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The Twelve Steps for Christians
Submitted by UPmomof6 on Thu, 04/09/2009 - 18:35
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The Twelve Steps for Christians
Excerpt:
The Twelve Steps For Christians
A Path For Recovery
Compiled By Theologue
The 12-Step program is the path to recovery for Alcoholics Anonymous (AA). It has been adapted in many forms to help people who have been addicted to some substance or behavior.
Bill W. who determined that most alcoholics would listen to a recovered alcoholic before they would seek out help from medical or spiritual advisers or counselor formulated the 12 steps. “It takes one to know one”. AA then began as a personal one-on-one program to help those seeking recovery.
The mainstream Protestant and Catholic churches have long been supportive of AA proving meeting rooms and other support. Unfortunately many fundamentalist and ultra-conservative churches have dismissed 12-Step programs because they are not ‘religious’ enough and do not mention Jesus in its steps or literature.
The 12-Step program developed from principles of the Oxford Group1, a conservative Christian self-study and self-help movement within the church. The Oxford Group had high standards of Christian behavior and relied on the Sermon On The Mount as a ‘text book’ of doctrine.
Bill W. and the other leaders of the new AA program decided that many people shied away from their meetings because they were too fundamentalist, and the last thing a person in crisis wanted was to become involved in a extremely religious program. Furthermore the Oxford Group was ultra-conservative Christian in its views. Because of that many people with other religious persuasions (Catholics, Jews, and non-conservative Christians) would not associate with their group. It was decided to tone down the message in order to make the program so it would not be offensive make it easier to recruit members from any background.
As a result the final version of the 12-Step program became universal in its appeal, even though it mentions a “Higher Power” and God 6 times. It is an astonishing that the Steps are accepted by even the most ardent ‘skeptics’ of religious faith, even though the Steps require that one ‘turn our life and will over to the care of God”, admit and confess sins, pray to God, and follow the path to spiritual growth leading to a ‘spiritual awakening’!
Untold numbers of people have been freed from their addictions and sinful behavior and became believers by faith in God through the Steps. The Steps are recognized worldwide for its success as a recovery and faith based program. What more could anyone ask and how can anyone criticize such a successful program of a recovery?
The 12 Steps For Christians
Step 1. ADMISSION
We admitted that we are powerless over sin2 - that our lives had become unmanageable.
Step 2. BELIEF
We came to believe that a Power greater than ourselves could restore us to wholeness.
Step 3. SUBMISSION
We made a decision to turn our life and will over to the care of God, as we understood Him.