Pubdate: Fri, 04 May 2007 Source: Leduc Representative (CN AB) Copyright: 2007 Leduc Representative Contact: http://www.leducrepresentative.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/2265 Author: Grant McDowell WHO IS TO BLAME FOR DRUGS? I recently heard two young men describe their entrance into the world of drugs and crime. Each of their families lacked the maturity and love necessary to give their children a solid foundation. Although this is true of many youths who become tangled in the drug web, other users and sellers grew up in a caring, disciplined family environment. So who do we blame for the problem of drugs? A thorough answer would take several gigabytes because societal problems arise from a variety of causes. I've already referred to one factor - troubled marriages and families. Other causes might include mental illness, manipulation by drug pedalling predators, slack justice for offenders, ignorance of the presence and power of drugs in the community and so on. Yet, even though the causes appear numerous, one condition is common in every case and that condition is a longing for lasting hope and happiness. While it's important to treat the causes, we must address the condition. For example, one of the men I referred to earlier spoke of his need for acceptance and love. Predators in the drug trade are keenly aware of this need; it provides them with a nice living. And even predators know their lives are hopeless. These men discovered something every clean and sober recovered addict has to learn -- you can't change until you come to the end of yourself. At that point, each of them turned his life over to Jesus Christ as the only one who could love him completely, just as he was. Furthermore, Christ was the only one with the power to heal their wounded spirits. Religion, as one astute young observer said, 'is just memorizing the right answers.' In other words, religion or religious practice often has little to do with the living God. Instead, it often consists of singing the right songs, being in the right place and saying the right words without either conviction or power to change. By contrast, these two men experienced love and hope through the Spirit of the risen Christ who loves us as no one else can. We shouldn't be shy about telling people trapped in the drug bog that Christ can pull them out. His power isn't a simplistic cliche we throw at a complex problem. On the contrary, he treats the condition behind the causes. As a case in point, 78 per cent of the addicts who find Christ through the Teen Challenge ministry these men enrolled in are still off drugs five years later. Compared to other treatment statistics, that's phenomenal. Someone criticized a recovered addict of merely switching his addiction from drugs to Jesus. Maybe, but if that's how you see it, remember this: one of these addictions will rob and kill you; the other will give you life and hope. - --- MAP posted-by: Steve Heath