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.
Letgoletgod: A few weeks back I caught Jennifer on a few shows … either Letterman’s or Leno’s and others … with the release of her new song … and she was a knockout with this song, along with the backup singers, the band … all incredible … and she was singing about a guy with a big ego …
In an earlier blog of mine I related How (it) became most annoying w/(its) RAP music allways turned up to the HIGHEST Volume ! (it had allways Mocked my Christian music Zraido.com (it) would mock the raidios slogan In an irritating sing along ( Negative Hits) during that last contact (it) said (it) was listenning to the Z LIE!*
Indigoblue: Just have to face the facts that opposites attract… he (they) had what we were missing, and vice versa … now you know the rest of the story … be careful for what you ask for, you just may get IT (LOL).
Peace.
where did that come from????????
WHO said it????
It’s so hard to keep my mouth shut when I see the Sociopath slithering into places I know he’ll do harm.
Recently a very active church leader came to me with stars in her eyes, over the moon with joy because the Sociopath was going to help her establish an after school program at her church.
What could I say? This is the same good woman who asked me about his suitability for ministry previously. I told her he had a few good work habits, and some really unfortunate interpersonal problems. I told her SHE SHOULD GET A BACKGROUND CHECK! If she’d gotten the background check, he never would have gotten his foot in the door. But no, bless her sweet little heart. She prayed over it, then hired him. God save us all!
Now her church wants the S to spend even more unsupervised time with youth. Of course they do. He’s charming. I smiled and nodded. Then asked through gritted teeth, “Will the church be getting BACKGROUND CHECKS on the people participating in the after school ministry?
Their insurance requires this, for crying out loud! Why do these well intentioned people keep putting un-vetted ministry workers in contact with kids?
Warning to all: if your kids are participating in a church ministry, ASK them if they have gotten background checks on the youth ministry workers and volunteers. Too many well intentioned Christians think their church is somehow immune to tragedy, just because they’re well intentioned and pray their little hearts out over every candidate. It never occurs to these sweet, naive people that God gave them brains, and they should use this gift in His service. Simple background checks for ministry staff and volunteers would make church a much safer place for all.
Word to the wise: Sociopaths love to exploit congregations, and those congregations who still won’t vet volunteers and employees properly are a sociopath’s best bet. Never assume you or your children are safe, just because you’re in church. As long as congregations refuse to listen to their insurers, there will be Sociopaths in ministry.
Dear Elizabeth,
I AGREE 110%, but keep in mind that not all child abusers have been caught and have a record. I agree that they should completely do back ground checks.
One of the members of my living history group went to the pen for child porno, got out and got right back in, with few people knowing about his prison record or for waht. I raised holy hell ltil he was expelled and then got him fired from his job (WORKING WITH CHILDREN AT A MUSEUM) Now he is an “independent contractor” working with 4-H kids. I keep following him arouond when I can find where he is working and sending his bosses copies of his criminal record (that is not illegal, just PUBLIC INFORMATION DISTRIBUTION) but he still keeps on finding clients who do NOT check.
Even Charles “Jackie” Walls III of Arkansas (now in prison) for 20+ years and 1,500 victims in the boy scouts didn’t have a record until they finally arrested him after one of his “kids” was ordered to kill his parents because he told on Jackie. He killed them and got caught.
Does the S you are talking about HAVE A RECORD? If so, get a copy of it and give it to them. Good luck!
OXY,
Are you on here? A lady posted later last night under How can I help My Children Not Suffer. I think she needs someone to give her some suggestions.
Witsend: I just tracked down her story. Yes, I think she needs some immediate encouragement and guidance. I posted a couple of responses to get her name into the current postings.
Let’s watch for her.
And, I’m glad to see you. You are also in my prayers.
Dear OxDrover,
This man has no record of child abuse convictions that I’m aware of. He’s been accused several times, but even I am not sure he was guilty. He has a history of assaults, domestic abuse, assault convictions, restraining orders and incarceration for assault. He’s assaulted women as well as men. A simple background check would reveal to anyone security conscious that he is a bad risk.
He’s a textbook case of anti-social personality disorder, and he’s got the lifelong record to prove it. He is currently on pain management, and the narcotic pain relievers tend to effect his judgment. He’s charming, but interpersonally volatile.
There’s no reason to ramp up the drama in this case. I’d like to see the drama toned down considerably. If the church did background checks and vetted volunteers and employees according to their insurer’s guidelines, risk would be substantially reduced.
No drama – just common sense. That’s what I’m praying for. My church uses background checks for volunteers in contact with children. This is common sense.
This other church is full of very sweet, compassionate Christians. I like them, but their naiveté makes me nervous. The kids and I are involved with a few activities there. They are home-schooler friendly, and we are deeply grateful to them for their hospitality and home school co-op activities. We’d like to continue, but their carelessness with regard to background checks scares me.
They place great store on “reputation”, based on the gossipy, flighty, shallow insights of the evangelical churches in our area. Earnest and well-intentioned as this network is, it’s absolutely unreliable. They approve people with criminal records and smear people who’ve run afoul of their flamboyant leadership. As individuals, most of these people are quite bright. Collectively, they’re dumb clucks! They’ve made and covered up error after error, all resulting from their reliance on gossip and innuendo over background investigations.
If I sound cranky about this, it’s because I’ve seen this sweet bunch of dumb clucks blunder along, wondering why “bad stuff keeps happening” in their ministries. Sheesh! It’s a miracle they keep out of the national headlines, and equally miraculous they haven’t been sued yet.
Make some background checks already!