Most pastors and Christian
counselors have witnessed the zealot who has discovered liberty in
early sobriety and are immediate evangelists for immersion in the
recovery community – usually outside the walls of the church. In AA
circles we call this the "pink cloud”. Many pastors and church
leaders view this spiritually-based commitment to "outside” programs
as suspect, heretical or a threat to ones' spiritual development.
However, most of the concerns of the church are formed from
ignorance and embraced without sincere investigation.
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Consider these realities:
AA was founded by Christian men (see
Dick B's site) and rooted in the principles of the beatitudes.
The 12 Step movement is NOT
secular. Mention of the "Higher Power” in the Big Book of AA has
reference to total surrender of one's life ONLY to a Judeo-Christian
God. A personal, daily dependency on this God produces a spiritual
transformation, forgiveness from error, an embrace of divine mercy
and grace, the constant exercise of gratitude and worship, healing
and a "daily reprieve” from the sentence of death. (See "To the
agnostic” chapter of the Big Book of AA.)
AA's elimination of the person of
Jesus, Buddha, Mohammed and other specific religious leaders was a
calculated decision on the part of the early Christian leaders of
AA. They declared their mission was to stop short of becoming a
theologically-based program so as to, 1) attract the greatest
company of those desiring recovery and, 2) allow the church to "be
the church”, offering discipleship to tender souls who are open,
contrite and desperate to grow in their relationship with their God.
The Big Book of AA challenges the
reader to beware of having "contempt before investigation” when it
comes to spirituality. While most addicts have a mal-formed or
abusive concept of the church and of Christians, this step is
critical to their openness to faith. On the other hand, the church
would do well in withholding judgment of the spiritual maturity (or
immaturity) of a recovering person's spiritual understandings.
The process of withholding judgment
of a recovering person's spiritual formation requires both patience
and a deeper faith in the unpredictable timing and role of the Holy
Spirit. The emphasis then is on a sanctification process based on a
personal journey that has no schedule, format or "look”. The
conversion becomes one of repentance ("turning around”) toward a
specific DIRECTION rather than an immediate one-time DECISION.
The Great Commission does not
challenge the church to "sign up” souls but to make disciples of
human beings. Church leaders in the ‘40's and ‘50's, amazed at the
hope and spiritual vitality among 12 Step people, declared
Alcoholics Anonymous as "the greatest spiritual movement of our
generation”. With untold millions around the world who have been
quietly delivered from a sure death sentence, their claim requires
consideration.
Lastly, the church may be missing
out on one of the greatest opportunities for harvest among these
"hidden peoples” within the very shadows of their own buildings
(both within and without!) by not playing their intended role in
partnership with AA and the 12-Step movement.
May we
embrace the courage, the sensitivity and the vision to bring the
Savior's Grace to those most broken and desperate for His mercy and
our loving Christian communities.
"I
don't think there can be a better program than those offered
by Pacific Hills. The programs are without a doubt ones
that take hopelessness and turn it into miracles. The
staff has what it takes to turn lives around, and the end
result is truly a miracle. I watched the
video on your website and continue to watch it
everyday. I know every word by heart, and every word
that is spoken is the absolute truth." It all started
with a phone call to the information
help line.