Introduction
Celebrate recovery is a biblical based treatment option that incorporates the 12-steps along with Bible verses that pertain to each step within recovery. This program began over 25 years ago, at the Saddleback Church with Pastor John Baker as the founder and now is available at over 29,000 churches worldwide (What is Celebrate Recovery?, n.d.). This treatment option does not endorse psychological theory and all meetings are held within churches (What is Celebrate Recovery?. n.d.). In addition to the 12-steps this treatment option follows eight recovery principles and everyone in the program is encouraged to go to one day long seminars that are meant to strengthen your road to recovery and help maintain abstinence …show more content…
Each letter at the beginning of the principles spells out the word “RECOVERY” and has a specific step or a set of steps it is meant to help with. The “R” is “Realize I’m not God” and this helps with step one, “E” and step two is “Earnestly believe that God exists, that I matter to Him and that He has the power to help me recover”, and “Consciously choose to commit all my life and will to Christ’s care and control” is step 3 and “C” (Celebrate Recovery’s Eight Recovery Principles, 2015). Four and five combine for “Openly examine and confess my faults to myself, to God, and to someone I trust”, while steps six and seven are “Voluntarily submit to any and all changes God wants to make in my life and humbly ask Him to remove my character defects (Celebrate Recovery’s Eight Recovery Principles, 2015). “Evaluate all my relationships and offer forgiveness” are the steps eight and nine principle, “Reserve a daily time with God in order to know His will for my life” (steps 10 and 11), and lastly step 12 rounds out the eight principles with “Yield myself to God to be used to bring this Good News to others” Celebrate Recovery’s Eight Recovery Principles, …show more content…
Both 12-step and Celebrate Recovery are based on a higher power or Christian based. They also rely on the 12-step approach as a means of structure in the programs and for the most part both groups of participants use the Bible as a means of helping them with those steps. 12- step and Celebrate Recovery do not believe in psychological theory and do not support the use of medication in helping the individual obtain sobriety. While most of the 12-step programs are Christian based, some are not and that is what those programs and SMART Recovery have in common. SMART Recovery and Celebrate Recovery also contain online components that are not found in the traditional 12-step model. Lastly, 12-step and SMART Recovery offer completely free services, where the Celebrate Recovery model is very pricey for the average