Saturday, December 13, 2025

CEI (Cult Education Institute) Forum Discussion: New Creation Fellowship (aka Christ As Life) - Denton, Texas

Screen captures (from the Cult Education Institute thread on New Creation Fellowship (aka Christ As Life) - Denton, Texas if it’s still available) of a discussion of a church/group we used to belong to. They currently operate a coffee house called Gravity Denton” at 321 Avenue G, and the former ACTS (Accelerated Christian Training School) Bible School at 2402 W Prairie St across the street now appears to be called “JESUS TRIBE CHRISTIAN FELLOWSHIP.”

Caveat Emptor







From a comment about a particular religious group that one should apply to any group, religious or otherwise, that one is a part of or may be seeking to join:
What you’re describing lines up with what people call high-control environments.

These aren’t always obvious or extreme. Most don’t look “bad” on the surface. They often look like tight communities with strong values. The difference is in how much control they exert over people’s thinking, behavior, and relationships.

Here’s what tends to define them:

Control over information:
You’re encouraged to trust internal voices and be cautious of outside perspectives. Over time, this limits your ability to reality-check what’s happening.

Pressure to conform:
There’s a clear “right way” to think, act, and even feel. Disagreement isn’t just a difference of opinion, it’s treated like a problem.

Authority is elevated:
Leaders aren’t just respected, they’re hard to question. Their guidance can override personal judgment.

Identity gets tied to the group:
Your friendships, purpose, and sense of self get wrapped up in it. That makes leaving feel like losing everything, not just changing communities.

Subtle consequences for stepping out of line:
It might not be direct punishment, but people can face distancing, loss of status, or relational tension.

Where people underestimate this is assuming “if it was bad, people would just leave.” That ignores the cost structure.

What’s really happening is a tradeoff:

Stay → keep community, identity, stability
Leave → risk isolation, doubt, and starting over

Most people delay that decision until the internal cost of staying becomes higher than the external cost of leaving.

If you’re evaluating something like this, don’t focus on whether it looks good or bad on the surface.

Look at:

How disagreement is handled
Whether people can question leadership without fallout
How much of someone’s life is expected to revolve around it
What happens to people who leave

Those are the signals that tell you what kind of environment it really is.