Does Alcoholics Anonymous Help Grow the Spiritual but not Religious Movement?

Authors

  • Linda Mercadante Methodist Theological School in Ohio

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.1558/imre.40699

Keywords:

Spiritual-but-not-religious: Addiction recovery: Theology, 12 Step, community, transcendence

Abstract

Both the 12 Step movement of Alcoholics Anonymous and the spiritual-but-not-religious (SBNR) movement insist there is an important difference between spirituality and religion. Briefly, it is claimed that spirituality is personal and heart-felt, while religion consists of human-created doctrines, institutions, and outward rituals. However, the two routes to that definition differ in significant ways. For AA the dichotomy has been functional to allow a diverse membership and reduce an undercurrent of societal judgmentalism. For SBNRs, the claim has been boundary-marking, facilitating the movement away from organized religion. Nevertheless, as AA has progressed, it has become more of a portal away from religion and toward the SBNR ethos. This essay shows some of the more significant theological themes that have facilitated this movement.

References

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Published

2020-04-24

How to Cite

Mercadante, L. (2020). Does Alcoholics Anonymous Help Grow the Spiritual but not Religious Movement?. Implicit Religion, 22(2), 184-193. https://doi.org/10.1558/imre.40699