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Simply being religious doesn't mean or even imply that someone has some sort of mental illness or defect: they may have simply grown up in a religious household, and they use their religion as an anchor and coping mechanism, or they simply find some great comfort in believing a benevolent god is protecting them and providing meaning for their existence, or any number of other reasonable grounds.
It's when it turns into fundamentalism or, in the case of those in the video, what really amounts to "hysterical praying," that you begin to see a large number of truly disturbed people. (Of course, there's always an open chicken-or-the-egg question of whether the fundamentalist doctrine messed up their minds, or their already-disturbed minds found fundamentalist positions attractive.)
When a group of people are in a room twirling, dancing, swaying, screaming, crying, muttering to themselves, talking to God, etc., they better be either highly self-medicated or listening to a kick-ass band, which is really all that Jesus is to these people: a drug to quelch whatever emotional pain or doubt they're experiencing, and a focal point (or excuse) for releasing all of the energy they've kept bottled up. Their lives were empty and they needed a place to feel they belonged and their existence mattered (that one girl said as much when referring to her being a "passionate person" but never really feeling anything until she joined the group). If these kids didn't get involved in this nutjob group, they'd be fanatical members of some environmental or political group, or fanatical followers of some rock band, etc.
On a side note, the perfect example for me of the "fundamentalism is a mental illness" thing was the "God Warrior" lady on Trading Spouses a few weeks ago. She was quite plainly a severely disturbed woman, perhaps even being a paranoid schizophrenic, but because the entities she spoke to were figures from a mainstream religion (and not Harvey the Rabbit), she's allowed to roam freely, her deranged rants viewed as simply being the prayers of a deeply religious person.
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