1. Anxiety about the future encourages the emergence of “false prophets” who promise universal salvation projects and set dates for signs of the times and the end of the world, trapping those who seek reassurance. 2. Economic problems drive individuals, fleeing from a consumer society, to seek a spiritual alternative. In an age of speed, some offer their spiritual goods and promote them as quickly accessible and providing rapid spiritual answers to questions. For example, an advertisement for one heresy claims it “gives happiness now and quickly.” 3. Poor upbringing and family disintegration are major sources of most social tragedies, which may lead to joining a heresy. 4. Internal migration from rural areas to cities and emigration abroad lead to detachment from roots and loss of original religious traditions, making migrants more susceptible to all kinds of influences and an easy prey for heresies. 5. A human inclination towards strangeness, supernatural phenomena, and spiritual thirst for the absolute can drive a person to test everything for knowledge and self-affirmation, leading them into traps. 6. The results of today’s prevailing globalization include the feeling that one can achieve their spiritual self through personal effort. Consequently, people create their own religions based on bits of information gathered from various sources, mixing and matching ideas and beliefs that suit them, blending them with their original religion. This results in a personal religion with fundamental contradictions due to ignorance of each religion’s specifics and essence, such as incorporating reincarnation into Christianity, which contradicts the Christian doctrine of resurrection. This type of heresy has been given various names, including “remote control religion,” “religious tourism,” or “religious supermarket.”