The father of El Paso shooter Patrick Crusius is a licensed professional counselor who wrote a memoir about his nearly 40-year addiction to drugs and alcohol — and claims he once spoke with Jesus.

On his website, Bryan Crusius bills himself as a mental health expert whose “mission is to bring the highest level of care possible to any who wish to be free from addictions, codependence, PTSD and trauma.”

His practice, based in Richardson, Texas, involves accupuncture, sound and energy healing and meditation with “tones of quartz crystal bowls and isochronic beats.”

In the 2014 self-published book “Life Enthusiasm: A Path to Purpose Beyond Recovery,” Bryan opens up about how his struggles with addiction cost him his marriages to his first wife and Patrick’s mother, Lori.

The 63-year-old dad of four said he fell into drug addiction in his teens and moved on to abusing pills, including Vicodin and those prescribed for ADHD.

“I was always the one daring everyone else to go over the top in the partying category by taking the extreme amounts of whatever we had, whether Quaaludes, alcohol, magic mushrooms, or something else,” he wrote in the book, according to the Daily Mail.

In one passage, he also claims to have spoken with Jesus.

“Christ greeted me with a smile. He pulled his robe aside again with his right hand to reveal the flaming heart of love and compassion. He addressed me thus: ‘Bryan, you have chosen the Path of the Heart,'” he wrote.

Bryan once set up a GoFundMe page for a guitar teacher and friend, Eric Keyes, who was shot by a “mentally ill person” in Denton in 2012. Keyes survived.

The two men met after the Veterans Administration referred Keyes to Crusius’ clinic for treatment for his post-traumatic stress disorder following the shooting, the Daily Beast reported.

“He does a lot of good work,” Keyes told the outlet.

Bryan and Lori split in 2011, when Patrick was 12 years old.

Bryan’s counseling license expires in February 2020, according to Texas Department of State Health Services records.