I have been around a few people who are totally uncivil and rude. They can and will manipulate anyone who gets in their way. A word has developed throughout the past 100 years to describe such a negative characteristic, and that is “Svengali.” Never heard of it; well, you are not alone. Some information on this type of uncaring, controlling evil person noted as follows:
Svengali is a fictional character of George du Maurier’s 1894 novel Trilby. Svengali would either fawn or bully and could be grossly impertinent. The word “Svengali” has come to be used as a common noun referring to a person who, with evil intent, controls another person by persuasion or deceit. The Svengali may use pseudo-kindness to get the other person to do what the Svengali desires. The word is also used frequently for any kind of coach who dominates a performer or for an unaccountable but influential adviser who has control of a politician or candidate. (Wikipedia).
A further definition is “one who manipulates or controls another as by some mesmeric or sinister influence.” A Svengali-type person is one who is intrusive and presumptuous. Such a one is brash, self-assertive and will deceitfully control people. (Several movies were made about Svengali; John Barrymore played Svengali in a 1931 movie.)
As I dwelled on the character of Svengali, my thought process started to think about a New Testament character by the name of Diotrephes found in 3 John. In my judgment, Diotrephes had many of the character traits of Svengali. Diotrephes with evil intent controlled and dominated brethren. The following is extracted, in part, from the James Burton Coffman Commentary regarding 3 John 9-10.
[Editor’ Note: Many are the congregations among the people of God wherein men have forgotten to Whom the church belongs (Romans 16:16) and that Jesus Christ is really the Head of it (Colossians 1:18). Not infrequently, elderships face such a disturbance, and commonly in the absence of elders, men’s meetings are riotous (1 Corinthians 1:10-13). It ought not to be so, especially when our Lord occupies His rightful place in Christians’ hearts and minds. ~ Louis Rushmore, Editor]“I wrote somewhat unto the church: but Diotrephes, who loveth to have the preeminence among them, receiveth us not” (ASV). “But Diotrephes…” This suggests that he might have been wealthy or of high social standing. With it, however, he was proud, arrogant and insensitive. “Who loveth to have the preeminence among them…” [The definition of preeminence is the quality or state of being superior, DRF.] This prideful and arrogant attitude of Diotrephes was the sin which disturbed the church to which the apostle wrote; but commentators, in some instances, cannot allow that this was the trouble. No! They believe that, Diotrephes’ radical intransigence was due… to theological partisanship. “Diotrephes could have been an elder who was determined to champion the autonomy of the local church.” All such evaluations of the root of the trouble are based upon blindness to the sin of Diotrephes (the true cause of the trouble) which John specifically mentioned. Could it be that “loving to have the preeminence” is not considered sinful in some circles? “Pride was his sin… and a violent jealousy.” One masterful, power-loving man in a church may work incalculable mischief and injury. He had slandered (one of the apostles)… and broken the fellowship of the church.
The Sin of Diotrephes It was through pride that Satan fell. It leads the procession of the things God hates (Proverbs 6:16f). Fellowship within the sacred fold of the church itself cannot prevail where the poison ivy of pride is enthroned. The spirit of Diotrephes not only rejected the authority of an apostle, arrogantly turned away the Lord’s missionaries from his gates, and slandered the apostle who sat next to Jesus and leaned upon his breast, but it in time placed a Diotrephes in the saddle of authority in every urban community on earth (in the rise of metropolitan bishops), and at last repudiated the word of all the apostles, making a man to be the head on earth of the universal church! Yes indeed, as Paul put it, “the mystery of iniquity” was already at work; and this little gem of a letter gives a close-up of the very tap root of the spirit of Lucifer. “There are six things which Jehovah hateth; Yea, seven which are an abomination unto him. Haughty eyes, a lying tongue, And hands that shed innocent blood; A heart that deviseth wicked purposes, Feet that are swift in running to mischief, A false witness that uttereth lies, And he that soweth discord among brethren.” (Proverbs 6:16-19 ASV)