Sociopaths like to cloak themselves in a mantel of respect. They seek careers, or pretend to have careers, in fields that people associate with good character, trustworthiness, and authority, such as law enforcement, the military and the clergy.
Pursuing a career in religion or spirituality is particularly useful for sociopaths. People tend to trust religious figures simply because they are religious figures, which puts a sociopath several moves ahead when trying to scam someone. A sociopath claiming an inside track to God has a very powerful tool when it comes to manipulating people.
Plus, for a sociopath, a career in the clergy is easy—the primarily visible job requirement is an ability to talk. With typical inborn charisma, and a willingness to lie about other credentials, the sociopath is a shoo-in.
Lovefraud has written about several pseudo-members of the clergy whose behavior has certainly flouted the Ten Commandments:
Anthony Owens claimed to be bishop of a fellowship of more than 100 non-denominational churches, which was a lie. He was married to eight women at the same time.
Rabbi Fred Neulander founded the largest Jewish temple in southern New Jersey. He was convicted of arranging the murder of his wife.
Terry Hornbuckle founded a megachurch in Arlington, Texas. He was found guilty of raping three women, two of whom were parishioners.
Then, of course, there’s Fred Brito, who impersonated a Catholic priest, even performing a couple’s wedding, when he had no religious training whatsoever.
Lovefraud readers have told us of more cases. AlohaTraveler says her “Bad Man” had been a pastor for an Assemblies of God church in Seattle. Another woman has built a website about the real reason a reverend abruptly departed from the First Presbyterian Church of Fort Lauderdale, Florida—an extramarital affair with her.
Fake believers
Even sociopaths who aren’t clergy put religion to work in their manipulation. Here are some examples from the Lovefraud mailbag:
- A woman married a guy who was a “Christian” teacher (her quotes) in schools for 14 years. He abandoned her after six months and started an affair with another woman, all the while talking about reconciliation. She then found out she was his eighth or ninth wife, and he had previously been convicted of bigamy.
- A guy met a woman in a Christian chat room on the Internet. He was in the process of getting a divorce; she claimed she was also. He left everything and moved to her state to be with her. She taught at a Christian school half-days, and would meet him—for sex—after work. She was still married.
- Girl starts dating guy when she is 18. They belonged to the same Christian faith, which did not allow premarital sex; all their dates were chaperoned. When she was 20, they had a fairytale wedding. That night, he raped her, then started gaslighting her, and convinced a doctor that she was crazy, until she ended up on psychotropic drugs.
- A woman’s ex-husband claims to be a Christian minister. “The church is a fraud to bilk people out of money. He helps the other pastor get money from poor people who can’t afford it,” she writes. “When he raped me and tried to kill me, and when he and his daughter broke into my house, well the cops saw him wearing preacher pants and didn’t believe me.”
- Woman meets a guy on a Christian singles site—they both sang, did music ministry, and had an “intense desire to serve the Lord.” They married, started their own church, then she finds out he owed $30,000 in child support and was addicted to hardcore porn. He became physically abusive.
- Woman marries a 51-year-old Catholic school teacher who is an Episcopalian priest, retired military, widowed after 29 years of marriage. Two months into the marriage, his son moves in with them. The son was selling and using cocaine, and her new husband—the priest—was in business with him.
Predators are everywhere
Lovefraud has heard of many more cases in which sociopathic predators were fishing for victims in churches and on religious dating websites. We’ve heard of sociopaths who quoted the Bible, prayed every day, and emotionally tortured their families.
And then there are the sociopaths who use religion as a reason to keep bleeding their victims. Christian religions, and New Age spiritualism, embrace the concept of forgiveness. Sociopaths use this to claim that they’ve “found God” who has forgiven their transgressions, and you should too.
The key point here is that just because someone claims to be Christian, religious, or otherwise spiritual, does not mean he or she is automatically trustworthy. If your instincts are telling you that something is wrong, no matter what the context, pay attention.
moraira43: Your boss wears a mask, just like our EXs wore theirs.
Peace. I’m going to bed … I wonder what it would have been if my boss did heroin?
Just kidding.
good night its 5.57 am here oh well I am off work anyway
AlohaTraveler…. I am so sorry. This “Bad Man” you have described is my father…. I am shocked to find out about all of this. I watched my mother be painfully abused and I am so sorry you went through something similar. He has done nothing but harm my emotional well being as well, which is why I have spoken to him maybe 5 times in the last 7 years. I cannot believe I have found this article. But I am glad you have recovered. I wish you the best.
Oh Sh*T I have not even seen this one
:)~ Love YOUALL jere
Did anyone find out who said the quote that Bill Cosby repeats “Hurt People, hurt people”?
So profound … give an applause to that man and his wisdom.
Peace.
How about mean people Suc*K
Dear Moraira43. I was taken aback to read your blog about your boss, because my boss is very much the same and I am going through a thoroughly unpleasant time at work, at the moment. I work with nearly all women, and all of them except me, kow tow and she has made it quite obvious that I am her least favourite and constantly nitpicks my work. But she does it so courteously, that at first it took my along time to identify what was really happening. She has caused all sorts of unpleasant undercurrents in the staff – in the name of good management – of course!! And there have been many personal disputes which have culminated in people leaving. My boss used to be a policewoman and she treats people like bad children – very unhealthy.
