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AMERICA, Vol. 136: 458-461, May 21, 1977 SPIRITUALITY,
RELIGIOSITY AND ALCOHOLISM
by Joseph H. Fichter
One
of the most persistent generalizations we heard in our
interviews at alcohol treatment centers, and with alcoholics
themselves, is that religion has failed to help the alcoholic,
but
that the effort to regain and maintain sobriety requires
some
degree of spirituality. "Religion" in this context
means churches
and clergy and congregations. "Spirituality" means
a relationship
with God a recognition of His supportive power and a dependence
on it. In terms that are perhaps oversimplified, we may
say that
the recovering alcoholic tends to bypass the whole structure
of
organized religion and to appeal directly to the "Higher
Power"
that can keep him sane and sober.
The
Failure of Religion
While
our study focuses on alcoholic clergymen, we could not
help but learn that the typical alcoholic lay person has
most
often been "away from the church" for a considerable
period prior
to admission to a rehabilitation center. As one recovering
alcoholic remarked with some bitterness: "Where was
the church
when I needed help? All I got was a scolding and advice
to say my
prayers. The priests said all I needed was will power and
backbone. The parishioners turned me off as a no-good bum.
That's
what I was; and that's why I had to have help."
Rehabilitated
alcoholics who were raised as members of one of
the Christian denominations almost always make a distinction
between the God of the churches and the Higher Power of
Alcoholics
Anonymous. They say that the God they knew was judgmental,
harsh
and forbidding, whose representatives on earth preached
fire and
brimstone from their pulpits. Both the clergy and the laity
in the
parish rejected the excessive drinker because he was not
leading a
good Christian life. We must remember not only that this
is the
picture of organized religion through the eyes of the alcoholic,
but also that the active alcoholic notoriously blames others
for
his predicament.
This
negative view of religion and of the God of the churches
is questioned by a priest who has 16 years of sobriety and
a
full-time apostolate among alcoholics, and who probably
knows as
many alcoholics as anyone in the field. He is convinced
that this
concept of the judgmental God of organized religion is a
kind of
"party line" that spreads among Alcoholics Anonymous
people and is
picked up by the newcomer to A.A. meetings. He sees it as
a
stereotype that reinforces the official A.A. position of
nonalignment with any church and thus focuses attention
on the
nondenominational character of A.A. spirituality.
There
are some self-proclaimed atheists who have regained
sobriety at rehabilitation centers, or in Alcoholics Anonymous,
who did not accept and practice any religion while they
were
active alcoholics, and do not do so now. Certain of these
people,
however, while remaining agnostics, develop a notion of
a "power"
outside themselves that seems to help them maintain sobriety.
They
are unwilling to say that God is helping them, and they
want
nothing to do with any church. Their continued rejection
of
organized religions is apparently based on their own definition
of
God and their own conception of Christianity and its churches.
While
the alcoholic lay person tended to drift away from the
church, the alcoholic clergyman stayed within the church,
tried to
maintain his position and to continue his ministerial functions.
Nevertheless, when he finally came to a treatment center
he often
expressed deep resentment against the church. Almost invariably,
however, this resentment is directed at a specific church
official, bishop, chancellor, dean, senior vestryman, rector
or
other religious superior. It is typical of the active alcoholic
to
place the "blame" on something outside himself:
the lay person, on
the church; the clergyman, on the church official.
The
Church Solution
Does
this widespread attitude of repudiation, anger and
resentment represent valid evidence that organized religion
has
failed in the rehabilitation of alcoholics? Perhaps the
question
had best be asked in a positive fashion. What has been the
church's approach to the problem of alcoholism? Most of
the
religious sects and some of the larger denominations,
traditionally taught that drinking alcoholic beverages in
any form
and amount is essentially an evil act. Other churches -
like the
Catholic, Episcopalian, Lutheran and Orthodox - condemned
intemperence, or excessive drinking, as sinful.
In
either case, the approach to alcoholism has been negative
and moralistic. There is moral danger in alcohol, and the
best
thing to do is to stay away from it. The "pledge"
is a promise not
to drink at all, and for a long time it was the only solution
that
pastors had to give their excessively indulgent parishioners.
The
pledge was also seen as preventive medicine. It was taken
voluntarily by thousands in the Irish tradition of the Pioneers
and in the American tradition of the Woman's Christian
Temperance Union. In some dioceses and religious orders,
the
pledge was imposed on newly ordained priests and deacons,
usually
to be observed for a period of five years.
There
is no accurate information on the effectiveness of the
pledge when administered to active alcoholics, but there
are many
rectory stories about the drinkers who had to take the pledge
repeatedly. Nevertheless, in its efforts to promote abstinence
from alcoholic beverages, organized religion unquestionably
prevented many people from succumbing to the illness of
alcoholism. Preaching about "demon rum" and its
horrendous
consequences gave many people the motivation and moral strength
to
avoid this alcoholic pitfall of iniquity, but it had little
success in rescuing the person who was already at an advanced
stage of alcoholism.
