Saturday, August 23, 2008

Religiously-Grounded Substance Abuse Programs Eschew Government Funding

One of the most controversial aspects of federal and state funding of faith-based social services relates to organizations that use prayer and religious teachings as an integral part of substance abuse treatment. Today's Louisville Courier-Journal reports that one such group-- Teen Challenge of Kentucky-- has voluntarily relinquished most of a $50,000 federal grant after Americans United for Separation of Church and State complained to the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services about the grant. Teen Challenge said it did not want to risk a lawsuit over the grant which was to be used to hire a development director and train board members in fundraising. Teen Challenge uses "confrontational evangelism" to cure substance abuse.

Meanwhile, Thursday's Forward reports on Beit T'Shuvah, the country's only Jewish residential program for drug and alcohol abuse. The Los Angeles program explicitly does not seek government funding because its treatment methodology is filled with religious content-- a 12-step program combined with Jewish spirituality. Residents study Torah each morning at 7 am, and are required to attend weekly Friday night and Saturday morning religious services