<p>Soon after graduating from high school I joined a cult. I didn&#39;t know it was a cult at the time. I thought I was dedicating my life to Jesus bringing others into the Christian fold and helping feed starving children in an orphanage in Haiti. I thought I was making the best decision of my life.</p><p>At the time I had no idea that our pastor Stewart Traill was living a lavish lifestyle engaging in sexual improprieties with the &quot;sisters&quot;--they were half his age--and neglecting the orphanage in Haiti. By all appearances Stewart was one of us. He dressed in fatigues wore his hair long and unkempt drove around in church vehicles--usually used dented up Pontiacs--carried Bibles with him and spoke only of God. He also had an uncanny way of &quot;seeing the spirit in you.&quot; One almost felt naked in his presence like he could see the sin we didn&#39;t even know we were&nbsp;hiding the sin that was standing between us and God.&nbsp;Most of us believed he channeled the spirit of Elijah or John the Baptist prophets heralding the return of the Messiah.</p><p>So why did I leave? Why do others stay? The cult I was in didn&#39;t chain its devotees to their bunks or stalk them after they left; they didn&#39;t have to. Most members who physically left&nbsp;returned within a week on hands and knees begging to be forgiven and taken back as &quot;prodigal sons.&quot; Many members never left. They have been in the cult for over forty years now.&nbsp;They have no families no sex&nbsp;life outside of Stewart reject their biological families maintain an underfunded orphanage that has had its license revoked by the Haitian government and they do all this while supporting a leader who lives luxuriously in a multi-million dollar tax-exempt&nbsp;mansion in Florida. I can&#39;t answer for them. I can only say that I stayed because I believed that I was serving God with all my heart and soul. I didn&#39;t realize that the&nbsp;proceeds of my labor were going to support an overweight false-messiah belly-floating in his personal swimming pool somewhere in Florida.</p><p>When I walked away two years later I had two dollars to my name a bag stuffed with all my possessions and the spiritual conviction that I was making the worst decision of my life.</p>