home *** CD-ROM | disk | FTP | other *** search
- Path: bloom-beacon.mit.edu!senator-bedfellow.mit.edu!faqserv
- From: wengerb@ccsua.ctstateu.edu (Brian Wenger)
- Newsgroups: alt.religion.scientology,alt.answers,news.answers
- Subject: FAQ: Scientology Codes and Creeds
- Supersedes: <scientology/users/codes_and_creeds_762611071@rtfm.mit.edu>
- Followup-To: alt.religion.scientology
- Date: 2 Apr 1994 10:55:52 GMT
- Organization: Central Connecticut State University, New Britain, CT
- Lines: 678
- Approved: news-answers-request@MIT.Edu
- Expires: 16 May 1994 10:55:19 GMT
- Message-ID: <scientology/users/codes_and_creeds_765284119@rtfm.mit.edu>
- NNTP-Posting-Host: bloom-picayune.mit.edu
- Summary: This posting contains the Codes and Creeds of the Church of
- Scientology and its members. It is suggested reading for anyone who
- wishes to gain a greater understanding of Scientology.
- Keywords: faq scientology dianetics
- X-Last-Updated: 1994/03/21
- Originator: faqserv@bloom-picayune.MIT.EDU
- Xref: bloom-beacon.mit.edu alt.religion.scientology:6942 alt.answers:2298 news.answers:17204
-
- Archive-name: scientology/users/codes_and_creeds
- Last-modified: 1994/3/21
- Version: 1.4
-
-
- --------------< FAQ: Codes and Creeds of Scientology >----------------
-
- The following Codes and Creeds of the Church of Scientology, were
- taken from the book _What is Scientology?_ (Church of Scientology
- International, 1992) along with the introductory paragraphs before
- each code and creed.
-
- [Grateful acknowledgement is made to the L. Ron Hubbard Library for
- permission to reproduce selections from the copyrighted works of
- L. Ron Hubbard.]
-
- This file contains:
-
- The Creed of the Church of Scientology
- The Auditor's Code
- The Code of Honor
- The Code of a Scientologist
- The Supervisor's Code
- The Credo of a True Group Member
- The Credo of a Good and Skilled Manager
-
-
- ======================================================================
-
- The Creed of the Church of Scientology
-
- The Creed of the Church of Scientology was written by L. Ron Hubbard
- shortly after the Church was formed in Los Angeles on February 18, 1954.
- After he issued this creed from his office in Phoenix, Arizona, the
- Church of Scientology adopted it as official because it succinctly
- states what Scientologists believe.
-
- -----
-
- We of the Church believe:
-
- That all men of whatever race, color or creed were created with
- equal rights;
-
- That all men have inalienable rights to their own religious
- practices and their performance;
-
- That all men have inalienable rights to their own lives;
-
- That all men have inalienable rights to their sanity;
-
- That all men have inalienable rights to their own defense;
-
- That all men have inalienable rights to conceive, choose, assist
- or support their own organizations, churches and governments;
-
- That all men have inalienable rights to think freely, to talk
- freely, to write freely their own opinions and to counter or utter
- or write upon the opinions of others;
-
- That all men have inalienable rights to the creation of their own
- kind;
-
- That the souls of men have the rights of men;
-
- That the study of the mind and the healing of mentally caused ills
- should not be alienated from religion or condoned in non-religious
- fields;
-
- And that no agency less than God has the power to suspend or set
- aside these rights, overtly or covertly.
-
- And we of the Church believe:
-
- That man is basically good;
-
- That he is seeking to survive;
-
- That his survival depends upon himself and upon his fellows and
- his attainment of brotherhood with the universe.
-
- And we of the Church believe that the laws of God forbid man:
-
- To destroy his own kind;
-
- To destroy the sanity of another;
-
- To destroy or enslave another's soul;
-
- To destroy or reduce the survival of one's companions or one's
- group.
-
- And we of the Church believe that the spirit can be saved and that the
- spirit alone may save or heal the body.
