Mega Holy
When federal authorities arrested televangelist David E. Taylor last month on charges including forced labor and money laundering conspiracy, they uncovered something even more chilling: allegations that he encouraged his followers to hurt themselves and police officers. This isn’t just another scandal about a crooked preacher. It’s a window into how evangelical authority structures can spiral into psychological abuse that secular mental health professionals would immediately recognize as dangerous—but that gets camouflaged as “spiritual warfare” or “testing faith.” Think about it: Taylor didn’t allegedly tell his followers to commit random acts of violence. According to reports, he specifically targeted their capacity for self-harm and harm to authority figures. That’s textbook cult manipulation, designed to break down followers’ ability to seek outside help or trust their own judgment. The really insidious part? This kind of escalation doesn’t happen overnight. It builds on evangelical culture’s existing emphasis on “dying to self,” “spiritual authority,” and viewing secular institutions (including police and mental health services) as potentially hostile to “true faith.” Taylor allegedly weaponized these common evangelical concepts. Here’s what secular psychology knows about this pattern: When religious leaders encourage followers to distrust their own instincts, question secular authorities, and view suffering as spiritually beneficial, they’re creating perfect conditions for abuse. Mental health professionals are trained to spot these red flags immediately. But evangelical culture often frames these same warning signs as marks of deep spirituality. “He’s calling us to radical obedience!” “We need to trust God’s anointed leadership even when we don’t understand!” “The world will persecute us for our faith!” The forced labor and money laundering charges are serious enough. But the allegation about encouraging self-harm reveals something deeper: how evangelical authority structures can become vehicles for psychological manipulation that would be immediately identified as abusive in any secular therapeutic context. Licensed therapists and counselors are bound by ethical codes that require them to prioritize client wellbeing and report dangerous situations. They’re trained to recognize when someone is being manipulated into self-destructive behavior. Religious leaders? Not so much. This case shows exactly why professional mental health care consistently produces better outcomes than “biblical counseling” when people are struggling. Real therapists don’t have financial incentives to keep clients dependent, don’t claim divine authority over their decisions, and are legally required to act in their clients’ best interests. Taylor’s arrested status means his specific operation is shut down. But the underlying evangelical framework that enabled this alleged abuse—the emphasis on unquestioning submission to spiritual authority, the suspicion of secular institutions, the valorization of suffering—remains intact across thousands of churches. Former members of high-control religious groups consistently report that recovery required working with licensed mental health professionals who understood manipulation tactics, not with religious counselors who might inadvertently perpetuate the same authoritarian dynamics. The real tragedy isn’t just what Taylor allegedly did. It’s how evangelical culture’s normal operating procedures created the perfect environment for psychological abuse to flourish while making it nearly impossible for victims to recognize what was happening to them. Source: Christian Post [https://www.christianpost.com/news/david-taylor-allegedly-urged-followers-to-hurt-themselves-police.html]
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