HomeNewse.l.f. Cosmetics co-founder Scott-Vincent Borba, 50, gives up career to become a...

e.l.f. Cosmetics co-founder Scott-Vincent Borba, 50, gives up career to become a Catholic priest

e.l.f. Cosmetics co-founder Scott-Vincent Borba, 50, gives up career to become a Catholic priest

Scott-Vincent Borba, e.l.f Cosmetics co-founder, will be ordained a priest on May 23, 2026, in the Diocese of Fresno, California. 

The internationally famous cosmetics executive, who before age 30 had spearheaded successful business campaigns for some of beauty’s biggest brands, including Neutrogena, Sebastian, Joico, Murad and Hard Candy, is now a Deacon after giving up his career for the religious life. 

At age 50, seminarian Scott-Vincent Borba says he doesn’t consider his to be a late vocation. 

“God called me at age 10,” he told OSV News. “I just accepted late.” 

Now in his pastoral year at St. Patrick’s University and Seminary in Menlo Park, Borba chuckled as he recalled how he drove a luxury car and wore an expensive black suit to his first meeting with his vocation director.

“(The director) opened the door, looked at me and said, ‘I have got a lot of work to do on you,’” recalled Borba, who is studying to be a priest for the Diocese of Fresno. 

Besides being an internationally famous cosmetics executive which made him a household name, Borba even developed his own eponymous brand of skin-balancing water, with Anheuser-Busch signing on for a marketing and distribution deal. 

He had several books to his credit, such as “Skintervention” and “Cooking Your Way to Gorgeous.” 

Borba also modeled as a youth, was an esthetician to the stars, and even gave actress Mila Kunis a $7,000 facial — using microcrystals from diamonds and rubies — for the 2011 Golden Globe awards. 

He’d had an office in Beverly Hills, a beach house not far away, and a social life that included parties with Paris Hilton and millions in the bank. 

However, amid what seemed to be a nonstop wave of fortune and fame, he was miserable. 

“I was at a party and I was very, very unhappy,” Borba told OSV News. “I just felt like I was empty and I was empty. I was exhausted. I was burning the candle on both ends.” 

Right on the spot, Borba looked up to heaven. 

“I said, ‘God, if this is life, where all you do is work and party and do that all over again and di£, then this is not the life that I think that you have made for me. But I can only change if you help me,’” he recalled. 

In response, Borba experienced a sudden conviction about his worldly ways, the reality of sin and hell, and God’s power to save. 

“I said, ‘Help me … I don’t want to do this (anymore),’” Borba said. “I was sincere about it and asking for God’s help, (and) he gave me my conversion. … It was God’s grace all over me.” 

Subsequently, Borba packed his bags, left his house and checked into a hotel. 

“I just didn’t want to be at my house anymore,” he said. “Everything reminded me of sin. … I was telling God, ‘I am so sorry for having ever offended you.’” 

Over the next few years, he moved away from Los Angeles and began divesting himself of his wealth — in stages, Borba admitted. 

“At that point, God called me to give up everything, and I thought that meant just my cars,” he said. “So I had an Aston Martin convertible, and I said, ‘All right, Lord, I’m gonna sell this car, give the money to charity, and then use some other money to get myself a truck.’ Then he said, ‘Give it all up.’” 

Borba said the Virgin Mary has been instrumental in his vocation journey. 

Borba recalled how after a particular childhood prayer intention was answered favorably following a rosary he prayed, he “asked Mary to stay with me, to keep me and to hold me throughout my entire life. 

“I know that our Blessed Mother has brought me into this vocation because of her love for me and for her Son,” said Borba. 

Even when he headed to Los Angeles after college to seek worldly success, Borba — who had then lapsed in his practice of the faith — still instinctively sought to connect with God. 

On the drive there, “God gave me the grace to turn off my radio, roll down my window and scream out to him, ‘Father, Father, please help me achieve some of my dreams. And upon achieving those, I will give you back my life and service,’” said Borba. 

Now, Borba — who left those dreams behind at age 40, and entered the seminary at 42 — is making good on that promise. 

“I have never been happier. I have never been more full of joy,” he said. 

“With everything the world can give me, I would give it back a million times over to be united to Jesus.”

Don't miss out!
JOIN OUR NEWSYPEOPLE COMMUNITY!

Our newsletter gives you access to a curated selection of the most important stories daily.

Invalid email address
Eyewitness? Submit your stories now via social or Email: [email protected]
Copyright © 2024 Newsypeople.com All rights reserved. The information contained in Newsypeople.com may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed without the prior written authority of Newsypeople.com.
RELATED ARTICLES
- Advertisment -
- Advertisment -

Most Popular

- Advertisment -
- Advertisment -




Verified by MonsterInsights