-
-
- -------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
- The Auditor's Code
-
- This code first appeared as a chapter in the book _Dianetics: The Original
- Thesis_ (later retitled _The Dynamics of Life_) written by L. Ron Hubbard
- in 1947 and eventually published in 1951.
-
- The ensuing years saw a great deal of auditing done by auditors other than
- Mr. Hubbard and from these experiences he was able to refine the Code and
- thus improve the discipline of auditing.
-
- The Auditor's Code was revised in 1954, appearing in Professional
- Auditor's Bulletins 38 and 39.
-
- Over the next four years, several additions were made to the 1954 Code,
- one of which appeared in the book _Dianetics 55!_. Another was released
- in Hubbard Communications Office Bulletin of 1 July 1957, ADDITIONS TO
- THE AUDITOR'S CODE, and two more items were added when the Auditor's
- Code of 1958 was published.
-
- The Auditor's Code 1968, released in October of that year, was issued
- as a Hubbard Communications Office Policy Letter. It was released in
- celebration of the 100 percent gains attainable by standard tech.
-
- Hubbard Communciations Office Policy Letter 2 November 1968, AUDITOR'S
- CODE, added three more clauses to the Code.
-
- The final version of the Code was published by Mr. Hubbard on 19 June 1980.
-
- The Auditor's Code is a fundamental tool of not only auditing but of life.
- As L. Ron Hubbard wrote in _Dianetics_, "The Auditor's Code outlines the
- *survival conduct pattern* of man. The Clear operates more or less
- automatically on this code." Because the basic axioms of Dianetics and
- Scientology comprise the fundamentals of thought itself, what works in
- auditing also works in life.
-
- -----
-
- I hereby promise as an auditor to follow the Auditor's Code.
-
- 1. I promise not to evaluate for the preclear or tell him what he
- should think about his case in session.
-
- 2. I promise not to invalidate the preclear's case or gains in or
- out of session.
-
- 3. I promise to administer only standard tech to a preclear in the
- standard way.
-
- 4. I promise to keep all auditing appointments once made.
-
- 5. I promise not to process a preclear who has not had sufficient
- rest and who is physically tired.
-
- 6. I promise not to process a preclear who is improperly fed or
- hungry.
-
- 7. I promise not to permit a frequent change of auditors.
-
- 8. I promise not to sympathize with a preclear but to be effective.
-
- 9. I promise not to let the preclear end session on his own
- determinism but to finish off those cycles I have begun.
-
- 10. I promise never to walk off from a preclear in session.
-
- 11. I promise never to get angry with a preclear in session.
-
- 12. I promise to run every major case action to a floating needle.
-
- 13. I promise never to run any one action beyond its floating needle.
-
- 14. I promise to grant beingness to the preclear in session.
-
- 15. I promise not to mix the processes of Scientology with other
- practices except when the preclear is physically ill and only
- medical means will serve.
-
- 16. I promise to maintain communication with the preclear and not to
- cut his communication or permit him to overrun in session.
-
- 17. I promise not to enter comments, expressions or enturbulence into
- a session that distract a preclear from his case.
-
- 18. I promise to continue to give the preclear the process or
- auditing command when needed in the session.
-
- 19. I promise not to let a preclear run a wrongly understood command.
-
- 20. I promise not to explain, justify or make excuses in session for
- any auditor mistakes whether real or imagined.
-
- 21. I promise to estimate the current case state of a preclear only
- by standard case supervision data and not to diverge because of
- some imagined difference in the case.
-
- 22. I promise never to use the secrets of a preclear divulged in
- session for punishment or personal gain.
-
- 23. I promise to never falsify worksheets of sessions.
-
- 24. I promise to see that any fee received for processing is refunded,
- following the policies of the Claims Verification Board, if the
- preclear is dissatisfied and demands it within three months after
- the processing, the only condition being that he may not again be
- processed or trained.
-
- 25. I promise not to advocate Dianetics or Scientology only to cure
- illness or only to treat the insane, knowing well they were
- intended for spiritual gain.
-
- 26. I promise to cooperate fully with the authorized organizations of
- Dianetics and Scientology in safeguarding the ethical use and
- practice of those subjects.
