top of page

Deception is Everywhere: This is your guide to avoid being deceived!


Spiritual deception knows no boundaries. It crosses ethnic lines, has no economic barriers and

intersects all religions throughout the world. Spiritual deception is abuse in its rawest construct

and this abuse takes many forms: sexual, psychological, emotional, and financial (to name a

few). Whatever your religion or faith, you might just be in danger of being deceived.

Why you might not recognize spiritual deception

Most people I know spend very little time, if any at all, thinking about spiritual deception. In the

lineup of the day where there’s family, career, and everyday life, thoughts of being deceived by

a spiritual leader don’t make the grade. We regard our pastors, rabbis, minister, priests, etc.,

with high esteem and rarely consider that a time may come when we are forced to see them in

a different light. Sadly, many won’t recognize spiritual deception until they become a victim of

it.

▪ ▪ ▪ ▪

Many years ago, I was a member of a particular “Word of Faith” church. I was also employed

there full time. I was a new convert back then. Every first Sunday of the month was considered

“Super Sunday” and every member was required to give a $100 “seed.” Faithfully, I came

prepared with my check already written out. We had a guest speaker that Sunday, a famous

man named John Avanzini. The pastor gushed glowingly as he introduced “Brother” Avanzini

who was world renown for his ability to “break the power of debt.”

In a baritone voice, Brother John Avanzini gave testimony after testimony of the countless

people who had sowed thousands into his ministry and reaped a hundred-fold blessing that left

them with hundreds of thousands of dollars in their bank accounts. Debt had been broken from

their lives! As a young woman with a mortgage and a car note, I desperately wanted to be one

of the “anointed and highly favored” ones to reap the same reward.

At the time, I had three thousand dollars to my name. That was my life savings. My mouth was

dry and my stomach churned as I debated whether I had the guts to, as Brother John said, “take

a leap of faith.” He gave numerous biblical examples where people sowed their last seed and

reaped rewards, and by the time he got to the Scripture featuring the woman who gave the

“widow’s mite,” well by then, I too firmly believed that if I leapt, “the net would appear.” Into

the bucket went my $3K life savings. Sadly, the net in my case turned out to be the ground. I

landed loudly with a thud. Not only was I broke but days later, the same church that employed

me started giving out bounced payroll checks. I stayed for two more weeks, and when the

church’s next check to me bounced, I left and found another job.

In hindsight, I was a victim of financial spiritual deception because of my own naivety and blind

greed.

Although deception can subtly creep upon you, other times it can hit you like a ton of bricks as

Krystal Harper discovered.

“When I first heard the nature of the allegations, they were so shocking and unbelievable

that I thought, ‘NO WAY, NO HOW!’ That same day I went to work and one of my co-

workers suddenly thrust his cell phone in front of my face. On his phone, right before my

eyes, was a full frontal naked picture of my pastor… Even though I had just seen the

evidence with my own eyes, I still didn’t want to believe it!” ~ Krystal Harper

Krystal’s story is told in Deception in the Pews. However, as you can surmise, she was the victim

of emotional spiritual deception. Utterly devastated by the scandal that rocked her church

when her pastor’s naked pictures were plastered on the web by his mistress, Krystal came to

realize too late that her faith had been tied directly to her pastor. And when he fell short of his

calling, she found herself confronted with the knowledge that her faith should only be tied to

God, Himself.

Whenever spiritual con artists deceive the unsuspecting, whether it be sexual, psychological,

emotional or financial, spiritual deception leaves a host of wounded individuals in its wake.

Because of its propensity to destroy lives, the co-authors of Deception in the Pews are

determined to sound the alarm, to raise awareness that spiritual deception is real, that it

can wound people immeasurably and it can turn people away from religion forever.

Sadly, spiritual deception is one of the reasons why religion in America is on the decline. It is a

major factor in why we see so many empty churches with dwindling congregations.

The above are just two examples. Millions of other examples exist. Do you have one of your

own that you’re willing to share? If so, join the conversation, buy the book, get involved.

In closing, here are seven steps you can take to avoid being deceived:

  • Don’t automatically assume deception could never happen to you

  • Don’t assume deception could never happen within your place of worship

  • Study and develop your own personal prayer life

  • Avoid blindly believing and following— without examination — everything you are told

  • Avoid making a God out of your spiritual leader

  • Never make excuses for the bad behaviors of those in spiritual leadership

  • Recognize that no person, regardless of title or position, is perfect in all their ways


Featured Posts
Recent Posts
Archive
Search By Tags
No tags yet.
Follow Us
  • Facebook Basic Square
  • Twitter Basic Square

Deception in the

Pews

bottom of page