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.
Buzzibee,
You got it sister!
There is a big fat New age movement in Maui and that equates to some of the most lost people. While I do consider myself a believer in Christ, I have also spent many years in a very liberal area in the US. Before I moved to Maui, I got my Massage Therapy Diploma and used that to survive in Maui. I have been exposed to A LOT of New Age stuff… and I pick and chose carefully what I let in these days… especially after Maui. I understand what a spiritual darkness hangs over that area… especially among the mainland transplants that get swept up in this guru-foo-foo stuff.
The Bad Man wanted to go to the Unity Church in Maui a few times and I found it to be very creepy. It was nothing more than a “Me-fest” and I never once heard the words “Jesus” or “God” but I was invited many times to stare into the eyes of my neighbor and state “I love you.” BLECH!!!
While I love the Polynesian culture and their spiritual connection to the “Aina” (land), I noticed that the REAL local people were NOT at these New Age crapola workshops and Love-fests.
James,
I am glad you liked the article. It was sent to me by the Mother of a friend. My friend had mentioned what I had gone through. His Mother knew a woman who was being abused by her very relgious husband. She found the article I sent you and forwarded it to me wanting to know if it was the same thing. I read it and said, “Narcissim with a Religious Twist.”
It looks like in the article and I suspect the book, they completely miss the point that there is a personality disorder driving this and not an over zealous misinterpretation of the Bible.
Very sad. I can just imagine that these psychos are out there quoting scripture back and forth: One side trying to show the abuser how he is biblically wrong and the psycho quoting back his own version and interpretation of the truth.
All the while, it is being totally missed that this is someone that can not be fixed with a few Bible verses.
TrishNJ,
I have all but given up trying to share or get any understanding from anyone outside of LoveFraud. I find it to be too damaging to me and my relationships.
PEOPLE DO NOT GET IT…. THEY JUST DON’T!!!!
I accept that now.
I know I can put into words “what he did” but I can’t really put into words “how he did it.” When people hear what he did, all they can think about is what it wrong with me that I would put up with that.
We all have out pride and I hate look pathetic and stupid in front of people that I love and want to respect me.
You know how they sometimes have that clapping meter to measure how loud people are clapping on a TV show? When I try to explain to someone “what happened” it’s as if I can see an approval meter on their face and I can see the approval meter dropping fast right in front of me.
That is the visible measurement of people “not-getting-it” that you are seeing go across their face. If you want to see the approval meter go up, you can say, “Boy that was bad! But I sure learned a lot and I am moving on with my life!” Suddenly, you will see APPROVAL flash across their face! They will be SO proud of you… and you are also seeing relief as the burden to understand you is lifting.
This is just my opinion of course… it’s what I see around me.
Does anyone relate?
aloha-
I was just today thinking the same thing about another problem…but yes, I definetly agree…..MOST people do not care or want to empathize…they want the gossip but not the obligation to care.
I have given up looking or hoping for a friend. In the past I was a decent friend and found reciprociy little and far in-between. I am fortunate I have a good husband, but no family or friends to speak of.
I got in trouble looking for a friend to lean on (due to an issue I can’t really speak to with hubby- too detailed to mention, he knows of issue but it’s his so he can’t really speak on it objectively)…psycho acted as if they were a friend….and then months later when I finally mustered up the courage to express my feelings…I got one of those disemboweling out-of-the-blue psycho reactions.
I will never forget it, though there are a few moments I will never forget now…all bad. Horrible. After I admitted my vulnerability, my need….I was told I was insane. Psycho tried to convince me Iwas insane…tried hard.
So to your point Aloha- I have stopped trying and really, I am finding I write and read more. Life is better in my shell and safer.
Dear Aloha,
Absolutely, your analogy of the “approval meter” is definitely RIGHT ON!
I’m fortunate that I have family who “does get it” (my two sons) and friends who “do get it” that if I am really in need of a physical shoulder to cry on, I can have one (or at least on the telephone) but as for others, I’m with you and HWS, I don’t think they really WANT to be supportive, because that takes too much energy.
I read somewhere that most people have only 4 or 5 real friends. No matter how “well known” or “popular” people are, it seems that those people that most folks call “friends” are really pretty superfiscial acquaintences at best. We called them “fair weather friends” when I was a kid, because if bad times came they were GONE.