-
- 27. I promise to refuse to permit any being to be physically injured,
- violently damaged, operated on or killed in the name of "mental
- treatment."
-
- 28. I promise not to permit sexual liberties or violations of
- patients.
-
- 29. I promise to refuse to admit to the ranks of practitioners any
- being who is insane.
-
-
- ----------------------------------------------------------------------
-
- The Code of Honor
-
- The Code of Honor first appeared in Professional Auditor's Bulletin 40
- on 26 November 1954. As Mr. Hubbard himself explained:
-
- -----
-
- "No one expects the Code of Honor to be closely and tightly
- followed.
-
- "An ethical code cannot be enforced. Any effort to enforce the
- Code of Honor would bring it to the level of a moral code. It cannot
- be enforced simply because it is a way of life only as long as it is
- not enforced. Any other use but self-determined use of the Code of
- Honor would, as any Scientologist could quickly see, produce a
- considerable deterioration in a person. Therefore its use is a luxury
- use, and which is done solely on self-determined action, providing one
- sees eye to eye with the Code of Honor.
-
- "If you believed man was worthy enough to be granted by you
- sufficient stature so as to permit you to exercise gladly the Code of
- Honor, I can guarantee that you would be a happy person. And if you
- found an occasional miscreant falling away from the best standards you
- have developed, you yet did not turn away from the rest of man, and if
- you discovered yourself betrayed by those you were seeking to defend
- and yet did not then experience a complete reversal of opinion about
- all your fellow men, there would be no dwindling spiral for you."
-
- "The only difference between paradise on Earth and hell on Earth is
- whether or not you believe your fellow man worthy of receiving from
- you the friendship and devotion called for in this Code of Honor."
-
- 1. Never desert a comrade in need, in danger or in trouble.
-
- 2. Never withdraw allegiance once granted.
-
- 3. Never desert a group to which you owe your support.
-
- 4. Never disparage yourself or minimize your strength or power.
-
- 5. Never need praise, approval or sympathy.
-
- 6. Never compromise with your own reality.
-
- 7. Never permit your affinity to be alloyed.
-
- 8. Do not give or receive communication unless you yourself
- desire it.
-
- 9. Your self-determinism and your honor are more important than
- your immediate life.
-
- 10. Your integrity to yourself is more important than your body.
-
- 11. Never regret yesterday. Life is in you today, and you make
- your tomorrow.
-
- 12. Never fear to hurt another in a just cause.
-
- 13. Don't desire to be liked or admired.
-
- 14. Be your own adviser, keep your own counsel and select your
- own decisions.
-
- 15. Be true to your own goals.
-
-
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
- The Code of a Scientologist
-
- The Code of a Scientologist was first issued as Professional Auditor's
- Bulletin 41 in 1954. In it, L. Ron Hubbard provides a Scientologist
- with guidelines in dealing with the press and in fighting for human
- rights and justice through social reform. It is a vital code for any
- Scientologist active in the community. The code was reissued in 1956
- in the book _Creation of Human Ability_. Revised in 1969 and again in
- 1973, the code is given here in its final version.
-
- -----
-
- As a Scientologist, I pledge myself to the Code of Scientology for the good
- of all:
-
- 1. To keep Scientologists, the public and the press accurately informed
- concerning Scientology, the world of mental health and society.
-
- 2. To use the best I know of Scientology to the best of my ability to
- help my family, friends, groups and the world.
-
- 3. To refuse to accept for processing and to refuse to accept money
- from any preclear or group I feel I cannot honestly help.
-
- 4. To decry and do all I can to abolish any and all abuses against
- life and Mankind.
-
- 5. To expose and help abolish any and all physically damaging practices
- in the field of mental health.
-
- 6. To help clean up and keep clean the field of mental health.
-
- 7. To bring about an atmosphere of safety and security in the field
- of mental health by eradicating its abuses and brutality.
-
- 8. To support true humanitarian endeavors in the fields of human rights.
-
- 9. To embrace the policy of equal justice for all.
