Sermons

Summary: I have read much about the 12 Steps found in drug treatment centers. This is one that I use that is based solely upon the Word of God and the Power of the Blood of Jesus to deliver. This is just a foundation and can be expanded upon in many ways.

Recovering from Addiction – A Work in Progress

By Pastor Jim May

One of the greatest weapons that Satan is using against mankind today is the power of addiction. He knows how we were made and what drives us, and he has been busy since the Creation of mankind, perfecting ways to control and dominate the hearts and souls of men. Addiction is a powerful force that takes hold first of the mind, then the body and ultimately the very soul of those who get caught up in it.

Addiction can come in many forms. Most of us when we think of addiction, we think of the cocaine, or heroine addict, or perhaps the alcoholic who staggers out of the bar, gets into a car and then kills some innocent victim on his way home. But addiction goes much farther than that.

According to New Scientist.com, a study by the National Institute on Drug Abuse and the National Institute on Alcoholism claims that drug abuse and alcoholism increased dramatically between 1991 and 2001.

The use of Marijuana, the mind altering and mood altering drug that many want legalized like tobacco, increased by over 18% during that decade. The rate of increase was much higher when separated into ethnic groups. The increase in marijuana use was 40% for Blacks and 54% for Hispanic people.

According to another source, LifeSite.net, “Pornography was compared to crack cocaine …when a US Senate hearing discussing the dangers of the addiction called on members to endorse a public health campaign warning of the dangers.”

According to an article in the New York Times, May 20, 2001, "There were 11,000 porn video titles last year [2000] verses 400 movie releases from Hollywood last year...[and] 70,000 pornographic web sites."

In case you haven’t noticed, the Internet has become the fastest and easiest medium to spread pornography, and now it is reaching down and taking hold of even of our youngest children because of sexual predators that lure them over the computer screen. Almost every day we hear of ministers, teachers, parents, doctors and people of all ages and every walk of life, whose lives have been ruined as a result of addiction to pornography.

But Alcohol, drugs and pornography are only the beginning. There are a lot more that we don’t hear as much about. Not much is said about nicotine anymore because it became an economic issue when cancer from smoking began to cost society so much. We are concerned about the social issues, worried about the moral issues, and cry about the destruction of families due to addiction, but when it starts hitting the wallet, well, that’s when we really get serious because we don’t want anything taking that “god” away from us.

There are a lot of groups operating right now who are trying their best to help people with the problems of addiction. I have heard of, and read about, many of the treatment centers in America, especially the drug rehab centers that are operated medically, where medication is used to help addicts overcome the effects of illegal drugs. The limited experience that I have had with these programs is that they help the addict overcome one drug but then he is still dependent upon another drug to stay free from the first drug. I also know that those whom I have known to go through these programs often tell me that they were able to get whatever drugs they needed even while they were in treatment and supposed to be protected from outside drug sources. I am no medical doctor so I won’t fault them for what they are trying to do. They are doing the best they can and I applaud their efforts, but the fact is that very few are really successful over the long haul in my experience.

I have also read much about the “AA” or Alcoholics Anonymous, including Al-Anon and AlTeen, groups that do all they can to help alcoholics of any age to overcome their addiction to alcohol. I have read about DA, or “Debtors Anonymous”, which is a program based upon the AA model that encourages fiscal, or financial, responsibility. It is intended to help those whose life has become unmanageable because of credit card debt and overspending. Then there is the GA, or Gambler’s Anonymous; a fellowship of men and women who share their experience, strength and hope with each other that they may solve their common problem and recover from a gambling problem. There is the NA, Narcotics Anonymous that directs its efforts at helping drug addicts. Then there is the OA, Overeaters Anonymous that offers a program of recovery from compulsive overeating.

It’s not just people with these problems that are addicts either. I am convinced that all sinners are “addicts” after a fashion because they are all addicted to sin and the ways of this world and cannot break free without divine intervention from Jesus Christ, the Son of God.

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Gregory Hogan

commented on Oct 5, 2006

Thank you for this sermon, I always appreciate the teaching of the 12-Steps in direct application to Christians. One other perspective on the 12-Steps in AA, is that not only are you to admit to a Higher Power, but you are to be absolutely honest. As I see Acts 17:27, if a person honestly reaches out to God, he will be found. Yes, mankind is idolatrous, because we substitute the truth of God for a lie. That can be done with any thing. But I see more people seeking the truth of the Loving Heavenly Father through AA and other addiction groups. We should build on then, not tear them down.

Aaron Polsgrove

commented on Jul 29, 2007

Brother James, Thanks for posting this powerful sermon. I used it in a Thursday night chapel service at a men's prison where I volunteer. We had about 60 men that night, and before service one of them told me he was sitting in the weekly AA meeting that takes place the same time as Thursday night chapel, and felt like he should go to the chapel service instead so he got up and left and came to this service to hear this message! I provided a hand out for each prisoner that listed the 12-steps along with the scriptural reference for each, and on the other side of the hand-out was the Promise to God. The Holy Spirit really showed up that night and many were blessed and I believe He will use this message to set many free from their addictions. Praise God!

Clayton Hall

commented on Jan 26, 2019

I think that possibly, Brother James, you need a little deeper understanding of the 12-Steps of AA. The literature of AA does not promote the idea that God, or as it has been distorted "higher power," is something that you can decide for yourself or create. AA literature makes it clear that there is only one God, "Remember that we deal with alcohol — cunning, baffling, powerful! Without help it is too much for us. But there is One who has all power — that One is God. May you find Him now!" ( Alcoholics Anonymous P.59 "How it Works." ). The Origianal founders of AA were Christian, thus it must be assumed, contextually, that when they wrote these words, "there is One who has all power, that one is God," they were referring to their God, Jesus. Men have distorted the intent of the founders of AA whose purpose was to restore man's relationship with their creator. AA affirms that alcoholism is a spiritual problem that can only be cured with God's help. See also, "Becoming Whole After Addiction" Clayton R. hall jr., PhD.

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