Pubdate: Sun, 15 Jun 2003 Source: Bergen Record (NJ) Copyright: 2003 Bergen Record Corp. Contact: http://www.bergen.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/44 Author: John Chadwick FAITH-BASED AID STIRS ZEAL, DEBATE The men sit quietly in rows, holding their Bibles and listening to a man speak reassuringly about the second coming of Jesus Christ. "People are going to see Christ coming, and the souls of the dead are going to be coming with him," Bill Thomson said. "We will all be with Christ. All the believers." The audience - some members just out of jail, others fresh off the streets of Paterson - are riveted by the lecture. They ask questions and highlight Scripture with yellow markers. A few say "amen." This is not a church. It's Good Shepherd Mission, a Christian alcohol and drug rehabilitation center - the kind of faith-based outreach that President Bush promises to support with tax dollars. Those promises - including a $600 million voucher plan - are at the center of a growing national debate. Bush, who credits his faith in Jesus with helping him quit drinking, wants to put faith-based programs on an equal footing with secular programs in the competition for public money. The administration has proposed issuing vouchers to low-income people for use at religious or secular treatment centers. "The reality is that if you don't address the spiritual component of their addiction, they are never going to recover, and we are throwing all this public money down a rat hole," James Towey, head of the White House's Office of Faith-Based and Community Initiatives, said in a recent telephone interview. A spiritual approach to treating addicts and alcoholics is nothing new. Alcoholics Anonymous and other 12-step programs have long preached the importance of seeking a "higher power" in recovery from addiction, but they do not promote a specific vision of that power. What makes the White House plan provocative is that it could provide public money to religious groups whose central focus is winning converts and who see addiction as a matter of sin, not disease. Critics call it an audacious assault on the separation of government and religion. "Having taxpayers support what amounts to a religious conversion runs counter to the Constitution," said Barry Lynn, executive director of Americans United for Separation of Church and State. "This seems to be a dramatic intrusion of church-state separation." The plan is also alarming treatment providers in New Jersey, who fear it will benefit unlicensed agencies that operate outside state standards. And they question whether faith alone is enough. Can religious ministries, some equipped only with Bibles and true believers' zeal, offer a legitimate alternative to secular treatment centers with trained counselors and social workers? "Alcoholism and drug addiction are chronic diseases," said Jim O'Brien, executive director of Addiction Treatment Providers of New Jersey. "And chronic diseases require professional treatment." Good Shepherd, for its part, has its own qualms about getting public money. Since 1930, the program has quietly provided a bed, a Bible, and an indoctrination into evangelical Christianity for men desperate to transform their lives. And it has always raised its own cash. The Rev. Mike Vieira, the director, said he fears government support would force him to water down Good Shepherd's core Christian teachings. With a budget of only $150,000, Vieira said he could use the extra money. But he has adopted a wait-and-see attitude. "What we do is wrapped up in our message," Vieira said. "And we don't want to change our message." Operating in an old mansion east of downtown Paterson, Good Shepherd puts the Bible squarely at the center of its treatment plan. The men, who live there for nine months, must finish a rigorous curriculum - five classes a day - before trying to get jobs or schooling. At a recent class, one of the teachers spoke about the consequences of Adam's eating of the forbidden fruit in Genesis. "God was in control of the Earth," said Thomson, who drives in once a week from Morris County to teach the class. "Now it's Satan who is in control of the Earth. Instead of being in a theocracy, we're in a Satanocracy." The fundamentalist vision of Christianity strikes a chord. Jose Luis Hernandez, a Lodi man starting his third month at Good Shepherd, said the program gives him hope. Sitting behind the house, on a paved strip loaded with old exercise equipment, he spoke about the love a believer feels when he discovers Jesus and the shame he experiences if he returns to drugs and alcohol. "It's like you're personally betraying Christ," he said. "You're nailing him back to the cross." Good Shepherd is far from alone in treating addiction with religion. Teen Challenge, one of the largest faith-based groups, operates 168 centers nationwide, promoting a similarly evangelical vision of Christianity. Bush spoke at a Teen Challenge facility in Iowa during the 2000 campaign. "We feel encouraged there are opportunities to help us enlarge," said John Castellani, executive director of Teen Challenge. "We are looking at this as a positive situation." But experts are divided about whether the faith-based approach works any better than secular methods, and the number of studies comparing the two are limited. Addiction specialists in New Jersey fear Bush's voucher plan will undermine the professionalism they have struggled to build over decades. Religious programs such as Good Shepherd operate as boarding homes, and fall outside the voluminous regulations that govern the licensing of residential treatment centers. In New Jersey, those regulations, among other things, set educational standards that treatment workers must meet - from graduate degrees to certificates. "To see the standards we have worked for get put aside for the faith-based approach is unacceptable," said O'Brien, of Addiction Treatment Providers of New Jersey. "This is a step backward." Federal officials said they're working to alleviate those concerns. They want the vouchers to cover both secular and faith-based programs, but stress that there must be full disclosure of the methods, credentials, and potential outcomes for each option. In the end, it will be up to the states to come up with lists of approved providers. "There are many pathways to recovery," said Charles G. Curie, administrator of the federal Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration. "We want the states to develop this in a way where there is a lot of information for the consumer. We want to make sure the individual is able to make a good choice." White House officials say the plan will come before Congress during fiscal 2004 budget deliberations in the next several months. Towey said it meets the constitutional standard set by the Supreme Court last year in its ruling on a school voucher system in Cleveland. "If it's voluntary, and people have a choice, then that meets the test," he said. He also said the White House has no preference for any treatment programs. He cited a Jewish treatment center in Los Angeles as just one of many possibilities. "Our point is that if faith-based approaches give some people the help they need, then we should be creating more choices for people," Towey said. "There was an effort to exclude them from the mix, and the president wants to put an end to this." Critics believe the White House has another purpose in mind. "I think they'd like to privatize a large number of government services to the poor," Lynn said. "And they've figured out one of the cheapest ways to do that is to let religion undertake those services." In the day-to-day routine of Bible classes, chores, and contemplation, Vieira said, there is no simple solution to the struggles his clients face. "The people we work with, the world doesn't know what to do with," he said. "We work with some people, as all programs do, year after year, until somebody finally gets it, and then they go on." Hernandez, the Lodi man who enrolled in Good Shepherd in April, said this is not the first time he has sought help in Christ. He embraced Christianity nearly a decade ago in a similar program in Florida. He stayed off drugs for a while, but became an alcoholic, he said. Before being dropped off at Good Shepherd by his pastor, he was drinking half a case of malt liquor every day. During a recent Bible study class, he raised his hand and spoke of a struggle inside him. "I have my own old self, and I have the Holy Spirit," he said. "How do I build up the Holy Spirit?" The teacher, a younger man who went through the program, replied: "Read the word. Pray. You have the power to overcome the situation." No one on the seven-man staff has any formal training in counseling or social work, Vieira said. But he stressed that all of them - including himself - have graduated from Good Shepherd and have the same vision and commitment. "Our main objective here is not only just that the men get a job and live a decent life," Vieira said. "It really is about eternity. Are we successful as far as leading people in the right direction. so that their eternity would be happy? I say we would be very successful." - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake