Agreed, Nederman, and CC too! Will try to apply that now, be"H.
Bob found the "truth" and is at peace - now he is a Christian...could happen, no? Hey, it probably happens every day. So?
Here is my point, after a short hakdomah:
In recovery from addiction and in finding Truth in general, there are some who demand going a way that hardly any else goes. 'Organized Religion' turns them off terribly - "If a
group is doing it, then count me out!". Anything that involves other people is untrustworthy to them, for many reasons that are valid to them.
And some searching people see Orthodoxy as a strong point - one that helps them know if they are just following out of convenience...after all, with a little humility and searcher can see that comfort - whether emotional, philosophical, financial, or social - twists our minds to see the truth in the easier way. And twisting for any reason is treif to them. They want a life of truth and see a Rule Book as the only way to get there.
Most do a bit of both, being part of an organized religion - but in a disorganized way..."the way of every man is straight in his own eyes", or as R' Tzvi-Meyer Zilverberg (and lhbc'l, R' Noach Weinberg a"h) put it, we tend to see our own selves as centrist/moderate, and most others as more toward the good or goofy extremes". I am promoting either side here, but here is what I'm getting at:
In choosing a group or tool for finding the Truth, it is probably a good idea to look for a success record. Torah has a very good success record at growing decent people.
When it comes to helping drunks get sober, I do not know what success record Torah nor any particular therapy or book has. But I
do see many, many sober drunks who claim AA showed them they way. And it did not them christians, jews, or whatever. It made them fathers, mothers, whatever they believed they were
supposed to be.
And the reason that AA and the 12 steps do not produce christians is simply because organized religion is not what the steps are about at all. They are not about any kind of religion at all. They are a chance to study
the most important mesechta of all: the truth about ourselves. Or what some sifrei mussar called "meseches atzmecha".
If you, Reb Dovid, want to make a recovery program that creates frum Jews - then you have made self-honesty a
secondary goal. And for an addict, it does not typically work that way. It's putting the cart before the horse. Instead, when a Jewish drunk becomes
really honest with himself (which can
only happen if he is first sober) then he comes to see the Truth of Torah much more clearly. For the Torah
is true!
Sadly, when non-addicts try to apply 12 steps to their lives, they get all confused. They confuse religion with recovery. But they are not sick! The only fuel of the steps is the drunk's natural motivation to save his or her life from the dustbin of history. Who else would let go of a resentment or desire and depend on G-d? Very few. Most average religious folks see trusting G-d with their personal lives as an
obligation - not as a real personal need. That's why so many goyim achieve the total dependence on G-d in AA, even though they have never seen a Torah...while so many frum people who posses the True Torah do not: they don't
need to! Sure, we are told we need to need to - but until a person or his wife or child has cancer, G-d forbid, they do not often really need to need G-d.
Sorry.
To recap:
Religion is for meaning. 12 steps is for sanity. They are completely different.
Unfortunately, so many people use twisted logic and get their undies all bunched up by making the silly inference that this is to say that Religion has no sanity in it, or that the principles behind the 12 steps cannot grow out of religion. Nonsense.
The truth is found in the Torah - but is our
honesty found in Torah?
No, it is not.
Hashem's honesty is.
Our honesty is found in
us.
It's only in us - as long as we want it and work for it. Goyim can have it as well as Jews. It is a skill that
can be learned or cultivated through Torah - but is not guaranteed by it nor by any book. And we addicts are so full of lies that actually lying is much more our ikkar problem than anything remotely related to 'kedushas haBris'! Especially us
frum porn users - we hide and fake all day long and with everyone. It is the frum porn user's way of life...lying. So openness and sharing the truth of ourselves with others is the bedrock of recovery in the 12 steps way.
I believe that reading a book - even the
Torah - cannot give that to anyone. Boruch Hashem for that - for if it could be, then the addicts would not need G-d. This is the
p'soless that becomes our
schach - our relationship with Hashem
grows out of our mistakes. Very beautiful, especially on Succos.