I’ve wondered the same thing as the OP. There are racks of self help books at the grocery store and, based on the titles, most of them are Christian type. That got me wondering.
I think most of those books are extensions of normal Christian ministering. Part of the job of preachers is to counsel their flock. They also have to write and deliver sermons. So I’m sure quite a few think to themsleves, “I should write this stuff down.” Besides the fact that they have so much source material to work with - they can basically offer any advice, find a biblical passage that fits and build a whole chapter out of that.
A formerly alcoholic friend of mine tried out AA and was simply turned off by the religiosity, by the “give yourself over to a higher power” and so on that he quit after one or two meetings. He was cured at a dryout retreat that he spent a month at. And 30 years later, he drinks but very moderately. It wasn’t Christian, but it was overtly religious (he claimed).
I was surprised that this post took so long to pop up in a thread like this.
Your friend was not and is apparently not very observant.
One or two meetings. Bawahahahzah
He spent a month at a dry out place… Bawahahashsa X42
Are you sure he was an alcoholic? You made the diagnoses, he did, a judge did or a doctor did or???
Glad he got sober and can drink now. Kind of proof he was not an alcoholic in the first place but no matter, good for him.
Now??? What was the necessity to bring AA up because only the truly uninformed still think it is religious based? Was your data point of one not very good instance do anything but feed your personal agenda? Atheist can’t get sober in AA? AA acts as a religion by insisting you believe in something you don’t want to?
If you answer yes to either of theses two last questions, Then I respectively ask that you not tell anyone who is truly an alcoholic that they should avoid AA because they are not religious and AA is a religion. And you are 100% wrong IMO …