-
- 10. To work for freedom of speech in the world.
-
- 11. To actively decry the suppression of knowledge, wisdom,
- philosophy or data which would help Mankind.
-
- 12. To support the freedom of religion.
-
- 13. To help Scientology orgs and groups ally themselves with public
- groups.
-
- 14. To teach Scientology at a level it can be understood and used by the
- recipients.
-
- 15. To stress the freedom to use Scientology as a philosophy in all
- its applications and variations in the humanities.
-
- 16. To insist upon standard and unvaried Scientology as an applied
- activity in ethics, processing and administration in Scientology
- organizations.
-
- 17. To take my share of responsibility for the impact of Scientology
- upon the world.
-
- 18. To increase the numbers and strength of Scientology over the
- world.
-
- 19. To set an example of the effectiveness and wisdom of Scientology.
-
- 20. To make this world a saner, better place.
-
- ---------------------------------------------------------------------
-
- The Supervisor's Code
-
- Just as auditors must follow a code of conduct, so too does the
- Supervisor in a Scientology course room. Unlike teachers in many
- traditional classrooms, Course Supervisors do not set themselves up
- as "authorities" who tell their students what to think, or espouse
- their opinions on the subject. Instead, students are guided to find
- the answers for themselves in Dianetics and Scientology materials.
-
- In the following code, Mr. Hubbard sets forth the key guidelines that
- ensure instruction in a Scientology course room is standard and
- professional, with maximum benefit to the students. This code is
- followed by Supervisors in churches of Scientology throughout the
- world, guaranteeing a high level of training in the technology. It was
- first published in 1957.
-
- -----
-
- 1. The Supervisor must never neglect an opportunity to direct a
- student to the actual source of Scientology data.
-
- 2. The Supervisor should invalidate a student's mistakes ruthlessly
- and use good ARC [understanding] while doing it.
-
- 3. The Supervisor should remain in good ARC with his students at all
- times while they are performing training activities.
-
- 4. The Supervisor at all times must have a high tolerance of
- stupidity in his students and must be willing to repeat any datum
- not understood as many times as necessary for the student to
- understand and acquire reality on the datum.
-
- 5. The Supervisor does not have a "case" in his relationship with
- his students, nor discuss or talk about his personal problems
- to the students.
-
- 6. The Supervisor will, at all times, be a source-point of good
- control and direction to his students.
-
- 7. The Supervisor will be able to correlate any part of Scientology
- to any other part and to livingness over the eight dynamics.
-
- 8. The Supervisor should be able to answer any questions concerning
- Scientology by directing the student to the actual source of the
- data. If a Supervisor cannot answer a particular question, he
- should always say so, and the Supervisor should always find the
- answer to the question from the source and tell the student where
- the answer is to be found.
-
- 9. The Supervisor should never lie to, deceive or misdirect a
- student concerning Scientology. He shall be honest at all times
- about it with a student.
-
- 10. The Supervisor must be an accomplished auditor.
-
- 11. The Supervisor should always set a good example to his students:
- such as giving good demonstrations, being on time and dressing
- neatly.
-
- 12. The Supervisor should at all times be perfectly willing and able
- to do anything he tells his students to do.
-
- 13. The Supervisor must not become emotionally involved with students
- of either sex while they are under his or her training.
-
- 14. When a Supervisor makes any mistake, he is to inform the student
- that he has made one and rectify it immediately. This datum
- embraces all phases in training, demonstrations, lectures and
- processing, etc. He is never to hide the fact that he made a
- mistake.
-
- 15. The Supervisor should never neglect to give praise to his
- students when due.
-
- 16. The Supervisor to some degree should be pan-determined about the
- Supervisor-student relationship.
-
- 17. When a Supervisor lets a student control, give orders to or
- handle the Supervisor in any way, for the purpose of demonstration
- or other training purposes, the Supervisor should always put the
- student back under his control.
-
- 18. The Supervisor will at all times observe the Auditor's Code during
- sessions and the Code of a Scientologist at all times.
