Pubdate: Sat, 16 Dec 2006 Source: Tuscaloosa News, The (AL) Copyright: 2006 The Tuscaloosa News Contact: http://www.tuscaloosanews.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1665 Author: Sarah Bruyn Jones CHURCHES TAKE ON DRUG, ALCOHOL ABUSE On Sunday night, drug paraphernalia and parents took over the space typically reserved for Bibles and teenagers at Valley View Baptist Church. Bongs, pipes, drug-storage containers and other items hinting at illicit behavior were displayed inside the church's student room. Parents, teachers and other adults were on hand to learn the facts about illegal drug use among adolescents. Teens were asked not to attend. The gathering had a simple theme: Talk openly and frankly with adults about teen drug use and addiction and the early warning signs. "This is about awareness," Valley View youth minister Jason Duran told the small group of adults. Duran wanted adults in the church to know about the substance-abuse reality and peer pressure facing students inside and outside the church's walls. "We're not saying they're here [at Valley View]. But hopefully, they are coming Wednesday night so we get them out of that life," Duran said of teenagers who drink alcohol or use illegal drugs. Duran then turned the program over to Leandra Celaya, a representative with Bradford Health Services, which provides mental-health and addiction treatment. Celaya has given similar presentations for years, usually at school assemblies. Recently, however, she started reaching out to churches, specifically Valley View. In the spring, Celaya helped organize a prevention event for both parents and kids at Valley View. Hundreds turned out for the presentation. "When it happens outside of school, the message tends to have an even larger effect," Celaya said. "They almost expect prevention programming in the schools." Celaya is not giving up the school presentations, but she is going to visit other captive audiences, particularly religious institutions. The approach by Bradford follows suggestions from the federal government and researchers to target faith-based communities in finding outlets for substance abuse prevention and recovery programs. A 2001 study by the National Center on Addiction and Substance Abuse at Columbia University first documented the connection between spirituality, religion and substance abuse. In looking to the future, the study recommended substance-abuse treatment providers establish working relationships with clergy. Duran and Celaya's partnership is an example of such a venture. At the time, the center said its study was a call to action "to tap into the power of religion and spirituality to help prevent substance abuse and addiction and improve recovery." A spokeswoman for the center said no new research has been conducted since 2001 and could not say if more clergy and treatment providers were forming these relationships. She did not know when, or if, any follow-up research would be conducted. Anecdotally, however, local clergy along with substance-abuse treatment specialists say the relationships are gaining a stronger presence within religious communities. "I think you are seeing more and more pastors recognizing this as a problem affecting not just the guys crawling around in the gutter, but that it is also our members in a suit and tie. And it is their children," said the Rev. Sidney Allen, a recovering alcoholic for 21 years and pastor of Beulah Baptist Church in Eutaw. Many denominations, including Southern Baptists, have long preached against drug use and the consumption of alcohol. The Assemblies of God, Church of God, Church of the Nazarene are among the denominations to take a similar stance on abstaining from alcohol. In the past, however, that approach has had a silencing effect, rather than a healing impact. "You were taught not to touch it, and you were really looked down on if you did," Allen said. "It was probably to the extent that you wouldn't go back to that church if they knew." Allen, who ministers to substance abusers at Calvary Baptist Church and the non-denominational New Covenant Church, said it wasn't until recently that the taboo subject has started to be embraced by Christian churches. Even now, he said, much of the work he does is one-on-one. Dan Ireland, executive director of the interfaith ministry Alabama Citizens Action Program, points to an increase in substance abuse among youth. Ireland's program, which is run mostly in schools, teaches students to abstain from any use of drugs, including alcohol, tobacco and illegal use of prescription drugs or over-the-counter medications. The majority of its funding comes from Baptist churches, Ireland said. "You know it's gotten out of hand," said Ireland, who has a doctorate of divinity and ministry. "A lot of organizations and most of the evangelical denominations have an interest in preaching about this." Ireland said he hasn't come across resistance in churches to talking about substance abuse, but that there is an issue of awareness. "It's a matter of educating mamas and daddies that it's a problem," he said. According to th National Center on Addiction and Substance Abuse study, it's also a matter of educating clergy. While 94 percent of clergy considered substance abuse an important issue in their congregations, only 12.5 percent had any training during their theological studies to address the issue, the study found. Additionally, the study showed nearly two-thirds of clergy - --including pastors, ministers and rabbis -- preached a sermon more than once a year addressing the issue. While churches have long opened their doors as a venue for holding Alcoholics Anonymous meetings, it wasn't until recently that churches began running programs of their own, using the Bible to help alcoholics through the recovery process. Christian-based programs steeped in Scripture, but that echo AA's 12-step approach, are currently being held at The Church at Tuscaloosa and New Covenant. Besides continuing those programs, Allen said the latest challenge is to take the message of substance abuse beyond addicts and to the general congregation. "I'm seeing more churches willing to do that," he said. Both the Southern Baptist Convention and the Alabama Baptist State Board of Missions passed resolutions this year at their annual conventions supporting education of alcohol abuse and promoting abstinence from alcohol. Acknowledging the problems caused by alcohol, including drunk-driving deaths and divorce, the state resolution passed last month urged Baptists to be involved in educating the public about alcohol abuse. Additionally, the resolution asked Baptists to become involved in lobbying government to curb alcohol use. "It's a holistic challenge," Ireland said. "Whether you talk about enforcement, groups like ours or churches, it is a challenge for all of us to coordinate our efforts together to put a stop to it." - --- MAP posted-by: Elaine