For
evidence, one need not look only at the rescue missions
on skid row, which produce relatively few reformed drunkards,
but
where religion is the chief instrument of salvation from
drunkennes. The overwhelming majority of alcoholics are
not on
skid row. They are people in the mainstream of society who
are
likely to have had some contact with organized churches.
When they
are active alcoholics, they are simply turned off by pulpit
condemnations of drinking and by exhortations to regain
their
self-control.
If
organized religion is the bastion of virtue and the
bulwark against intemperance, how is it possible that alcoholism
strikes some of its best people, ministers and priests,
religious
sisters and brothers? All of the preventives and safeguards
are
there: prayer, meditation, religious training, theological
and
ethical knowledge. Despite this moral and cultural and protective
environment, there have always been some cases of alcoholism
among
the church professionals. We have no exact information from
the
past about the extent of this problem. Indeed, even at the
present
time, we have only vague estimates of the incidence of alcoholism
among church personnel.
Again
the question arises: How has the church handled these
unfortunate people? One priest testifies: "Driven by
recurring fits
of remorse, guilt and depression, I sought help from doctors,
and
from priests in confessionals, time and time again - to
no avail.
Retreats, prayer, acts of self-denial, abstention from alcoholic
drinks for periods of time, rest homes, geographic changes
- nothing worked."
One
ecclesiastical solution to the problem is to get rid of
the alcoholic clergyman: Give him a warning or two, change
his
assignment a few times, then release him from all assignments
and
finally expel him from the ministry. This process of getting
rid
of the problem is much quicker in those churches that teach
drinking is a sin than in those that teach moderation and
temperance. We have no reliable data on the number of ex-clergymen
who have moved out of the ministry, or have been removed
because
of alcoholism.
A
second ecclesiastical solution has been the traditional,
moralistic approach to wrongdoing: contrition, repentance
and
reform of life. One of our interviewees told us: "I
wracked up a
car. The police caught me. I was a public scandal. I was
sent to a
treatment facility for punishment." In the days before
there were
easily available alcohol units and treatment centers, the
alcoholic clergyman could be sent away to some monastic
"reformatory" or house of correction. The penitent
alcoholic was
to reform his life through regular prayers and pious devotions
and
through all the religious practices that would fortify his
spiritual life and keep him off the bottle.
The
third ecclesiastical solution has been applied by church
officials reluctant to dismiss their alcoholic clergymen
but also
baffled that the usual spiritual and religious practices
do not
succeed in arresting the alcoholism. Often they turn elsewhere:
to
medical doctors who are asked to provide a cure, to psychiatrists
who are expected to find and remove the emotional and
psychological causes of alcoholism. The bishop who pursues
this
policy is unwilling to accuse his man of sin, nor does he
want to
admit that he is an addict. He is sure that something else
is
"troubling" the priest and that this is what makes
him drink too
much.
Continuing
Performance
The
lay person who is an active alcoholic usually breaks away
from religious practices, attendance at worship services,
participation in group prayer and public devotions. It seems
a
remarkable fact that this is not the case with the active
alcoholic clergyman. One recovered priest said: "Many
times I read
my breviary when I would have been better off not to bother
with
it, because I was drunk reading it." Priests often
pride
themselves that they showed up for their scheduled Mass,
no matter
how "hung over" they were. One bishop quoted a
lady who reported
to him: "When Father Murphy was here, we had Mass every
day - drunk or sober."
The
determination of alcoholic religious personnel to remain
functional should not be surprising. After all, religion
is their
occupation and, like men in other occupations and professions,
they struggle to maintain their role despite an increasingly
debilitating illness. In our survey of recovering alcoholic
clergy
we found that even though half of them said they "often"
or
"sometimes" suffered blackouts, three-quarters
of them also said
that they were able to perform their regular work "very
well" or
"fairly well."
In
many cases there is self-deception among men who think
they are getting away with it when they are "too sick"
to do their
job and some other priest covers for them. As they become
more
impaired, and if the alcoholism is allowed to continue,
there
occur instances that cannot be covered up or explained with
some
other excuse. Stumbling into the pulpit to give an incoherent
sermon, appearing before a Bible study group in an alcoholic
haze,
performing a baptism with a case of the shakes: these are
a
revelation to others that something is amiss, but they are
also an
indication that the alcoholic clergyman is still trying
to perform
his regular duties.
In
most instances in the past the only formula known by the
clergyman for coping with his alcoholism was the traditional
response of more and better religious practices, the same
formula
that parish priests offered to alcoholic lay people. Mass
and
Communion, frequent confession, praying the rosary, visits
to the
Blessed Sacrament: all the true and tried religious devotions
that
help to make a good person better were seen as curative,
or
ameliorative, of alcohol addiction. These concepts were
part of
the training and education in novitiate and seminary. They
are an
integral part of the clergy life style.
