
The Yin and Yang of Mark Anthony Stephens
October 13, 2025On one day, Mark Anthony Stephens publicly declared that “the Holy Ghost will never inspire you to lie, gossip, steal, or ruin the reputation of others.”
The very next day, he posted a rant mocking his “crazy” wife — claiming she’s sleeping in his room and using his sound equipment.
Let’s pause there.
Mark has an active restraining order preventing him from contact or proximity to that home. So how would he even know what’s happening inside? Unless he’s violating the order, the answer is simple: he doesn’t. He’s making it up — because the post isn’t about truth; it’s about narrative control.
This is DARVO in motion: Deny, Attack, Reverse Victim and Offender.
- He denies the abuse that led to the restraining orders.
- He attacks the protected party through social media gossip.
- And then he reverses the roles — painting himself as the victim while the real victims are once again shamed publicly.
This is Mark’s digital pulpit: a self-made echo chamber where he masquerades as a victim of “false prophets” while practicing the very deception he preaches against.
Still “Married” — By His Own Design
Technically, Mark and Tori are still married. But only because Mark refuses to comply with discovery and participate in his own divorce. The marriage exists on paper solely because of his obstruction — a legal loophole he exploits to justify his ongoing obsession, commentary, and control.


He claims righteousness by status — “I’m still her husband” — but that’s not covenant. It’s possession disguised as piety.
If he truly believed the Holy Ghost was guiding him, he’d walk in humility, accountability, and truth — not spiritualized gossip and digital voyeurism.
Faith as a Weapon
Mark uses religious rhetoric like camouflage — quoting scripture while engaging in psychological warfare. It’s a pattern familiar to anyone who’s followed his posts: sermonizing by day, slandering by night.
He’s not preserving his marriage; he’s preserving his narrative — one where he’s always the misunderstood prophet, and every woman who leaves him becomes another “Jezebel” sent to test his faith.
When faith becomes theater and the Holy Ghost becomes a prop, truth is always the first casualty.
The Real Question
If, as Mark says, “the Holy Ghost would never inspire someone to lie, gossip, or destroy reputations,” then who, exactly, is inspiring him to do all of those things?