Celebrate Recovery Review
Celebrate Recovery Review
Celebrate Recovery Review
Paul Stark
March 2004
Materials
Leader’s guide, 20-minute Leader’s Introductory Video, 8 audio cassettes of Rick Warren’s
“Road to Recovery” sermon series, Sermon Transcripts (in print and on 3.5” floppy diskette),
Participant’s Guides 1-4, Leader’s Guide on 3.5” floppy diskette,
Leader’s Guide
This is a well-done, professionally produced curriculum that covers
preparation, implementation, and maintenance of the program. Content includes
forwards by Rick Warren and primary curriculum author John Baker, the 8
recovery principles based upon the 8 beatitudes of Christ, a slightly
customized/modified Twelve Steps and their biblical comparisons (according to
Baker), i.e., scripture references, 8 chapters with 25 lessons for working the eight
principles (designed to last 12 months), and a 23-page appendix containing
numerous reproducible promotional materials. Every principle concludes with a
testimony germane to the lesson content. The first letter of each word in each
principle forms the acrostic, RECOVERY. Additionally, almost every lesson has
its own acrostic. The introduction includes a detailed and helpful “90-day kickoff
strategy”, “seven keys to start your recovery ministry and keep it growing”, and
“meeting formats and materials”. Meetings are designed to meet once weekly and
last for two hours. Baker and Zondervan have done an admirable job with this
guide. It is a comprehensive manual, well presented from start to finish,
facilitating strategic implementation by any organized church, and well-guided
direction for individual leaders throughout.
Participant’s Guides
All four guides devote the first 13 pages to Warren and Baker‟s forwards,
the eight principles, the Twelve Steps and their biblical comparisons, and
Reinhold Niebuhr‟s serenity prayer. Every lesson in each of the four guides
begins with the corresponding beatific principle and step.1 Every lesson contains a
Think About It section followed by a Write About It section. The Think About It
section is didactic, replete with scripture, albeit almost exclusively from
paraphrased translations. The Write About It section consists of a series of
questions designed to reinforce the material covered in the Think About It section.
Many lessons make use of acrostics to reinforce the lesson theme. Some early
lessons contain evangelistic components for those not saved.
1
The 25 lessons are distributed among the modified/customized Twelve Steps. The modified/customized
Twelve Steps are distributed among the 8 principles. Hence, all twelve steps except one correspond to more
than one lesson.
Introductory Video
Baker dominates this video with his testimony, apparently designed to
motivate CR program leaders.
Audio Cassettes
Eight sermons from Rick Warren‟s Road to Recovery series delivered at
Saddleback Church. These sermons are delivered in typical Rick Warren
conversational style. Paraphrased translations are used throughout. Sermons
include testimonies with speakers identifying themselves as “in recovery”,
alcoholics or addicts, and unabashedly confessing belief in the disease concept of
addiction.
25 Lessons on Diskette
The leader‟s guide in MS Word format.
Content Evaluation:
The idea in this principle is surrender of life and will. The acrostic,
TRUST, is used to help facilitate this. CR does a good job of conveying the
importance of surrender, despite the use of numerous AA slogans. Lesson 6
contains an explicit evangelistic opportunity.
Lessons 16-18 are dedicated to AA‟s steps eight and nine, which deal with
listing people harmed as a result of addiction and making direct amends to them.
Amends are compensation for a loss or injury.2 The “Golden Rule” is invoked to
2
Merriam-Webster, I. Merriam-Webster's Collegiate Dictionary. 10th ed. Springfield, Mass., U.S.A.:
Merriam-Webster, 1996, c1993.
The lessons deal with the process of making a list of those harmed, and the
appropriation of forgiveness and grace. After being taken through the methodical
process of making the list, participants are told that taking the steps of
forgiveness3 with release residual guilt and shame. Finally, a basic teaching on
grace is given: it‟s free, received by faith, characterized by God‟s love, paid for
by Christ, and lasts forever.
A footnote early in lesson 19 states that the Step4 will be emphasized more
than the Principle, and so it is. Practical advice is offered for monitoring “good
and bad behavior”, primarily through the use of a journal. Participants are told to
look for negative patterns in their journal entries, share them with their sponsor,
and erect action plans to overcome them, with God‟s help. Principle 4‟s moral
inventory is augmented by the stated need for "an ongoing inventory”, “a daily
inventory”, “a periodic inventory”5, and a daily action plan.
Lesson 21 covers the important issue of relapse. The deterrents given are,
daily prayer and Bible reading, attending recovery meetings regularly, spending
time with family, and getting involved in service6. Although this lesson correctly
exposes relapse as preceded by temptation, the tools offered are far from practical.
