In his first video, which amassed more than 2 million views, Schneider said he attended a service wearing glasses with a camera built into them.

“Welcome to Sunday service!” the speaker said. “All you have to do is follow the commands.”

The video then shows the speaker telling those in attendance to sit in their chairs multiple times.

“Brainwashing techniques,” one commenter wrote.

Another viewer wrote they viewed it as a manipulation tactic.

The TikToks are snippets of previous videos that were first posted to Schneider’s YouTube channel from December 2019 to February 2020.

According to its website, Scientology is a religion meant to address an individual’s spirit, not the body or mind.

“Scientology further holds Man to be basically good, and that his spiritual salvation depends upon himself, his fellows and his attainment of brotherhood with the universe,” the website stated.

Not without its controversies, many have criticized the organization.

Notably, actress Leah Remini participated in Leah Remini: Scientology and the Aftermath, which was a documentary series that explored the Church of Scientology. Leah Remini and other former members shared their stories. However, as Newsweek previously reported, the series and Remini received backlash from the organization.

Commenters under Schneider’s TikToks were concerned for his safety.

“Thanks for sharing but be careful dude,” a viewer commented.

Another wrote: “Dude…be careful. They disappear ppl.”

In Schneider’s other videos, he shows his interactions with alleged members of the organization. He met with a woman when he tried to “level up” by purchasing a book. Schneider told her that in order to get the money he needed to buy the book, he stole and sold his friend’s gaming system.

At the start of the video, he said he wanted to “make them feel as bad as possible” and asked the woman if he should give the money back.

“You can keep $30 and give him the rest of the money,” the woman said. “All I want to make sure is if he gets mad, like, it’s on you. I will not be responsible because you stole.”

Schneider showed the book he purchased and he asked if he should give the rest of the money back to his friend, to which the woman offered him a course that cost $50.

“Wait, so they openly accepted proceeds of crime?” a commenter asked.

A TikToker viewer wrote, “Tries to make them feel bad…they feel nothing.”

When Schneider first walked through the doors of the Church of Scientology, he showed a video of a meeting with an alleged member who asked him a series of questions that included whether he had an investigatory frame of mind, if he had a family member connected to the Federal Bureau of Investigation or the Central Intelligence Agency or if someone he knows would be upset with him going to the Church of Scientology.

Another person in a different video asked him if he came across data that was unfavorable toward Scientology.

“Should I research it?” Schneider asked.

The man shook his head and said, “Definitely not. That’s the worst thing you can do, especially in Scientology.”

The man told Schneider that it is best for someone to observe a service themselves, rather than make a judgment based on other people’s experiences.

In addition to this series, another TikTok went viral that demonstrated the organization’s “personality test.” Newsweek reported that the video received more than 2 million views.

TikTok user @jordana1999, or Jordana, completed the “Oxford Capacity Analysis,” which is not connected to Oxford University.

Newsweek reached out to Ben Schneider for comment.