-
- 19. The Supervisor will never give a student opinions about
- Scientology without labeling them thoroughly as such;
- otherwise, he is to direct only to tested and proven data
- concerning Scientology.
-
- 20. The Supervisor shall never use a student for his own personal
- gain.
-
- 21. The Supervisor will be a stable terminal, point the way to stable
- data, be certain, but not dogmatic or dictatorial, toward his
- students.
-
- 22. The Supervisor will keep himself at all times informed of the
- most recent Scientology data and procedures and communicate this
- information to his students.
-
- -------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
- The Credo of a True Group Member
-
- In our bureaucratic age, members of a group are often left feeling hopeless
- and ineffective in the face of seemingly insurmountable difficulties.
- Some even come to feel they might be better off without allegiance to any
- group. But inevitably no one can survive alone, and denying oneself
- membership in a group is denying oneself that certain pride and satisfaction
- which can only come through teamwork.
-
- In his research into the technology of groups, L. Ron Hubbard codified the
- principles which members of any group should follow to attain its goals.
- These are offered in the following code, written in January 1951.
-
- With these guidelines, a person can greatly increase his contribution
- to a group, while at the same time maintaining his own self-determinism.
-
- -----
-
- 1. The successful participant of a group is that participant who
- closely approximates in his own activities the ideal, ethic and
- rationale of the overall group.
-
- 2. The responsibility of the individual for the group as a whole
- should not be less than the responsibility of the group for the
- individual.
-
- 3. The group member has, as part of his responsibility, the smooth
- operation of the entire group.
-
- 4. A group member must exert and insist upon his rights and
- prerogatives as a group member and insist upon the rights and
- prerogatives of the group as a group and not let these rights be
- diminished in any way or degree for any excuse or claimed
- expeditiousness.
-
- 5. The member of a true group must exert and practice his right to
- contribute to the group. And he must insist upon the right of
- the group to contribute to him. He should recognize that a
- myriad of group failures will result when either of these
- contributions is denied as a right. (A welfare state being that
- state in which the member is not permitted to contribute to the
- state but must take contribution from the state.)
-
- 6. Enturbulence of the affairs of the group by sudden shifts of
- plans unjustified by circumstances, breakdown of recognized
- channels or cessation of useful operations in a group must be
- refused and blocked by the member of a group. He should take
- care not to enturbulate a manager and thus lower ARC [under-
- standing].
-
- 7. Failure in planning or failure to recognize goals must be
- corrected by the group member for the group by calling the matter
- to conference or acting upon his own initiative.
-
- 8. A group member must coordinate his initiative with the goals and
- rationale of the entire group and with other individual members,
- well publishing his activities and intentions so that all
- conflicts may be brought forth in advance.
-
- 9. A group member must insist upon his right to have initiative.
-
- 10. A group member must study and understand and work with the goals,
- rationale and executions of the group.
-
- 11. A group member must work toward becoming as expert as possible in
- his specialized technology and skill in the group and must assist
- other individuals of the group to an understanding of that
- technology and skill in its place in the organizational
- necessities of the group.
-
- 12. A group member should have a working knowledge of all
- technologies and skills in the group in order to understand them
- and their place in the organizational necessities of the group.
-
- 13. On the group member depends the height of the ARC [understanding]
- of the group. He must insist upon high-level communication lines
- and clarity in affinity and reality and know the consequence of
- not having such conditions. *And he must work continually and
- actively to maintain high ARC in the organization.*
-
- 14. A group member has the right of pride in his tasks and a right of
- judgement and handling in those tasks.
-
- 15. A group member must recognize that he is himself a manager of
- some section of the group and/or its tasks and that he himself
- must have both the knowledge and right of management in that
- sphere for which he is responsible.
-
- 16. The group member should not permit laws to be passed which limit
- or proscribe the activities of all the members of the group
- because of the failure of some of the members of the group.
-
- 17. The group member should insist on flexible planning and
- unerring execution of plans.
-
- 18. The performance of duty at optimum by every member of the group
- should be understood by the group member to be the best safeguard
- of his own and the group survival. It is the pertinent business
- of any member of the group that optimum performance be achieved
- by any other member of the group whether chain of command or
- similarity of activity sphere warrants such supervision or not.
