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He Helped Start a Cosmetics Empire, Then Gave It Up to Be a Priest

May 20, 2026
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He Helped Start a Cosmetics Empire, Then Gave It Up to Be a Priest

Growing up in a farming community in California’s Central Valley as the youngest of five children, Scott Vincent Borba felt he was destined for more.

“I always wanted to be something bigger,” he said. In college, when he saw students driving Alfa Romeos and Porsches, he wanted a fancy car, too.

He went on to help start e.l.f. cosmetics, which has grown into a $3 billion company selling glow-reviving lip oil, makeup-melting cleansing balm and other products at Target, Walgreens and Walmart. He started his own brand, Borba, which made flavored water and gummy candies that promised to clarify and replenish the skin. He wrote two books about skin care and even recorded a song called “Skin Deep.”

But despite his outward success, he said, he was miserable. One night about 12 years ago, at a party at his newly renovated house in the Hollywood Hills, with his prized Aston Martin convertible parked outside, he looked around and questioned everything.

“What is life all about?” he recalled thinking in an interview. “Is it just about making money and partying and repeating, just trying to acquire, and then we die? And I said: ‘That’s why we’re created? That’s why I’m here?’”

Those questions led Mr. Borba, 52, on a remarkable journey, which he will complete on Saturday, when he is ordained as a Roman Catholic priest in the Diocese of Fresno, Calif.

Along the way, he has had to grapple with his old life as a high-flying beauty executive.

“Living a life that I brought everyone to vanity, trying to make little mini-Kardashians out of everyone, bringing them the products to make them look and feel like they’re part of the celebrity society, is the opposite of what God wants,” Mr. Borba said. He added, “It’s something that I’m going to have to live with penance throughout the rest of my life to know how I’ve affected the world in this one way.”

But Mr. Borba said he was truly fulfilled in his new life serving God. He said he had given up his possessions — his house, his Aston Martin, his Dolce & Gabbana coats and his suits by Gucci and Ralph Lauren, and has divested from his stocks and 401(k).

It was not an easy transition from the beauty industry to the clergy. At his first meeting with a vocations director, a priest who helps Catholics discern their calling, Mr. Borba said he showed up in a Hugo Boss suit, driving a Mercedes, ready to deliver his “pitch.”

“‘Oh my gosh, we have so much work to do,’” Mr. Borba recalled the priest telling him.

Mr. Borba was raised in a Catholic family in Visalia, Calif. As a boy, he said, he sold candy to his friends at “at a high margin,” and his father noticed his entrepreneurial spirit. He graduated from Santa Clara University, a Jesuit institution in the Bay Area, and in 2004, he helped to start e.l.f. — short for “eyes, lips and face” — as a budget-friendly brand after seeing women with luxury cars shopping for beauty products at dollar-stores around Los Angeles.

“I said, ‘That’s the opportunity,’” he recalled.

As the brand, now called E.L.F. Beauty, took off, Mr. Borba started Borba Skin Balancing Water, infused with what he called “crystallines” of vitamins, minerals and fruit extracts that promised to correct skin imperfections. Sephora sold them in refrigerators under signs marked “Drinkable Skincare,” and the actress Maggie Gyllenhaal was photographed holding a bottle. In 2007, he inked a deal with Anheuser-Busch to market and distribute the drinks. For the 2011 Golden Globe Awards, he said, he gave the actress Mila Kunis a $7,000 facial using crushed rubies and diamonds.

Alongside his hard work, Mr. Borba was also partying — until the party at his house where he had a “mystical experience” as he felt God and the presence of St. Michael the Archangel, and was shocked to see himself in a new light.

“I should have been dead from the horror of what I saw, and based on where my life was,” he said.

Mr. Borba kicked everyone out of the party, checked into a hotel and collapsed in tears. He moved out of his house and never returned.

“I remember saying to myself, remember crying: ‘This is not the man my dad and mother created me to be,’” Mr. Borba said. “‘This is not the man that God created me to be.’”

After a period of searching, he said, he found himself answering a call to the priesthood he had first felt when he was 10 years old.

In 2019, he joined a seminary in Oregon and then entered St. Patrick’s Seminary in Menlo Park, Calif. Some of the seminarians “thought I was a joke,” he said, because of his background in cosmetics.

The Most Rev. Joseph V. Brennan, the bishop of Fresno, said when he first met Mr. Borba about seven years ago, he had no idea about his experience in cosmetics. “I’d never heard of e.l.f. before,” Bishop Brennan said in an interview. “Honestly, not part of my experience or part of my world.”

But Mr. Borba, he said, had clearly had “a life-changing experience in terms of his faith,” and overcame some early challenges as a seminarian. After five years of study, he graduated from St. Patrick’s this month.

“His maturity and his business acumen and experience had a lot to do with that,” Bishop Brennan said.

On Saturday, when he is ordained as a priest, the Fresno Diocese will announce where Mr. Borba will serve as Reverend Borba. Mr. Borba said he was looking forward to counseling parishioners, celebrating the sacraments and serving God, who “actually beautifies us — beautifies us from the inside out.”

“In all of my success, and all of my opportunities in life, and all of all of the monetary gains I’ve had in my life, I have never been more happy,” he said.

Michael Levenson covers breaking news for The Times from New York.

The post He Helped Start a Cosmetics Empire, Then Gave It Up to Be a Priest appeared first on New York Times.

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