I’ve always felt that the people you are the closest to are not those that you “party” with anyway, but those people who were there when the BAD times came. Who were there for you when you went through the tough times.
Of course good friends also share the happy times, the good times, but I think what makes them so special is the bad times that they stay there with you for. One of the women I used to consider one of my CLOSEST friends, after my husband died simply said “well, just get over it”—and you know, that’s how she felt, I’m sure, but NOW I would never discuss with her the things I discuss with you guys, or let her know if I was “emotionally bleeding” because I NOW know that our friendship is very superfiscial and that she doesn’t want to discuss the deeper meanings of life or her feelings or mine.
I was there for her when she developed leukemia, in fact, I was the one who diagnosed it…and I was THERE for her the entire year she was in the hospital…but when the time came to support me, she was NOT there. That saddens me, but that happens some times. We give more to a friendship than when the time comes that we get back. For the most part, though, I have been very supported by the really good close friends that I do have, but even they from time to time get tired of listening, and that’s understandable unless they too have had a “personal” P experience.
For the “acquaintences” those I just say “I’m doing fine. How about those Cubbies?” LOL
HolyWater and OxDover,
I want to clarify. It’s not that I think people don’t want to understand or care… especially loved ones.
I think that they can barely get that there is something they are not getting. So, if we drop the subject, there is relief.
The more we labor the point that they don’t get it, the more we try to explain what happened, the more it sounds unfathomable that we would put up with such behavior, the more we prove to them that we are pathetic, the more they just can not wrap their heads around what it means to be duped or abused by a pathological partner! Whew!
(Here I go laboring over my points again… )
Anyway, I just never get any relief talking to anyone about this stuff. Never.
Except I do like to “talk” to people here. I think we live in a different reality… a more real reality. Getting here is a rough trip and there ain’t no goin’ back! HAHA!
XO E
There you go again creating another one of those awesome expressions, Aloha.
‘A more real reality’…..does it get any more realer than living your life with a PDI then in the aftermath, confirming to yourself through rigorous education, knowledge, constant self examination, finally learning the definition, the term to use for the PDI?
whew ditto.
Thanks Jane.
What is PDI? Is it Personality Disordered Individual?
Or Pathologically Disordered Individual?
I missed that day.
Yea, Aloha, I think a “more real reality” is definitely IT! LOL You really come up with some great ones!
I know what you mean about some people (even ones that DO love us) just can’t get their heads around the “why” of what was done and the “why” of why we put up with it.
You know, I actually used to be ASHAMED that I did put up with it. That is was some character flaw in me that made me do it. I realize now that I didn’t set appropriate boundaries, and I’m working on correcting that, but it isn’t a “character flaw” or something bad or stupid in me, but it sure FELT that way for a while.
IF (and I repeat IF) someone who knows me think I should be “ashamed” or that there was some “character flaw” in me is why all this happened, they it is THEIR problem not mine. The people that I love and I know love me, don’t impute a “character flaw” to me, but to the Ps for their behavior.
This wasn’t something that I did, or you did, or anyone else but THEY DID the bad deeds. It may not have been good judgment on my part to stay around as long as I did, but it wasn’t because I was BAD, it was the Ps who were and are the bad apples. I did not victimize them, and you didn’t victimize the Bad Man, it was the other way round. It is only now that I am finally I think getting rid of the feelings of the shame of it. Logically I didn’t think I should be ashamed but the feelings are not always subject to “logic”—at least not at first. (smile)
Aloha:
I do relate. I have causiouly spoke to a couple of co-worker friends about “my” S and have received those same looks. I have learned by watching faces how much I can reveal.
My closest girlfriend (have talked almost daily for the last twelve years of our twenty five year friendship) and I have spoke only three times since February. She recognised “my” S for a bad person (but not an S) almost immediately. I talked to her about him, she was helpful, but couldn’t understand why I wouldn’t /couldn’t take her advise and just stop seeing him. I called her the morning after her birthday to ask if she wanted to go to lunch. She was so upset with me that I didn’t recognise her the day before that she hung up. She blames the S. for it, and blames me because she assumed he was still in my life. She thinks I’ve changed the last two years, DUH!!!
Today is my second day with NC (again) and I need her and miss her more that anything. I wish she “got it”.