Temptation is not explicated, and the usual suggestions to pray and read the Bible
are given. I would have preferred a full discussion of what the Bible says about
why Christians stumble7 and what it says about preventing it.
This lesson seems to fit uncomfortably with the rest of the curriculum.
Baker never explains what “getting stuck” is, although he does elaborate on the
term by rephrasing it as, “getting bogged down”. All seven reasons are failure
statements. They begin, “You have not…” (5x), “You are not…”, and “You are
afraid…”. This lesson appears to be targeted toward avoiding relapse, but I had to
wonder why it was not included in the relapse lesson.
Meetings
The program then transitioned to small groups. I attended the group for
“Chemically Dependent Men”. The literature advertises that a trained facilitator
leads each group. The training actually consists only of having successfully
completed the CR program. Four men, including the leader, attended the group.
They all used the classic AA style of introduction, introducing themselves by first
name only, then stating that they were both Christians and addicts. The group
discussed only their 12-step progress. Two of four had been drug free for only 30
days. One stated he had been stuck on Step One for several years. Another stated
it took him 2-1/2 years to reach 30 days of sobriety. All monologues were in 12-
step recovery language. The AA rule of no crosstalk was enforced. The Bible and
Jesus were only alluded to. One man presented another with a Narcotics
Anonymous 30-day keychain (honoring 30 days of sobriety). Neither the CR
Leaders‟ Guide nor the Participant‟s Guide was used during the evening.
Observations
This is a noble strategy, albeit not a traditional means of proclaiming the gospel.
Baker offers no commentary on the degree to which conversions have occurred as
a result of this strategy.
9
Repentance and faith (belief) are bound together in one piece (not tempo rally successive acts). To
“repent” (metanoeō; cf. Mark 1:4) is to turn away from an existing object of trust (e.g., oneself). To
“believe” (pisteuō, here pisteuete en, the only NT appearance of this combination) is to commit oneself
wholeheartedly to an object of faith. Walvoord, J. F., R. B. Zuck, & Dallas Theological Seminary. The
Bible Knowledge Commentary : An Exposition of the Scriptures. Wheaton, IL: Victor Books, 1983-c1985.
For example, many children are brought up having been told by their parents,
“Children should be seen and not heard”, or “Don‟t speak unless spoken to”. This
is the idea behind Haaken‟s comments.
10
Janice Haaken, Beyond Addiction: Recovery Groups and “Women Who Love Too Much”, Free
Associations 3, 1992, pp. 102-104.
In his testimony early in the leader‟s guide, Baker states, “I had finally hit
my bottom”. “Hitting bottom” is the recovery industry‟s big bang theory. It is the
suggestion that something comes out of nothing. The idea that the further one
plunges into oblivion the greater the likelihood of discovering a resource to break
free is naïve. Bottom for many is death. Also, if someone has the mistaken idea
that they must hit bottom before they can break free, there is the risk that they will
accelerate the plunge in an attempt to reach this point sooner, thereby greatly
increasing the risk of death. I found Baker‟s repeated use of AA vernacular
perplexing.
The primary problem with the twelve-step model, and to a large degree,
the CR model, is that a preponderance of attention is directed toward changing the
will. Christians who are addicted are not in spiritual bondage (Romans 6). Rather,
they are caught in a spiritual stronghold. The locus of a spiritual stronghold is in
the mind. Hence, battling the will is fruitless for the believer since he is no longer
held in bondage. In bondage, choices are ultimately controlled by Satan (2 Tim.
2:26). Once saved, the Spirit opposes Satan and the desire of the flesh. In bondage
(unsaved), the think-feel-act process is corrupted. Since one‟s thinking emanates
from faulty reasoning, flawed logic, pretensions, human philosophy, and empty
deception, feelings are necessarily contaminated. Considerable behavioral control
belongs to the enemy. Once one‟s thinking is illuminated in redemption, Satan
must abandon manipulating and coercing at the level of the will and focus his
efforts toward operating at the level of thinking. Since the spiritual battle is taking
place in the mind, a good curriculum must give considerable attention to this.
11
Linda Mercadante, Victims and Sinners: Spiritual Roots of Addiction and Recovery, Westminster John
Knox Press, 1996, pp.162-163.
12
Several attempts were made to contact Saddleback‟s CR staff in an attempt to ascertain their definition of
addiction, and if they had any indication of CR success (aka, “treatment outcomes” in clinical settings). No
response was ever received.
This is the strongest support group curriculum I have seen. The team of
Warren, Baker, and Zondervan has produced a very professional product. Its
potential is significant, but its foundational adaptation of the twelve-step/disease
model will impede its success. Because nothing else of its caliber exists,
especially with the support and endorsement of Rick Warren, and because of the
conspicuous paucity of scholarly commentary on the nature of addiction, many
churches will use it.