is an ideology quite incongruent with the social status of those who adhered to it, since people can and do hold belief systems inconsistent with their place in society: (140). Furthermore, though the elite of a society, are most well-off, their hopes and wishes often transcend a mere desire to maintain the realized status quo. Upper-echelon figures are quite capable of desiring [51] major changes in or even the overthrow of the system they control (141). These figures may come to embrace a worldview that anticipates such changes.
        A paradigm illustration of how a central and power-holding group can adopt a radically new religion or worldview is found in Burridbges discussion of the founders of Jainism (142). The founders of Jainism in the sixth century B.C.E. were from the upper strata of society. They were aristocrats drawn from the Kshatriya category of persons, which was composed of warrior and ruler. Further, Jains were part of the financial elite of society. They were the bankers of India and had always been extremely wealthy people. Despite the fact that the Kshatriyas were in power, they were led to question their current assumptions so radically that a group of them underwent a reconstruction of their worldview.
        The integrity of the Kshatriya universe of meaning began to break down due to purely internal and subjective factors. According to their worldview, their own category of persons did not have access to Moksha, the religious goal of absorption into Being itself. External oppression or deprivation was not at issue; rather, interior turmoil arose as members of this elite stratum of society began to experience revulsion at their own social category: Burridge describes Jainism as a "revulsion on the part of Kshatriyas against continuing to be Kshatriyas" (143).
        Kshatriya predisposition for a worldview change manifested itself objectively in the successive appearance of new religious teachers propounding new ideas. Eventually, a catalyst figure arose who disseminated a religious view that embodied the new assumptions and convictions about redemption increasingly necessary to many Kshatriyas. The catalyst figure here was Mahavira, a founder of Jainism, who is described by Burridge as a guru, a prophet or teacher (144).  In holding that Moksha was open to anyone, [52] Mahavira paved the way for a new religion, Jainism, for the Kshatriyas. Conversion to Jainism involved a radical change in orientation for the aristocrats. It involved substituting unworldliness for worldliness and the giving up of wealth so as to become mendicants. The founding of Jainism may thus serve as a paradigm of how a group in power may undergo a radical change in their symbolic universe.

Implications for Analysis of Millennial Groups in Power
        The discussions of this chapter prepare us to move ahead in our study of millennial groups. The definitions and descriptions worked out in the first section will help determine whether selected biblical texts arc protoapocalyptic literature and allow us to fill in gaps in our knowledge concerning the groups and worldviews behind these texts.
        The groundwork for a more critical analysis of those biblical protoapocalyptic texts that may have been produced by millennial groups in power was offered in the second section. The examples of List I show that we need not assume that all biblical proto-apocalyptic texts were produced by marginal or disenfranchised groups. Even a setting of relative deprivation need not be at issue for all biblical apocalyptic texts. The millennial group, the Sitz-im-Leben of apocalyptic literature, is motivated by factors that occur with or without deprivation.
        This result is allowed for by the general findings and results of form criticism. Form criticism allows that recurring situations or settings will involve both constant and variable elements. The variability can often be a function of the different communities and the different religious and political conditions in which recurring settings are found. In other words, form criticism links a genre to a given land of institution, social occurrence, or group, but the concrete occurrence of an actual institution or group will vary in accordance with its social environment or arena. (145). Deprivation is a variable that may or may not be part of an arena in which millennialism occurs.
[53]     The following schematization summarizes these obsrvations (146). Because Sitze-im-Leben do not occur in the abstract, but as concrete situations, we must allow that such situations will vary: In the schema, the capital letters A, B, and C designate the variety of social environments or arenas that accounts for some of this variableness. I therefore define a social arena as a spectrum of social, economic, religious, and political components that will affect the concrete expression of a Sitz-im-Leben. One way to thnk of such an arena is as an overarching context for concrete situations.
Chart 1. Components of Setting in Form Criticism

Classes of Arenas:                     Class A                   Class B                    Class C
                                                    Ax Ay Az                Bx Bv Bw                 Cx Cu Cy
                                                                                                                          
Concrete Situations:                       Ax  -------------------- Bx  -------------------- Cx
                                                                                             
Sitz-im-Leben                                                                     x <------------------> Gattung
 

        Note that concrete situations are designated in the schema by a combination of an upper- and lowercase letter. The lowercase letter, the same in each situation, represents the Sitz-im-Leben. Form criticism links a given Gattung to a specific Sitz-im-Leben. The term Sitz-im-Leben designates what is constant or common (represented here by the element x) among a group of comparable concrete situations (147). By designating the concrete situations as Ax, Bx, and Cx in this way, the schema also illustrates the argument that recurring concrete situations may appear in a variety of social arenas. The influence of the larger arena is indicated by the capital letter in each of the respective designations.
        This form-critical schematization provides a framework for understanding the fact that millennial groups can occur in social arenas that lack observable deprivations including the upper strata of a society The millennial group, like the other social occurrences, institutions, and groups that constitute the Sitze-im-Leben of form criticism, will occur in a variety of [54] larger social arenas. No social stratum or type of social contact configuration can be ruled out a priori as a possible social arena or matrix for millennialism. When the positive factors discussed above occur, groups undergo millennial catalysis within a variety of larger social environments (arenas like those designated by class A, class B, and class C in the above schema).