-
-
- ----------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
- The Credo of a Good and Skilled Manager
-
- Leadership is considered a rare commodity, a gift possessed by a few
- uncommon individuals. And after a few years in a high executive
- position, whether in the private or the public sector, many individuals
- wonder whether this gift is in fact illusory.
-
- In his management technology, L. Ron Hubbard developed a large body
- of guidelines that enable executives and managers not only to apply
- their powers with intelligence but to exercise sane leadership that
- will enable their groups to flourish and prosper. Following this code
- can greatly increase one's success as a manager in any group, from a
- business to a commonwealth of nations. This code was also written
- by L. Ron Hubbard in 1951.
-
- -----
-
- To be effective and successful a manager must:
-
- 1. Understand as fully as possible the goals and aims of the group
- he manages. He must be able to see and embrace the *ideal*
- attainment of the goal as envisioned by a goal maker. He must be
- able to tolerate and better the *practical* attainments and
- advances of which his group and its members may be capable. He
- must strive to narrow, always, the ever-existing gulf between the
- *ideal* and the *practical*.
-
- 2. He must realize that a primary mission is the full and honest
- interpretation by himself of the ideal and ethic and their goals
- and aims to his subordinates and the group itself. He must lead
- creatively and persuasively toward these goals his subordinates,
- the group itself and the individuals of the group.
-
- 3. He must embrace the organization and act solely for the entire
- organization and never form or favor cliques. His judgement of
- individuals of the group should be solely in the light of their
- worth to the entire group.
-
- 4. He must never falter in sacrificing individuals to the good of
- the group both in planning and execution and in his justice.
-
- 5. He must protect all established communication lines and
- complement them where necessary.
-
- 6. He must protect all affinity in his charge and have himself
- affinity for the group itself.
-
- 7. He must attain always to the highest creative reality.
-
- 8. His planning must accomplish, in the light of goals and aims, the
- activity of the entire group. He must never let organizations
- grow and sprawl but, learning by pilots, must keep organizational
- planning fresh and flexible.
-
- 9. He must recognize in himself the rationale of the group and
- receive and evaluate the data out of which he makes his
- solutions with the highest attention to the truth of that data.
-
- 10. He must constitute himself on the orders of service to the group.
-
- 11. He must permit himself to be served well as to his individual
- requirements, practicing an economy of his own efforts and
- enjoying certain comforts to the wealth of keeping high his
- rationale.
-
- 12. He should require his subordinates that they relay into their own
- spheres of management the whole and entire of his true feelings
- and the reasons for his decisions as clearly as they can be
- relayed and expanded and interpreted only for the greater
- understanding of the individuals governed by those subordinates.
-
- 13. He must never permit himself to pervert or mask any portion of
- the ideal and ethic on which the group operates nor must he
- permit the ideal and ethic to grow old and outmoded and
- unworkable. He must never permit his planning to be perverted or
- censored by subordinates. He must never permit the ideal and
- ethic of the group's individual members to deteriorate, using
- always reason to interrupt such a deterioration.
-
- 14. He must have faith in the goals, faith in himself and faith in
- the group.
-
- 15. He must lead by demonstrating always creative and constructive
- subgoals. He must not drive by threat and fear.
-
- 16. He must realize that every individual in the group is engaged in
- some degree in the managing of other men, life and MEST and that
- a liberty of management within this code should be allowed to
- every such submanager.
-
- Thus conducting himself, a manager can win empire for his group,
- whatever that empire may be.
-
- ========================================================================
-
- As mentioned earlier, grateful acknowledgement is made to the L. Ron
- Hubbard Library for permission to reproduce selections from the copy-
- righted works of L. Ron Hubbard.
-
- "Dianetics," "Hubbard," and "Scientology," are trademarks and service
- marks owned by the Religious Technology Center and are used with its
- permission. "Scientologist" is a collective membership mark designating
- members of the affiliated churches and missions of Scientology.
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------
-