Christian Recovery Centers: Why Establish a “Christian Recovery Resource Center”?
Why Establish a “Christian Recovery Resource Center”?
By Dick B.
© 2011 Anonymous. All rights reserved
Five Values from, and Reasons for, Your Participation
Increased resources: Your own knowledge, program, and service to others will be substantially enhanced by the additional, comprehensive resources you will have in your own location.
Increased referral service to the addicted and otherwise-afflicted: In addition to conducting your own program, you can help others in your community find Christian and other resources such as assessment, intervention, detox, counseling, treatment, sober-living, homeless, public aid, job and educational help, and veterans assistance—things you may not now have or do.
Increased ability to refer to other centers which can provide help in an area you don’t serve: Already, there are many “Christian Recovery Resource Centers” established in the United States, Canada, and the United Kingdom—with more to come. You will know about these.
Increased networking ability with us and with other “Christian Recovery Resource Centers”: And this means by phone, email, and other means of communication; as well as by personal meetings, conferences, and seminars with experienced Christian leaders and workers in the recovery arena you will get to know and can trust.
New emphasis on overcoming the present Christian recovery barriers: Our resources that document the Christian origins of the recovery movement, the Christian upbringing of A.A.’s cofounders, and the highly-successful original Akron A.A. “Christian fellowship” recovery program; that provide a positive refutation of the propriety of nonsense gods and phony spirituality prevalent in recovery today; and that provide an ability to reach newcomers and their helpers with success information emanating from their own turf.
The key to this new project of the International Christian Recovery Coalition is better one-on-one cooperation between Christian Recovery Resource Centers; each one enhancing the other; each one more equipped with A.A. and recovery history and resources pointing toward a comprehensive, successful recovery program; and the ability to reach out beyond the Center’s own community to another community which can help the person in need. The concept is part of the growing International Christian Recovery movement which gained strong impetus with the founding conference at Mariners Church in Irvine, California in May of 1939.
Already, 23 Christian Recovery Resource Centers have been established since the project was begun January 1, 2011; and we fully expect that number to double by the end of the second quarter on June 30, 2011.
God Bless, Dick B., Executive Director, International Christian Recovery Coalition
Writer, Historian, Retired attorney, Bible student, CDAAC, and an active and recovered A.A. member with 25 years of continuous sobriety on April 21, 2011. Published 42 titles and over 500 articles on A.A. history and the Christian origins of the recovery movement.
Five conservative message movies that don't suck
I'm not going to sugarcoat it: we right-of-center types often have a tough time making competent message movies. And we tend to overpraise those few films that do get made because they are morally and/or politically to our liking. “But utility is a … Read more on Daily Caller
Overcast, light rain
Shepeard Community Blood Center will hold the Columbia County EMA Blood Drive on June 27 from 10 a.m. to 7 p.m. at the Evans Government Center Auditorium and at 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. at Columbia County Roads and Bridges in Appling. … Mosaic United … Read more on Columbia County News Times
Tags: united states, christian recovery, ational c