For many years mental-health professionals dismissed scrupulosity as a symptom of neurotic behavior and treated it accordingly. Though not included as a specific entry in the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders, and although it has been long recognized by priests, rabbis, and spiritual directors, it has been only recently understood as a possible subtype of obsessive-compulsive disorder (OCD). Recent studies seem to suggest that approximately three million people suffer from OCD; it has been further asserted that approximately six percent of this group or approximately 180,000 people suffer directly with scrupulosity.
Our best available evidence seems to suggest that we might understand scrupulosity in two distinct manifestations: developmental scrupulosity and emotional scrupulosity. For the most part people who suffer with developmental scrupulosity are often able to trace the experience of scrupulosity to a specific time in adolescence during which they became excessively focused on sin and the consequences of sin. For still others who experience scrupulosity later as an adult it can often be traced to a powerful conversion experience, for example at the conclusion of the RCIA process (Rite of Christian Initiation for Adults). More often than not a person who suffers with developmental scrupulosity can experience relief if not a complete “cure” with the help of a kind and patient confessor. We might best understand developmental scrupulosity as the manifestation of a “tender conscience.” Emotional scrupulosity, on the other hand is a more enduring form of the disorder which generates intense emotional disturbances. The manifestation is considered as primarily obsessive when there is a persistent idea, image or impulse that a person views as intrusive and senseless. The person struggles and desires to rid themselves of this manifestation, often with no enduring success. The manifestation is considered as a compulsion when there is a repetitive action associated with the disorder that the person feels compelled to carry out. It is not at all uncommon that the person understands the compulsion to be senseless, i.e. the compulsive washing of hands, checking locks, repeating prayers, performing a specific ritual action associated with religious practice. When scrupulosity is emotionally rooted professional help is essential. It is not possible to pray yourself out of the experience of emotional scrupulosity and there is no patient or gentle confessor that can help you rationalize your behavior or experience. Prayer and of course a gentle confessor is important and useful, but behavior modification and some form of drug therapy is highly effective and required. We might best understand emotional scrupulosity as the manifestation of a distinct form of Obsessive-Compulsive Disorder (OCD).
Pictured: Fr. Thomas Santa speaks at a retreat in Australia.