Probably
one of the main reasons for adhering to religious
practices, while men in other occupations abandon them,
is the
reluctance on the part of the clergyman to admit that he
is an
alcoholic. This point was reiterated many times in our interviews
with recovering clergy. They said: "this simply could
not be
happening to me. After all, I knew all the theology anybody
could
need. I was in holy orders, a special sacramental status.
I
studied the best moralists and read the most popular ascetical
writers. A person like me just could not be a drunkard."
On
the other hand, it is often said that the person with this
problem is the first to know he is an alcoholic and the
last to
admit it to others. The average age at which the priest
first
realizes he is not a normal drinker, that drinking is a
problem
for him, is at age 42. Eight years later at age 50, he enters
a
treatment facility. These are average ages, with many younger
below this average, and many older above it. Even after
recognizing his failure to overcome the craving for liquor,
he
spends years on the job wanting God to get him out of his
desperate condition. He says that he went "through
the motions" of
religious practices, still believing in their curative powers
but
discouraged that they did not work for him.
Despite
his addiction and the befuddlement that accompanies
it, the priest is too well educated to believe that their
is a
kind of "magic" in sacraments and devotions that
will make his
problem disappear. Nevertheless, he and his superiors and
advisers
often cling to the hope that a miracle will happen to remove
the
alcoholic bondage. Time and again he is admonished, "You
could if
you would," as though the solution lay in prayer and
willpower.
The response of the desperate alcoholic is: "I would
if I could."
Spiritual
Conversion
In
practically all cases we have studied, the alcoholic
clergyman admitted that he could not find sobriety in his
relationship with either God or his church, and in despair
and
failure to stay away from drink he often said that he was
being
"let down" by God and church. As Philip J. Donnelly,
S.J., has
written: "The declining alcoholic is incapable of worshiping
God
in Spirit, because he has lost his spirit. He has not lost
his
faith, but spiritual values are completely unattainable
while he
is in that morass....he cannot escape the awful bondage
of
alcoholic deterioration."
Oddly
enough, the beginning of spiritual recovery occurs when
the alcoholic clergyman focuses on himself rather than on
God and
the church. As one rehabilitated priest said: "The
most important
discovery I made right at the beginning of treatment was
that I am
not a bad person. This was a tremendous relief of all the
shame
and guilt I brought into the place. I saw myself in a completely
different light. There was a great initial lifting of my
burdens
and worries as I discovered what alcoholism was - what it
was that
I had, how it could be helped - and all of a sudden there
was
hope."
Most
of the people who are caught up in the addiction to
alcohol do not understand the nature of their affliction.
They do
not know what alcoholism is, and this ignorance is probably
shared
by large numbers of people who would like to help the alcoholic.
When we asked the former patients what elements were most
helpful
in their therapy process they ranked as most important "learning
about alcoholism." The overwhelming majority (92 percent)
also
said that when they realized that alcoholism is an illness,
they
were relieved of the sense of guilt and of feelings of shame
and
humiliation.
The
relief that came from this cognitive and emotional change
was followed by a personal spiritual renewal. Four out of
five of
them said that their recovery from alcoholism involved a
spiritual
experience, or "spiritual awakening." As one priest,
a religious
said: "I rediscovered God in a personal way that I
never had
before. Now I am very informal with Him. I spend more time
in
gratitude than in petition. More and more, I attempt to
give
myself to God in a way I really didn't when I took my vows
and
when I was ordained. It is a much more complete, thoroughgoing,
profound conversion. Soon after that recovery process, as
I was
discovering more and more about God, I found that I could
be much
more honest before Him."
If
the alcoholic clergyman maintains the dichotomy between
religion and spirituality - and he does frequently speak
of it - he also comes to realize that the spirituality he
now recognizes
in his process of recovery "was always there"
in the church that
he served. He is willing to say that the experience is new,
but he
points out that the content is not new. In other words,
there is
"nothing new" about dependence on God, turning
one's will and life
over to God, asking forgiveness for shortcomings, prayer
and
meditation, having concern for others, making amends to
those we
have injured.
In
a practical sense, these ancient principles of
spirituality, taught by all the churches, seem to have been
rediscovered and put to practice in the Twelve Steps of
the A.A.
fellowship. The story is told of a veteran expert in the
field of
alcoholism (who declined to be interviewed for this study)
that he
once explained A.A. to a group of Catholic bishops. One
of the
prelates remarked: "This is old stuff. What's the difference
between what Alcoholics Anonymous have to offer and what
the
church has always taught?" The simple response came
in one word:
"Success."
The
survey we are conducting on recovering alcoholic clergy
is limited only to those who have had in-patient therapy
at
accredited treatment centers. The principles and philosophy
of
A.A. are an integral part of their treatment. There are
undoubtedly many others who have not had this advantage
but have
regained sobriety by following the program of A.A. Finally,
one
occasionally hears of chronic alcoholics - like Matt Talbot
- who
simply quit drinking.
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