Dear Beverly, Moraira43 and everyone: Hasn’t anyone noticed that “they’ve” taken over everything? Because they don’t play fair. Yes, there is no such word in their dictionary of evil. They smile to everyone’s face and kiss a#@....... to get where they want to go … then they get to the top … and the rest of us are pigeons for them to do what they want. If they are about to get caught … up goes the smoke screens and the finger pointing at the innocent to take the fall… and life goes back to normal for them … until the next whistle blower starts screaming “The Emperor has NO CLOTHES”.
Look what happens to whistle blowers in our society, they are kicked to the scrape heap, lied about … so anti-socials can save face … off to oblivion … wake up people, whistle blowers of people of God telling everyone an evil is over here or over there.
Peace.
Dear Karissa,
I am in a bit of shock that you found me. Donna alerted me that you wanted to contact me. Let me say first, please please please do not alert your Dad to my essays. This is a healing place for me and I hope for you, as well.
With that said, Welcome Karissa. You are a beautiful and courageous young woman and I can only imagine what you went through with your Dad. Some of his stories about his parenting ideas seemed pretty warped and scary to me. I hope all of you are doing well and have peaceful lives now.
Though I shouldn’t be, I am surprised to hear that your Dad wasn’t helping out as much as he led me to believe. He told me he sent $1000 per month to your Mom. I believed him. Also, I asked him specifically if he had ever hit your Mom and he said no. He said once he pretended he was going to throw her off the boat so that she would “settle down” but other than that he adamantly said he was not physical with her. I also asked, “Were you mad at your wife all the time?” He looked puzzled and said, “I don’t think so.” I spent a lot of time trying to figure out what her life with him was like. I just couldn’t believe it was like mine. I felt like I was going to have a nervous breakdown with all the badgering and attacking on my character. I wondered, “How did she endure?” Eventually, I told a friend, “I don’t know her story but it doesn’t matter anymore. I can feel it in my bones.”
In time I came to realize that the stories your Dad painted were lies or as I used to say, “the facts were so bizarrely twisted that the truth was barely recognizable.” Many times I had wanted to contact your Mother but I didn’t want to disturb her hard earned peace. I will tell you one thing, when I saw what was written in the cement at your house, it practically knocked me off my chair and I started to cry. I had said that very thing about myself after the experience with your Dad. I found you all when you were awarded the house for Habitat for Humanity and I followed the story on the Internet. I hope that’s not too weird for you. At the time, I wanted to look into your Mom’s eyes. I was trying to figure out what happened because I could not make sense of how your Dad was treating me with the past life he claimed to live as the “Minister of Compassion.” I found the site with all of your pictures when I was trying to verify his stories about his ministry.
I had thought it would be your Mom that might find these essays. Please let her know.. it was not her. It was him. That has been my biggest lesson in all this. How people treat us is most often not about us but about them. In fact, I am working on a new essay about that very topic. If you are not sharing any of this with your Mom, I understand. You would know better than I where she is in her healing. Between you and me, if she ever needs to fight in court with him on anything, I am willing to share any information I know that will help to verify his lack of character. Other than that, I don’t ever want to see him again.
Rest assured, Karissa, I have healed from this nightmare. I did a massive amount of reading and learning from this forum at LoveFraud. Though I am not qualified on paper to diagnose your Dad, I feel very strongly that he has Borderline and Narcissist Personality Disorder. Also, due to some of his exploitative activities, I believe he may qualify as a Sociopath but I am not 100% sure. However, the stories here at LoveFraud sound very familiar and I relate to nearly every word and tactic described here by the 100s of readers.
Anyway, to any reader out there that is sharing this moment of validation with me… this is the ultimate! However, I am happy to say that I am beyond the point of needing validation. Most of us will not receive confirmation like this. We need to trust ourselves and know that we already have all the information we need. It is wrong when someone abuses you. PERIOD.
Yesterday, my boyfriend (yes! I finally have one!!) took me to see a memorial site for his Dad. At the site there was a placard that said, “Right wrongs nobody.” If only I had those words with me when I was with the Bad Man. When we hear the truth, it rings our bell loud and clear, doesn’t it?
Aloha….. E
P.S. I helped your Dad chose those Peridot earrings he sent you for your 18th birthday. :o)
Dear Karissa,
Welcome to lovefraud, I too had a psychopathic biological father, so I can relate to some of the disappointments that children of these personality disordered people have. We want so much a loving parent who likes and loves us, we want to do things so that they will approve of us, and love us.
Nothing we could ever do though, would ever make them even be able to comprehend “love” much less do it.
My biological father abandoned me when I was an infant, and made no attempt at contact until I was 16 or so, at 18 I went to live with him thinking we could have a relationship, a bit late, but a relationship none-the-less. He abused me in every way possible.
He died last summer and all I could feel was relief, and a day or so of anger that he had hurt me so badly when all I wanted to do was love him, and please him. Alll I wanted was to be loved back. I hadn’t seen him in over 40 years so he was never part of my life from the time I fled from him, abused and bruised, emotionally and physically.
Read the articles and essays here and learn about psychopathic personaility disorder and how those people think and behave. It wasn’t about your mom, or you, or even “Aloha” it was HIM, ALL ABOUT HIM. What he wanted, and what he wanted was someone to blame for every mistake he made in his life—someone besides himself.
You did not deserve to have a psychopath for a father, and neither did I. We just got the “LUCK OF THE DRAW” when fathers were given out, but at the same time, I firmly believe that the burdens are “parceled out” by God to those that can bear them, He tells us he will not ever give us more to bear than we can bear, so we will come out stronger in the end for having borne this burden. God bless you, and (((hugs)))).